• Discernment

    At harvest time, awash in abundance, we are faced with many choices. choices about what to keep and what to give away, about what to eat quickly, and what to store, and the best way to make use of all that we have. In this session, we can literally and metaphorically assess our harvest and decide what we offer in feast, what we pickle, what we ferment, what we sweeten into jam, what we pause in the freezer, what we salt, and what we dry to reconstitute later. In this conversational online gathering, we will swap stories about when and how we’ve made choices about what to salvage, valorize, or toss, and exchange some techniques for literal and metaphorical preserving and upcycling.

  • Unsettling Grief

    Unsettling Grief is an opportunity to collectively explore grief and genocide, tending to the unnameable sorrow for the unjust mass death of Palestinians at the hand of empire.
    Through collective witnessing of the shared grief we refuse to look away from, we gather online for this grief circle to honor the unfathomable sorrow in our hearts for the mass death of Palestinians at the hands of empire. So we may discover a different kind of opening. An overlooked crack in the foundation of modernity's violences, a way of moving through sorrow that resists apathy, passivity, or acceptance. A way for our love of life to outweigh our fear of death – strengthening our endurance for witnessing so much grief and sorrow – and build our capacity to show up to fight what presently feels overwhelming.

  • Generosity

    We have been taught by the hyper-individual dominant culture to hoard our excess, to save for a rainy day, as our mainstays against the intentionally insecure competitive economy. Many of us are hyper-aware of the inequality all around us, and deciding how, and how much to share can be daunting and paralyzing. As with so much un- and re-learning, it takes practice to be generous. This conversational gathering will help us to explore generosity (amid material abundance and scarcity and mindsets of the same). We hope to also support attendees in identifying how to engage in giving without feeling taken advantage of.

  • Living the Questions that Feed Us

    In this gathering, we return to a set of powerful questions shared by Fatuma Emmad—questions that lingered after our last circle and deserve more time. Together, we’ll explore what draws us into practices of nourishment, land-tending, and ecological care. Are we growing food to survive? To reconnect? To repair? To rewild? And how do we know we’re not replicating the very systems we long to transform?

  • Vessels otherWisdom Circle

    Different containers are appropriate for storing, carrying, and collecting different contents. As the contents change, the container might need to change as well. You can store yarn in a loosely woven basket, but you cannot carry water. You can ferment kefir in a glass container, but it requires attention and active care, so that you burp the container before it shatters. Some containers are temporary, and others hold forever. Some carry seeds, others carry ancestors. In this discussion, we will discuss the oft-overlooked importance of the vessels we carry and those that carry us.

  • Waste otherWisdom Circle

    Throughout this cycle, we will be exploring the concept of Away. We have become blind to the metabolic processes that sustain us, such that what we consume and what we excrete simply comes from and goes to the mythical land of Away - outside of our attention or awareness. Not only does this hidden world allow us to be oblivious to all kinds of irresponsible, unsustainable atrocities, but it leaves us feeling isolated, uninformed, and disconnected from our beautiful, entangled relationships with the wider world. In this first call we will deep dive into all that we discard in our exploration of Waste.
    There is so much abundance in waste, if only we have eyes enough to see. Waste, by one definition, is the disposal of something that still has value. With some extra time and energy to sort through and process what others discard, we can actually keep the useful and nutritious bits in circulation and to properly lay what we cannot use to rest, or give it to someone that can.

  • Death & Decay

    This goodGrief circle is an opportunity to sit with what our death-and-grief-averse culture often hides from sight. To complement our discussions in the otherWisdom Circles around the mythical land of Away, we will hold space for open conversation in the style of a virtual Death Cafe. Taking the time to explore a topic that the dominant culture has deemed taboo might just shift our perceptions of death and decay in ways that can inform how we lean into otherWays of living, loving, and grieving amidst a finite world.

  • Extraction otherWisdom Circle

    Everything we consume carries stories, has origins. Our food, energy, metals, and comforts are pulled from somewhere — and over the past several centuries, those somewheres have multiplied and often stretched well beyond the range that our bodies travel. Everything we consume connects us to other bodies, beings, places and ecosystems, but those connections are often imbalanced, incomplete, and uni-directional. They take more value than they return. They leave more harm than they tend. In this session, we will look closely at extraction: how bodies, lands, and histories are mined for profit, and how we are entangled in these flows.

  • How to Grow Local Food Movements

    Cameron Terry, an urban farmer in Roanoke, Virginia, will share with us his experience in food sovereignty and the local food organizing space. Cam not only runs Lick Run Farm, but is a founding member of the Southwest Virginia Agrarian Commons, which works towards community held land for regenerative food production and farmer equity. He also organizes farmers markets, farm events, and a farm summer camp for kids in the city.

  • Composting otherWisdom Circle

    What comes to mind when you hear the word compost? The bucket of stinky food scraps near your sink. Single-use plates and utensils that go in a green bin. A big pile, you know, you need to turn. Time, temperature, and transformation. Rich garden soil.

    Composting is the process of taking bodies and materials (waste), inviting a new kind of life into them (microbes), and turning them into something that can be used again (digestion). This applies to reclaiming what the dominant culture discards as “waste,” yes, though we can easily extend the lessons of composting beyond the physical.

    Together, we will consider composting as both a biotic practice (closing nutrient loops, building soil, healing metabolic rift) and a cultural practice (working with memory, story, and trauma to fertilize more viable futures). Beauty in the breakdown.