Relational Anthropology -Environment

Chapter 17F discusses the relationship between humans and the environment, emphasizing that ecological issues stem from a relational disconnect rather than technical failures. It advocates for a sh…

Survivor Literacy
Pluriology – The Pluriological Institute — A Vision for the First Center of Relational Coherence

The Pluriological Institute aims to establish a framework for Pluriology as an academic discipline focused on relational coherence. Structured around four pillars, it offers specialized programs fo…

Survivor Literacy
Pluriology -Pluriological Applications — How Pluriology Reframes Creativity, Work, Relationships, and Identity

Pluriology is a living discipline that reframes creativity, work, relationships, identity, and collective behavior. It emphasizes understanding mode transitions and rhythms rather than seeing issue…

Survivor Literacy
Pluriology – The Pluriome in Practice — How Pluriologists Read Rhythms, Modes, and Disturbances

Pluriology bridges theory and practice by examining human experience through relational dynamics instead of diagnosing issues. Pluriologists analyze rhythms, modes, and environmental constraints to…

Survivor Literacy

“All that you touch, you change.
All that you change changes you.”

Octavia Butler names the reciprocity we all live inside of — ecological, emotional, relational.
A reminder that transformation isn’t something we do to the world; we change with it.

#OctaviaButler #Reciprocity #MutualBecoming #RelationalEcology #LifeboatAcademy #SlowSocial

Kimmerer’s reminder lands softly but precisely: restoration is empty without relationship. What lasts is the reciprocity we build with place — the ongoing, living exchange that outlives any single intervention.

#BraidingSweetgrass #Reciprocity #RelationalEcology