Our Approach
What sets us apart:
- Fearless inquiry. We confront the questions many avoid—from the existential risks of unchecked AI, to the sacred role of psychedelics, to the enduring wisdom of Indigenous traditions.
- Integration, not fragments. Our approach spans the full spectrum: rigorous research, embodied retreat experiences, online learning, and community education.
- Science and spirit. We bridge ancient wisdom with emerging knowledge, spirituality with science, and individual healing with systemic change.
- Practical frameworks. We provide clear, actionable pathways for individuals, families, organisations, and communities to navigate profound change with courage and clarity.
- Purpose-driven impact. Every offering is designed to meet the urgent challenges of our time—climate collapse, mental health crises, AI disruption, war, and growing social polarisation.
Working in Right Relationship with Indigenous Wisdom
Our offerings and pathways are inspired by or in collaboration with Indigenous traditions, particularly those rooted in the use of sacred plant medicines. It is essential to us that this work is not appropriated or extracted, but approached with deep reverence, cultural humility, and a dedication to ethical alignment.
We ground our practice in the Eight Principles of Indigenous Medicine, as outlined by a collective of Indigenous leaders, researchers, and healers. These principles offer a powerful ethical compass for anyone engaging in transformative work with Indigenous medicines, especially within Western and global contexts.

Working in Right Relationship with Indigenous Wisdom
Adapted from Celidwen et al. (2022), The Lancet Regional Health – Americas
- Reverence
Recognising Indigenous medicines as part of sacred, relational ecosystems calling us to care for land, lineage, and future generations. - Respect
Engaging with Indigenous traditions by following customs, giving space, and allowing communities to determine how their medicines are used. - Responsibility
Ensuring that benefits, harms, and knowledge are shared ethically, and that accountability exists for appropriation or misuse. - Relevance
Including Indigenous knowledge meaningfully — not as token gestures, but through integrated education, research, and leadership. - Regulation
Protecting both tangible and intangible cultural property safeguarding land, medicines, spiritual practices, and Indigenous intellectual rights. - Reparation
Committing to reparative justice and benefit-sharing when knowledge, land, or resources have been taken without consent. - Restoration
Restoring Indigenous authority in how medicines are known, taught, and practiced, placing Indigenous voices at the centre. - Reconciliation
Actively healing relationships between Indigenous and Western systems through justice, mutual respect, and global cooperation.
Reference:
Celidwen, Y. et al. (2022). Ethical principles of traditional Indigenous medicine to guide western psychedelic research and practice. The Lancet Regional Health – Americas, 16, 100389
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