EcoDharma
EcoDharma

Replacing the “Behavior Change” Playbook

For decades, climate and environmental advocates have tried to close the gap between what people know and what they do. Frustrated, our answer has been “more”: more information, more urgency, more compelling imagery. But what if the problem is our misunderstanding of the problem?
EcoDharma
EcoDharma

Finding the Sacred in the Ordinary

What if “nature” is right here in the experience of being alive? A lifelong city dweller reflects on how mindfulness of the everyday elements of water, breath, food, and fire can dissolve the illusion of separation between ourselves and the living Earth community.
Creative
Creative
This world is signaling to us constantly, both inviting us out of complacency and, in the same moment, offering endless gifts.
EcoDharma
EcoDharma

You Don’t Have to Carry This Alone

Situated somewhere between profession and spiritual practice, eco-chaplaincy is an emerging field rooted in contemplative traditions that is responding to the suffering arising from ecological crises. The handful of eco-chaplaincy programs, still small, signal a shift in how we understand care.
EcoDharma
EcoDharma

The Power of Sangha

We consider Joanna Macy to be a root teacher for One Earth Sangha. Going forward, we will honor her birthday in that light. On the first observance since her passing, we share Joanna's delightful conversation with Adam Lobel from 2015.
Practice
Practice
Our bodies are built to be in conversation with our ecosystem, responding to the world around us via internal clocks. When we attune to the pulses within and around us, time can become an experience of kinship.
EcoDharma
EcoDharma

Seeing Consumption in its Subtle Forms

“How would you like to be in relationship?” One might ask this question to the river, the tree, or the glacier.
EcoDharma
EcoDharma

The Quiet, Unglamorous Work of Our Time

To organize at scale amidst chaos and extreme climate events, we need to build real trust as we face collective vulnerability.
EcoDharma
EcoDharma

Interview with Ajahn Pasanno and Julia Butterfly Hill

Interviewed here in 2005, a monk and tree-sitting activist reflect on the lengths they were willing to go, and the lessons they learned along the way, in the effort to abide by their fierce commitment to their beloved old-growth trees.
EcoDharma
EcoDharma

Losing the Taste for Destruction

Life gives onto life, what does one call this but love? What does the truest impulse of life itself have to teach us?