PREFACE
This Wisdom Hub is part of Navigating Our Future’s Foundational Series, alongside Democracy, Reverence, Love and Compassion, Ethical Economics and Whole Systems Thinking. Each Hub explores a threshold practice essential to navigating the metacrisis. We begin with grief—not because it is easy, but because it is honest. To honor our losses together is to renew our covenant with life, preparing the ground for reverence, for love and care, for democratic governance, for ethical economics, and for a return to whole-systems awareness.
This Hub approaches grief as personal medicine, communal ritual, and civic capacity. The pages invite readers into a wider circle: to feel what must be felt, to speak what must be spoken, and to move together toward practices that repair relationship with people and place. What follows blends psychology, indigenous wisdom, spiritual traditions, movement histories, and practical civic design into a single through-line: grief is love in action. It is also a public good—an essential capacity that strengthens communities, democracies, and ecosystems.
FRAMING THE FOUNDATION
Grief is the doorway into belonging.
This Wisdom Hub recognizes that grief, when acknowledged and shared, becomes a source of healing, resistance, and collective renewal. It is the first step toward reconnection — with ourselves, with each other, and with the living Earth. Rather than treating grief as a private burden, this Hub highlights the cultural, spiritual, and communal practices that transform sorrow into strength and solidarity.
Help us expand this Wisdom Hub. We are actively building our Resource Contributors Network. If you know verifiable organizations, tribes, municipalities, institutions, nonprofits, or businesses doing credible work—especially at local and bioregional levels (and significant national/global sources)—please share them with us: info@navigatingourfuture.org
Our Citizens’ Intelligence System grows as the community shares what works.
RITUAL, RESISTANCE, AND RECONNECTION
By Larry Greene • November 21, 2025
The Uncried Tear
Beneath an old oak tree, a circle of chairs waits. In the center, a bowl of smooth stones — each one a grief carried quietly. This is where we begin: with the uncried tear.
We live in a time of cascading loss. Forests fall silent, rivers run slow with toxins, glaciers withdraw into memory. Families scatter; trust erodes; the climate grows erratic. The temptation is to close the heart. Yet grief is not weakness. Grief is testimony. We only grieve what we love — grief is the soul's insistence that life is sacred.
Grief is the language of fidelity. It says: This mattered. It still matters. In a culture that rewards distraction and speed, grief slows us down long enough to notice what's gone missing — salmon returning in fewer numbers, elders dying alone, a neighborhood tree cut before its time, a language slipping from living tongues. To let ourselves mourn is not indulgent; it is a form of truth-telling. When sorrow is ignored, it hardens into despair. When faced, it becomes a doorway. Pema Chödrön counsels us to "stay with the broken heart." Elisabeth Kübler-Ross's framework provides context by contending that grief is the price of love.
Why Grief Matters: Facing the Brokenness
We only grieve what we love. In grief we discover our tether to life, our belonging to community, and our responsibility to the future. The Dalai Lama teaches that grief is the natural consequence of love—when we lose what we cherish, sorrow arises not as pathology but as proof of our capacity for deep connection. He invites us to transform this grief into compassion, to let our personal losses open us to the suffering of others, and in that opening, to find renewed meaning and purpose.
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross gave us language for grief's terrain—denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance—not as a rigid sequence but as a map of the heart's wilderness. Her work reminded a death-denying culture that dying and mourning are not failures but passages, and that honoring them makes us more fully human. David Kessler, who collaborated with Kübler-Ross in her final years, added a sixth stage: finding meaning. He discovered that those who move through grief most gracefully aren't those who "get over it" fastest, but those who allow loss to reshape them, to reveal what truly matters. Meaning doesn't erase the pain—it gives the pain purpose.
Francis Weller brings us back to grief's communal roots. He reminds us that in older times, grief was never solitary—it was witnessed, sung, wailed into being by the whole village. "Grief and love are sisters," he writes, "woven together from the beginning." To suppress grief is to suppress love itself, to betray our belonging to the web of life. Weller identifies five gates of grief: everything we love and will lose; the places in us that have not been met with kindness; the sorrows of the world; what we expected but never came; and ancestral grief passed down through generations. Each gate, when approached with care, becomes a threshold to deeper aliveness.
Brené Brown's research on vulnerability illuminates why grief often feels so threatening. We live in a culture that values invulnerability, that mistakes emotional armor for strength. But Brown's decades of work reveal the opposite: it is precisely our willingness to be vulnerable, to let ourselves be seen in our brokenness, that creates genuine connection and resilience. Grief shared becomes grief transformed—not diminished, but woven into the larger fabric of human experience. When we dare to grieve aloud, we give others permission to do the same, and in that mutual witnessing, isolation gives way to belonging.
John Bowlby's attachment theory helps us understand why loss strikes so deeply. From our earliest moments, we are wired for connection—our survival depends on it, and so does our sense of self. When we lose someone or something we're attached to, we don't simply lose an external object; we lose part of our identity, our sense of security in the world. Understanding grief's phases—numbness that protects us from initial shock, yearning that searches desperately for what's lost, disorganization as old patterns collapse, and finally reorganization as we integrate loss into a new way of being—doesn't make grief easier, but it does make it less frightening.
Stephen Levine speaks of "unattended sorrow"—grief that gets buried rather than felt, grief that calcifies in the body and soul. He teaches that unresolved grief doesn't disappear; it goes underground, where it manifests as numbness, rage, illness, despair. But attended to with mercy and patience, grief becomes transformative. Levine invites us to soften around our pain rather than brace against it, to meet sorrow with the same tenderness we'd offer a frightened child. In that softening, we discover we're larger than our losses, capable of holding both heartbreak and hope without choosing between them.
Facing the brokenness together begins to restore what's possible. When we speak of losses aloud — of species, of places, of safety, of trust — we are not only cataloging harm; we are renewing our vows to the living world and to one another. Grief, in this light, is a civic virtue.
Grief as Resistance
Joanna Macy has devoted her life to what she calls "the Work That Reconnects"—helping people honor their pain for the world without drowning in it. She understands that beneath climate anxiety, species grief, and despair over social collapse lies love—love for forests and rivers, for communities and children, for the possibility of a livable future. Macy teaches that we must feel this pain fully if we're to act effectively. Numbness and denial don't protect us; they cut us off from the very sources of courage and connection we need. Her spiral of gratitude, honoring our pain, seeing with new eyes, and going forth leads groups through despair into what she calls "active hope"—hope not as optimism but as participation, as showing up for life even when outcomes are uncertain.
Indigenous traditions have always understood grief as sacred work. Sobonfu Somé of the Dagara people describes how her village holds communal grief rituals regularly, not waiting for individual tragedies but tending to the community's accumulated sorrows as preventive medicine. When grief is metabolized collectively, it doesn't harden into violence or addiction or despair. Coast Salish communities hold salmon ceremonies each year, mourning the diminishing runs while renewing their covenant with the waters. These aren't performances of nostalgia but acts of resistance—they insist that salmon are not resources to be managed but relatives to be honored, that reciprocity matters more than efficiency, that some relationships are worth maintaining even when they're costly.
Breeshia Wade centers grief within the Black experience, illuminating how systemic oppression creates a particular kind of sorrow—anticipatory grief for lives cut short by violence and neglect, ancestral grief inherited through generations of trauma, and the exhaustion of grieving publicly while being told to "get over it" and move on. Her work in Grieving While Black names how racism compounds loss, how white supremacy denies Black communities even the dignity of mourning fully. She frames grief as both personal and political, insisting that to grieve while Black is to resist a culture that has never valued Black lives fully, to claim space for sorrow as an act of defiance and self-preservation.
bell hooks taught that love is both political and practical—not sentiment but action, not feeling but practice. Grief, in this light, is love persisting beyond presence. To grieve the broken treaties, the clearcut forests, the poisoned wells is to refuse to normalize harm, to insist that love remains even when what we loved is gone. Public mourning becomes resistance when it rejects the logic of disposability, when it says: these lives mattered, this land was sacred, this future is worth fighting for.
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa modeled how collective grief could become national healing. By creating space for both victims and perpetrators to speak their truths, by acknowledging atrocities rather than burying them, the commission transformed private trauma into shared history. Today, climate grief hearings emerging in cities across the UK, New Zealand, Australia, and the United States follow this model, inviting residents to testify about losses from floods, fires, drought, and displacement. These forums don't solve climate change, but they shift the discourse from abstract statistics to embodied stories, compelling policymakers to see the human stakes and communities to recognize their shared vulnerability.
From Sorrow to Cohesion
Communities that honor grief rediscover their strength. A vigil by a polluted stream becomes a watershed restoration project. A memorial for elders lost to heat becomes a neighborhood care network. Mourning endangered languages gives rise to schools of revival. Grief metabolized becomes belonging. Belonging becomes cohesion. Cohesion becomes resilience. In remembering together, we recover the strength to act together.
Tara Brach offers the RAIN practice—Recognize, Allow, Investigate, Nurture—as a way of meeting grief with radical acceptance. Rather than pushing away difficult emotions, RAIN invites us to name them, make space for them, explore them with curiosity rather than judgment, and finally offer ourselves compassion. This practice transforms our relationship with sorrow. Grief becomes not an enemy to defeat but a teacher to sit with, a portal to deeper self-understanding. When communities practice RAIN together, individual grief becomes collective wisdom.
Pema Chödrön's teaching to "stay with the broken heart" might sound masochistic to ears trained in positivity culture, but it's profoundly liberating. She invites us to stop trying to fix ourselves, to abandon the exhausting project of being invulnerable. The broken heart, she suggests, is actually the open heart—cracked wide enough to let in not just our own pain but the pain of the world. This brokenness is where compassion is born. A community of broken-hearted people is a community capable of genuine tenderness, of meeting each other in truth rather than pretense.
Contemporary neuroscience confirms what ritual has always known: grief held communally stabilizes us physiologically. When we mourn together in circles, our breathing synchronizes, our heart rates align, stress hormones decrease, and oxytocin—the neurochemical of bonding and trust—increases. This isn't mysticism; it's biology. We are literally wired for collective grief, our nervous systems designed to regulate through connection. This is why vigils, wakes, and mourning circles don't just comfort emotionally—they heal neurologically, building the physiological capacity for resilience.
Robin Wall Kimmerer, in Braiding Sweetgrass, teaches that grief for the land is inseparable from love for the land. As a botanist and member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, she weaves Indigenous wisdom with scientific knowledge, showing how mourning ecological loss can deepen rather than diminish our relationship with place. When we grieve a forest clearcut or a river dammed, we're not indulging in sadness—we're honoring relationship, acknowledging interdependence. That grief, rather than paralyzing us, often catalyzes care.
Thomas Berry's concept of "The Great Work" frames our historical moment as a time of profound transition—from exploitation to reciprocity, from separation to participation. Berry understood that this transition requires grief—for the damage done, the species lost, the Indigenous knowledge erased. But he also insisted that grief without vision leads nowhere. We must grieve and dream, mourn and imagine, face what's broken and commit to repair.
Rituals of Renewal
Rituals give sorrow a vessel, a form that can hold what feels unbearable. Without ritual, grief becomes wilderness without paths. With ritual, grief finds structure and witness, becoming something we move through rather than drown in.
The Irish tradition of keening offers a powerful example. Professional keeners would wail at wakes and funerals, their voices creating a sonic container for collective grief. Their wailing said: your loss is our loss, your tears are our tears, you do not mourn alone. Mexican Día de los Muertos transforms the boundary between living and dead into a threshold of celebration, teaching that grief need not be solemn to be sacred. Jewish shiva creates structured mourning where the community literally holds the grieving, taking over practical tasks so they can focus on feeling.
Japanese Obon honors ancestors through lantern-lighting ceremonies. Watching lanterns drift downstream or out to ocean, carrying prayers and memories, offers a physical metaphor for release—we let go not by forgetting but by entrusting what we love to currents larger than ourselves. Māori tangihanga can extend for days, allowing entire communities to gather, weep, sing, and remember. Grief here is not rushed or privatized—it's given the time and space it requires.
In Andean communities, offerings to Pachamama (Earth Mother) acknowledge that grief extends beyond human loss to include the land itself. Despachos—elaborate prayer bundles—recognize the more-than-human world as alive, deserving of the same mourning rites we offer human kin. Sobonfu Somé describes Dagara grief ritualswhere the entire village gathers at a designated grieving ground, emphasizing that these rituals aren't reserved for death alone—they're preventive medicine, tending to accumulated losses before they calcify into depression or violence.
Contemporary adaptations are emerging everywhere. In Portland, Oregon, monthly grief circles use adaptations of Dagara practices combined with Quaker silence. After California wildfires, communities created memorial groves where people return to mourn and plant trees. Climate-grief vigils organized by groups like Extinction Rebellion gather at sites of destruction, holding space for sorrow while interrupting business-as-usual with the insistence that some things are worth mourning publicly.
The Work of the Heart
Psychologists describe "disenfranchised grief"—sorrow that society doesn't recognize or validate. Pauline Boss expanded this understanding with her concept of "ambiguous loss"—losses that occur without closure or certainty. A loved one with dementia is both present and absent. A climate refugee loses home but not to death. A species sliding toward extinction is simultaneously here and disappearing. Boss teaches that healing from ambiguous loss doesn't come from achieving closure but from learning to live with uncertainty, to hold both hope and grief simultaneously.
Miriam Greenspan's work on "dark emotions" challenges the cultural mandate to be positive. She argues that grief, despair, and fear aren't problems to solve but gateways to wisdom. When we allow ourselves to feel these emotions fully, they become sources of insight and connection. Her practice of "emotional alchemy"—facing emotions without avoidance, surrendering rather than controlling, and letting them transform us—requires enormous courage but reveals unexpected resilience.
Lama Rod Owens brings Black, queer, and Buddhist perspectives to grief work, emphasizing that marginalized communities can't afford to separate personal grief from systemic grief. He teaches that this grief is inseparable from rage, that both emotions are holy, that spiritual practice must make space for anger alongside compassion. His work challenges "spiritual bypassing"—the tendency to emphasize peace while avoiding confrontation with injustice.
Megan Devine challenges the entire "grief recovery" industry. She argues that the pressure to "heal" and "move forward" dishonors grief's reality. Some losses don't get better; they just become part of us.She distinguishes between "clean pain" (the unavoidable ache of loss) and "dirty pain" (suffering added by shame or pressure to be different). We can't eliminate clean pain, but we can reduce dirty pain by creating cultures that accept grief as permanent, that welcome the grieving without demanding they move on.
This is the work of the heart: to remain available to life without shutting down. In grieving, we recover our wholeness and our willingness to protect what gives us life. A community that practices grief is a community rehearsing love.
From Mourning to Movement
Across history, grief has sparked movements. The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo in Argentina transformed private anguish into public testimony, their mourning helping to topple a dictatorship. The AIDS Memorial Quilt humanized statistics, making abstract numbers into names and faces. Standing Rock was grounded in grief for what had been lost and fierce love for what remained, catalyzing a generation of Indigenous-led environmental movements.
The Movement for Black Lives emerged from accumulated grief—for Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Sandra Bland, Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, and countless others. "Say their names" became a ritual of remembrance, an insistence that these lives mattered. Importantly, the movement also developed mutual aid networks that continue beyond protests, recognizing that grief and care are intertwined.
The global youth climate strikes channel intergenerational grief. Young people aren't just angry—they're grieving futures foreclosed, possibilities lost. Rather than letting this grief collapse into nihilism, they've transformed it into moral clarity. After Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico, communities didn't just rebuild—they reimagined, turning grief into determination to create resilient, self-sufficient communities.
The Good Grief Network offers ten-step programs that help people metabolize eco-anxiety and climate grief into constructive action. The steps move from acknowledging feelings to accepting difficult realities to reconnecting with nature and community to taking meaningful action, explicitly linking personal grief work with collective organizing.
The grief-to-action rhythm is simple and strong: gather, feel, honor, act.
In Cascadia, community vigils after wildfires became annual replanting festivals and fire-wise trainings
In urban neighborhoods stripped of trees, grief walks led to community land trusts stewarding parks and greenways
In Minneapolis, communal mourning seeded mutual-aid networks that sustained ongoing civic engagement
These examples reveal a pattern: grief-to-action movements succeed when they create spaces for feeling before demanding doing, when they honor sorrow without getting stuck in it. Communities that skip the feeling stage often burn out quickly. But movements grounded in grief have staying power because they're motivated by love, and love is inexhaustible.
CLOSING INVITATION
Grief, when honored, is not only personal medicine but cultural glue—binding us to one another and to the Earth. It prepares us for reverence, democratic renewal, ethical economics, and whole-systems thinking. It is the foundation upon which all the other Wisdom Hubs rest.
This Hub is an invitation to practice together: to gather, to feel, to honor, and to act. To create communities where hearts can break open rather than shut down. Where vulnerability is recognized as strength. Where love persists in the face of loss.
The path forward requires us to feel deeply while acting wisely, to grieve what's gone while protecting what remains, to honor our dead while serving the living and those yet to be born. This is the Great Work of our time—not to avoid suffering but to transform it into service, not to deny death but to let our mortality teach us how to live.
We invite you to bring your grief to the circle. To speak what you've been holding alone. To discover you're not crazy for feeling what you feel. To find, in shared sorrow, unexpected solidarity and renewed purpose.
The world needs our grief. It needs us to be awake to what we're losing, to refuse to normalize the unacceptable, to let our hearts break in ways that crack us open rather than shut us down. It needs communities that can hold intensity without collapsing, that can metabolize collective trauma into collective wisdom.
Grief is the price we pay for love. And love—fierce, vulnerable, committed love for this aching world and all its creatures—is the only force strong enough to meet this moment.
Come to the circle. Bring your stones. Speak their names. And discover, in the company of fellow broken-hearted beings, that you are not alone, that your grief is holy, and that together we have everything we need to tend what remains.
Help us expand this Wisdom Hub.
Contribute to the Resource Guide. If you know credible projects, practitioners, or research we should include—especially local/bioregional efforts—email: info@navigatingourfuture.org .
Include a sentence about why the resource matters and a URL we can verify.
FOUNDATIONAL VOICES
● Elisabeth Kübler-Ross (1926-2004) | On Death and Dying
Revolutionized Western approaches to death and dying with five stages of grief. Pioneered hospice concepts in the United States. https://www.ekrfoundation.org/
● Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) | Mourning and Melancholia
Distinguished healthy mourning from pathological depression. First to call grieving "grief work." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mourning_and_Melancholia
● John Bowlby & Colin Murray Parkes | Attachment Theory
Provided empirical foundation for understanding grief as rooted in attachment systems. Mapped mourning phases. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Bowlby, : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Murray_Parkes
● C.S. Lewis (1898-1963) | A Grief Observed
One of the first widely-read grief memoirs; normalized questioning and struggling honestly with loss. https://www.cslewis.com/us/
● Viktor Frankl — Meaning-centered therapy:
https://www.viktorfranklinstitute.org/
● C.G. Jung — Archetypal depths of loss:
https://www.jungian.co.uk/c-g-jung/
● Rollo May — Existential psychology and courage:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rollo_May
CONTEMPORARY VOICES
● David Kessler | Finding Meaning |
Added "finding meaning" as sixth stage of grief. Founder of online grief support. https://grief.com/
● Brené Brown | Daring Greatly, Atlas of the Heart
Research on vulnerability and emotional literacy. Grief avoided becomes shame; grief shared becomes connection. https://brenebrown.com/
● Francis Weller | The Wild Edge of Sorrow
Identifies five gates of grief. Insists sorrow must be communal, embodied, ritualized. https://www.francisweller.net/
● Breeshia Wade | Grieving While Black
Centers Black grief within systemic racism and historical trauma. Grief as both personal and political. https://www.breeshiawade.com/
● Pauline Boss | Ambiguous Loss, The Myth of Closure
Pioneer in understanding losses without closure—dementia, displacement, climate losses. https://www.ambiguousloss.com/
● Resmaa Menakem | My Grandmother's Hands
Explores racialized trauma stored in body. Offers somatic practices for processing ancestral grief. https://www.resmaa.com/
● adrienne maree brown | Holding Change
Integrates grief into movement building. Sustainable justice work requires metabolizing collective losses. https://adriennemareebrown.net/
● Lama Rod Owens | Love and Rage
Black, queer Buddhist teacher. Grief and rage are holy; spiritual practice must address injustice. https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/622103/love-and-rage-by-lama-rod-owens/
● Megan Devine | It's OK That You're Not OK |
Challenges pressure to "heal" and "move forward." Grief deserves acknowledgment, not advice. https://refugeingrief.com/
● Miriam Greenspan | Healing Through the Dark Emotions
Dark emotions as gateways to wisdom. Emotional alchemy through presence, not avoidance. https://miriamgreenspan.com/
● Sheryl Sandberg — Option B:
● Joanna Macy | Active Hope, Coming Back to Life
"The Work That Reconnects." Hope is participation, not optimism. https://www.activehope.info/
● Thomas Berry — The Great Work:
SPIRITUAL & CONTEMPLATIVE TEACHERS
● His Holiness the Dalai Lama | Transform grief into compassion
● Pema Chödrön | When Things Fall Apart | Stay with the broken heart
https://pemachodronfoundation.org/
● Stephen Levine (1937-2016) | Unattended Sorrow | Soften around pain
● Tara Brach | Radical Acceptance| RAIN practice
● Thích Nhất Hạnh (1926-2022) | No Death, No Fear | Interbeing and impermanence
● David Bohm (1917-1992) | Wholeness and the Implicate Order | Separation as illusion
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Bohm
● Clarissa Pinkola Estés | The Dangerous Old Woman | Grief creates "hollow bone"
https://www.clarissapinkolaestes.com/
● Lama Rod Owens — Love and Rage:
● Richard Rohr — Center for Action and Contemplation:
● David Bohm — Dialogue & wholeness:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Bohm
INDIGENOUS WISDOM KEEPERS
● Sobonfu Somé (1954-2017) | Welcoming Spirit Home
Dagara grief rituals. Regular collective mourning as preventive medicine. https://www.sobonfu.com/
● Martín Prechtel | The Smell of Rain on Dust
Grief must be as beautiful as the love that preceded it. https://fiveinvitations.com, https://floweringmountain.com/
● Robin Wall Kimmerer | Braiding Sweetgrass
Grief for land inseparable from love for land. The "Honorable Harvest." https://www.robinwallkimmerer.com/
POETS & WRITERS
● Mary Oliver (1935-2019) | "To live in this world you must be able to do three things..."
● Naomi Shihab Nye | "Before you know kindness...you must know sorrow"
https://poetryfoundation.org/poets/naomi-shihab-nye
● Ross Gay | The Book of Delights | Joy and grief coexist
● Joy Harjo:
● Ada Limón:
https://poets.org/poet/ada-limon
● Martín Espada:
END-OF-LIFE PRACTITIONERS
● Frank Ostaseski | The Five Invitations
● Megan Sheldon | The Art of Death Midwifery | Death literacy
https://www.linkedin.com/in/megansheldon/?originalSubdomain=ca
ORGANIZATIONS & CENTERS
● Post Carbon Institute (PCI)
Community resilience and systems thinking; Resilience.org library; practical tools for local adaptation — https://www.postcarbon.org/ https://www.resilience.org/
● The Dougy Center
Childhood grief support https://www.dougy.org/
● National Alliance for Children's Grief
● Good Grief Network
10-step climate grief programs https://www.goodgriefnetwork.org/
● The Work That Reconnects Network
https://workthatreconnects.org/
● Modern Loss
Community storytelling: https://modernloss.com/
● Refuge in Grief
Tools & trainings: https://refugeingrief.com/
● Rainforest Information Centre (John Seed):
https://www.rainforestinfo.org.au/
● ORION Magazine
Nature, culture, place: https://orionmagazine.org/
● Center for Loss & Life Transition:
https://www.centerforloss.com/
● The Grief Recovery Institute
https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-grief-recovery-institute/
● Center for Loss & Life Transition
https://www.centerforloss.com/
● Metta Institute
https://www.mettainstitute.org/
● Somatic Experiencing International
● The Embodiment Institute
https://www.theembodimentinstitute.org/
● Ojai Foundation
Council practice
https://waysofcouncil.net/places/united-states/california/ojai/centers/the-ojai-foundation/
● Star Retreats
Pocket Ranch Institute https://starfound.org/our-history/
● Climate Psychology Alliance
https://www.climatepsychologyalliance.org/
● The Garrison Institute
https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/
PRACTICES FOR HEALING, BELONGING, AND ACTION
Grief Circles & Rituals
Host a Grief Circle — Safe, communal spaces with clear agreements
Seasonal Rituals — Tied to solstices, equinoxes, civic anniversaries
Art as Alchemy — Drawing, painting, poetry for metabolizing grief
Nature Witnessing — Sitting with landscapes as companions in grief
Ancestral Healing — Addressing intergenerational sorrow
CASE EXAMPLES
• Standing Rock Prayer Camps (2016) — lament braided with water protection and treaty defense.
• COVID‑19 Community Memorials — altars, art installations, and vigils that honored the dead and mobilized care.
• Global Youth Climate Strikes — grief for foreclosed futures transformed into moral courage and civic action.
• Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo — private anguish turned into public demand for truth and accountability.
• AIDS Memorial Quilt — memory as movement, reshaping policy and culture.
• Puerto Rico after María — mourning catalyzed mutual aid and community‑owned microgrids.
• Christchurch — communal mourning after mosque shootings strengthened solidarity and reform.
• Minneapolis — grief after George Floyd’s murder seeded durable neighborhood support networks.
• Local Watershed Remembrance Days — grief‑to‑stewardship ceremonies that restored creeks and salmon habitat.
CLOSING INVITATION
Grief, when honored, is not only personal medicine but cultural glue—binding us to one another and to the Earth. It prepares us for reverence, democratic renewal, ethical economics, and whole‑systems thinking.
This Hub is an invitation to practice together: to gather, to feel, to honor, and to act. Share resources from your community and join us in shaping the future.
Help us expand this Wisdom Hub.
We’re actively building our Resource Contributors Network. If you know verifiable organizations, tribes, municipalities, institutions, nonprofits, or businesses doing credible work—especially at local and bioregional levels (and significant national/global sources)—please share them with us at info@navigatingourfuture.org.
Our shared intelligence system depends on community input.
We Invite You to Get Involved
We’re inviting individuals, organizations, and communities to share how you are working with grief where you live — on school boards, in neighborhood councils, watershed groups, co-ops, and tribal governance. These contributions—whether reflections, practices, or projects—will help expand our collective library.
We Invite You to Share Local Governance Stories
Tell us how grief shows up in your community work. Your stories help others find their own pathways to belonging and self-governance.
We Invite You to Contribute Video Stories
We’re building a growing video section featuring grief projects led by communities. Share your story so others can learn and be inspired.
• Send video stories: stories@navigatingourfuture.org
• Share reflections / suggest resources: info@navigatingourfuture.org
Visit: www.NavigatingOurFuture.org
Copyright © 2025 Larry Greene – All rights reserved.
This article is part of the Navigating Our Future series. You are welcome to share brief excerpts with proper credit and a link to www.NavigatingOurFuture.org.
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