“What happens when we center Life in all our choices? When regeneration is not a buzzword but a way of being?”
Rutendo Ngara, Member of the Wisdom Council with the OLRs
Beyond Development:
Returning to Responsibility
While the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Inner Development Goals (IDGs) mark significant milestones in global efforts toward sustainability and human flourishing, they remain framed within an anthropocentric paradigm of mechanization and reductionism, prioritizing what humans must develop, rather than how we must relationally evolve.
To meet the scale and depth of today's polycrisis: ecological breakdown, social fragmentation, and technological acceleration, we must move beyond siloed metrics and linear performance indicators while simultaneously deepening into relational wholeness, ecological accountability, and intergenerational reciprocity. As we move through this threshold, both dimensions transform; metrics become relational, wholeness becomes measurable, and entirely new forms of accountability emerge.
The Original Living Responsibilities (OLRs) offer a next-generation process: a biocultural evolution of the SDGs and IDGs, rooted in Original Peoples' cosmologies, Earth-based governance, and kinship systems. This weaves strategy with spirituality, embedding ecological intelligence, relational ethics, and ancestral coherence into the core DNA of organizational life, allowing technical rigor and sacred reverence to inform and strengthen each other, generating wisdom neither possesses alone.
The SDGs illuminate what we must do; the OLRs reveal who we must become to steward life with integrity. Each makes the other more powerful. Where the IDGs foster individual growth, the OLRs expand this into collective relational maturity, creating the field through which coherence emerges across teams, ecosystems, and generations. Where current models channel transformation through growth, the OLRs introduce transformation through right relation, and in the creative tension between expansion and deepening, a third way surfaces: regenerative maturity that knows when to grow, when to pause, when to return.
The OLRs are much more than a static framework. They are a living cosmology and embodied process, carried by Original Peoples and cultivated in alliances through training journeys, reciprocal partnerships, allyship networks, and biocultural futures-thinking immersions. We work directly with organizations, governments, and movements ready to braid their strategy and culture with Earth's laws, Original Peoples' knowledge, and planetary responsibility, holding both contemporary systems and ancient wisdom as co-evolving teachers in an ongoing conversation about what it means to lead with life.
A bit deeper.
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We are consciously choosing to reframe what has often been described as "goals", including influential frameworks like the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Inner Development Goals (IDGs), as Original Living Responsibilities.
While these agendas have drawn attention to urgent crises, their underlying logic often remains entangled with colonial blueprints: linear progress, individual mastery, and the quantification of impact. What is absent is a kinship-based, Earth-centric consciousness, a comprehension that we do not act upon the world from the outside, but are metabolically entangled within her.
"Goals" imply a future to chase, a lack to overcome, a destination always out of reach. Responsibilities, in contrast, are living agreements, invitations to participate with care, reverence, and reciprocity. Rather than asking "What can we achieve?" a responsibility asks "How shall we respond?", even when no answer is clear.
The word "development" itself carries colonial weight, the assumption that some are "developed" and others "underdeveloped," that progress is linear, that growth always equals advancement. This logic has justified extraction, erasure, and the destruction of cultures and ecosystems in the name of improvement. The OLRs compost this paradigm, recognizing that true maturation is not development over others, but relationship with all, where thriving means deepening reciprocity, restoring what's been broken, and honoring what has always sustained life.
In this light, we redefine privilege as the capacity to repair the conditions that created imbalance, an opportunity for restoration.
These Original Living Responsibilities call us beyond "development" as conquest and toward relationship as regeneration, where ancient (and modern) wisdom alongside contemporary innovation inform each other, where biosphere stewardship and human flourishing are inseparable, where we remember how to be in right relation with land, lineage, and life herself.
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In the dominant paradigm, we are taught to treat discomfort and crises as flaws to fix, often through technological solutions applied before we truly comprehend the relational patterns beneath them. Original Peoples' and Earth-rooted traditions expand this understanding: discomfort is also instruction, the land speaking through our nerves, asking us to slow down and listen before we intervene.
As systems unravel around us (and in us), ecological, geopolitical, cultural, economic, spiritual, we are being called to return to rhythm and coherence alongside necessary action. To find our grounding and remember who we are and where we are. When we act from unprocessed trauma or techno-solutionism, urgency becomes our only compass, and we confuse movement with meaning, re-enacting harm under the guise of progress. We optimize symptoms while leaving root causes intact. Systems born solely in urgency and quick fixes tend to preserve urgency and generate new crises.
Responsibility in this time of rupture is relational presence woven with strategic action. It begins with both pause and purpose, comprehending the pattern before intervening in it. It listens to what the wound is teaching while tending what needs care. It asks: What is life calling for here, from both my capacity to respond and the web of life itself?
When we respond from this place, action becomes ceremony, leadership becomes listening, strategy becomes reciprocity. We move with both clarity and devotion, dancing and responding in step with Earth's evolving intelligence.
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Original Living is the return to right relation as necessity. It names the deep intelligence woven into Earth's design: instructions older than empires, encoded in stars, stones, rivers, and story.
"Original" does not mean primitive; it means primordial, foundational, elemental, the first agreements that life made with herself. Like the Mamos of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta speak of the "documents of Nature", the primordial patterns and interconnections of how things function, this is what we mean by Original Living: the original principles of life.
In this way, Original Living is both heritage and contemporary coherence. It is a leadership stance rooted in reciprocity, listening, and kinship, honoring what has always sustained life while responding to what this moment calls for.
It asks: Do our choices reflect belonging? Are our actions in service to life? Do we move from both clarity and reverence?
To live originally is to align systems, strategies, and selves with the pulse of the living world. It is to lead as if Mother Earth were watching, because she is. This is both metaphor and method, poetry and practice, compass and commitment to coherence across time, body, spirit, and system, where ancestral wisdom and emergent possibility inform each other.
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These responsibilities are pathways of collective reweaving. In a culture that often treats knowledge as commodity, sampled, styled, and discarded, we risk turning even sacred teachings into consumable trends.
The Original Living Responsibilities are a living process, an ongoing practice of attunement and participation. They cannot be rushed, cannot be read and studied alone. They must be embodied. They are relational, recursive, and unfolding, a way of being that matures over time through humility, reverence, and response-ability.
Knowledge here is beyond being a concept in the mind, it is gnosis, embodied knowing. It lives in the body, in felt experience, in the way you move through the world when no one is watching. Using these responsibilities without living them misses their essence entirely. They are not about thinking or talking about change, they are about being the change (like Gandhi said), allowing transformation to move through your choices, relationships, and presence.
These responsibilities are not for those wanting to check boxes of achievement. They are about becoming kin with life, deepening coherence and relationality with the living world.
Because the future is about learning to walk together, with the land, our ancestors and all of our kin, human and more-than-human. We must not be so intent on arriving.
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Original Living Responsibilities emerge from a regenerative, relational worldview, one that honors ancestral wisdom, ecological intelligence, and present-moment accountability.
This is leadership as devotion, deepening alongside expansion. Repair through both action and presence.
We don't call this "new" the way colonial history has used that word: New World, New Earth, New Age, as if to erase what came before. This is (k)new, a remembering. What feels new to some has long been known by the land, by Original Peoples, by the mycelium beneath our feet. This is reconnection alongside innovation, ancient wisdom informing emergent possibility.
We offer these responsibilities now as both signal and practice, invitations to remember what has always sustained life while responding to what this unprecedented moment calls for.
Efforts to “change the world” driven by urgency, control, or metrics replicate the very worldview that created the crisis. What we need is not more mastery, but repair rooted in kinship. For Original People, this is a lived reality, and has been, for tens of thousands of years.
Original Peoples, while comprising less than 6% of the global population, steward at least 25% of the world’s land, land that holds around 80% of Earth’s remaining biodiversity. Their leadership, worldview and integrated ceremonial praxis is vital to the flourishing of all life systems.
In this way, the Original Living Responsibilities are received and lived more than they are designed to engineer transformation. They assist us in (re)membering, a putting back together of how life sustains herself: through reciprocity, rhythm, patterns and reverence and how we are nested within those cycles. Right relation is much more than an esoteric daily practice, it is an embodied way of honoring ancestrality, land, lineage, spirit, community and the future.
This is systems evolution, where change deepens into relationship, where optimization serves regeneration, where what emerges honors what has always sustained us.
"Action on behalf of life transforms. Because the relationship between self and the world is reciprocal, it is not a question of first getting enlightened or saved and then acting. As we work to heal the earth, the earth heals us."
-Robin Wall Kimmerer
Collaborate With Us
Our partnership invites organizations into a deeper practice of responsibility, beyond sustainability metrics toward kinship with life. Together, we co-create spaces to share grounded practices, cultivate relational capacities, and shift the narrative from performance to reciprocity. This is leadership aligned with the rhythms of Earth.
Corporate Partnerships
As an initiative of The Earth Elders, you can support the deep work of right relation by becoming a philanthropic partner. Join us in nurturing the capacities rooted in ancestral wisdom, ecological humility, and collective care, that are essential for a just and regenerative future. This is a reciprocal process investing in the conditions for life to thrive.
Philanthropic Partners
We invite academic partners into a living collaboration that moves beyond conceptual information and into transformation. Together, we explore how learning can reconnect us to land, lineage, and each other. Through co-created research, teaching, and dialogue, we nurture the wisdom, humility, and relational skills needed to face today’s challenges with courage and care.
Academic Partnerships
We design and create immersive journeys for leaders ready to root their practice in spirit, ancestry, and Earth. These are experiences of reconnection that nurture right relation and regenerative capacity beyond sustainability.
Leadership Immersions
We partner with hubs and networks to cultivate cultures of care, reciprocity, and shared inquiry. Together, we unlearn extraction and co-create living systems aligned with planetary rhythms.
Hubs and Networks
For practitioners walking between worlds, we offer reorientation. This is an invitation to ground your work in sacred responsibility and return your practice to the pulse of life.