Welcome friend!
Mycelial* threads is an organic collaboration - Our goal is to let the threads go where they may to help make connections and ground us where we belong.
This is a co-created space. A community of practice. A symbiosis of creatives✝.
We seek to answer some questions:
What’s missing? Despite all of our “producing” and “accumulating,” people still feel a sense of lack. How can we live more fulfilled lives?
What would nature do? (WWND?) How can we learn from and emulate nature in our designs and ways of being together?
We are exploring:
-How to connect with nature through our entire selves (mind, body, spirit)
-Grounding, mindfulness and flow: working with our hands, moving our bodies helps us connect with ourselves, each other and the earth
-Modern twists on ancient practices (artisans and technology; salvaging and storytelling)
-And more (this is an ever evolving space)
All served with a generous dash of mystery and a heaping spoonful of whimsy.
This SubStack is for you if:
You are curious about the natural world
You believe there is more to life than money, stuff, and fulfilling ephemeral human desires.
You seek hope and regeneration.
You know that when humans connect we can do anything.
You believe our mind, body and soul are connected (not separate entities); we exist in the world with our bodies.
Intrigued? Make sure to Subscribe and stay tuned for a new post every Tuesday.
✝ If you are human, you are creative. It may have been suppressed in you as a child, but it is there nonetheless - waiting for you. Have you ever engaged in imaginative play? Daydreamed you were somewhere else? Solved a tricky problem using nothing but your own brain power? That was you, being creative.
*Mycelium: the mass of branched hyphae that make up the (mostly) underground part of fungi. Hyphae are tubular, linked, thread-like structures that are responsible for gathering nutrition (either from the soil or from a host), transporting nutrition to other fungi and to plants, and enabling communication between other fungi, bacteria and plants. Cool fact: the largest organism on earth is the honey mushroom (Armillaria gallica). Its mycelium is over 2500 years old and weighs 440 tons (the size of 3 blue whales).
I love this idea! Thank you both!!! Looking forward with curiosity and anticipation.
Wondrous!!