Current Companies

Affordable Mental Health Therapy

Psychedelic Facilitator Lending

About Lundi Ramos

I come from Icelandic and English ancestry, born in Southern California and shaped by a life lived in motion across landscapes, systems, institutions, and thresholds.

I name this not as identity alone, but as orientation. My work is shaped by land, history, responsibility, and the question of what we choose to build when we understand that nothing belongs to us entirely.

Wherever I am, I try to practice stewardship over ownership, and responsibility over entitlement.

My work lives at the intersection of capital, care, and governance. Over the past decade, I have built and led values-driven companies across mental health, public systems, and regulated psychedelic industries. Again and again, the work has been the same: turning ethics into structures that can survive pressure.

I design ventures and institutions that are financially viable, policy-aligned, and built to endure. This work has helped create public cost savings, new regulatory pathways, and durable partnerships across sectors.

I move between roles as a founder, advisor, executive, writer, and therapist. I am a Licensed Professional Counselor, but my work has never belonged to one title. Across every role, I am concerned with the same question: how do we build systems that protect dignity, distribute care, and remain accountable to the future?

Writing is one of the ways I metabolize that question.

My essays explore capital, power, land, psychology, business, governance, and the quiet moral architecture beneath the systems we inherit. I write for people building inside complexity: founders, clinicians, investors, policy leaders, organizers, and anyone trying to make work that does not betray the world it claims to serve.

Grounded in psychology, entrepreneurship, and natural farming, I work with governments, international organizations, NGOs, investors, and entrepreneurs to build institutions that are structurally sound, economically coherent, and aligned with the future of business.

Through my work, I explore how institutions, land, and communities can be cultivated to support human dignity, psychological wellbeing, and long-term resilience.

I create, advise, and write toward futures where care is not ornamental, ethics are not performative, and systems are designed to hold what matters.