The Zoo We Built for Kindness
Inside the nonprofit world, kindness often learns a strange choreography. Missions built on healing and care must sometimes perform before wealth, translating kindness into a language capital understands.
Over time, the system begins to resemble an enclosure: causes on display, donors strolling past the exhibits, deciding which forms of goodness deserve to live this season.
And somewhere in the quiet spaces between fundraising dinners and strategic relationships, a question emerges: why does kindness have to audition before it is allowed to exist?
When Former Employees Take Clients: What It Reveals About Business Today
Employees leave. Clients follow.
Nothing illegal, just how it works.
Until one day, you realize you don’t want to play this game anymore.
Your Career Is Not a Stage, It’s a Landscape
We were taught to see our careers as performances. A stage with bright lights, applause, titles, and the constant pressure to ascend.
But life is not a theater, it is terrain. Some of us are climbing mountains, some are navigating deserts, and some are learning the tides of an ocean.
When we stop measuring our work by visibility and start asking what landscape we’re actually in, success begins to look less like applause and more like alignment with the land beneath our feet.
The Soil Beneath Our Markets
Two ways to grow food reveal two ways to build economies. One begins with disturbance, control, and extraction. The other begins with observation, patience, and trust. What if the way we farm soil has quietly shapes the way we farm companies and markets?