
community workshops
Tools for navigating a world in polycrisis
We know that the world feels painful and overwhelming for many people, and that it is not always possible to provide free psychosocial support to everyone. We are living in a context of social, political, and environmental polycrisis, where emotions such as eco-anxiety, powerlessness, information overload, and a sense of being lost are becoming increasingly common.
In response, we design community workshops open to the general public: spaces of encounter that offer psychosocial tools and resilience practices aimed at transforming emotional overload into understanding, care, and sustainable action.
Accessible, collective spaces with real impact
Our workshops and talks are designed for people who feel the weight of the global context, but who may not be part of organized activism. We work with accessible, clear, and sensitive approaches that help people name what hurts, understand what is happening, and recover internal resources to navigate uncertainty without disconnecting or collapsing.
Experience and collaborative networks
Over recent years, we have facilitated open workshops and public talks in collaboration with a range of organizations and networks, including:​
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Organizations linked to Nobel Peace Prize laureates.
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Greenpeace.
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VOICOT, an organization focused on preventing violence against animals with wide reach on social media.
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Vipassana Buenos Aires, with whom we developed a series of free meditation sessions open to the public.
These experiences have allowed us to work with broad and diverse audiences, adapting our content to different cultural and social contexts.
An accessible and sustainable model
Our goal is to keep these workshops low-cost and accessible, without sacrificing quality or depth. At the same time, this model helps to:​
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Sustain the work of the organization.
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Support free psychosocial care for defenders of life.
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Generate valuable insights based on the experience and knowledge of our therapists, strengthening our methodologies.
Participating in community workshops not only offers personal tools, but also contributes to a collective cause.
Caring as a form of action
We believe that, in times of polycrisis, learning how to sustain ourselves emotionally is a deeply political and collective act.
These workshops are an invitation not to harden or disconnect, but to find more humane and sustainable ways of being in the world.