22 years of coaching taught me: prioritizing others unlocks collective potential. Through language, teaching & systems that reward unity, we can unite humanity. Success starts with "How can I serve?"
Tribalism and Belonging
Tribal instincts once helped us survive. Today, neighbors can learn to use them for care—rewriting everyday stories to include, connect, and belong.
How Neighbors Rewrite Borders
A child can cross a river yet be stopped by paperwork. Onyx and her son Jasper face the quiet borders hidden in forms and office hours—until a neighbor helps. A photocopy, a translation, a call answered by a human turn bureaucracy into belonging.
Borders and Belonging
Borders are choices that cage people by birthplace. Birds cross freely; humans face passports, checkpoints, and indifference. Statelessness traps millions in limbo. Super WEgo calls neighbors to act—help with forms, welcome newcomers, and refuse systems that deny dignity.
We Learn It Too Late
At 103, Dr. Gladys McGarey shows healing is ordinary: love, kind laughter, meaningful work, patient listening, and small acts of attention. A warm reminder to notice, care, and let tiny acts add up into real healing.
We Are Cousins, Act Like It
If science tells us we’re all distant cousins, what would change if we lived like it? This piece turns that insight into a practical invitation: one breath, one intention, one small act—habits that shift us from “me‑first” to “we‑first,” rebuild neighborhood care, and make kinship a daily practice.
Connection Beyond the Cord
Beyond the cord: pregnancy swaps cells that linger for decades, weaving mothers and children together. Microchimerism reframes motherhood as biological and emotional interdependence—an invitation to live “we‑first.”
Dad, Is My Body 100% My Own?
Our bodies are mosaics: pregnancy swaps cells that can live for decades, blurring “yours” and “mine.” Microchimerism reframes identity as shared—an invitation to a we‑first life that honors connection, lineage, and the quiet ways we carry one another.
Dad, Why Do Humans Have A Belly Button?
The first cut of the cord was more than a medical moment—it opened me to a sacred link. The belly button became a daily emblem of interdependence, urging a shift from “me‑first” to “we‑first” through gratitude, small rituals, and shared care.