GUIDANCE ON RECEIVING MATERIAL OFFERINGS
Our shared work is not rooted in accumulation, but in conscious support for the unfolding of human integrity, relational depth, and societal evolution. Any material support extended toward this mission is not “donation,” but a mutual act of responsibility — a gesture that must be clean, coherent, and unburdened by complication, ambiguity, or hidden consequence.
1. Unlisted Economic Interests (e.g. stakes in private ventures)
We may receive a share or portion of an enterprise not listed on open markets only when it has been clearly understood, poses no ongoing legal or financial entanglements, and supports the clarity and freedom of our operations. This will be assessed with careful discernment, free from personal or speculative interest.
2. Places and Structures (e.g. land, buildings, spaces)
Before welcoming any physical location or shelter into the fold of our operations, we must ensure it does not carry unresolved obligations (debt, damage, restrictions), and that its presence furthers our capacity to act rather than draining attention or resources. Each possibility is entered into with full awareness of its implications.
3. Invisible Instruments of Value (e.g. patents, crypto-assets, creative rights)
We are open to receiving instruments of value that exist beyond the physical – such as encoded digital value, intellectual works, or contractual interests – only where their meaning, value, and future path are coherent and do not carry liabilities or open-ended obligations.
4. Agreements Related to Mortality (e.g. post-life arrangements)
Where individuals seek to support this work after death – through wills, trusts, or account designations – we honour that intention only when its form is clean and responsibility has been taken to ensure no ambiguity or dispute may arise. All such arrangements must be plainly declared and consistent with our ethos.
5. Unusual or Undefined Items of Support
Where a proposed offering does not fit into any of the above — whether due to form, uncertainty, or novelty — we will only consider it if it bears genuine relevance and requires no sacrifice of clarity, time, or legal simplicity.
RELATING TO THE OFFERER
We do not receive anonymous gifts in which the source remains fully obscured. While discretion is respected, accountability requires that the individual or entity behind any offering is known to the circle of core stewards. This ensures integrity, protects from misuse, and allows us to honour the relational nature of every act of giving.