11/09/2025
After attending the recent advanced training in Zimbabwe 🇿🇼, accredited educator .earth had this to share about her experience:
Who do you trust when it comes to our land, our food, and our future?
Frameworks and charts help measure progress and inform policy. But during an advanced training at the Africa Centre for Holistic Management (.holistic.management) near Victoria Falls, I was reminded of something deeper. Ultimately, it’s not diagrams or statistics that heal landscapes; regeneration is carried by people aligned around shared values. In an age of climate anxiety and social divides, it was a reassuring reminder: real change happens when people find common ground in caring for the land.
At ACHM in Zimbabwe, we learned in an open-air classroom by day and around a campfire by night. People from different backgrounds discovered a common language of land and life. Each person brought a unique insight, and together they formed a chorus of possibility.
Listening to these voices, I realized renewal is not a solo act. It’s a collective effort. The week was powerful not because of any one guru or technique, but because of the harmony of perspectives – ranchers, educators, butchers, investors, conservationists – all united by purpose. In that circle, I saw a glimpse of what the world needs: collaboration across generations and disciplines, rooted in respect and care for the land.