Wealth Dojo.
Coming soon in 2026.
About the Wealth DojoWealth is a sacred accelerant: it will either deepen devastation or accelerate the composting of extractive systems. Right now, systems are shifting, shedding skins, and stuttering toward futures we cannot yet name. Moving wealth wisely in this time between worlds is a transformative manoeuvre and a crucible of leadership.
Amidst all this flux, we sit at critical junctions. Those of us with access to concentrated financial resources are already shaping the field — already accelerating certain futures by funding or defunding, by reinforcing familiar patterns or resourcing the experimental. The question is: with what awareness, and toward what futures? Wealth stewards are potent leverage points — if we're willing to train in the dynamics of complexity, entanglement, emergence, and collective reorientation. And if we're willing to sit with a different question than the familiar one. Not, "What can I do with my wealth to help?" but something far more demanding, "What is being asked of me by the web of life I am entangled in?"
This is why the Wealth Dojo exists, as a rigorous and relational practice ground for wealth stewards to develop the inner, relational and systemic capacities needed for this era of upheaval. To stay present inside complexity, uncertainty, and consequence — and to practice new rhythms of response, where ecosystems meet, where roots hold tension, and where the soil is working out its next chapter. Philanthropic foundation staff and advisors, wealth holders, wealth managers and family office professionals are all positioned to redirect capital flows, storylines, and possibilities—moving wealth wisely in a time between worlds. We have three different offers that we are inviting you into.
Our Practice Grounds
Practice Micro Doses.
Short-form practices for reorienting how wealth moves.
We offer a series of short-form practices — standalone online training sessions of 90 to 180 minutes, hosted by Wolf Willow partners and faculty, that you can take individually or as a package. Each one opens a different question about how capital moves and what it makes possible. How do you give when you can feel the web your giving lands in? What shifts when the field of counsel widens to include ancestors, future generations, and the more-than-human world?
Through story, dialogue, somatic sensing, and systemic insight, each session is a different doorway into the same core question: what happens when you slow down enough to feel what money is actually touching? You will explore what it means to fund the forest rather than just the trees, to honour slow transformation that linear metrics will never capture, and to discern when funding is sustaining structures whose time has passed. This is not gentle work — the patterns that shape how wealth moves are deep, and shifting them requires honesty, nerve, and a willingness to be changed by what you find. We cultivate a richer awareness from which more skillful and liberating choices can emerge. These are not lectures. They are places to train.
Rewilding + Reclaiming Wealth.
Reorienting wealth in conversation with the more-than-human world.
Rewilding and Reclaiming Wealth is an in-person, land-based immersion that invites participants into direct relationship with the more-than-human world. Through time on the land, participants are supported to unlearn familiar ways of perceiving wealth, success, and responsibility, and to cultivate new forms of attention shaped by ecological intelligence, limit, reciprocity, and interdependence. The work is about shifting orientation—so that wealth can be felt, understood, and moved differently.
The experience is hosted by core Wolf Willow faculty and grounded in Wolf Willow’s approach- ways of doing, being, knowing, relating and belonging - alongside the accompaniment and expertise of carefully chosen philanthropic and investment guides. The immersion creates conditions for participants to become more courageous, more discerning, and more commensurate with the realities of this moment—across wealth distribution, investment strategy, and philanthropic decision-making.
Alongside time with the land and more-than-human world, the program may include opportunities to connect with social innovators and practitioners working at the edges of regenerative futures, systemic change and deep transitions.
Matriline: Multi- Generations of Women.
A 9-month hybrid accompaniment within The Wealth Dojo for women wealth holders across multi generations of family.
Intergenerational wealth without rites can produce ‘ghost’ capital — resources carrying the unmetabolised weight of what came before. For some families, that means unresolved obligations and silences. For others, it means a powerful ancestral thread that is seeking a full voice. Either way, without a conscious passage, wealth moves on autopilot — sometimes shaped by patterns no one has chosen to examine or that no longer serve.
This 9-month hybrid journey is an extended practice ground for women wealth holders across multiple generations of family. It offers accompaniment through a rites-of-passage process that supports families to reckon with how wealth has moved through their lineages, what it has protected, what it has carried, and what it is askingto become.
This is not about optimizing family governance or securing continuity. It is about slowing capital down enough to be moved with greater presence and discernment — across generations, across time, across more-than-human worlds.
Through a woven arc of online sessions and in-person gatherings, participants engage practices of eldering and listening, imagination and futuring, root-system work, and place-based inquiry. The work invites women to sit together inside complexity: grief and gratitude, inheritance and refusal, care and consequence. Wealth is approached not as an asset to be mastered, but as a relational force that binds families into wider ecological, historical and ancestral fields.
This offering may take the form of a small cohort of families walking alongside one another, or a more intimate accompaniment with a single family. In both cases, the emphasis is on moving wealth in ways that are truthful, grounded, and commensurate with the times we are in.