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welcome
This is an invitation to explore the wisdom of interconnection.
To experience the power of presence, care, and belonging.
To discover new ways of being —
more whole, more creative, more alive.


Explore:

Rooted in Deep Ecology, social technologies and SYSTEMS THINKING, my work bridges inner and outer transformation —

in service of a culture of care for ourselves,

for one another, and for the Earth. 

 

OFFERINGS ARE FOR:

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ORGANIZATIONS &
change makers
GENERAL
PUBLIC
GRASSROOTS
COMMUNITIES
STUDENTS
AND FACULTY
Change-makers often find themselves between exhaustion and despair. These offerings support the renewal of purpose, resilience, and collective strength, helping teams meet these times with clarity, presence and heart.
Through deep listening, relational facilitation, and collaborative design, community-led responses to local challenges are supported and strengthened, rooted in lived experience and local wisdom.
In educational settings, reflective spaces invite students and faculty to move beyond theory, fostering ecological awareness and grounded, meaningful responses to the planetary crisis.
As the polycrisis deepens, eco-anxiety, solastalgia, trauma, and ecological grief are increasingly present. These spaces cultivate understanding, emotional resilience, and mental well-being in uncertain times.

Sara Giovinazzo, Italy

“Meeting Fernanda was an experience in itself. The moment I stepped into the room where she was leading her Deep Ecology workshop — a subject I knew nothing about — it was immediately clear that this was not just a workshop, and certainly not led by an ordinary person.
The feeling was that we had entered a timeless space, where we could explore aspects of ourselves and the world that had previously been out of focus.
The journey Fernanda guided us through was one of
discovery, rediscovery, and awareness.”

Roots of My Practice

From a very young age, I learned to witness suffering with an open and courageous heart. One of my earliest memories is from my first visit to India, at the age of four, when I asked my mother to see doctors treating people with leprosy on the streets. I wanted to see reality as it is.

Formed by Tibetan Buddhist philosophy and by encounters across diverse cultures, I learned early to recognize impermanence and interdependence — and to hold suffering and beauty as inseparable expressions of a living, interconnected world.
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