Regen Commons
Already a commoner

How much of your life is already a commons?

The air you breathe. The language you speak. The knowledge passed down by people you'll never meet. Commoning isn't something new. It's something to remember.

And yet, the common sense of tending common ground is easy to forget. We build from scratch. The fruits of our efforts die on the vine. What we could offer each other — for mutual benefit — stays scattered, undiscovered. What could change if we commoned more often?

Tending the commons

Commoning is a practice.

Commoning isn't joining an organization. It's choosing, daily, to share what you know, tend what you didn't plant, and hold things in trust rather than ownership.

Commoning practice

Tend what you didn't plant

Find something in the commons that someone else contributed. Use it. Improve it. Pass it forward. The value of shared knowledge grows with each hand that touches it.

Finding our footing

The regenerative movement is growing.

For it to flourish, it needs tending — and we are just beginning to remember how to cultivate fertile soil together. What conditions will nourish our common ground?

We each have a role

The regenerative movement needs shared ground.

A place where your knowledge stands alongside others. Less gets lost when a project ends. Where the invisible labor of coordination becomes visible. You don't have to carry everything alone.

A doorway

Commoning is a choice.

The regenerative movement doesn't need us to create something new. It needs us to share and tend to what's in front of us.

Everyone who finds their way here is invited to plant something first. An ask. A sentence. A seed. For what you hope can blossom within the Regen Commons.

Already in the ground

Explore what's been planted.

Hover over the seeds to see what's growing.

Make an offering

I wish we would common…

Add your vision to shape what becomes possible in our shared commons. A sentence, a hope, a seed. It doesn't have to be polished. What you plant here joins what others have planted — together, these visions become the field.