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(Re)Wild.

To (re)wild is not to abandon structure, but to return to relationship.

(Re)Wild centers the understanding that humans are not separate from land, food, or community — and that many of the challenges we face stem from disconnection rather than individual failure. This work draws from ecological thinking, embodied learning, and place-based practice to support reconnection at human and systemic scales.

(Re)Wild is not about going back, but about moving forward differently — with more attention, care, and reciprocity.

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Reclaim Relationship.

(Re)Wild invites a shift from extraction to relationship. This means learning from land rather than simply using it, listening to bodies rather than overriding them, and designing systems that sustain rather than deplete.

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Across food, movement, and education, (Re)Wild supports practices that slow down, pay attention, and rebuild trust — with ourselves, with each other, and with the ecosystems that hold us.

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Practice Reciprocity.

(Re)Wild is grounded in the idea that care must move in more than one direction. Nutrition, movement, and learning are not neutral acts; they shape the land, communities, and futures we participate in.

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This work encourages practices that give back — through regenerative food systems, embodied education, and movement that honors place and limits. Sustainability here is not a checklist, but an ongoing relationship.

​© 2025 Duck on the Fox LLC. All rights reserved.
All curriculum, workshops, designs, and written materials are copyrighted works by Michaela Ensweiler. Website design by BlaStauff Media & Designs

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