radical courage

Radical Courage is a conscious act of stewardship for the world we co-create.

It is a big ask. Let's unpack it.

Purposeful Agency
Anchored in clear intention, humility, and a sense of personal mission. It’s the courage to act, speak up, and protect what matters.

Responsible Leadership
When we can stand in our strength, set clear boundaries based on good principles. This power is responsive, not reactive. It uplifts and empowers others.

Grounded integrity
It means acting with congruence - aligning words, deeds, and values - transforming inner conviction into outer change.

Place your hand over your solar plexus, just above the navel.


Feel the energy there - your inner fire.
Breathe into it. Wake it up.‍


Let it know that it is time.
Let it reconnect to your bigger mission.

Guiding question

How can I reclaim my power and use it with wisdom - today, right now ?

Extend your capacity to take responsibility. Be present to and respond to the world – rather than to be overwhelmed or reactive.

Embrace your unique super-powers and think of them as sacred gifts that only you can give to the world

Set boundaries with grace. Notice where you need to say “no” or “yes” to honor your energy and priorities.


Affirmation: I meet the world from my center. I respond with courage. I carry power with care.

Ritualize

Evoke - Embody - Evolve

Engage the ring

See the GUIDE to refresh them

Satyagraha is a term coined by Mahatma Gandhi, meaning “truth-force” or “holding firmly to truth.”

Satya means truth

Agraha means firmness, insistence, or holding fast.

It describes a form of power that does not rely on domination or violence. Instead, it emerges from unwavering alignment with truth—expressed through thought, word, and action.

It is the strength to remain rooted in principle, even in the face of threat or coercion.

Satyagraha is not submission, and it is not aggression. It is a third stance - one that holds its ground without attacking.

The term Soulforce was later used by Martin Luther King Jr. to describe it: A moral and spiritual force capable of confronting injustice through inner coherence rather than external force.

Soulforce does not operate through reactivity or ego. It arises from integrity, presence, and the refusal to abandon one’s sense of what is right - even under pressure.

Soulforce sits at the meeting point of ethics, action, and identity. It is not bound to any one tradition or culture, and it has appeared wherever people have met injustice with presence and refused to look away.