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Notes and Reflections on Rewilding


Reflections from the book “What would nature do?" by Ruth DeFries
Nature doesn’t predict. It prepares. In a world that changes faster than we can plan,nature never clings to control.It learns. Adapts. Begins again. For millions of years, living systems have faced uncertainty — droughts, storms, extinctions — and yet life continues, not through perfection, but through pattern.Through principles that protect what matters most: connection, renewal, resilience. To rewild learning is to bring these same principles into how we teach, lead, and i
K Ramnath Chandrasekhar
Nov 92 min read


Rewilding Learning: Leading Like a Living System
Reflections from the book “Regenerative Leadership: The DNA of Life‑Affirming 21st Century Organisations by Giles Hutchins & Laura Storm Design the system like a living ecosystem Instead of rigid curricula detached from place, design a learning environment that mirrors natural rhythms: observation → feedback → adaptation. Let students and community members become co-designers of their learning. Cultivate culture & being Encourage behaviours such as curiosity, collaboration, r
K Ramnath Chandrasekhar
Nov 91 min read


Rewilding Thought and Action
Reflections from the book ”Sand Talk” by Tyson Yunkaporta Thinking. Being. Doing. Learning is not a subject.It ’s a way of being in the world. In the old systems, thinking stood apart, dissected, measured, timed.But in nature, thought, being, and action move together, like roots, soil, and rain.To rewild learning, we bring them back into conversation.Not hierarchy, but harmony. A Series of Yarns Every insight begins as a yarn, a circle of stories, laughter, pauses, contradic
K Ramnath Chandrasekhar
Nov 92 min read
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