A little over fifteen years ago I spent the last week of 2009 with a group of about 30 others, being tutored by Joanna Macy in facilitation techniques for her pivotal “Work that Reconnects”. That time with Joanna was formative for me, and for the work I was to do in the years that followed. It led me to become more active in climate change work in the Salmon Arm area. I had just led a candlelight vigil on a cold snowy night on the eve of COP15 earlier in December, and after I returned from the training with Joanna, I went on to organize more events in Salmon Arm. In later years I also began a column for a monthly newspaper in the area. Her influence led me to live more intentionally.

Joanna died on July 19, 2025, at the age of 96. The world has lost a woman who needed multiple adjectives to describe her: she was a scholar of Buddhism, general systems theory, and deep ecology. She was a writer with over a dozen books, a teacher, and an earth activist. She was also a poet and an eloquent translater of Rilke. She has inspired people around the world.

Joanna Macy. Photo credit Adam Loften

A couple of weeks ago when I learned that Joanna was nearing her end, through the Work that Reconnects Network, I followed her last days with much emotion on the website caringbridge.org. Joanna taught the world in her dying, as well as during her long life. Many have written about her gifts, and how she brought an insightful framework to environmental activism. Rebecca Solnit posted an eloquent reflection on her blog “Meditations in an Emergency” which you can find at https://www.meditationsinanemergency.com/in-honor-of-joanna-macy-1929-2025/

I recall New Year’s Eve December 31, 2009, when I was with Joanna. Each participant took a “Fool’s Leap” into the next year, committing to some action that would be their own “going forth”, the last of four “stages” in the spiral of the work that reconnects.

My Fool’s Leap was to commit to writing the story of my challenges creating a lakeside environmental centre. It took many more years, but I did write that memoir, which became Twin Islands. Here’s the description — https://sarahweaver.ca/projects-and-books-2/

Music was an important part of our workshop, and we even had a song about the Fool’s Leap! You can find it at the wonderful rich website of “Songs for the Great Turning”, by Gretchen Sleicher, who was one of the participants at our workshop. See https://songsforthegreatturning.net/going-forth/fools-journey/

During our workshop, Joanna spoke of commitments that each participant could consider making. She called them “Five Vows”, and gave us each a laminated card with them printed onto it.

I vow to myself and to each of you:

  • To commit myself daily to the healing of our world and the welfare of all beings.
  • To live on Earth more lightly and less violently in the food, products, and energy I consume.
  • To draw strength and guidance from the living Earth, the ancestors, the future beings, and my brothers and sisters of all species.
  • To support each other in our work for the world and to ask for help when I feel the need.
  • To pursue a daily spiritual practice that clarifies my mind, strengthens my heart, and supports me in observing these vows.

These vows have guided me in the years since, although I’ve had many deviations. I am grateful for my time with Joanna, and for her profound influence on my life. Her work lives on throughout the world.

For those unfamiliar with her work, I’ve included a summary of the Work that Reconnects below. These are my words, based on my understanding of her teachings.