PERSON
Joanna Macy
The eco-philosopher, Buddhist scholar, and systems theorist (1929–2025) who gave despair a container—architect of the Work That Reconnects, the spiral of gratitude, pain, new seeing, and going forth, and of active hope as the practice of acting on behalf of life regardless of the probability of success.
Joanna Macy spent five decades building emotional and moral infrastructure for people confronting civilizational crisis. Born in 1929 and shaped by doctoral research at Syracuse that traced the structural parallel between Buddhist dependent co-arising and cybernetic feedback, she developed what she called the Work That Reconnects—a four-movement spiral of gratitude, honoring the pain, seeing with new eyes, and going forth—through thousands of workshops with activists facing nuclear dread and ecological collapse. Her central insight is that the numbness produced by unacknowledged grief is more dangerous than the grief itself, and that the pathway from accurate perception of danger to motivated, sustained response must run through the body’s capacity to feel, not around it. When she died on July 19, 2025, at the age of ninety-six, the AI revolution was transforming the conditions of creative and intellectual work more rapidly than at any previous point in human history—and the framework she
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