Dāna — generosity in action
Reciprocity is a matter of keeping the gift in motion through self-perpetuating cycles of giving and receiving.
—Robin Kimmerer
The price of programs and retreats is set as low as possible to limit financial barriers to access. Additional support time is offered freely as a gift.
If the conversation supported you—clarity, calm, inspiration, or a next step—consider offering an amount that matches your means and the value received.
Your dāna helps cover scholarships, software and legal costs, advisors and guest teachers costs, and the seen and unseen time that holds this container.
Donation is optional. Please book freely even if you can’t contribute right now.
Dāna Offering Guidelines
(per 30-Minute Session)
Access Dana · €10–30
For those experiencing financial hardship, students, or anyone for whom money is tight. Your presence and commitment to practice are the greatest offering.
Community Dana · €40–60
For those with basic needs met and some discretionary income. This covers the foundational costs of offering this service.
Supporting Dana · €75–90
For those with comfortable income who can contribute at a level that helps pay-it-forward to support others.
Generous / Benefactor · €100–200+
For those with abundant resources who wish to ensure this teaching remains accessible to all; your generosity creates scholarships for others and helps build next level initiatives.
How to choose your offering
• Consider what feels generous as your finances allows without creating stress.
• Remember that dāna sustains both your session and makes future sessions possible for others.
• Trust your heart’s guidance on what amount honors both your circumstances and the value received.
• No one is turned away for lack of funds.
“Give according to your means and your heart. The teachings are priceless, yet we live in a world that requires practical support.”
Other ways to offer Dāna
(a “gift-web”)
If money isn’t the right gift for you now, reciprocity can be service, care, or creativity. Choose one that feels joyful and feasible:
Compassionate service: volunteer time (meals, crisis lines, childcare), offer rides, check on neighbors.
Care for non-human kin: plant pollinator gardens or trees; join a local clean-up.
Mutual-aid logistics: deliver groceries to elders; repair bikes/tech; share tools.
Skill-sharing & creative gifts: teach a free micro-workshop; record a guided practice; make art for community events.
Spiritual eco-dāna: dedicate a daily practice to someone and send a supportive note.