Getting There from Here highlights people, ideas, and movements that have sparked transformative change throughout history.
You’ll find both inspiration and practical tips for participating in the life‑affirming worldview taking shape today.
Getting There Means Taking Action
Inspirations, Examples, Ideas
The world is evolving at breakneck speed, and will continue to do so. We can choose to glide along in the wake of the change, or we can help to pilot the future we want to see.
What You’ll Find in This Section
This section features the many ways in which transformative change has occurred in the world, and serves as an inspiration for what each of us can do to help. Here you’ll find topics related to:
- steps we can take to move toward a more interconnected state
- individuals, organizations, and grass-roots efforts aimed at making meaningful change
- How people like Martin Luther King pursued change despite the challenges he faced
- How scientists such as Einstein pursued new views of reality despite resistance
Small Things Matter
We don’t need to be experts to be involved in creating the future want to see. All of us can be involved in taking small steps along the way— steps such as:
- lending a hand to someone who needs support
- joining organizations that are working toward a better future
- strengthening our communities
- practicing the values we want to see reflected in the world
These things and more are the types if things all of us can do to help build the future we want to see.
Featured Articles

M.L. King, Jr. — Moral Clarity in a Nation Divided
In a time marked by fear, division, and entrenched inequality, M. L. King, Jr. held to a larger truth — that beneath all the ways

Einstein’s Persistence in Advancing a New Worldview
Einstein is now synonymous with genius, but in the early 20th century he was a young thinker whose ideas seemed too radical to be taken
Food for Thought
What you do makes a difference, and you have to decide what kind of difference you want to make."
Jane Goodall
Small Things We Can Do
- Support people in need. Offer your time, skills, or resources to those facing hardship—not as charity, but as a way of strengthening the social fiber we all rely on.
- Seek out local or national groups working on issues like sustainability, democratic reform, education, or community resilience, and contribute in whatever capacity you can.
- Engage with people who hold different perspectives, seek to understand, and work towards reducing the polarizatoin that keeps societies stuck.
You must be the change you want to see in the world.
Mahatma Gandhi
Resources...
A global community offering perspectives, analysis, and community to help people grow and thrive in a rapidly changing world.
A changemaking organization applying contemplative practices toward societal transformation and environmental change.
A free, digital library with extensive resources on effective activism.
A perspective on social change as a natural part of human evolution.
More Articles

M.L. King, Jr. — Moral Clarity in a Nation Divided
In a time marked by fear, division, and entrenched inequality, M. L. King, Jr. held to a larger truth — that beneath all the ways we separate ourselves, we belong to one human family. His moral clarity, grounded idealism, and courage in the face of resistance helped a divided nation

Einstein’s Persistence in Advancing a New Worldview
Einstein is now synonymous with genius, but in the early 20th century he was a young thinker whose ideas seemed too radical to be taken seriously. His breakthroughs helped accelerate a shift in how we understand reality, but his path was anything but smooth.

Gandhi’s Resolve in Redefining Power
In the early 20th century, Mahatma Gandhi’s leadership in nonviolent resistance emerged alongside a broader unfolding in how we understand reality—across science, society, and culture—each contributing a thread to the weaving of a new, more interconnected worldview.