Integrative Medicine: A Game-Changer for Global WellbeingIntegrative Medicine: A Game-Changer for Global Wellbeing

Stories from the Hearth

Hearth Summit São Paulo Session Featuring:

Dr. Richard Ghelman, MD, PhD

Clinical Director, Ghelman Institute of Integrative Medicine
🌍 São Paulo, Brazil

In São PauloDr. Richard Ghelman, MD, PhD, Clinical Director of the Ghelman Institute of Integrative Medicine, introduced the audience to the dimensions of integrative medicine and the role it can play in cultivating wellbeing, worldwide.

Watch the session below (in Portuguese) or click the cc button to generate auto-subtitles in a different language.

EXPLORE THE REGIONAL SUMMITS FURTHEREXPLORE THE REGIONAL SUMMITS FURTHER

Dive Into Stories From Around the World

Discover the Science of WellbeingDiscover the Science of Wellbeing

Meet and hear stories from the changemakers exploring how wellbeing works and why.

Arts & Experience Advisory BoardArts & Experience Advisory Board

ANIQUE JORDAN

Carrie Barratt

Dr. Corinna Otto

Lalita Suzuki

MANUEL BAGORRO

Tiu de Haan

Neuroscientific Dimensions of WellbeingNeuroscientific Dimensions of Wellbeing

Stories from the Hearth

Hearth Summit São Paulo Session Featuring:

Raquel Tatar

Chief Scientific Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Center for Healthy Minds
🌍 Madison, USA

In São PauloDr. Raquel Tatar, Chief Scientific Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Center for Healthy Minds, shared the dimensions of wellbeing as seen through a neuroscientific lens. Take a deep dive into how the brain works and influences wellbeing, as well as the emerging Healthy Minds Framework.

Watch the session below (in Portuguese) or click the cc button to generate auto-subtitles in a different language.

EXPLORE THE REGIONAL SUMMITS FURTHEREXPLORE THE REGIONAL SUMMITS FURTHER

Dive Into Stories From Around the World

Discover the Science of WellbeingDiscover the Science of Wellbeing

Meet and hear stories from the changemakers exploring how wellbeing works and why.

Human Flourishing in EducationHuman Flourishing in Education

Stories from the Hearth

Hearth Summit São Paulo Session Featuring:

Enrique Tamés

Director of Human Flourishing Projects, Tecnológico de Monterrey
🌍 Monterrey, México

In São Paulo at the second regional summit held at FACENS University, Enrique Tamés, Director of Human Flourishing Projects, Tecnológico de Monterrey, took to the stage to share insights into human flourishing and education.

Watch the session below (in Portuguese) or click the cc button to generate auto-subtitles in a different language.

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Dive Into Stories From Around the World

Discover Wellbeing in Higher EducationDiscover Wellbeing in Higher Education

Meet and hear stories from the changemakers championing wellbeing in higher education.

Intergenerational Trauma, Ancestry, and RaceIntergenerational Trauma, Ancestry, and Race

Stories from the Hearth

Hearth Summit São Paulo Session Featuring:

Raquel Barros

 Coordinator of the Emotional Collaboration Laboratory (ENLACE) and the
Possible Worlds Community Extension Program, FACENS University
🌍 São Paulo, Brazil

Isabel Santos Mayer

Coordinator, Brazilian Institute of Studies and Community Support (IBEAC)
🌍 São Paulo, Brazil

In São Paulo at the second regional summit held at FACENS University, Raquel Barros, Coordinator of the Emotional Collaboration Laboratory (ENLACE) and the
Possible Worlds Community Extension Program, FACENS University, and Isabel Santos Mayer, Coordinator, Brazilian Institute of Studies and Community Support (IBEAC), joined in conversation on intergenerational trauma, ancestry, and race in Brazil.Watch the session below (in Portuguese) or click the cc button to generate auto-subtitles in a different language.

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Dive Into Stories From Around the World

Discover Cycles of Healing From Intergenerational TraumaDiscover Cycles of Healing From Intergenerational Trauma

Meet and hear stories from the changemakers championing intergenerational cycles of wellbeing.

VenuesVenues

Cankarjev Dom

The Hearth Summit will be primarily held at Cankarjev Dom, the cultural heart of Ljubljana and a beacon of artistic and intellectual life. Its striking architecture blends modern design with a nod to the region’s rich heritage, creating a space that is both visually stunning and deeply inviting. Inside, it hosts a diverse array of events, from world-class performances to thought-provoking exhibitions, making it a vibrant hub for creativity and culture.

The venue’s commitment to fostering dialogue and connection through the arts adds immeasurable value to the community. It’s not just a building; it’s a living testament to the beauty and importance of cultural expression in Slovenia – the perfect space for our community to build our Hearth!

The World Will Not Change Unless We Change OurselvesThe World Will Not Change Unless We Change Ourselves

Stories from the Hearth

Reflections From:

Kotaro Aoki

Co-Founder and Chairmain, KOTOWARI
🌍 Tokyo, Japan

As a new endeavor, we will be holding Hearth Summit Kyoto at the end of this year. As we look for young people to join us on the journey to the summit, let me share my personal background and talk about my own journey so far. This journey began in the Himalayas in India.

Surrounded by mountains that are silent and devoid of any sign of life, where the wisdom of the East is stored, I spent my days training. After studying philosophy at a liberal arts university in the United States, I worked in global investment, and then I set off on a journey of wandering. Through my travels, I realized that the roots of the problems that are prevalent in the world lie in the framework of civilization and human consciousness that have existed for hundreds of years.

This realization turned into conviction through my journey to the wisdom of the world, past and present, and my days of training in the Himalayas. No matter how much the framework of society is reformed, if the consciousness of people who aspire to change does not change, the same problems will be repeated. Above all, the world will not change unless we change ourselves. I was struck by the true meaning of Mahatma Gandhi’s adage, “Be the change you wish to see in the world.”

After returning to Japan a few years ago, I began to give back to society the fruits of my journey. Since last year, my work has expanded beyond generations and borders to connect with the world. Through the management of the retreat “Gandhi 3.0” in India and the “KUNI Initiative” co-run by Haruo Miyagi, leaders in philosophy, religion, politics and business have come together to create a global solidarity that aims to create a new society rooted in inner transformation.

While the world around us is facing a worsening crisis, at the same time, there are strong signs of the birth of a new worldview. We will build the future of society on a foundation of wisdom that will not change over the ages. There must be a way in which the pursuit of personal truth and happiness and the efforts to improve society as a whole can coexist without contradiction. Pioneers who embody this kind of future are beginning to appear around the world.

Global leaders who are at the forefront of this exploration will gather in Japan to create the future of society together with the younger generation. Driven by this vision, this project was born. I look forward to meeting young colleagues who will join me in exploring the future of Japan and the world.

Kotaro Aoki

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Dive Into Stories From Around the World

Discover the Wellbeing Movement in AsiaDiscover the Wellbeing Movement in Asia

Meet and hear stories from the changemakers championing wellbeing in Asia.

Cultivating the Next Generation of Leaders With Wisdom From JapanCultivating the Next Generation of Leaders With Wisdom From Japan

Stories from the Hearth

Reflections From:

Haruo Miyagi

Former President, ETIC (Entrepreneurial Training for
Innovative Communities)
🌍 Tokyo, Japan

For nearly 30 years, I have been involved in nurturing the next generation of leaders. A few years ago, when I retired as the representative of ETIC., which was the foundation of my work, I began to explore the world by broadening the time and space axes, and I had the opportunity to connect with Indigenous communities around the world, which have a history of several thousand years. There, I learned from their ancient worldview and have been working to support them.

As a result of this, I have been meeting more and more world leaders who are seeking new worldviews across America, Europe, and Asia. They seem to have the same deep expectations for Japan as I do for the wisdom of indigenous peoples. Their expectations go beyond mere respect for a different culture with a long history, and they are looking to Japan for the possibility of finding hints for the future.

Since last year, I have been inviting world leaders to Japan with Kotaro Aoki, and we have been talking about the future while making pilgrimages to various places. Overseas leaders who are successful in capitalism in Western society but feel its limitations are looking for a future of creative civilization that transcends East and West. By engaging in dialogue with participants from overseas in Japan, I feel that new possibilities are opening up.

Historically, leaders have taken the lead in solving urgent social needs. I have worked with leaders in my career, and many of them have started companies and brought about change in society through services and products. However, as the younger generation of leaders face today’s world challenges, they are faced with the barriers of thought and action that humanity has accumulated over the past few hundred years. Many people feel that it will be difficult to fundamentally solve the problems if we continue within the traditional framework.

Against this backdrop, the next generation of leaders is being asked to look at the world from an infinitely broader and deeper perspective and to have an integrated view of themselves and the world. This is a new attempt in the history of humanity, and world leaders are just beginning to explore it. Aaron Pereira, Co-Lead of The Wellbeing Project, one of such global exploration networks, contacted us, and we decided to organize Hearth Summit Kyoto.

The summit in Kyoto will be a rare opportunity for young people from around the world to come together and envision the future together without being bound by existing frameworks. Through this project to create this summit together, we hope to accompany young leaders on their quest and contribute to the creation of a new society. I sincerely look forward to meeting young people who share the same vision for this project and are willing to work together to build the future.

Haruo Miyagi

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Dive Into Stories From Around the World

Discover the Wellbeing Movement in AsiaDiscover the Wellbeing Movement in Asia

Meet and hear stories from the changemakers championing wellbeing in Asia.

Connect with Rohini on social media:

Connect with Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies on social media:

Rohini Nilekani

Chairperson, Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies

Rohini Nilekani is an author and philanthropist and has been a strong influence in the Indian social sector over the past three decades. Her philanthropic work spans different sectors of Indian civil society. She founded Arghyam, a foundation for sustainable water and sanitation, and co-founded Pratham Books, a nonprofit enabling access to reading for millions of children. Currently, she is the Chairperson of Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies and a Co-founder and Director of EkStep, a nonprofit education platform. 

Rohini sits on the Board of Trustees of ATREE, an environmental think tank. In the past, she has served on the Audit Advisory Board of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India and the Eminent Persons Advisory Group of the Competition Commission of India. In 2017, she was inducted as a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She has been a member of the Board of Science Gallery Bengaluru, the Advisory Board of the Well Being Project since 2019, and the Dakshin Foundation since 2021. Rohini was voted the Best Grassroots Philanthropist by the Forbes India Leadership Award in 2022. 

Rohini Nilekani is a committed philanthropist and has been named ‘the most generous woman in India’ for the third consecutive time in 2022 by the Hurun India Philanthropy Report. In 2017, she signed the Giving Pledge with her husband, Nandan Nilekani, which commits half their wealth to philanthropic causes.

A former journalist, she has written for many leading publications such as Times of India, India Today, Mint, etc. Rohini’s first book, Stillborn, a medical thriller, and her second, Uncommon Ground, were published by Penguin Books India. Her latest, Samaaj, Sarkaar, Bazaar – A Citizen-first Approach, is a self-published, Creative Commons-licensed book. She is also the author of 17 books for young children.

LEARN MORE FROM ROHINI NILEKANILEARN MORE FROM ROHINI NILEKANI

Content Curation Advisory Board Member

Organizational Wellbeing Specialist

Gayle Karen Young

Senior Advisor, Hearthland Foundation, and Cultivator, Cultivating Leadership

Connect with Gayle on social media :

Connect with Cultivating Leadership on social media:

Connect with Hearthland Foundation on social media:

Gayle believes the world needs more leaders who are “able for” what lies ahead, who have developed the capacity to meet the complexity of global challenges. Working in the field of leadership for the past two decades, it has become abundantly clear to her that there are the visible, tangible, practical, and pragmatic aspects of leadership that need to be executed on a day-by-day basis, and then there is the work of caring for the spaces between people, of seeing complexity and interdependencies, of understanding relationships and power and all the ephemeral things that still excise tremendous influence on the day-to-day behaviors of people. Thus it is the invisible work of leadership, the work of showing up, setting culture, and creating spaces for others to thrive that is the focus of her work. She believes in meeting people and systems wherever they are, and then developing people to work with the full range of who they are to meet the full complexity of the organizational system and operating ecosystem, working with the intangible but critically necessary human substructures to move a strategy forward.

Gayle Karen Young is a cultural architect and a catalyst for human and organizational development. She comes from a rich organizational consulting background with both corporate and nonprofit clients. She was in process of becoming a Zen monk when she became an executive instead, taking on the role of Chief Culture and Talent Officer at the Wikimedia Foundation (CHRO for Wikipedia and its sister free-knowledge projects) until early 2015 when she joined Cultivating Leadership. From high-level strategic thinking to practical implementation, her skills include leadership development, change management, facilitation, training, strategic communications, speaking, team building, and personal and organizational transformation.

Gayle holds a Masters degree in Organizational Psychology. Gayle is passionate about global women’s issues and supporting women in leadership. She is also very much a geek that loves attending Comic-Con and reading science fiction, which inspires a passion for technology and its leverage for societal change. She is keenly interested in the intersection of technology and human rights and supports futurist humanitarian causes. She lives in both San Francisco, California, and Whidbey Island, Washington.

IN GAYLE'S WORDSIN GAYLE'S WORDS

How do you think individual, collective, and planetary wellbeing are connected?

I think of the deep interconnections from the perspective of coherence and integrity. We over-emphasize individual wellbeing as though that were sufficient, and while individual wellbeing is necessary (sleep, diet, and nervous system self-regulation), it is insufficient. One cannot be well if one’s family isn’t well, if your people aren’t well, if your planet isn’t well. 

What do you hope the outcomes are from the global Hearth Summit?

“It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.” – J. Krishnamurti. Greater interconnectedness, greater resilience, greater awareness, and more coherence.

WHAT GAYLE IS READING, LISTENING TO, AND WATCHING

Jennifer Garvey Berger, Changing on the Job (2nd edition) (2024). “It ties deeply between developmental theory and the capacity for resilience and change.”