Growing in Two Directions
Global Roots. Local Branches. One Connected Field.
Two Ways Organization Happens
There are two ways organization happens.
One connects healers everywhere.
The other builds connection where we live.
Both are necessary.
The First Path: Collective Infrastructure
Much of what I’ve written so far has focused on the first path: collective infrastructure that supports healers across regions, disciplines, and practices. This is the cooperative layer—shared systems, collective buying power, expert access, and professional support that no single healer should be expected to build alone.
That work matters because it changes the conditions of the field as a whole. It reduces overhead. It redistributes burden. It creates stability where there has been fragmentation. It allows healers everywhere to practice with more support and less strain.
But infrastructure alone is not enough.
Healing Is Relational
Healing has always been relational. It lives in proximity, trust, and shared context. It moves person to person, neighbor to neighbor, through places and relationships that cannot be centralized or scaled in the same way systems can.
This is where the second path comes in.
The Root System Beneath the Surface
The cooperative model is the root system beneath the surface.
Roots don’t draw attention to themselves, but they are what make everything else possible. They share nutrients. They stabilize the soil. They allow growth in places that would otherwise be too depleted or unstable.
At a global level, Healers Unite is focused on building that shared root system for healers—so no one is paying full price alone, navigating systems in isolation, or reinventing infrastructure from scratch. This is the layer that creates leverage, continuity, and professional durability across the field.
It’s broad by design.
It’s collective by necessity.
And it’s only one part of the picture.
Every Tree Needs Branches
Branches are where life becomes visible. Where leaves catch the light. Where fruit forms. Where connection happens in real time.
Local organization is about proximity. It’s about finding other healers in your area who understand your context, your community’s needs, and the realities of practicing where you live.
This is where shared space becomes possible.
Where referrals happen naturally.
Where collaboration replaces competition.
Where healers can come together to ask: what does our community need right now?
Local branches aren’t about hierarchy or control. They’re about connection.
They create places for healers to meet face to face, to share resources, to support one another, and to explore ways of offering healing to people who may never have encountered it before.
What better place for healing to take root than where we already live?
Starting Where I Am
I can’t build local connection everywhere.
But I can start where I am.
For now, that means beginning in Raleigh — with Wilmington to follow as additional branches take shape.
I’ll be bringing healers together to talk about shared needs, collaborative possibilities, and ways of offering care within the surrounding community.
And I’ll be building it in public.
Not perfectly. Not with all the answers. But visibly.
Follow along and watch me figure it out as I go — building community near me, learning in real time, and sharing what works and what doesn’t.
Learn from my missteps. Improve on them in your own area.
A Forest, Not a Single Trunk
Healers Unite is not meant to be a single trunk.
It’s a forest.
Shared roots beneath the surface.
Many branches above the ground.
Each shaped by its environment.
All connected.
The global work creates stability and support.
The local work creates relationship and resonance.
Together, they allow healing to move in ways that are both durable and human.
Strengthening Local Roots
This is how we move through change—by strengthening local roots so something healthier can grow.



Love your vision brooke!