November 2025 Eco-Spiritual Calendar
- Rick Bonetti
- 2 days ago
- 4 min read
Updated: 2 hours ago
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Here's a list of some upcoming online and Rogue Valley in-person eco-spiritual activities that may interest you. Check back, as this post will be updated during November as we get additional information, and a new calendar listing will come out in late November 2025. Don't be intimidated by the scope of this list; choose to participate in just what calls to you.
October 22 at 4:00–5:30 p.m. PDT - Center for Christogenesis will have special guests Brian Thomas Swimme and Monica DeRaspe‑Bolles for a live webinar that explores this cosmic story and the role every person plays in its unfolding. More information here.
October 23, 30, 2025, and November 13, 20, 2025, at 4 p.m. PT - Convergence is hosting a 4-part series: In Search of a New Story: Reimagining What Comes Next. Each session is 90 minutes, online via Zoom, exploring "what it means to search for a new story—one rooted in interconnection, courage, sacred imagination, and collective renewal." Register here.
"Join spiritual pioneers Dr. Matthew Fox and Rev. Cameron Trimble for a timely and transformative four-part series featuring conversations with some of the most compelling wisdom voices of our time: Ilia Delio, Carolyn Myss, Rabbi Rami Shapiro, and Diana Butler Bass."
October 23, 2025, at 5 p.m. PDT - Greenfaith is inviting everyone to join them for a movement-wide call to connect with folks from across the country, share next steps to strengthen and create GreenFaith Circles—local, faith-rooted hubs for action, care, and community—and preview our next national campaign. Register here.
October 24-26, 2025, from 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. PDT - Humanitys Team is celebrating the 16th Annual Global Oneness Summit - Awakening the Divine Within.
October 24-26, 2025 - Center for Action and Contemplation is offering ReVision 2025: The Webcast - "reimagining a Christianity that empowers us to meet this moment in history with clarity, courage, and compassion" featuring Fr. Richard Rohr, Brian McLaren, Carmen Acevedo Butcher, James Finley, Diana Butler Bass, Fr. Greg Boyle, Lerita Coleman Brown, Rev. Dr. Jacqui Lewis, Carlos Rodríguez, Mirabai Starr, and Randy Woodley Live online with after-event replay. Cost: $250, $175, or $99. More information and registration here.
October 27-29, 2025 - Institute for the Future (IFTF) is having its Ten-Year Forecast 2025–2035: Strategy in the Age of Chaos.
October 28, 2025, from 6-9 p.m. PT - SOCAN's monthly meeting at the Medford Public Library will be on the topic: Heat Beneath the Waves: How Climate Change Transforms Our Seas with Dr. Bill Gorham, Coastal SOCAN Co-Facilitator and longtime climate educator. Gormal "will dive into the hidden impacts of greenhouse gases on our oceans—revealing how rising temperatures and acidification are reshaping marine ecosystems, disrupting coastal communities, and accelerating global climate feedback loops.
Through vivid examples and accessible science, Dr. Gorham will illuminate how ocean changes ripple outward—affecting food security, weather patterns, and the health of coastal economies."
October 29, 2025, at 7 p.m. PT - Join Asia Philanthropy Circle and Project Drawdown for the launch of a groundbreaking new report, Drawdown Roadmap for Food, Agriculture, and Land Use (FALU) in Southeast Asia. Register now >>
October 29, 2025, at noon PDT - Pachamama Alliance is hosting Resilience and Possibility in These Times - a conversation with Chris Ategeka, a Ugandan-born systems thinker, engineer, and author who asks a simple, urgent question: "What does it mean to be human in an age that keeps pulling us away from ourselves?" Register here to join the call.
October 29, 2025 - Peace House in Ashland, OR has been running a 4-week Resisting Militarism training series, challenging attendees to think: how would you respond if federal agents are deployed in our community? Session 4 is on Land, Space, and Direct Action. Controlling space, whether it’s a government building for staging operations or public land for mining uranium, is necessary for military action. How do we support land defenders and resist the building of new spaces for militarized policing? Sign up at https://donorbox.org/events/808433/steps/choose_tickets. This is the last session with just a few spots left. Email Meg (meg@peacehouse.net) if you’d like to join or get on the waitlist for the next time we run the series. Dates coming soon!
November 6, 2025, at 9 a.m. PT - Institute for the Future (IFTF) is having a 30-minute public conversation: Signal Swap: How to Discuss Signals. Register here.
Nov. 17th - Dec. 15th, 2025 - "The Cosmos Within Us: Living A Path of Transformation" based on Brian Swimme's Powers of the Universe with Betsey Crawford.
November 13, 2025, at 10 a.m. PT - Join climate scientist Kate Marvel, Ph.D., as she explores climate science and solutions through the lens of different emotions, from wonder to anger and fear, and finally to hope. Register now >>
November 13, 2025, from 6-9 p.m. PT - SOCAN is having its fall fundraiser Sips for Sustainability at Ashland Elks, 255 E. Main Street, Ashland, OR, with guest speakers Rep. Pam Marsh and Senator Jeff Goden.
December 4, 2025 - From Oregon Climate Action Hub: Central Oregon LandWatch will host two special presentations by National Geographic Explorer Kiliii Yüyan at the Tower Theatre, as the closing events of the 2025 Livable Futfure Forum.. In appreciation of the many groups and organizations that make Central Oregon a more just and vibrant place to live, they are making 100 complimentary tickets available to their 3 pm event. Click here by October 25th for tickets.
Postponed until 2026 - Earth Literacies' Sisters of the Earth Community offers: The Great Work of our Time: Loving Earth, Saving Humanity, Gail Worcelo, Holly Wilkinson, Amie Hendani & Maria Dipal bring a wealth of wisdom and knowledge to this subject, beginning |12:00 Noon Eastern. Registration is now open.
Rogue Valley Voice aggregates and curates information from many third-party sources and does not necessarily endorse all aspects of others' work. Still, we find their viewpoint provocative and interesting enough to encourage the reader to engage with and come to their understanding and actions, as they deem appropriate.



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