An image of a powerpoint slide from the 2025 "Global Integral Conference" the title says "Finding Wholeness for an integral age".

Embracing Global Connection:

Inclusion Tree at the Integral European Conference 2025

Written by: Michaela Kennedy,

Earlier this year, I had the privilege of representing Inclusion Tree at the Integral European Conference (IEC) 2025 in Hungary, an extraordinary gathering of thinkers, practitioners, innovators, and community builders from around the world. The week was alive with curiosity, heart, and transformative dialogue as hundreds of us came together to explore what it means to live, lead, and create from an integral perspective.

Immersed in the Flow of the Conference

I began each day with a morning meditation practice, a grounding way to connect with myself before diving into a comprehensive program of keynote speeches, workshops, and social events. The themes resonated deeply with Inclusion Tree’s mission of helping people feel seen, heard, and understood.

Keynote Highlights

The keynote sessions at IEC 2025 wove together theory, practice, and lived experience. Each one opened a different perspective on what it means to live and lead integrally in today’s world:

Book cover of “Evolutionary Leadership” by Peter Merry, featuring a subtitle “Integral Leadership for an Increasingly Complex World” and a foreword by Fons Trompenaars. The design includes a vivid purple and pink abstract background with a central spiral graphic.

Introduction to Wyrd Technologies – Peter Merry & Michael Oswald

This session introduced “Wyrd Technologies,” a term pointing to tools and approaches that embrace complexity, synchronicity, and systemic flow. Rather than relying on linear solutions, these technologies help us notice patterns, deepen our intuition, and work with emergence in both organisations and communities. It was a call to recognise the subtle intelligence available when human and systemic awareness converge.

Global Sharing Circle – Bence Ganti

In a moving facilitation process, participants from around the globe gathered in a circle to share their hopes, concerns, and visions. Voices from many cultures were heard, reminding us that integral practice is not just about theory but about inclusivity, listening, and holding space for diversity. The circle itself was the keynote, a lived demonstration of collective presence.

Integral’s Charismatic Presence: Intersubjectivity – Tom Habib

This presentation explored the magnetic, tangible field that emerges when people meet one another with authenticity. Rather than focusing on individual charisma, the talk reframed presence as something co-created between people, an intersubjective resonance. It invited us to pay attention to the relational “between,” not just the personal “within.”

Promotional graphic for the Integral European Conference (IEC), featuring a nighttime photograph of the illuminated Hungarian Parliament Building in Budapest. The top text reads “Map of the Magical-Mystery Tour,” suggesting a themed journey or event. At the bottom, the IEC logo displays colourful geometric shapes alongside the conference name, evoking a sense of vibrant exploration and cultural depth.

Finding Radical Wholeness – Ken Wilber

Here, the focus was on embodiment as the pathway to wholeness. The speaker challenged the tendency to seek integration only in the mind, instead inviting practices that return us to bodily awareness, stillness, and movement. Radical wholeness was framed as a courageous act: choosing to live without fragmentation in a world that often pulls us apart.

What’s Problematic with Grand Integral Theories – Dr Susanne Cook Greuter

This provocative keynote invited us to examine integral theory itself critically. Are “grand maps” sometimes too abstract, too universalising, or even alienating? By surfacing blind spots and limitations, the talk invited a humbler approach to theory, one that stays grounded in lived human experience while still honouring the richness of integrative frameworks.

Inner Development Goals: Challenges and Opportunities through an Integral Lens – Tomas Bjorkman

Aligning with the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), this keynote explored how inner capacities, such as empathy, resilience, and perspective-taking, can support global sustainability. Through an integral lens, the talk highlighted both the promise and the challenges of embedding IDGs into education, leadership, and community projects.

An image of a bonfire with at night time with people standing around the image smiling.

Beyond Holacracy: Love, Psychedelics, Community – Brian Robertson

This session built on experiments in new organisational forms, pushing beyond Holacracy toward models infused with love and transformational practice. With boldness, it invited participants to consider how psychedelics, deep relational work, and community-building can create governance structures that are alive, adaptive, and human-centred.

Triunity Process: The Basic Archetypal Patterns – Dr Pier Luigi Lattuada

Drawing from archetypal psychology, this keynote revealed primal patterns that shape human development and collective life. The Triunity Process was presented as a way of understanding how opposing forces and unifying principles interact, offering insights into both personal integration and systemic change.

The Miracle of WE: Integral Facilitation of Dialogue Processes in Latin America – Raul Aramayo

This keynote shared inspiring stories of dialogue processes transforming communities in Latin America. Using integral facilitation, deeply divided groups were able to discover common ground and heal divides. The session was both hopeful and practical, showing how the “miracle of WE” can emerge even in contexts of struggle.

Indoor musical performance featuring two seated musicians on a softly lit stage. One plays a bowed string instrument, possibly a kamancheh, while the other plays an oud, evoking traditional Middle Eastern melodies. Behind them, a textured wall with abstract art and a row of green plants adds warmth and depth. Several empty chairs suggest a larger ensemble or upcoming performers. The setting feels intimate yet formal, with carpeted steps leading to the stage, all framed within a circular pink gradient border that enhances the contemplative mood.

Radical Wholeness Needs Radical Integral Work – Bence Ganti

A powerful reminder that wholeness is not comfortable. This keynote argued that living integrally requires radical work, including confronting personal shadows, addressing systemic injustice, and leaning into the edges of growth. It was a call to courage, resilience, and commitment to the “hard work” of transformation.

A Journey of Sound Through the Stages – Santiago Jimenez

This experiential keynote used sound and vibration as a map of human development. Participants were guided through tones, rhythms, and resonance that evoked different stages of consciousness. It was more immersive than a lecture, demonstrating how music and sound can awaken awareness beyond the reach of words.

Fractals of Change – Karen O’Brien

Here, change was presented as a fractal, patterns repeating at multiple scales, from individual growth to societal transformation. The keynote offered insights into how recognising these repeating patterns can help us navigate change with greater clarity, compassion, and effectiveness.

Wholeness in Politics: Surfing the Polarities – Dr Elke Fein

This keynote directly addressed the polarisation evident in today’s political landscape. Instead of seeking to erase or avoid polarity, the speaker suggested “surfing” it, holding tension creatively, and using conflict as a generative force. It was a timely reminder that politics can be practised with wholeness and creativity, not just division.

Invoking Wholeness Through Collective Awakening – Craig Hamilton

Here, the spotlight was on collective, not individual, awakening. The keynote invited participants to consider what happens when groups wake up together, when awareness, compassion, and clarity arise not in one person, but in the shared field of consciousness. Practices of group meditation and intersubjective dialogue were presented as gateways to this awakening.

Spiral Dynamics View on War, Politics and Ecology – Said Dawlabani

Using the Spiral Dynamics framework, this keynote analysed war, politics, and ecology as interconnected expressions of human development. It showed how conflicts and ecological crises can be understood as struggles between worldviews, and how solutions must meet each worldview with compassion while guiding humanity toward higher levels of integration.

Group of eight adults standing in a semi-circle on a carpeted floor, smiling and holding colorful paper signs with text. Dressed in casual to semi-formal attire, some are barefoot, suggesting comfort and informality. The background includes a white wall with air vents and a table with miscellaneous items. On the floor, vibrant cutouts shaped like footprints and other forms hint at a playful or interactive group activity. The image is framed in a circular border with a soft pink gradient, enhancing the sense of connection and shared experience.

Changing Education – Jamila Tressel

Education was reimagined here as a holistic journey that nurtures body, mind, and spirit. The keynote highlighted models of education that foster resilience, creativity, and systems thinking, preparing young people not just for jobs but for life in a rapidly changing world.

Bodyway – The Gateway Home – Nor Pecsenka

Closing the arc, this keynote reminded us that embodiment is essential to integral practice. Through breath, movement, and felt awareness, we are invited to return “home” to ourselves. The body, often overlooked in intellectual spaces, was framed as the truest gateway to wholeness.

Together, these presentations created a powerful arc: from theory to lived experience, from the individual to the collective, and from challenges to possibilities.

Workshops & Embodied Learning

Highlights included:

  • Bringing Wholeness to Politics with Deep Democracy – engaging with ways politics can evolve to hold diverse voices and perspectives with respect.
  • Dancing the 4 Quadrants – embodying Ken Wilber’s integral framework in movement, unlocking new insights through experiential practice.
  • Love, Relationship and Flow – investigating the dynamics that underpin human connection.
  • The Powerful Tool of Fasting – learning about resilience, clarity, and renewal through ancient practices.
  • Practice of Intersubjective Non-Duality – deepening into shared presence and connection beyond the self.
  • Archetypal Embodiment and Global Constellation – powerful journeys into the symbolic and systemic layers of our human experience.

Evenings were filled with connection – from the gala dinner to an outdoor tribal community event under the stars – weaving together professional dialogue and heartfelt friendships.

Presenting Our Work: Building the First Company in an Integral We-Space

One of the most rewarding experiences was co-presenting a workshop with Stephane Segatori: “The First Company Built with an Integral We-Space.” Together, we shared Inclusion Tree’s pioneering journey in cultivating organisational culture not only as a structure, but as a living field of connection, compassion, and co-creation.

Participants engaged deeply with how a company can be built from the inside out, where governance, culture, and service all flow from collective awareness, trust, and shared purpose. The discussion reinforced our belief that workplaces can (and should) be transformative spaces that nurture both individual growth and collective flourishing.

A Spirit of Community

Beyond the workshops and formal sessions, the Magical Mystery Tour with fellow participants served as a poignant reminder of the joy of discovery and the power of community. Together, we explored Hungary in a spirit of curiosity and play, strengthening bonds that will continue long after the conference.

Bringing It Home to Inclusion Tree

Attending IEC 2025 reaffirmed for me that Inclusion Tree is part of a global movement – one that is daring to imagine organisations, communities, and societies where love, wisdom, and wholeness guide our decisions and relationships.

I return inspired, more deeply committed than ever to:

  • Embedding integral, human-centred and trauma-informed practices into our daily work.
  • Creating spaces where participants, families, and staff feel genuinely seen and heard.
  • Building bridges between local community needs and global conversations about inclusion, governance, and human flourishing.

Closing Reflection

The Integral European Conference was not just an event; it was an experience of possibility. For Inclusion Tree, it marks another step in our journey of weaving compassion, collaboration, and connection into everything we do.

As we continue to grow, we carry forward the spirit of IEC 2025: a belief that when we come together in wholeness, we can create organisations, and communities that truly embody love in action.