Zines & Workbooks to help you
Run Toward the Hard Sh*t
Attention as Devotion: Authored by Monica Alanna of @rooted.relating
Your attention is the most limited resource you have.
Attention as Devotion is a 20-page companion for those ready to reclaim their attention as a tool for change.
You didn’t consciously choose to build altars to screens or devices, but here we are. This zine helps you dismantle them, rebuilding your routines with radical care and conscious choice.
You’ll explore what’s happening without shame, offers language for why it’s so hard to look away, and invites you into a different relationship with your devices; one rooted in intention, embodiment, and devotion to what actually matters to you.
Harm reduction, tantric philosophy, and the science of the attention, economy, Attention as Devotion moves you from awareness to practice, excavates what it costs to live distracted, what becomes possible when you reclaim your focus, and how your attention (directed with care) is a form of world-building.
Part companion to our course, Attention 101.
Fully alive on its own.
Conflict is intimacy: a workbook
Conflict is where relationship deepens — if we let it.
The Conflict Workbook is a companion for those willing to turn toward the hard conversations with care. Use it solo, with a partner, or as a guide in your circles.
Created by Grief & Conflict Mentor Monica Alanna of Rooted Relating, with support from Grace Pilled’s Hanna Williams, this workbook offers practical frameworks, reflective prompts, and body-based practices.
Perfect for individuals, couples, and small teams who want to strengthen communication and grow through discomfort — a steady hand for transforming tension into understanding, and reaction into relationship.
“I feel like I got so much more out of this course than what I paid. The relatable personal stories, the one-on-one chats, the worksheets, recordings, and the workbook to revisit in the future.
I've come away feeling better equipped to navigate the sticky situations that inevitably arise by being in relationships with people. From friends, to coworkers, to partners; I know that putting these actionable skills into practice will lead me toward deeper connection with the people around me.
I feel more comfortable with the discomfort of conflict, and grounded in my ability to approach it with compassion and seek repair.”
— Ryan S. Rochester, NY