What’s new with Corinna Moebius

It’s been quite some time since I updated my website, social media, or anything else. I’ve been on something of a hiatus — focusing on writing projects and on the development of new workshops, courses and walks. See my Calendar of Events for my latest offerings!

March 2025

This March, I decided to transition from TerraViva Journeys as the name of my business to operating under my own name. I’ve been working on two major projects: completion of the manuscript of my second book on Little Havana and development of my Core-Respond framework, which I will be sharing in upcoming workshops and courses.

My client Envoys Educational Travel (a really great company to work with),  hired me for a second time, and this year for the Global Educators Summit in Miami, Florida in April. I will be leading an all-day “walking workshop” in Little Havana focused on decolonizing immigration narratives. I’m excited to put into practice my principles of regenerative tourism, which I will be sharing with the group, all of them K-12 global educators from across the U.S. I will also be attending the conference!

February 2025

In February, I participated in one of the last leadership courses (Leading Through Collapse) led by Professor Jeb Bendell, founder of the Deep Adaptation movement and facilitator Katie Carr. In this online course, we learned how to lead with insight, care and moral imagination.

November 2024

I attended the Historic New England Summit in November for the first time, and really appreciated its focus on civic engagement, arts and culture, and surfacing silenced histories.

After the conference, I joined the nonprofit Atlantic Black Box for its “Where Walk” in Maine, a “Walk for Historical & Ecological Recovery,” and specifically its “The Descendants Walk” in York. During our stroll through York Village, we reflected on the visible history of the landscape, and what memories of historical violence and what legacies of racism remain embedded here, often obscured behind a romanticized Colonial Revival facade.

The walk helped participants notice the connections between how we “other” certain people and how we “other” the land itself. The day concluded with a meal served by neighbors and a very moving performance by Antonio Rocha called “Malaga,” inspired by a ship built in 1832, in Brunswick Maine, and used as  part of the already Illegal transatlantic trade of African captives to the Americas, especially Brazil.