A 7-Day Living Capital Play Challenge
You already have more riches than your bank account reflects.
This challenge is 7 days of noticing — and naming — what's already blooming.
Starting on Earth Day — April 22, 2026. Seven audio prompts. One living capital per day. A map of wealth that finally includes you.

You look at your life and see abundance everywhere — the garden springing back to life in Spring, the friendships that hold you, the skills you've built through decades of care and curiosity. Your children are fed. Your neighbors trust you. Your ideas are alive.
And then you open your banking app. And the number there tells a completely different story.
That gap isn't a failure. It's a measurement problem. You've been assessed by a system that only counts one kind of capital and ignores the other nine.
Rich Right Here Now doesn't ask you to earn more. It asks you to count more accurately.
Again and again, the research lands in a place many of us have already felt in our bodies: wealth is wider than money and life becomes more livable when we learn to recognize what is already supporting us.
Regenerative economics has been naming this clearly for years: flourishing emerges when many forms of capital are in relationship, not when one metric is pushed to carry the whole story. John Fullerton and the Capital Institute point toward living systems that grow resilient through circulation, interdependence, and multiple kinds of nourishment. Financial capital matters, of course, and it does its best work when held inside a wider ecology of relational, material, ecological, creative, and spiritual wealth.
Neuroscience research on scarcity shows that when the nervous system is bracing, attention narrows and imagination constricts. When the body experiences enoughness and perceived safety, more room opens for creativity, relational openness, and a fuller sense of possibility. In this framework, that is somatic capital: the lived wealth of a body that is not constantly being asked to survive alone.
Research on gratitude shows measurable shifts in the brain, including activation in reward pathways, social cognition networks, and the medial prefrontal cortex. These shifts are linked with more prosocial behavior, more connection, and greater wellbeing over time. And importantly, gratitude for relationships tends to nourish people more deeply than gratitude for possessions alone. Which means abundance is often registered through belonging before it is counted through ownership.
Social capital research across family life, workplaces, and communities keeps finding the same thing: relationships directly shape wellbeing, and each layer matters in its own way. Relational deprivation carries real costs for health, resilience, and creative capacity, even when other resources are present. The people who know you, trust you, feed you, challenge you, and remember you are not extra to the picture of wealth, they are a great part of its structure.
Research in Ecology and Society and related community resilience work shows that values-centered dialogue builds shared capacity, coordination, and care. Conversation is not just a way to describe what matters; it is one of the ways communities learn how to tend what matters together. That is why dialogic capital is not supplementary here. It is the medium through which all the other capitals circulate, become visible, and come alive between us.
Each morning, a short audio prompt arrives. You listen. You notice. You name what's already here.
By Day 7, you'll have a personal Living Capital inventory — a record of wealth that no market crash can take from you.
$7
(Regular $97; value $208+)
Your own 7-day audio journey. Listen at your pace. Keep your map forever.
Seven days. Ten capitals. One invitation to count what actually counts.
Created by Genevieve M. Westerman and The Strategic Heart Enterprises LLC
If you can't find your answers to your questions regarding this challenge, Contact Me.