Deep Colonisation Recovery Circles - DIY Guide

This is a simple process for small groups to explore, unpick and begin to heal the trauma of growing up and living in systems of domination. The text is below - or click the button to download it as a PDF

The trauma of domination, superiority and colonisation have caused and continue to drive our most challenging crises at every level, from our bodies, through our relationships and our social structures. We need to be able to address this at every level to create lasting change. 

Deep Colonisation Recovery circles are a format for connecting personal, relational and social change and healing. They are places to bring together the personal and political, the inner and the outer, to generate recovery and healing for ourselves and our wider societies. 

The format: Regular (e.g. weekly) meetings in small (e.g. 4-10 people) to share our experience of colonisation and practise personal and cultural decolonisation and detraumatisation. Over the course of a few weeks (e.g. 5-6 minimum), these groups develop the safety and support to begin to dig into and heal our personal and cultural trauma together, while also co-creating ways to make social interventions that will address wider social trauma.

The form: There is no one ‘correct’ way to do this - but our suggestion is - start simple: 

  1. Spend a few minutes being quiet together, with each person following their own practice for settling in their body and checking in with how they’re feeling in the moment. If someone is leading this, be sure to leave plenty of quiet for people to follow their own process.

  2. Divide the remaining time equally between the people there, so each one can have roughly the same amount of time to speak. You can do this by the clock, or by each one's sense, depending on how flexible your time is - make sure no one is left behind. 

  3. Speak in rounds, so that each person knows when their time to speak will come. This lightly ritual format has been used by humans for millennia and creates safety. Aim for at least two rounds if at all possible. 

  4. The light guidance for speaking is: 

    • Speak from the heart and listen to others from the heart.

    • Don’t interrupt others - keep to the circle.

    • Keep what’s said confidential. 

    • Remember the power of space and silence - a whole round of silence could be just what’s needed. 

  5. Aim to work in three rounds (you could think of these as: head, heart and hara - our centre of power in the guts): Each round has a question to respond to in relation to the them your group has chosen to focus on (see list below). In round one the question is: what I think about the colonisation; in round two it is: what I feel about the colonisation; in round three it is: what next small wise step am I going to take to address the colonisation.

The content: Pick an area of shared focus for each session. If an idea comes up in the pre-circle chat, use that, or pick one from the list below. 

  • Perfectionism

  • Play

  • Being/getting it right

  • Professionalism

  • Addiction

  • Gentleness

  • Work

  • Land

  • Education

  • Sleep

  • Health

  • Conflict/fighting

  • Money

  • Death 

  • Authenticity

  • Power

  • Dance

  • Appearance

Useful notes

It could be useful to have a pre-meeting with the group before diving into the rounds, to start to build relationships and share any expectations or anxieties. In diverse groups there will be very different experiences of colonisation and some people may need more time and/or safety than others. The best attitude to cultivate is one where the whole group is sensitive to these very different experiences - and we are willing to go at the pace of whoever needs most time so that we can all journey together.

This pre-meeting could also benefit from developing some shared agreements. People in the group will have their own ideas about what kind of agreements help them to relax and feel safe in a group - it’s worth taking time with this as it can make the difference between a supportive practice and a triggering one. Here are a couple of examples that may be helpful:

Relationship with ourselves

We will work to better understand our inner worlds, to heal our own trauma and to build self acceptance, love, capacity and resilience. We will work toward housing our sense of individuality within the wider collective that we are part of.

Relationship with others

We will work towards better understanding of our inter-relationships, being open and honest in our dealings with one another, working to treat one another with kindness and compassion, to heal ruptures between us and to the best of our ability focus on our shared purpose.

Prioritising the need for an ongoing, growing learning and understanding of both trauma and colonisation will keep the group working towards health and wholeness. Being gentle and empathic with ourselves and others while not shying away from difficult areas will help us avoid overwhelm. 

We are on the road to recovery together and will often make mistakes. A good rule of thumb to check whether we’re moving towards health or re-experiencing trauma/domination is that healthy emotional responses move us (often through challenging territories of rage, grief, or fear) towards connection, fairness, relaxation and love - unhealthy ones don't.

Use the safety of the circle as place to practise, to build skills and strength to build awareness of your own and our collective power and which can help bring a grounded sense of vulnerability, honesty, challenge and a decolonising awareness to places in your life which are not so safe and which don’t yet have agreements around the need for deep change e.g. our families of origin, communities or workplaces. 

Ongoing education is also crucial. There are many great books, websites and other resources that can help develop our thinking and practice. Here are some good places to start:

Red Nation

Starter Culture

Gesturing Toward Decolonial Futures

Allyship and Anti-Oppression resource guide

Deep Adaptation decolonisation resource page

Here are some more thoughts on decolonising our meeting and decision making practices.


BlogsEva Schonveld