Training
Native Daily Network offers interactive training experiences rooted in responsibility, relationship, leadership, land, and community.
Native Daily Network has facilitated educational gatherings, workshops, community discussions, and public engagement for years, bringing together Indigenous perspectives, environmental stewardship, relationship building, and lived experience. Over time, that work has developed into a more formalized training practice focused on responsibility, relationship, leadership, land, and community engagement.
In recent years, we have also worked with partners including the Cities of Tacoma and Seattle, along with 350 Tacoma, to help deliver trainings connected to disaster resilience hubs and community preparedness.
First Supporter
Our broader training framework, focused on supporting leadership without stepping over it, holding responsibility without centering yourself, and strengthening direction instead of redirecting it.
First Supporter
First Supporter is a multi-day training developed through years of community advocacy, education, environmental stewardship, and lived experience alongside Indigenous communities. It teaches people how to support leadership without stepping over it, how to carry responsibility without becoming the center, and how to strengthen direction instead of redirecting it.
Built through real world organizing, facilitation, and community work, First Supporter helps teams, workplaces, organizations, and community groups understand how support, trust, and accountability actually hold up in practice.
Participants leave with:
- A clearer understanding of how to support leadership without stepping over it.
- Practical language for responsibility, relationship, trust, and role clarity.
- A stronger ability to contribute without taking control or becoming the center.
We Are The Land
While the broader First Supporter framework continues to develop, We Are the Land is currently available as an interactive training experience and facilitated session.
We Are The Land
This two hour interactive session examines Indigenous homelands as lived, political, and ongoing realities. Through discussion, guided reflection, research, and collaborative mapping exercises, participants explore how personal movement, institutional practice, and public language can either reinforce erasure or move toward accountability. The session asks participants to locate themselves in relation to the communities and lands their work impacts, grounding leadership in real context rather than abstraction.
Participants leave with:
• A stronger understanding of Indigenous presence as ongoing rather than historical
• Greater clarity around the limits of symbolic acknowledgment without action
• A more grounded approach to leadership, partnership, and accountability


