User
Write something
How To Grow In the Circle
Growth in The King’s Circle is about showing up, reflecting, learning, and taking aligned action. 🌿 This Circle was designed to help you grow in four dimensions: 🌿 Spirit — Strengthen your intuition, connect with your ancestors, and learn practices rooted in African wisdom traditions like Ifa and Vodun. 💫 Strategy — Apply spiritual clarity to everyday life decisions — money, business, relationships, and purpose. 🔥 Wealth — Learn practical tools for building generational wealth through investing, crypto, trusts, and legacy planning. 🌕 Community — Walk with others who understand your journey. Celebrate progress, share reflections, and stay inspired. Here’s what you can expect each month inside the Circle: ✨ Monthly Teachings — Spiritual and financial lessons that bridge ancient wisdom with modern strategy. 🔥 Expert Sessions — Interviews with thought leaders in wealth, spirituality, and creative entrepreneurship. 🌿 Reflection & Practice — Journal prompts, community discussions, and small steps to apply what you learn. 🌕 Behind the Scenes Access — Updates from my films, retreats, and foundation projects. Remember: transformation happens through consistency, not intensity. The goal is not to do everything — the goal is to stay connected and to apply what resonates with you. ✨ Reflection: What area of your life are you ready to strengthen — your spirit, your strategy, your wealth, or your relationships? What would growth look like for you in this season? Keep showing up. Keep planting seeds. Your ancestors are watching you grow. 🌿 — James Weeks
What happens when African spirituality informs how we build AI?
On February 7th at 3:00 PM EST, Olayemi “Yemi” Olorunsola enters The King’s Circle for a conversation that stretches across time — from ancestral wisdom to future innovation. Yemi is a Yoruba scientist, geologist, and IT expert working at the powerful intersection of African spirituality, wellness, AI, and technology. Her work challenges the idea that progress must come at the expense of soul, culture, or community. In this conversation, this brilliant Nigerian scientist will break down: ✨ How African spirituality supports healing, emotional clarity, and alignment ✨ How AI and tech can be used intentionally to empower rather than extract ✨ What it means to build the future while staying rooted in ancestral intelligence Her impact speaks volumes: 🔥 Finalist in the NCWIT AiC Competition for creating an AI-powered mental health app for women 🔥 Semifinalist in the Nebraska Governor’s New Venture Competition for designing a tech-enabled environmental cleanup service At the heart of her work is a commitment to equity, emotional clarity, and empowering underrepresented communities. This is more than a talk. It’s a reframing of what innovation can be. 📌 Set your reminder. Be in the room. The King’s Circle is where wisdom meets the future.
5
0
What happens when African spirituality informs how we build AI?
From Stone Churches to Soul Food: Ethiopia Awaits
Alicia sent me a photo the other day and said, “It’s Christmas in Ethiopia.” The image was of an 800-year-old church carved entirely out of a single piece of rock in Lalibela, Ethiopia—one of the most awe-inspiring sacred sites in the world. She also shared a photo of one of Ethiopia’s most beloved dishes, Doro Wat—rich, slow-cooked, and deeply rooted in tradition. Alicia is an engineer by training and serves as Director of Global Operations at Across the King’s River Foundation. Her husband is from Ethiopia, so this journey carries both personal and cultural significance. We’re currently in the early stages of planning a retreat to Ethiopia later this year—and as members of The King’s Circle, you’ll be the first to know and receive access at a special discounted rate. Part of the reason for this trip is impact. We’ll be raising funds for a Math Center we’re building in Ibadan, Nigeria—an initiative focused on education, opportunity, and long-term transformation. And the other reason? It’s simpler—and just as important. Alicia wants us to have damn fun. To explore ancient ground. To taste the food. To experience the culture. To enjoy the beauty and energy of Ethiopia together. There’s already so much momentum around this, and you can feel it in the audio Alicia sent this morning (attached). We’ll be sharing more soon—but for now, I’m curious: 👉 Are you interested in coming with me and Alicia to Ethiopia? Don't forget to listen to the audio message Alicia sent me.
From Stone Churches to Soul Food: Ethiopia Awaits
Remembering the Roots: A Sacred Journey Through Nigeria
LIVE EVENT | Saturday at 5 PM PST / 8 PM EST ✨ In December, I traveled to Nigeria with three powerful women—Chief Aikulola, Michelle, and Hadiya—to walk sacred lands, reconnect with ancestral wisdom, and experience a journey that shifted us at the deepest level. This wasn’t just a trip. It was a remembering. 🌍 Join us live in King’s Circle to explore: - What truly changed for us—and why - The spiritual and personal lessons we’re carrying into 2026 - How ancestral connection can bring clarity, grounding, and expansion - Insights you can apply immediately to your own growth and evolution - If you’re feeling the call to deepen your alignment and step into the next chapter of your spiritual journey, this conversation is for you. 🕔 Tomorrow — Jan 10, 20265:00 PM PST / 8:00 PM EST 🔗 Join via Zoom: HTTPs://us02web.zoom.us/j/88926099605?pwd=7viDz2N1hjreXe07KM3L1cHNA952eS.1 Meeting ID: 889 2609 9605Passcode: 028970 📱 One-tap mobile: +1 669 900 6833, 88926099605#, *028970#+1 669 444 9171,88926099605#, *028970# Come listen. Come reflect. Come remember.
Remembering the Roots: A Sacred Journey Through Nigeria
Osram ne Nsoromma: The Moon, the Star, and the Stories We Carry
Last night, Chief Aikulola asked me about the star and moon symbol that appears on the King's Circle site. She said she also noticed the symbol in pictures from the Eyo Festival, a historic Yoruba ceremonial procession in Lagos performed to honor royalty and ancestors. It's a great question and It’s called Osram ne Nsoromma — The Moon and the Star. An Adinkra symbol from the Akan people of Ghana. It represents love, faithfulness, harmony, and balance. The moon and the star exist together without competing — each shining in its own time, sharing the same sky. I’m drawn to Adinkra symbols, which is why I want them on my sites. They’re not just beautiful — they represent royalty, African literature, philosophy, and the richness of our cultures. They’re visual storytelling, wisdom turned into design. What I love most is that Adinkra symbols invite reflection. Now that I've explained what it is, what does it mean to you? Do you see it as a symbol of love, balance, partnership, or something else entirely? And have you ever noticed Adinkra symbols before without knowing their meaning? 👉🏾 Tomorrow, I’ll be sharing insight into some of the other Adinkra symbols on the landing page site and the stories behind them. Let’s talk 🌙⭐
Osram ne Nsoromma: The Moon, the Star, and the Stories We Carry
1-13 of 13
The King's Circle
skool.com/thekingscircle
Join a circle where spiritual wisdom meets financial growth. Access teachings, support & transformation—guided by spirit, unity, and prosperity.
Leaderboard (30-day)
Powered by