A circular black and white design featuring a wolf and a dinosaur. The wolf's head is on the left side with its mouth slightly open, showing teeth, and the dinosaur's head is on the right side with its mouth open, showing sharp teeth.

Reconciliation Pathways

Existing to transform place-based understanding, connected to land, relationships, and knowledge.

The Approach

At Reconciliation Pathways, reconciliation is approached as a shared learning journey grounded in relationship and care.  The work supports organizations at all stages, helping them strengthen understanding and translate intention into thoughtful action.  Through strategic advising, training, communications, and purpose-led engagement, let's build confidence, capacity, and approaches to place-based understanding that are thoughtful, practical, and values-aligned.

Reconciliation is shaped through relationships, decisions, and the places where we work and live.  My role is to support organizations in navigating this work with care, clarity, and respect for the land and communities involved.  I bring decades of experience working across Indigenous law, policy, and place, including land negotiations, cultural site protection, and repatriation, but I draw on that experience in service of your context, your questions, and your responsibilities.

Each engagement is tailored and collaborative.  I work alongside teams at different stages of learning, helping translate intention into approaches that feel grounded, informed, and achievable.  Whether you are beginning this work or seeking to strengthen systems already in place, the focus is on building understanding, confidence, and relationships that can be carried forward.

Three mountain goats with white fur navigating rocky terrain on a steep mountain with sparse green vegetation.

Location

Reconciliation Pathways is based at Xwemélch’stn, with deep gratitude for the unceded territories of the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw, xʷməθkʷəy̓əm, and səl̓ilwətaɬ Peoples.  These lands are held in the embrace of the mountains, nourished by the ocean, and shaped by forests, rivers, and the many beings who continue to care for this place.  They have sustained life, law, and story since time immemorial, and they continue to ground the responsibilities, relationships, and approach of Reconciliation Pathways.

Whether you are working within these territories or connecting from elsewhere, we can meet in ways that respect your context and needs, on-site, in community, or through thoughtful virtual connection.  Place matters, and so does how we choose to be in relationship with one another and the lands that hold us.

Services

THE STORY BEHIND THE WORK

  • A woman with long, wavy brown hair smiling softly at the camera, wearing a white top.

    Lisa Wilcox | kwakwemtenaat

  • Guided by the Land

    The land teaches us how to lead—with patience, with clarity, and with care. Guided by land, I help organizations and leaders move from symbolic gestures to meaningful, measurable change.

    My approach is guided by the understanding that reconciliation is not about perfection—it’s about presence. It’s about how we choose to be in relationship—with land, with law, with community, and with ourselves. Together, we create what the land already knows: there is no future without relationship.

“Reconciliation is a daily practice—not a gesture, but a commitment. One that reshapes systems, restores relationship, and redefines how we live with land and one another.”

— Lisa Wilcox, Reconciliation Pathways

Resources

This Morning Routine Will Improve Your Mood

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Raven dancer in regalia

How to Take An Effective Mental Health Day Off

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Exercises To Calm Your Anxious Thoughts

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Indigenous performers playing traditional drums decorated with designs of faces and sun motifs.

The Beginners Guide to Meditation

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