b'This is the place where the compass of Buy Low/Sell High goes kaflooey. (Philanthropists come here occasionallylike monarch butterflies migrating to the pine forest of the Trans-Mexican volcanic belt near the border of Michoacn or finance ministers migrating to the Berghotel Schatzalp in Davosto contemplate the problems markets leave behind.)And, yes, for you fans of astrology, mythology and manure-packed cow horns buried under the full moon, this is the place where Jumbo Goddamn Mumbo is frequently seen having two-martini lunches with geomancy fairies and anthroposophical spirits half his age. 2 We need a new myth about people and planet.So writes Spencer Beebe, the founder of Ecotrust. 3He could have said a new myth about money, a myth that allows us to see both the world of money and the world in which we live. Beebes call is all the more interesting in that he is the founder of a nonprofit financial institution with assets of $30 million, annual revenues of $11 million, and a for-profit investment affiliate that owns 100,000 acres of forest, rangeland and farmland. 4Ecotrust is probing the boundary between fiduciary responsibility and a new economic narrative.2 For more on Jumbo Goddamn Mumbo, Zero Chief, Symbiosis and a dozen or so other demigods and goddesses who gathered recently near the Continental Divide, go to Poetically Incorrect (in SOIL: Notes Towards the Theory and Practice of Nurture Capital, Slow Money Institute, 2017).3 Nature State: Ten Parables for the Anthropocene, Spencer Beebe (Ecotrust, 2019), p. 3.4 Ecotrusts mission is to inspire fresh thinking that creates economic opportunity, social equity and envi-ronmental well-being in Salmon Nation (as they call their regional home), focusing on salmon fisheries, food systems and forestry from northern California to Alaska. 7'