We’ll explain the meaning of our symbol

The symbol — a green circle with bubbles — is the brand's most recognisable visual element. It is not merely decorative: it conveys an idea. Namely, that the health of the body and that of the territory are one and the same process, and that living systems are understood as wholes, not as the sum of their parts.

THE CIRCLE · FOREST GREEN

The circle represents holism: the idea that systems — biological, ecological, social — are understood as integrated wholes rather than as the sum of their parts. It is the principle that underpins everything we teach, currently divided into three areas: the body and movement (Holistic EcoYoga), Living Nature (Umanagea) and the living landscape (Geólatra). The colour is Forest Green, that of the parent brand and a serene representation of the nature that underpins each discipline.

THE BUBBLES

Within the circle, several spheres of decreasing size in Bone White, touching one another. They are the perfect metaphor for holism: living systems that exist as wholes rather than as the sum of their parts. From the largest to the smallest, their centres spiral inwards following a ratio that recurs time and again in nature — in the spiral of a shell, in a pine cone or in the arrangement of leaves on a stem —: the Fibonacci sequence, in which each number is the sum of the two preceding ones and whose ratio approximates the golden ratio (φ ≈ 1.618). We do not present this as sacred geometry, but as what it is: an observable pattern. Science with Awareness.

 

THE LOGO

The logo encapsulates the school's core principle in a single image: human health and the health of the territory are one and the same process, and we can learn to belong within it. The spheres symbolise interconnection — the body, consciousness and the earth understood as a single system, not as separate parts. That is why everything we offer, from science-based yoga to nature bathing and nature trails, pursues the same goal: to dissolve the separation between the inside and the outside, and to recognise that human beings are part of nature. Because it's a process of learning to belong.