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2026 MY3YE

Blog
March 19, 2026

A Place Built the Way the World Should Work

The gap between the world as it is and the world as it could be is not a mood. It is a design failure. Tusita is the experiment in building differently.

There is a gap between the world as it is and the world as it could be.

Most people feel it. They feel it in the commute that takes an hour each way and gives them nothing. They feel it in the apartment they rent but cannot afford to own, in the city that takes everything and returns noise. They feel it in the distance between people who are supposed to be community and have become neighbors who do not know each other's names.

The gap is not a mood. It is a design failure. The cities we built optimized for throughput, not for life. For commerce, not for rest. For transaction, not for belonging.

Tusita is the experiment in building differently. Not as a utopia. As an engineering project.

What Tusita Is

Tusita is a community-governed physical location — the first of many — built as a Parallel Civilization.

Not a commune. Not a resort. Not a tech campus with ping-pong tables and branded oat milk. A place where the design principles are different: where architecture honors life, where governance belongs to the people who live there, where the incentive of every system is the flourishing of the people inside it.

The centerpiece of every Tusita location is a Dome. Not as decoration. As intention.

The Dome incorporates the sacred architecture of every tradition — the geometry of the cathedral, the geometry of the mosque, the temple's proportional dignity, the stupa's centered calm. Not to appropriate. To honor. The center of every Dome is a meditation circle, open to all, owned by none. The apex is engineered for universal energy exchange — the point where presence accumulates and stillness is possible.

Believers of every tradition have a place of worship inside. No tradition is privileged. No tradition is excluded. The architecture itself is the declaration: we came to honor all of it.

The Governance Model

Tusita does not have a landlord.

The community that lives in Tusita governs Tusita. Decisions about shared resources, new construction, community agreements, and the allocation of the income the location generates — these are community decisions, made through the same contribution-weighted governance that runs through the MY3YE ecosystem.

Your voice in Tusita governance is earned by your presence and your contribution. The person who has maintained the gardens for a season has more governance weight than the investor who flew in for a weekend. Consistent Energy, Structural Impact, Weighted Resonance. The formula runs. The priest has no role.

Tusita also functions as a destination. Visitors come to see an alternative way of living — and by coming, they contribute to the economic sustainability of the community. The income from travel, stays, and events flows back into the community treasury. The guests pay to experience what the builders built. The builders earn from what they built.

The community owns the result. The result funds the community. The loop is closed.

A Node in the Network

Tusita is not a single location. It is a protocol for physical community.

Every Tusita location runs on the same governance structure, the same architectural principles, the same commitment to universal welcome and community ownership. They connect through ONEON. Resources, knowledge, and community support can flow between them.

A person who builds their governance weight in one Tusita carries recognition into another. A community that develops a solution to a shared challenge — waste management, energy production, education — can share it across the network. The intelligence that runs the ecosystem learns from every location and serves all of them.

This is the Parallel Civilization aspect. Not a single utopian bubble, destined to collapse when the founders leave. A protocol that any community can run, in any geography, with any culture — connected by shared principles and shared infrastructure.

Why Physical Matters

The digital layer of the MY3YE ecosystem is important. It is not enough.

People need places. Physical community. The density of shared space that produces trust, cooperation, and the kind of social fabric that remote work and group chats cannot replicate.

SOS Systems builds the pathways to bring people in — from displacement, from conflict zones, from underserved communities. ONEON builds the network they move through. Tusita is the place they arrive.

Not permanently. Not for everyone. But for the ones who need a place to rest, to rebuild, to contribute, to prove their value before moving on to build their own corner of the world — Tusita is the infrastructure of belonging.

The Name

Tusita is a realm in Pali cosmology — the realm of contentment, where beings who have earned their way through previous rounds of existence rest before their final passage.

We chose the name deliberately. Not because we believe in cosmology. Because the idea is true: contentment is earned, not granted. The destination arrives after the work. And when you arrive, you rest not in stasis but in readiness — ready for what comes next.

The river moves. Tusita is where you rest before moving with it again.


Tusita is in active development. Visit tusita.xyz to follow the build.