The Place You Can Actually Live
Tusita is not an escape from the world. It is a proof of concept that the world can be built differently.
At the center of every Tusita community is a meditation circle.
Around it: dedicated worship spaces — one for each major tradition. Not a compromise space where every religion gets a corner. Distinct spaces, built with care for each tradition's specific architecture of meaning. A mosque with its orientation. A temple with its threshold logic. A church with its nave. A zendo with its emptiness. And above all of them, at the apex of the dome: an open space where no tradition claims the air and all of them share the light.
This is not a design decision made by committee. It is a statement of what Tusita is. A place that can hold multiplicity without flattening it. A place built from first principles: what do human beings actually need to live well, and how do you design the conditions that produce it?
What the Name Carries
Tusita is a Pali word. It means contentment — not satisfaction, not happiness, not success. Contentment. The state of the ones who have found the conditions for genuine flourishing and chosen to build within them.
Not the transcended. Not the ascended. The content.
The choice of name is intentional. Tusita is not a utopian project. It is not an escape from the world. It does not promise to remove difficulty. It is the deliberate construction of conditions — physical, social, economic, architectural — that make genuine flourishing possible for the people who build and live within it.
The word is old. The project is concrete. The roadmap has milestones.
Arrive as a Visitor. Stay as a Builder.
Most places you can visit. Few places you can inhabit. Fewer still let you become part of the architecture.
Tusita operates both registers simultaneously. Visitors arrive for the all-inclusive packages, the wellness retreats, the cultural festivals. They experience what this prototype actually feels like from the inside. The beauty is not curated to keep you spending. It is built by the people who live here and maintained by the community that governs it.
Some leave with a story. Some don't leave.
The path from visitor to builder is not a sales funnel. It is a genuine progression. Contribute — capital, labor, resources — and your position in the community grows. Islander. Steward. Founder. Sovereign. Each tier earned, not purchased outright. Each one granting more governance weight over the community you're helping to build.
The Contribution Score is the engine. Your governance weight is your $TUSITA holdings multiplied by your score. Capital matters. Capital without contribution never captures the community. A builder with fewer tokens and a long record of contribution has more governance weight than a large holder who has never built anything here.
This is the architecture of belonging. Not gatekeeping — earned entry.
The Physical Proof of Concept
The dome is the most honest expression of what Tusita is building. It holds everything inside without privileging any of it. The meditation circle at the center is the one universal — present across every tradition, required by none.
Around it: 100% renewable energy. Closed-loop water. 60%+ food self-sufficiency through vertical farming and aquaculture. Zero-landfill waste. Not aspirations — structural requirements for any Tusita location. A community that depends on external energy supply is not a community. It is a dependent.
Every project in the MY3YE ecosystem finds its physical home here. The engineers building ONEON's network. The artists publishing through Otto Music. The SOS Systems governance participants, for whom governance is a daily practice in Tusita, not a quarterly vote from an apartment. The physical and the digital are not separate projects. They are the same project, expressed at different scales.
The Civilization Argument
There is a version of this story that ends at "luxury eco-resort with blockchain." That is not Tusita.
The civilization argument is simpler and harder: every existing system of collective life was built under constraints — scarcity, coercion, inherited power structures that shaped the architecture before anyone alive today arrived. Tusita is the project of building without those constraints. Starting from the question: what do humans need to live well? And building toward the answer with governance they earn and infrastructure they own.
The dome is a symbol. The roadmap is a fact. Genesis. Pioneer. Expansion. Independence. Civilization.
Full legal sovereignty in at least one jurisdiction — a community not just practically self-governing, but formally recognized as such. That is not distant aspiration. It is a milestone.
For the ones who were handed nothing — we built this for us.