How the two properties work together.
One breath, two lungs. The Speakeasy inhales. The Headquarters exhales. Members move between them as a single rhythm.
The typical member year.
A Lighthouse Member might visit the Speakeasy for four to eight evenings a year, attend one or two full retreats at the Headquarters, and spend a private week at the house for their own work. A Guardian layers governance and founding-era gatherings onto that rhythm.
Each property has a specialty.
The Speakeasy is designed for an evening to be remembered. The Headquarters is designed for a week to change you. Confusing the two dilutes both.
One set of rules, two architectures.
The charter applies identically across both properties. What differs is only what the two rooms are physically designed to hold.
An illustrative member calendar.
Questions, answered.
Lighthouse Members usually visit the Speakeasy several times a year and spend at least one extended stretch at the Headquarters.
Occasionally. It is not the default. Doekwesy was designed for the Speakeasy.
Both are private. The Speakeasy is more often the first point of contact for invited guests. The Headquarters is more consistently members-only.
A private sanctuary is an act of discernment on both sides.
Founding seats, full membership, and aligned hosting inquiries begin with a single private conversation. There is no public waitlist and no mass onboarding.