Support This Work: Help Keep It Rolling

Chronic illness resources that stay free, honest, and nature-centered. Here's how to help keep them that way.
Looking up from forest floor through canopy.
Photo by S. Rolling

Still Rolling Outdoors stays free. Always.

No gatekept content—just real talk about chronic illness, nervous system healing, and adaptive ways to be in the wild. Keeping this going takes time, hosting, privacy tools, and field gear, which right now come out of pocket while managing my own health.

To make this sustainable, the goal is 15–20 monthly supporters at $5 each. If this space has helped you breathe easier, feel less alone, or remember your own pace, here’s how to help carry it further.


🔁 Monthly support (most helpful)

Even $5/month adds real stability. Recurring support means planning ahead—saying yes to the deeper, harder posts, not just the quick ones—and keeping this free for the next person who needs it.

Tiers:

  • Free Subscriber – All posts delivered, no credit card required
  • Supporter ($5/month) – Helps cover hosting and tools
  • Trailblazer ($10/month) – Supports deeper work and field time
  • Patron ($25/month) – Anchors long-term sustainability

Become a Monthly Supporter


💸 One-Time Support


Prefer to give once? Both of these help:

Send a Tip: General support for hosting, privacy, and creation tools.

Support the Gear Fund: Field recording equipment and adaptive trail gear, so the work can keep coming from the places that teach


📬 Can't Give Financially? Here's How You Help

Your presence matters. When you subscribe, comment, or share a post, you help others find the trail.

  • Subscribe (free) – Grows the email list that eventually converts a small percentage to paid supporters
  • Comment – Engagement signals help posts surface in search and discovery
  • Share – Sometimes one post, at the right time, changes everything for someone

Subscribe Free (No Credit Card)


🌱 Thank you

If you can give, thank you. If you can’t, thank you for showing up, reading, and sharing—this is part of the work, too.

We heal by being witnessed, not measured.

And if you prefer to stay anonymous, you’re always welcome.