Momentom Collective has been undeniably blessed with being able to create and collaborate with some truly incredible human beings. From every discipline and passion and unique calibration, we have had masters in their field come and give their gifts and provide insights into how they use certain tools and techniques to get where they are.
Teachers and residents have become dear friends over time, and Stephen is a long standing believer in the medicine and lessons of community living and the potency of collective human intention.
We sat down with Stephen to get an understanding around some of the things that motivate and inspire him in his personal world, after so many accomplishments.
Stephen is the founder of renowned permaculture community Puntamona, and has been an outspoken advocate for regenerative agriculture practices world wide.
Stephen was featured in the Netflix documentary, Down to Earth, where he takes the host Zac Efron on a tour of Puntamona to share his passion for fruit forests, sustainable living, and how returning to harmony with nature NOW is the only way we can ensure a better future for our children.
We got to know the man behind the name a little deeper, and really wanted to know WHO IS STEPHEN BROOKS, and what makes him tick?

Who is Stephen Brooks?
I’m someone who feels like I was able to fast forward life many years ahead and I’m trying to assimilate all that information and to macro-redesign.
I’m always asking questions like, “What are our cities and towns going to look like in 50 years? Where is our water going to come from? Where is our food going to come from? What’s the commute going to be like from my house to my best friend’s house? What would my ideal life situation look like?” And then, “How can I create that?”
I would say that has been my role. It’s a difficult role because it requires a lot of patience, especially with state of the world and with bureaucracy. I’m doing my best to push these ideas forward.
This looks like quite a number of projects for me that I’m involved in.
1. Punta Mona is a school, or an “Eco-Versity.” It’s a training ground for the next generation to re-design the world on both a physical and a spiritual level. We’re experimenting radically with green building and agriculture.

Q: What is your purpose?
My purpose is bridging the future with now.
Many years ago I used to host the TEDx conference at Burning Man. One year, I introduced a man who was talking about automation. Billions of people left the countryside to go live in the cities to work in factories. In the next 20 years, all of those factories are going to be run by computers, and all those people are going to lose their jobs. Which could be complete chaos, mayhem, and war. Or, we can get really prepared. So, how can we get the countryside ready to receive billions of people that are about to return?
Who I am is being a messenger and a bridge to a lot of this. I am on a major mission to keep screaming this vision and also just trying to have fun as I go.

Q: Where do you see the world in 5 years?
We’ll be a lot further along. A lot of these things are happening now, but separately. When I first woke up to a lot of this in 1995, there were no health foods stores or Whole Foods. Now, Walmart is selling organic. So it IS happening.

Q: What can we do as individuals to move the future forward?
As part of our intention was to be multigenerational, two of the little ones accompanied our journey. Bringing in chaos and cuddles, we were reflected, our patience was tested, but we understood the importance of staying in our child state, our playful state, and not take things too seriously.

Q: What does circus mean to you?
When I was in 5th grade we had to do a report on a famous person, and I did mine on PT Barnum. So, in some ways, what circus brings up to me is the tortured animals, or other backside aspects of the circus.
On the other hand, I’ve always been someone who enjoys arriving early to festivals – whether it’s Burning Man or Envision – because I love being part of the build. I love the roadie vibe of being en route to the circus.
I was on tour at the Grateful Dead, a “Deadhead,” which meant I was literally part of that circus. But I love the preparation, and to create this alternative world so that the common everyday people can come and get a taste of how sweet life could be. And that’s what the circus does: it takes people out of their norm. I think the more we can take people out of their norm, the better opportunity we have for them to realize things could be different.
Additionally, circus is connected with community. My first taste of this was in the parking lot of the Grateful Dead show in 1988. It changed my life: to taste what it feels like to live in a community. What it feels like to be surrounded by people that have similar values, that was revolutionary for me.

Q: What about festival culture propels you to create these experiences for mass amounts of people?
I want to wake up as many people as possible.
When people have these experiences, they often don’t want to go back to the old ways. I also think the combination of plant medicine and festival reality is a really unbelievable combination of “wake up.” You wake up to the reality of the cosmic joke of it all. And then you get to go to the festival and actually see it and in real life. It’s exciting and it gives me so much hope.

Q: What inspires you and why?
One of my biggest inspirations was in 2003-2004. I drove to Costa Rica on a caravan of vegetable oil powered buses. It was like a circus literally driving through Central Park. It was freaking epic.
I was really inspired by how it felt to be living that way. Also, we were on the front pages of the newspapers in Mexico City and Honduras and around the world. Through these interviews and this exposure we were reaching millions of people talking about combining quality of life with purpose.
So, I’m constantly trying to find how I can have fun and enjoy, while changing and influencing as many people as possible.
That’s why things like Envision or Eclipse Gatherings bring mass amounts of people together. I like to create these events for people; events that truly change them. Where they can say, “Before I went to Punta Mona I was one way, and when I left I was forever changed.” Or, “Before I went to Momentom I was one way, and after I left my life was never the same.” I want to try and create that as much as possible.

Q: What can people expect from meeting you in residency?
What they can expect is that they’re going to get some real outward inspiration.
I find a lot of people in our tribe are so internal and they’re doing so much self-work. But I wonder, what are all these enlightened people going to do if they go back to live in their same suburbs? If they go back to live in the same old ways that they’ve been living in?
We need to recreate the outside, so that we can keep cultivating the inside. We need to re-create the way we’re living, where we live, where our food is coming from, etc. If we’re still sitting in traffic, still commuting to work in old ways, and still doing jobs that are not radically improving the world – then, we’re still part of a system that’s destructive.
So, my goal at Momentom is to be a deep inspiration for next steps. Not only for the residents, but also for the team at Momentom as well.
For those who attended the Green Residency in December 2022, I am sure they can attest to that. Thank you Stephen for being such an epic example of what it means to be a community leader and a team builder, and someone we will continue to build a bright and beautiful future with.