Jessie Kleemann reflects on ancestral technologies of earth acknowledgement and preservation that have allowed generations of Indigenous communities from Kalaallit Nunaat to build and sustain a balanced environment. She honours forms of embodied knowledge that have unfolded in the Greenlandic ecosystems over centuries. By asking urgent questions that arise in communities who experience environmental disasters, she investigates how particularities of place can be protected and transmitted to future generations. Through body language and movement, Kleemann operates a sacred journey around the sun in order to restore buried beliefs and technologies that are paramount to the collective crafting of possible futures. In quest of constant transformation, Kleemann draws from the vibrations of her own body in order to connect with her inner and outer self as well as all the living entities that surrounds her. Kleemann’s performative call for interconnectedness between the human and its land is voiced in Kalaallisut accompanied by soundscapes. The presence of needles and threads, flowers, seeds, coffee, food, and fabrics are symbolic to acts of sowing and resowing one’s relationships towards all human beings as well as Mother Nature.