The Coherent Business Podcast

Sam Pressler: Building a Healthy Community Through Civic Renewal, Spirituality, and Local Business

Aram DiGennaro Season 1 Episode 6

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0:00 | 52:56

Guest: Sam Pressler
Host: Aram DiGennaro

In this episode of the Coherent Business Podcast, Aram sits down with Sam Pressler to discuss the complex journey to building a holistic society through the facilitation of healthy civic life, small business, and the need for economic democracy to empower communities. The dialogue reflects a vision for the future that is much more person-centered and connected through intentional relationships and living, 


Topics covered in this episode: 

  • The decline of community institutions, how the economy has transformed community life 
  • Spirituality and it's crucial role in securing a healthy future and healthy relationships 
  • The future of community engagement: building off of past practices, intermixing them with new ideas. 
  • Business contribution to civic renewal by prioritizing community over profit.


Connect with Sam Pressler & Aram DiGennaro (Resources) 

Sam's LinkedIn: Sam Pressler
Aram's LinkedIn: Aram DiGennaro








Chapters

00:00 – Introduction and Background

Aram welcomes Sam Pressler, founder of Connective Tissue, a project exploring how communities rebuild trust and belonging. Sam shares how it began as a Substack newsletter—an experiment in “learning out loud”—and evolved into a network connecting civic thinkers, policymakers, and practitioners working toward renewal.

02:42 – Understanding Connective Tissue

Sam explains how Connective Tissue grew from a writing project into a space for collective experimentation—helping communities test real-world ideas for connection, from town “activity fairs” to partnerships with organizations like the YMCA. He aims to make discussions of social capital not just academic or moralistic, but joyful and actionable.

06:14 – Vision for Civic Renewal

Instead of focusing on short-term goals, Sam thinks in centuries: a world where people feel agency in shaping shared life, belonging to overlapping communities that give meaning and purpose. Civic change, he says, grows “bottom up”—through small, locally rooted experiments that connect across places and evolve over time.

09:48 – Theories of Civic Engagement

Sam explains how civic life shifted from local membership groups to top-down institutions, leaving citizens as clients instead of co-creators. Rebuilding civic health means realigning membership, decision-making, and funding to restore local agency and trust.

20:11 – Economic Democracy and Community

Sam and Aram explore the link between economic and civic vitality. Drawing from Wendell Berry, Sam argues communities can’t be self-governing if their economies aren’t. Local ownership, cooperative models, and antitrust reform, he says, are all civic issues—because where ownership resides, so does power.

29:39 – Spirituality and Community Engagement

The discussion turns to the spiritual side of civic life. Sam notes that as organized religion declines, people still crave spaces outside the market where relationships aren’t transactional. Sabbath becomes a metaphor for reclaiming sacred time and community meaning—a reminder that not all value can be measured in dollars.

39:34 – The Role of Business in Civic Renewal


Business, Sam says, is neutral—it depends how it’s practiced. Locally rooted enterprises can become civic anchors when they treat work as stewardship, not extraction. Aram and Sam imagine a culture where entrepreneurship and community building reinforce each other, integrating purpose with prosperity.