About Jonathan

Jonathan Relucio is a facilitator and coach who brings over two decades of experience at the intersection of healing, justice, spirituality, and liberation. His work is rooted in authenticity, compassion, interdependence, and honoring the sacred in all beings.

Jonathan’s coaching is shaped by 20+ years of leadership in community organizing for racial justice and immigrant rights, restorative justice, and transformative education. His work spans urban and global contexts—from the South of Market in San Francisco and Oakland to the Philippines and Palestine—supporting communities through mindfulness, movement, and deep relationship.

With a trauma-informed, culturally grounded approach, Jonathan integrates mindfulness, embodiment, meditation, creative expression, yoga, and Earth- and ancestor-based practices as powerful tools for awareness and transformation. He views vulnerability as a strength and coaches with an intentional commitment to reflecting back each person’s highest Self, in service of their deepest purpose and what matters most. He trusts the innate wisdom of individuals and collectives.

Jonathan’s practice is enriched by a decade of teaching trauma healing yoga, meditation, and mindfulness in urban schools, mental health clinics, juvenile detention centers, and Palestinian refugee camps as a Senior Trainer for Niroga Institute. He is an alumnus of Spirit Rock's Mindfulness, Yoga and Meditation Training; East Bay Meditation Center's Spiritual Teacher and Leadership Program; and the Communities Rizing teacher training. He currently serves on the Healing Advisory Council for Filipino Advocates for Justice and is a member of Spirit Rock’s Community Dharma Leaders cohort (2025–2027).

He facilitates transformation in social justice movements with Rockwood Leadership Institute, and co-founded AllThriveEd.org to integrate trauma-informed mindfulness and restorative practices for healing and racial equity in the private, public and nonprofit sectors.

Jonathan honors his Filipino roots and brings his full, embodied self to his work—including his love of dancing, DJing, martial arts, and being in the water. He believes that liberation is a collective path, and that spiritual practice can—and must—support movements for justice and joy.