Care is part of what communities must organize, not just feel.
Social Fabric supports care by helping communities make support pathways visible, relational, bounded, and durable. Care becomes more trustworthy when it is held with memory, context, and shared responsibility.
Care as infrastructure
Care is not an optional soft layer around community life. It is part of the infrastructure that makes participation, stewardship, and resilience possible.
Help made visible
Help requests, help responses, and support pathways help communities make care legible and actionable rather than leaving it buried in private exhaustion.
Healing through tending
Tending is love in action. Consistent care, trusted responsibility, memory, and relationship can help restore the conditions that trauma disrupts.
Care with boundaries
Care also requires governance. Boundaries, consent, role clarity, and trusted review help communities support one another without turning care into confusion or extraction.