The Origin
How a kitchen table became
a movement across fourteen cities.

Chicago, IL
One attorney. One phone call. One dinner.
Margaret Osei had been practicing for nineteen years when she realized she hadn't had an honest professional conversation in three. Not the kind where you admit the brief you filed was wrong, or that you don't know how to talk to the new associate who reminds you of who you were before the work hardened you. She called two colleagues she trusted. They met at a kitchen table in Lincoln Square. By midnight, they had agreed to do it again the following month.
Chicago · Detroit · Milwaukee
Word travels the way it always has — through trust.
By the second year, Margaret was fielding calls from attorneys she barely knew. A public defender in Detroit had heard about the circle from a law school classmate. A solo practitioner in Milwaukee drove two hours each way. No one advertised. No one needed to. The only qualification was being honest enough to admit you needed the room.
7 Cities · 84 Members
The circle widened. The stakes deepened.
Chapters formed in cities where the need was loudest — overworked public defenders in Cleveland, solo practitioners in rural Kentucky courthouses, managing partners in Houston carrying sixty-hour weeks with no one down the hall who could tell them the truth. Each chapter found its own rhythm, but every circle kept the same rule: rank dissolves at the door.

14 Cities · 312 Members · Still Growing
The next chapter belongs to someone who hasn't found us yet.
There is an attorney somewhere right now who just lost their first capital case alone. Another who is three months from burning out and doesn't know how to ask for help. Another building a practice in a county where the nearest colleague is forty miles away. Counsel exists for them. The question is whether there's a seat waiting when they arrive.
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