Declare a Surface.
Name one thing you could realistically offer if the right need appeared nearby.
FavourBucks.com
Offer a ride, a tool, a meal, a skill, or a spare hour. When a favour closes, the people involved can record it, settle it, and help the Group get stronger.
Pay Maya
The site should not force everyone through the same story. A neighbour, a caregiver, a builder, a donor, and a protocol reader each need a direct path.
Name one thing you could realistically offer if the right need appeared nearby.
Not an emergency request. Just one practical thing that would raise your standard of living if a trusted person could help.
A Group turns scattered kindness into shared assets, risk cover, local memory, and the capacity to do more tomorrow.
A useful favour often needs more than one person. One route, one tool, one witness, one shared asset. The protocol keeps the pieces legible without making the human part feel mechanical.
Each example shows the same shape: capacity on one side, need on the other, Group capacity in the middle.
How the favour composes
A neighbour has a car and a free Tuesday morning. Someone else needs a careful ride home from day surgery. The Group names the safety limit, the witness confirms the close, and the ride becomes capacity the local commons can see.
A Logistic is the structured version of a favour request. It helps stewards see urgency, physical requirements, trust, skill, and scale without turning the person into a ticket.
Where the favour starts. A home, clinic, tool shelf, garden, bus stop, kitchen, or pickup point.
Where the help needs to land. Sometimes a place, sometimes a person, sometimes a Group asset.
When it matters. Now, this afternoon, next Tuesday, before the storm, after the appointment.
The important constraints: cold storage, low-step vehicle, privacy, lifting help, skill level, consent, or witness class.
The launch should seed imagination without overpromising. These are practical enough to do manually and meaningful enough to build a Group around.
Drivers, companions, and witnesses coordinate rides for medical appointments and hospital pickups.
A ladder, drill, extension cords, saws, and a checkout habit that keeps tools useful and returned.
Three households cook, two people deliver, one steward checks dietary constraints and consent.
Before the power goes out, the Group knows who has what and who can use it safely.
Trusted adults, written permission, and clear boundaries for short childcare gaps.
A tutor, mechanic, nurse, elder, or builder answers the question before it becomes a bigger problem.
Founding declaration
A steward can use these declarations to see whether enough people in one place can form a pilot Group. No public ledger. No FavourBuck promise. Just the first map of capacity and need.
A human steward reviews the pattern, looks for local overlap, and follows up when there is enough trust density to run real favours carefully.
The launch does not lead with a token. Favour Bucks are the accounting layer for witnessed useful work, Group share, and system infrastructure once the human flow proves itself.
FavourCapitalist is the operator lane for people who can host, fund, map, or maintain resilient Reticulum-compatible infrastructure after the favour layer proves real demand.