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=== Florida (c.1975 - 1978) === After a brief period living on a shrimp boat in Key West, Wulf and Arol settled into a compound at 3317 Virginia St., in the Coconut Grove neighborhood of Miami, Florida. From "The Grove," they recruited new members to rebuild the commune, and incorporated as a non-profit as The Zendik Society - Church Of Life Essence, Inc.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sunbiz.org, Florida Department of Corporations |url=http://search.sunbiz.org/Inquiry/CorporationSearch/SearchResultDetail?inquirytype=EntityName&directionType=ForwardList&searchNameOrder=ZENDIKSOCIETYCHURCHLIFEESSENCE%207385520&aggregateId=domnp-738552-61116348-889d-4a4e-9c62-2fa84db8d162&searchTerm=Zenda%20Properties%2C%20LLC&listNameOrder=ZENDH%20L140001932890}}</ref> Wulf wrote a play (best described as a series of sketches) called The Oracle, and they supported themselves by staging the play nightly for donations. The birth of their daughter Fawn in 1976 brought a turn toward militant environmentalism in Wulf's writing. The outlook for Fawn's future came to symbolize the future for all children, which they saw as dystopian and destructive from both an ecological and social perspective. This inspired the publication of a collection of essays titled "The Reality Is This...", which was a call to Revolution as the only way to salvage a livable environment. Attracted to the "Back to the Land" movement of the late 1970's, the commune moved to a plot of land near [[Ocala, Florida]] in 1977 with then intention of building a self-sufficient "off-grid" community. The members who romanticized moving back to the land were unprepared for the hardships of such a life, so most of them left. Wulf, Arol, Fawn and the remaining members retreated to a compound in Gainesville, Florida over the winter of 1977-78 and prepared for a move back to California, which happened in May, 1978.
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