Siku Amarok (SEE-koo AH-mah-rok)
A Resident
Siku Amarok (a.k.a. Wolf)
Most call him Wolf, but Siku responds equally well to silence. His presence is both quiet and anchored—like a mountain under snow. His practice is grappling, though he rarely uses the word. For him, it’s an embrace in motion, a way to understand through contact. He teaches that force is not the goal, but awareness: of balance, of tension, of the breath between actions.
He prefers wide-open spaces, where movements can unfold without boundary. In the mornings, he often rolls in dewy grass, slowly waking his limbs with stretches that seem both animal and divine. He never hurries, and yet he always seems to arrive at the center of things—where the weight settles, where decisions are made without words.
Siku collects moments more than objects: the way someone shifts before they move, the hum in the body after effort. He believes grappling is a conversation—sometimes a dance, sometimes a negotiation, never a fight. His favorite saying, uttered before each session, is simple: “Let’s find where you end, and where I begin.”
Current Location
Species
Ethnicity
Realm
Professions
Children
Sex
Male
Sexuality
Omnephilic
Other Affiliations



