Thinking really broadly about genuine holistic, it seems that people functioning closer to nature are genuinely holistic. Those people comfortable with themselves and their niche roles in nature and community are genuinely holistic. People who strive to live, minimizing complexity, controversy creation, chaos, fighting, and conflict are genuinely holistic. People who share, nurture, mentor, love, care, and are in context with nature are more genuinely holistic. When people are themselves, they are more genuinely holistic. Genuine, holistic people strive to solve problems and prevent them from occurring in the first place. People living close to nature and communities in remote villages living together with nature are genuinely holistic; when they need help, they ought to get help as soon as possible. Anyone who is genuinely holistic ought to be able to get help with anything they need as they live life. One of the first steps for people striving to become genuinely holistic is to take a genuine holistic self-assessment. This assessment will be developed by genuine holistic, loving, and caring scientists, researchers, healthcare people, and other interdisciplinary fields. These assessments will lead to holistic prescriptive advice for people to transition from their current condition with the hope that they can get to their desired future condition as soon as possible. I will not tell you which roles in society are more genuinely holistic, as you must figure out this for yourself relative to your passions and aspirations in context with nature. Any living role in society has the potential to be genuinely holistic. It is up to you.