Retreat Experience

Is the Lagom Respite & Renewal Experience Right for You?

If you need a break and would like to spend some time in the peace and quiet of nature, walk through the woods and listen to the birds, this is the experience for you! You can ALSO try something new—maybe use your hands on a carpentry or gardening project, learn more about the Enneagram, cook some good meals from scratch.

We start with listening to what YOU really need. Every person's stay will be different, and we will work with you to craft the type of time you desire, choosing optional activities ranging from very physical and hands-on to reflective and quiet.

Stays are open to individuals (ages 18+) or to families and small groups of up to 10 participants (minimum 2 nights, maximum 10 nights).

What makes time at Lagom Landing different is that we encourage physical activity in order to increase connection with our bodies while on retreat. We ask all guests to return 2 hours of labor each day of their visit, in exchange for a reduction in our rates.

See our full listing of season activities here.

The framework of Respite and Restoration at Lagom Landing is centered around these principles:

  • Movement out of the head into the body is consistently life-giving.

    We offer experiences where our bodies are engaged. It can be a simple walk or bike ride, splitting firewood, yoga, gardening, or fashioning a cutting board down in the shop. Bodily practices help bring presence and balance to our overtaxed, overstimulated minds.

  • We have an off the grid retreat house on the edge of the woods overlooking a field highlighted by majestic white pines. Sitting on the porch, one can breathe in the medicinal gift presented here.

    Maple season takes us into the generosity, mystery, and flow offered in the sacred goodness of the maple.

    Gardening and building soil through permaculture techniques allow us to dig our hands into the wonder of the soil’s fertility, providing nurturing food for plants and bodies to grow strong. We can always learn more by observing the woods and fields around us as they change through the seasons.

    Evening sunsets remind us of every day being up for revision. Beauty reimagines itself for us nightly. Taking in the quiet, learning birdsongs and plant names and watching wildlife is a healing experience.

  • Reconnecting with our individual creativity. How many of us have lost touch with our creative nature? Screen time can easily take the place of genuine creativity in our lives. What would it be like to nurture our inner artist, woodworker, musician, or dancer? When’s the last time we’ve freed the inner poet? What creative experience or story is waiting to be birthed? Intentional creative time brings us alive.

  • Understanding and processing our deep connection with one another and our surrounding world is fundamental to grounding ourselves in a culture that fosters isolation. Morning Watch and Speaking With Bread (soon the be called "Gratitude Gathering") is a time to share the inspirational, the challenging, the creative juices flowing through us with others. Understanding the truth of “we are not alone” through laughter, storytelling, breaking bread, and making music, we can address those places of loneliness in our lives.

  • As we age, many of us can forget the gift of fun and playfulness in our lives. At Lagom Landing, we love the gift of wintertime and the fun and beauty offered up in snow. The gift of a morning ski in the woods or breaking out the sleds can bring our inner child to life. Ping pong can bring us into “the zone” where we become intensely present to a little white ball coming at us. Board games can get us unplugged and laughing with one another. Genuine fun is a true source of vitality.

  • Deep rest and silence are not always readily available. What would it be like to unplug, to silence the notifications, the demands, the “necessary” emails? Where is the gift of silence in your life? What are the quiet whispers of mystery calling to you? What would it be like to give yourself permission? Permission to breathe, to do nothing, to sleep, to be available to yourself? What might it look like to move into "receive" mode? How would it feel to not earn, not do, not be “there for”, but to just BE—to welcome and allow “rest”oration?

Our bodies are speaking to us all the time—and if we pay attention, we hear the gratitude they hold.
— Colette Lafia