- You will gain space to think clearly and calmly
- You will reconnect with parts of yourself that may have been overlooked
- You will return with practices to support everyday balance and wellbeing
There are times when life looks full from the outside yet feels unsettled within — when a quiet question begins to surface, asking for space, truth, or a gentler kind of clarity. It’s often in those moments of readiness that change begins to take root.
Set in a peaceful forest outside Amsterdam, this psilocybin retreat offers a supported pause—a chance to step away from momentum and into presence. The process is intentionally held—grounded in science, therapeutic guidance, and respect for the natural world —to help you explore what lies beneath the surface of daily life.
Your journey begins before arrival. A personal intake call provides an opportunity for you to share your story, express your intentions, and ask questions. In the online preparation workshop, you’ll meet your group, learn breathwork and meditation techniques, and gain a clear understanding of how psilocybin works in the body. You enter feeling informed, welcomed, and ready.
The ceremony takes place over one day and one night in the woods of Maarn. There is time to walk slowly among trees, to share nourishing vegan meals, and to settle the body before entering the yurt. When the ceremony begins, you’ll be accompanied by experienced guides, live music, and a dose carefully aligned with your intention. The pace is unhurried. Your process is respected.
Integration completes the experience. During the final workshop, you’ll reflect on what surfaced and explore how those insights might shape the way you live, work, or relate to others. Ongoing access to Spinoza’s breathwork and meditation library supports the weeks that follow — because transformation often continues long after the retreat ends.
This journey does not seek instant change. Instead, it opens space for understanding. For clarity. For quiet reconnection with your inner compass.
Sometimes the most meaningful shift begins not with answers — but with the willingness to listen.
GOOD TO KNOW