48 Hours to Think Without Being Interrupted.
The Solo Immersion Stay is a self-guided experience for one person who needs genuine quiet, unstructured time, and somewhere worth being alone.

What This Is
Not a vacation. Not a workshop. Not a wellness program.
Just you, the land, and enough silence to finally hear yourself think.
You choose your unit: the geodesic dome in the woods or the cedar treehouse by the creek. You arrive with whatever you're carrying. You leave with something sorted that wasn't before. That's the general shape of it.
There's no agenda waiting for you. No itinerary, no check-ins, no structured activities. What there is: 30 acres to wander, three creek beaches, a network of sit spots up in the woods, a fire to build at night, and an arrival kit designed to give the time some shape without filling it up.
What's waiting for you?
Who This is For
This stay is designed for one person. Specifically, one person who is dealing with at least one of the following:
A decision they've been avoiding.
A season of work that has emptied them out and hasn't been refilled.
A transition between jobs, relationships, or chapters… where the next thing isn't yet clear.
A creative project that has stalled because life got too loud to hear it.
A general sense that they've been living reactively for too long and need to remember what they actually think.
If none of that applies, a regular booking works just fine. But if any of it does, this is worth doing intentionally.
Nature's Embrace
The Arrival Kit
Every Solo Immersion Stay includes a physical kit waiting at your unit when you arrive, and a digital version sent at booking so you can begin before you get here.
The kit includes:
A property map: Not just where things are, but what they're good for. Which sit spot is best for morning light. Which creek beach is quietest. Where to go if you want to feel small in a useful way.
A sequence of reflection prompts: Not therapy exercises, not journaling templates. Five questions worth sitting with over the course of your stay. Brought to you in a specific order for a reason.
A suggested rhythm: Not a schedule. A loose shape for the day that leaves most of it open but gives you enough structure that the time doesn't dissolve into aimlessness.
A note from Sue: Handwritten. Short. The kind of thing you'd want someone to say before you walked into the woods alone.
The 5 Questions
We include these in every kit. They're worth seeing before you decide.
What have I been avoiding thinking about?
What would I do if I weren't worried about what it looked like?
What did I used to love that I've quietly stopped making time for?
What do I actually want the next year to feel like?
What am I pretending not to know?
You don't have to answer all of them. You don't have to answer any of them. But most people find that 48 hours in a quiet place with a good question is more useful than six months of thinking about thinking.
