Couples Integrative Wellness Retreat

Is it time to nurture your relationship with a peaceful, intention-filled getaway, designed to deepen your connection to yourself and each other?
This experience offers a chance to step away from the daily demands on your relationship. Come on retreat with your partner and enter a sacred space where you can prioritize your relationship, learn anew about yourself and your partner, and deepen your connection.
This retreat honors partnership as a spiritual path, a journey that can challenge us, inspire us, and ultimately lead us closer to who we truly are. Whether you’re navigating new chapters or craving deeper intimacy, this retreat is designed to nourish your relationship and awaken new dimensions of connection, health, and well-being together.
Through a schedule of meaningful activities, guided by the timeless wisdom in the Edgar Cayce readings, you’ll explore new ways to grow together, honor your individual needs, and bring forward your best selves.
What to Expect
This couples retreat blends mindfulness, movement, and practical tools to help you both reconnect with yourselves and each other.
A general daily schedule you and your partner will follow includes:
8 a.m.: Yoga, Meditation and Breathwork
9:30 a.m.: Healthy, Catered Breakfast inspired by the Cayce readings
10:30 a.m.: Morning Experiential Workshops informed by Buddhist psychology and the Cayce readings
12:30-4 p.m.: Lunch and Optional Spa Treatments
4 p.m.: Afternoon Workshops designed to improve communication and foster connection
6 p.m.: Catered Dinner
7 p.m.: Evening Experiential (such as sound and Reiki healing)
This retreat begins on Thursday evening and ends on Sunday at noon.
The Benefits
- Break unhelpful patterns and build more understanding and empathy
- Strengthen emotional connection in a focused and restorative setting
- Learn practical tools and create lasting habits that support clear communication and mutual growth
This isn’t about fixing something. It’s about deepening what’s already there and remembering what brought you together in the first place.
As Rumi wrote, “Out beyond ideas of wrong-doing and right-doing, there is a field. I’ll meet you there.”