Time Off - Wilderness On


Explore your deepest inner self in decision-making


I invite you to travel with us, connect with the wilderness and explore your decision making drivers.

  

 

You love Nature

You are Nature

-Your true nature is knocking at your door-

 

"Explore your deepest inner self in decision-making"

One of the more enduring beliefs about decision-making is that if we think hard enough, we can make better choices. This advice works well when our decisions are clearly defined and time is plentiful. But in wilderness settings, our decisions are less clear and time is short, and the standard advice is in some cases, dangerously misleading.

 

In an absolute stunning remote wilderness location, with experienced facilitators, you will explore the way you make decisions in nature.

 

 

 


Step into the wild and let nature do its work

Travel into the pristine wilderness of La Garrotxa, the eastern pre-Pyrenees. Crystal blue water in a steep canyon, vertical rocks and oak trees with strings of moss hanging off the branches. In this appearing fairy-tale realm and with a group of maximum 8 people, you will be fully immersed during this 5-day adventure. By playing with the elements of Nature through canyoning, hiking, fire making, solo time and healthy food you’ll find a beautiful balance to reflect, enjoy, rest and find ways.

With the invitation to focus on your challenge in decision-making... In the container of Nature, togetherness and presence... Initiating the conditions to find the gift at the other side...

So you can navigate beyond...


Nature doesn't see status or wealth or social position. It cares only about presence, one's ability to read the signs, navigate the terrain, and translate the language of the wilderness. Nature is the great equalizer.


The wilderness simply has its way. if we respect this and pay attention, we belong here as much as any other animal. Buth the margins for error are small, and the way one makes decisions in a high-risk situation is critical. Yet for all of us a life with no sharp edges would be worse. The hazard of modern times is the danger of no danger.


For thousands of years, men and women danced and walked and moved together, taught each other the ways of nature. They slept under the stars and rested in the shade of old trees. They told stories and taught each other by being together, facing real danger together. Men and woman need these dimensions of wilderness and the unknown to know the more primal part of their own psyche and body.