With the land: remember, relationship, repair

With Susan Raffo

October 9 - 11, 2026

Date and Time Details: Check in is between 4:00 and 6:00 pm on Friday, October 9th. The first event will be dinner at 6:00 pm. The retreat will end after lunch on Sunday, October 11th, approximately 1:00 pm.

Contact: lacey
laceyh@kirkridge.org

All retreats are sliding scale with scholarships available.
  • Camping – $315.00
  • Commuter – $265.00
  • Farmhouse Private Room – $525.00
  • Farmhouse Shared Room – $425.00

The land where we rest, grieve, and celebrate is the only thing we have in common with those around us. Our bodies are created of and are part of the land. When we die, we fold back into the land’s cycle of life. Our breath, the sea water that is beneath our skin, and the minerals of our bones and eyelashes are all shared with the oak and marmot and seal. And for most of us living on Turtle Island, the land we are on is occupied. Most of us are living as uninvited guests, as settlers of people who are beholden to treaties, even as those treaties are continually broken.

During our time together, we will work with three different layers of relationship with land: the physical sensed truth of relationship, the memories of our people’s generational relationship to land, and the clarity of repair and accountability that seeks to change what is possible for all of our descendants. For those registering, you will receive a guide for prework about a month before we gather. Doing this prework will help deepen our very short time together. After all, moving at the speed of the land is not the same as moving at the speed of a workshop.

This workshop builds on the workshop from the previous year. This means that it is open to those who have not yet attended this workshop and those who would like to return. The focus of the workshop is on practice which includes supporting practice for the long term.

Scholarships available!

About the Leader

Susan Raffo

Susan Raffo (she/her) is a writer, cultural worker and bodyworker with a personal practice who has done much of her work through the Healing Histories Project, a network of abolitionist healers/health practitioners, community organizers, researchers/historians & cultural workers building solidarity to interrupt the medical industrial complex and harmful systems of care. Raffo recently transitioned to […]

Learn more about Susan Raffo

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