March 7 & 8, 2025
Live in
Joshua Tree, California
Early bird pricing available until Jan 27th
With
Early bird pricing available until Jan 27th
With
Early bird pricing available until Jan 27th
With
Only the Living Die
A certain reversal of fortune has found me.
Wrenched my plans for myself out of symmetry. It’s medical, with a kite’s tail of consequence. I’d had a feeling for a while, which is why whenever any of you who I met on the Nights of Grief and Mystery asked about the school I tended to equivocate about the thing. I didn’t know if I’d be able to follow through on the commitment.
A certain reversal of fortune has found me…
Wrenched my plans for myself out of symmetry. It’s medical, with a kite’s tail of consequence. I’d had a feeling for a while, which is why whenever any of you who I met on the Nights of Grief and Mystery asked about the school I tended to equivocate about the thing. I didn’t know if I’d be able to follow through on the commitment.
But I don’t feel entirely done.
To know the moment that you’re in, and mobilize accordingly: that’s where grace and style and eloquence are born. Once there, though, it’s work to find where desperation gives way to urgency, urgency to purpose, and purpose to limit. Karaoke’s unbecoming when elegance and elegies are called for. There’s wrangling now to be done. Not much of an invitation, I’ll grant you. But there it is. Let’s find out what we’ve got, what we really know.
The next day he got on a plane with his wife, Nathalie, and flew from Toronto to Joshua Tree. In the air, he began to write in a green moleskin, which has come to be known as “the Green Book.”
A day after they arrived, Kara, a Joshua Tree local and devourer of Stephen’s work, went to their house with groceries. She brought ripe sumo citrus oranges and a tasty mezcal, along with her high-wattage smile, offering a hand in the darkness.
Stephen spent two weeks in Joshua Tree in a state of shock, his symptoms accelerating, trying to make sense of what he had learned.
Now, a little more than a year later, Stephen returns to Joshua Tree with the Green Book finished.
From Joshua Tree, he went to San Diego where he lived downstairs from Kimberly for the next two months.
Stephen and Kimberly have been collaborating since August 2021.
Their book Reckoning was published in August 2022, and shortly after they went on tour reckoning live across the country. A younger woman no longer young and an older man not quite old.
They’ve made several series- emergent and evocative- on Birth + Death Among Us, Forgotten Pillars: Patrimony, Matrimony, Kinship, Ancestry + , and NeverLand/ SeverLand: Dirt, Place, Ancestry and the Making of Culture in the New World.
This year of reckoning has been one of experiments, breadcrumb trails, and sober attempts at understanding the state of things, trying to get bearings with shifting sands.
This two-day offering includes:
We recommend that you arrive to Joshua Tree by Friday early afternoon. We will begin with a late afternoon session at 4pm followed by dinner. We’ll meet again on Saturday morning at 10, followed by lunch, and an afternoon session.
Accommodation & Airport Information (not included):
Click here for recommendations
(LIMITED TO 100 PARTICIPANTS)
*Does not include Accommodations or Travel
Photo Credit: Charlie Chipman
Joshua Tree Retreat Center
Friday – Saturday
March 7th – 8th, 2025
This gathering will be held in the stunning Friendship Hall designed by Lloyd Wright on the beautiful grounds of the Joshua Tree Retreat center- 80 acres of desert land, including trails and a labyrinth.
The desert will be beginning to bloom.
Information on how to get to the venue can be found here.
Stephen is a worker, author, storyteller, culture activist, and co-founder of the Orphan Wisdom School with his wife Nathalie Roy. The school is a teaching house for skills of deep living and making human culture that are mandatory in endangered, endangering times. He makes books, tends farm and mends broken handles and fences, succumbs to interviews, teaches and performs internationally.
He has Master’s degrees from Harvard University (Theology) and the University of Toronto (Social Work).
Apprenticed to a master storyteller when a young man, he has worked extensively with dying people and their families, is former program director in a major Canadian hospital, former assistant professor in a prominent Canadian medical school.
Stephen Jenkinson is the author of: Reckoning (2022), co-authored with Kimberly Ann Johnson, A Generation’s Worth: Spirit Work While the Crisis Reigns (2021), Come of Age: The Case for Elderhood in a Time of Trouble (2018), the award-winning Die Wise: A Manifesto for Sanity and Soul (2015), Homecoming: The Haiku Sessions (a live teaching, 2013), How it All Could Be: A workbook for dying people and those who love them (2009), Angel and Executioner: Grief and the Love of Life – (live teaching, 2009), and Money and The Soul’s Desires: A Meditation (2002).
He is also the subject of the feature length documentary film Griefwalker, a portrait of his work with dying people, and Lost Nation Road, a shorter documentary on the crafting of the Nights of Grief and Mystery tours.
Kimberly Johnson is an author, postpartum care activist, trauma educator, structural bodyworker and single mother. She graduated Valedictorian from Northwestern University with a BS in Social Policy (‘97).
She studied yoga directly with the three main lineage holders of the Krishnamacharya tradition- Desikachar, BKS Iyengar, and Pattabhi Jois and taught yoga full time for 15 years, while running a Structural Integration practice.
When radically rearranged by childbirth, Kimberly’s life changed shape to attend to the cultural chasm of postpartum care, and as a result she trained in Somatic Experiencing and Sexological Bodywork to be able to help women heal from birth injuries, gynecological surgeries and sexual boundary violations.
She is the author of the feminist trauma book Call of the Wild: How We Heal Trauma, Awaken Our Own Power and Use it for Good (HarperWave, 2021) as well as the early mothering classic, The Fourth Trimester: A Postpartum Guide to Healing Your Body, Balancing Your Emotions and Restoring Your Vitality (Shambhala, 2017) – translated into 8 languages. She is the host of the Sex Birth Trauma podcast with over 1M unique downloads.
YOUR HOST
Kara Hoppe, MA, MFT, is a psychotherapist, death doula, teacher, author, and mother. She has spent over 15 years as a relational therapist working with individuals, couples, and groups toward healing and growth, guiding clients to become grounded, integrated people with better access to their own instincts, wisdom, and creativity. She leads groups for those living the dying part of life, runs grief circles, and teaches a class on mortality. Hoppe is the coauthor of Baby Bomb: A Relationship Survival Guide for New Parents, a 2021 INDIES finalist. Her work has been featured in The Atlantic, Parents Magazine, Psychology Today, and Fatherly, among other publications. She lives with her husband and two children in Pioneertown, CA, and sees clients in private practice via telehealth.
Paul Waxman of Fika Fête.
Fika Fête…
A nod to Paul’s Swedish heritage, a “fika” is a daily Swedish ritual, a moment of calm & a reminder to enjoy the little things with loved ones.
“Fête,” a French term derived from Medieval Latin “festus” , meaning festival, feast, party- a celebration with food, typically honoring someone & ideally outside.
This is a two day immersion experience, so there’s no option for just one day only. We want you to be present for this whole experience- the meals and the space between sessions are part of the sessions.
Yes, these are live emergent experiences. Stephen and Kimberly haven’t reckoned live together since Reckoning Maui in November 2023. We’ve never spoken about the Green Book.
Yes, we will have time and space for questions. You may submit questions ahead of time, and we will incorporate them. We may have time for live questions
Bring your books! We intend to have time for book signing, but this depends on how the days go with Stephen’s health. We will also have books for sale.
No, lodging is not included. Tuition includes 3 teaching sessions, dinner Friday night, and lunch on Saturday. (Breakfast on Saturday morning is also not included.)
This is the only live reckoning scheduled for this year. Only the Living Die is particular to the desert where Stephen went after receiving his diagnosis, and to this particular cycle.
There are a limited number of single and double accommodations available.
If you are interested in staying on site, please contact Julia Holman at jholman@sunsetlotus.org. Julia can also help with rideshares from airports.
Your ticket is non-refundable.
Should you have any additional questions, our support team are ready to assist.
Click here to send an email.
(LIMITED TO 100 PARTICIPANTS)
*Does not include Accommodations or Travel
A certain reversal of fortune has found me, wrenched my plans for myself out of symmetry. It’s medical, with a kite’s tail of consequence. I’d had a feeling for a while, which is why whenever any of you who I met on the Nights of Grief and Mystery asked about the school I tended to equivocate about the thing. I didn’t know if I’d be able to follow through on the commitment.
But I don’t feel entirely done.
To know the moment that you’re in, and mobilize accordingly: that’s where grace and style and eloquence are born. Once there, though, it’s work to find where desperation gives way to urgency, urgency to purpose, and purpose to limit. Karaoke’s unbecoming when elegance and elegies are called for. There’s wrangling now to be done. Not much of an invitation, I’ll grant you. But there it is. Let’s find out what we’ve got, what we really know.
Dear Ones,
I’ve been back from a trip to Ireland for twelve weeks now and I am still unpacking, in both senses.
My whole life people have told me that I look Irish. “You must be Irish.” My response was always, “yes, partially.” I knew that I was mostly Irish and Swedish on my dad’s side, a quarter English on my mom’s side and the rest a California mashup.
Then came 23andMe, or ancestry.com, and I got some more percentage specifics. Surprisingly I’m only 8% Swedish even though my grandfather was 100% Swedish, so probably accounted for by Viking migration patterns and genes.
It never occurred to me to be proud of these percentages…
The overt cultural inheritances were so few- corned beef on St. Patrick’s Day, Swedish pancakes, a Swedish children’s song. It never occurred to me to pursue any kind of deeper connection, either through research or visiting those communities in the US, or to make pilgrimages to those motherlands.
Thirty years ago, a freshman in college, I felt my responsibility as a citizen was to study the marginalized histories of people in the United States. Following on an excellent high school history education that included Eyes on the Prize, The People’s History, I went straight into African-American studies. I studied the African diaspora throughout the Americas, and immersed myself in Black Feminist Theory, as well as Social Policy. At the time, the education was strongly anti-essentialist.
There was definitely an ethos that “white people need to do this work with other white people.” That “work” to me meant educating “my” people about racial bias and privilege, about not letting racism go unquestioned, and to always work on behalf of people who had less than I had. I never heard this charge of working with other white people as a call inner or outer to deeply explore my own roots.
And even though my Irish and Swedish great grandparents who came here were poor and then became poor working class, the story of the American dream, of their children, my grandparents, making it through college, owning houses, and making it to early retirement- that story of resilience and national identity and bootstraps and World War II was a stronger one.
I’ve lived all over the world. I went searching for spirituality in Asia and then in Brazil. Decades ago, you could hear me saying “I feel at home wherever I go.” I cared about my impact on the places I went, but I took care of that by learning the languages and imagining that I was more of a traveler than a tourist. I often felt that I could express the stirrings of my heart and my spiritual leanings in Sanskrit or Portuguese.
I heard Stephen mention that one of the best ways to make yourself known to your ancestors is to speak a language they can understand. I was arrested. I asked myself, “what language would that be?” I asked myself: “Do you have to be drawn to something to really learn it?” Because I had learned Sanskrit and Portuguese relatively easily based on how familiar it seemed and how badly I wanted to communicate with the people where I was. At that time, I didn’t even know there was such thing as an Irish language to learn.
When Stephen said “wouldn’t it be a thing to be together in Ireland?” I said “yes!”
But I didn’t feel excited about going to Ireland, I felt daunted, without knowing exactly why. There seemed to be long, dark shadows there.
I did harbor a hope that I would be recognized and claimed, that the red hair that had non-Irish people constantly asking if I was Irish would be a signal or a beacon, that the Irish themselves would say “you look like my sister.” “You must be from here,” or maybe “welcome home?”
It was a joke among our traveling band that I wanted to be mistaken to be from there. I guess it’s understandable as a person who has never remotely blended in anywhere I have traveled. I wanted to feel surrounded as a majority.
A few months ago, we made a pilgrimage to Wales, England and Ireland. In Ireland, our small traveling band searched out stone circles, Sheila-na-gigs, and wells. We found some of those and stone walls and famine houses.
Stephen has said that the dying people he counseled were mostly filled with unspooling dread that they would be forgotten. So as a living person it’s our responsibility to claim the dead and remember them.
He says there’s no such thing as the ancestors; there are only my ancestors or your ancestors.
So I did go to a land where some of my people came from, and I did ask questions about their names and speak them aloud, but I still don’t have ritual practice to connect to them.
I live in the suburbs and work on screens.
I have the fantasy of the times- a farm community where more of my life is with people, hands in the dirt, family meals, in nature, with intergenerational family care.
Twenty five years ago, Stephen moved out of the big city to a farm. I’m on one side of the hill and he is on the other.
The Orphan Wisdom school has been called a study of the “unauthorized history of North America.”
This work hasn’t been elaborated as much publicly as Stephen’s work on death and elderhood, although it’s foundational to what he has been teaching and practicing for the last twenty three years.
We come together again- this time to contemplate this hill, to consider our relationship to dirt, to place, to ancestry and to culture. And to make culture in doing so.
Have Courage!
YOUR TEACHER
Sexological Bodyworker, Somatic Experiencing practitioner, Structural Integration practitioner, author, postpartum advocate, birth doula, yoga teacher and single mom.
She has helped thousands of women heal from birth injuries, gynecological surgeries and sexual boundary ruptures.
YOUR HOST
Host, Organizer, Assistant
We are offering three different accommodation options. A solo room, a twin room, and the option of a dorm room. The dorm rooms are lovely and spacious with lots of natural light. The dorm rooms are in cottages / the main house that also have additional communal spaces where you are free to be during downtime.
All bedrooms will be in the beautiful stone buildings at Trefacwn, near to the roundhouse that will hold us for group sessions.
Early Bird Pricing ends January 10, 2025
(Prices in USD)
We are keen to bring together a group of people who are ready, grounded and stable in their own practices to do this work. The people that make up the group provide a container. We want for this container to hold us with steadiness and heart so that we can drop in to the time we have together with the most benefit.
Your place is confirmed by payment AND acceptance of an application form. In the 48 hours following your payment, you will be sent an application form to complete (please check your spam folder for it if you don’t see it). Once this application has been received you will receive an email confirming if this intensive is the right fit.
Where do I belong?
To whom do I belong?
Where do I have a right to be?
What do I owe my ancestors and the ancestors of the land I live on?
Never Land/Sever Land is a live audio series between Kimberly Ann Johnson and Stephen Jenkinson engaging his new work NeverLand: Agriculture, Culture and the Striving for Belonging.*
These are unscripted, realtime encounters with work that is still sprouting from seed.
There is ritual to be had and found in joining hundreds around the world for these in-depth conversations.
*This project originated from a residency at the Pari Center in Tuscany in Spring 2023.
$2100 $1800
Pease email Emily at carson.emily@hotmail.com if you would like to be on the wait list for a dorm room for Mothering the Bones.
$1950 $1550
Pease email Emily at carson.emily@hotmail.com if you would like to be on the wait list for a dorm room for Mothering the Bones.
Refund Policy
There will be a $500 non-refundable deposit and no refunds given beyond 28th February 2025.
Places must be paid in full before March 2025.