Personal tools
You are here: Home About Us
Updates by Email
Enter your email address to receive our e-newsletter
Privacy Policy
Overheard...

“My parents wept, my brothers chuckled as I was swept away,
I remember my joys, my sorrows, my griefs, to this very day.
I remember the excitement, joy and unknown,
as if my departure was nothing I’d known.
That was soon forgotten as I walked down the path,
through an experience that would forever last.
As I think of it now it was a powerful thing,
My childhood was done – I could hear the fat lady sing.
Though it’s now over it’s never quite dead,
the good and the bad still live in my head.” – Excerpt from My Journey by Megan Thompson, 2002

Support Our Work
...with a secure donation
 

About Rite of Passage Journeys

Mission, brief history of Rite of passage journeys, cross cultural traditions and experiences of indigenous peoples applied to modern culture. Vision quest and connection with nature.

Journeys’ retreats are contemporary versions of historic “vision quests.” It is believed that Jesus, Mohammed, Buddha, and St. Joan all spent time alone in nature seeking insight. There are many cultures of the world that continue to practice types of vision quests, such as many Native American Nations, Australian Aborigines, and the Basque people of Northern Spain.

Over the last 40 years, many Westerners have begun exploring how to bring rites of passage back into our communities, returning these traditions to their primary place in assuring our cultural health.  The concept of a “vision quest” is becoming increasingly recognized and valued in a cross-cultural context, thanks to the work of Stephen Foster & Meredith Little, Bill Plotkin, and many others.

Journeys draws from many traditions and translates them into cross-cultural activities so that each participant can comfortably join in all activities from the standpoint of her/his own background.

Our age-appropriate programs are high-adventure and many of our programs involve extended backpacking trips through the most beautiful terrain Washington has to offer. Our staff is well-trained and experienced in wilderness safety and first aid. They use a range of skills to ensure participants’ physical and emotional safety and health.

Participants, staff and mentors create a community that encourages personal reflection on what is happening to them and what the future might hold. In each program, there is an actual “journey” which serves as a metaphor for this exploration.
Each program offers a special time, set aside for solitude, to encounter the self in the safety of the wild, where real change can occur.  For teens and adults, this includes one or more days of solo time in the wilderness; for our younger journeyers, this time of solitude may be only a few minutes a day, giving them a taste of connection with the earth, and with the quiet place inside themselves.

These multi-dimensional journeys offer chances to grow via physical accomplishments, encounters with other ideas, and opportunities to reflect on life experience. We believe that experience is the greatest teacher, and have designed our work to permit individual and group learning in dialogue with events and interactions as they occur. This is experiential learning in the truest sense of the word. The atmosphere of learning and exploration is fun, creative, reflective and joyous.

Document Actions
powered by Plone | site by ONE/Northwest and served with clean energy