Restoring Resilience

A nature-based pause for changemakers and earth stewards

Green River, Utah

When was the last time you truly allowed yourself the gift of pause? The gift of rest? For those immersed in humanitarian, social justice, professional grief tending and climate change work, the demands can be relentless—physically, emotionally, and spiritually. How do we heal and practice internal activism when the weight of the world feels so heavy? When the urgency of crises calls for unceasing productivity? When we feel isolated in our despair and outrage at the state of things?

Green River Canoe Trip

September 26th - October 3rd 2025

7 days in a remote canyon setting, 45 miles of flat water paddling, 12 participants max

Guides:  Eva Jahn, Elizabeth Johnson & Lauren Bond
Pricing:
EARLYBIRD by April 31: $2,450
Standard: $2,750

Still have questions? Join the guides for a free informal meeting on April 9th to get all your questions answered! Register at link below.

Our emotional landscapes deserve as much care and attention as the external work we undertake. To sustain our activism—whether it’s nurturing climate warriors, writing songs, raising children, conducting research, organizing, gardening, educating or grief tending—we must also listen to our own inner stories.


This retreat offers a restorative pause on the stunning Green River, designed to help you reconnect with yourself, rebuild emotional resilience, and engage with a community of like-hearted participants. By fostering intentional connections with the more-than-human world (often referred to as ‘kinning’), you’ll discover spaces to rekindle your sense of purpose and possibility.

We’ll paddle along the river’s breathtaking waterways and plant our feet firmly in its ancient landscapes for practices that include:

  • Gathering circles and somatic anchoring

  • Reflective journaling, solo walks and relational practices

  • Gratitude and active hope exercises

  • A transformative 24-hour solo (kinning) experience, designed to reconnect you with “your wild and precious life.”

This landscape—rich with wonder, ancient history, and awe-inspiring beauty—will hold space for our griefs, frustrations, and active hopes. Together, we’ll create a sanctuary for healing and re-centering, enabling you to return to your work with renewed strength and clarity.
Take this soul-prioritizing pause to rekindle your connection to the world and embrace the resilience that lies within.

Meet the Guides

  • Eva Jahn, LPC (she/her)

    FACILITATOR and GUIDE

    Eva is the executive director and co-founder of the Climate Emotional Resilience Institute and a licensed psychotherapist working at the intersection of trauma, gender-based violence and climate distress. She is an international experiential educator and speaker and her work is influenced by studies in complex trauma and resilience, climate psychology, ecopsychology, neuroscience, nature-based and contemplative mindfulness practices, the Work That Reconnects and her multi-cultural background.

    Eva is passionate about understanding the immediate mental health impacts of climate related disasters and long-term stressors of living with the reality of this polycrisis over time and how to move towards emotional resilience. Her love for rivers and the stillness and spaciousness that they provide, leads her to spend many weeks every year with the waters. Eva is has worked as a wilderness guide for many years and is both trained in swift-water rescue and WFR.

    She believes that developing a consistent nature connection practice with elements of somatic awareness — integrating a sense of the sacredness of the land and her inhabitants — can foster reciprocity with the more-than-human world essential to our personal and collective well-being.

  • Elizabeth Johnson, MA (she/her)

    FACILITATOR and GUIDE

    Elizabeth is the co-founder and executive director of The Peaceful Presence Project, an Oregon-based nonprofit dedicated to cultivating community-centered death and grief literacy. With a Master’s degree in Community and Urban Planning, Elizabeth’s work explores the cultural, social, and ecological frameworks that shape human experiences of loss, transformation, and renewal. As a death doula and international educator, Elizabeth’s work draws upon The Work That Reconnects, focusing on building emotional resilience in the face of profound personal and planetary challenges.

    She serves on the leadership council for Public Health Palliative Care International and is a graduate and current faculty member of the Anamcara Project, where she emphasizes grief as a pathway to resilience and ecological belonging. Elizabeth’s work is deeply rooted in her personal experiences with loss and her belief in the transformative power of sorrow, gratitude, and connection. Growing up amid the wild hills and rivers of northern Montana, she has always turned to the natural world as a source of solace, perspective, and intervulnerability.

  • Lauren Bond, MA (she/her)

    LEAD GUIDE, River’s Path

    Lauren is the founder of River’s Path, now in their 11th season, offering profound and transformational canoe journeys in Colorado and Utah. Their mission is to connect people with the natural world through immersive and educational canoeing experiences.

    After dedicating her career and a master’s degree toward working in outdoor and  environmental education, Lauren found there wasn’t space in her work for stopping, sitting down and becoming lost in conversation with an eagle or a waterfall. Canoeing rivers right outside her back door in Boulder was the perfect way to do that and the river retreats on the Green River in Utah are the culmination of her journey thus far.

    Lauren has spent nearly 35 years of exploring rivers and streams, and nearly twenty guiding them. “We have guided thousands of people down the St. Vrain river and taken over 200 down the Green River. The gratitude I feel is indescribable. It is a joy for me to share the sacred havens of the river with you.”

We welcome all…


who feel the weight and impact of this unfolding polycrisis in their personal or professional lives. Whether you’ve directly experienced a climate disaster, work daily with the realities of the climate crisis, or carry the heaviness of our changing ecosystems in your heart and body, this retreat offers a restorative pause to reconnect and renew. Our experience is designed to be inclusive and welcoming to all. No prior canoeing experience is necessary. Whether you’re new to the river or a seasoned paddler, all are welcome to join.

What to Expect – Overnight Canoe Trip on the Green River