The Inside Work program invites you to reclaim a connection to your body, biology, community, and the living world, and reimagine recovery as a pathway toward greater meaning and belonging.
Most women are navigating this rite of passage unsupported, under-resourced, undermined, and expected to travel unfamiliar terrain without a map or a community of fellow travellers.
Because women deserve more than encouragement to simply endure, The Inside Work brings together three dimensions of healing that have too often been treated in isolation:
Understanding how hormonal transition can influence sleep, mood, stress tolerance, cravings, motivation, emotional regulation, and overall capacity. Biology matters, and when women understand what is happening in their bodies, they can move through this season with more clarity and compassion.
Evidence-based, trauma-responsive psychotherapy and addiction counselling adapted to the realities of peri- to post-menopause. Exploring the story without understanding the biology can leave women feeling blamed, while understanding the biology without exploring the story can leave women feeling pathologized.
Exploring the stories, beliefs, and expectations that shape how women see themselves through the lens of Dr. Brené Brown’s research and The Daring Way™ methodology.
The Inside Work is a holistic approach to recovery and a place where women can explore their lives with curiosity, self-compassion, and courage.
The Inside Work is designed for women in peri- to post-menopause who are navigating recovery, identity shifts, and the physical and emotional changes of midlife.
This program may be for women who are questioning whether what they are experiencing is “normal,” feeling overwhelmed by hormonal transition, drinking more than they would like, struggling with food, body shame, burnout, anxiety, perfectionism, or patterns of coping through work, achievement, caretaking, shopping, or constant busyness.
It is also for women navigating relapse, recovery challenges, moral distress, self-abandonment, or the experience of feeling like a stranger in their own body and mind.
The program offers a space for exploration, education, empathy, and emergence.
The Inside Work is intentionally designed to be invitational, nourishing, and paced for individualized healing. Delivered as a five-day inpatient intensive on Gabriola Island, the program offers women a focused, restorative space to step away from daily demands and explore recovery with curiosity, self-compassion, and courage.
Sunday
Saturday
9:00 AM – 4:00 PM Daily
12:00 PM – 2:00 PM
We begin by exploring the biological realities of midlife and how hormonal transition influences mood, motivation, sleep, stress tolerance, emotional regulation, reward pathways, cravings, and our desire to reach outside of ourselves to cope.
Understanding what is happening in our bodies and brains is often the first step in releasing shame.
Midlife has a way of bringing unfinished stories to the surface such as scripts about our worthiness to be seen, heard, loved, and valued.
Through therapeutic exploration, guided reflection, and connection with like-hearted women, participants are invited to examine the stories that have shaped their lives and decide which chapters they wish to continue writing and which ones they are ready to close.
Many women arrive knowing they are overwhelmed, exhausted, anxious, or disconnected, yet struggle to identify what they are actually feeling on a deeper level.
Drawing from emotional literacy frameworks, participants learn how emotions can serve as information rather than problems to solve. By cultivating curiosity, self-awareness, and emotional fluency, participants can build a stronger connection to their internal landscape.
Most coping strategies start as solutions. They may have helped us manage stress, loneliness, grief, uncertainty, overwhelm, or pain.
But over time, what once offered relief can become maladaptive and cause harm.
Together we explore what sits beneath the urge to numb, escape, achieve, perform, control, or disappear – with curiosity rather than judgement. Because understanding what a behaviour has been doing for us is often the first step toward discovering what we truly long for.
Drawing from The Daring Way™ framework, participants identify what is no longer working and develop greater awareness of the patterns that keep them stuck.
Healing requires bravery. And bravery requires solidarity and support.
In a trauma-informed, supportive, and invitational environment, participants can explore vulnerability, shame, fear, and uncertainty while cultivating the capacity to stay present with what arises.
Like the seasons, tides, and moon, our bodies are designed to move in cycles.
Yet many women have spent years overriding their natural rhythms in service of productivity, caregiving, achievement, and survival.
Together we explore the role circadian biology plays in regulation, restoration, and recovery. Participants learn how reconnecting with the body's innate rhythms can support healing and create a foundation for a more sustainable way of life.
Recovery is cultivated in small, consistent practices – and within intentional acts of joy – that bring us back to center and into enchantment with our lives.
The Ritual invites participants to explore the daily rituals, restorative habits, and intentional practices that support nervous system regulation, emotional wellbeing, recovery resilience, creativity, connection, and self-trust. Together we examine how small, consistent acts of care can become anchors during seasons of uncertainty and change.
Participants begin to release inherited beliefs, societal expectations, and ways of being that have worked to disenchant, disempower, and disconnect us from ourselves, each other, and the natural world.
Together we will reclaim our right to rest, belong, and take up space.
Healing doesn’t end when the program concludes.
Participants will leave with practical tools, a personalized plan for ongoing support, resources, deep connections with like-hearted women, and a clearer understanding of how they want to move forward in this next chapter of life.
Dr. Tracy is an Obstetrician-Gynaecologist, surgeon, and educator with over twenty-five years of clinical experience in women's health across the lifespan. Her approach to care is integrative and multi-tiered- addressing hormones, nutrition, lifestyle, and emotional wellness to meet each woman where she is. Known for translating complex medical science into clear, accessible language without losing warmth or clinical rigour, Dr. Tracy brings both precision and deep compassion to her work with women navigating perimenopause, menopause, and midlife transition. She is the co-founder of Menopolooza, a movement dedicated to transforming the conversation around midlife and women's health, and a sought-after speaker on hormonal health, surgical care, and the systemic gaps that leave women underserved. Dr. Tracy is committed to a future where midlife women don't just survive- they thrive, with clarity, dignity, and joy.
Bryn Meadows is a Counsellor, with over twenty five years of experience walking alongside people through the messy, meaningful, and magical parts of being human.
Bryn created the Menopolooza movement because she believes menopause is not the end, it's a rite of passage. A wild, weird, and holy season where women get to reclaim themselves, rewrite the script. Her work is trauma-informed, body-celebrating, and deeply rooted in compassion, with a healthy dose of humour. With a Master's degree in Healthcare Leadership and 25 years in the mental health field, Bryn brings clinical expertise and compassion to her work. She is a Registered Master Practitioner in Clinical Counselling (MPCC) and a Certified Daring Way™ Facilitator–Clinician (CDWF), trained in the transformational methodology based on Dr. Brené Brown's research on vulnerability, shame, and courage.
Lisa Wall is a Certified Trauma Professional, somatic practitioner, educator, and SHE RECOVERS Coach with additional training in sound healing, circadian biology, intimacy education, and herbalism. With more than two decades of experience in community leadership, group facilitation, and program development, she brings an empathic, relational, and cyclical approach to her work. She integrates evidence-based practice with deep respect for lived experience and the wisdom of nature. As a woman in recovery navigating perimenopause herself, Lisa understands firsthand the profound ways this season of life can intersect with identity, wellbeing, and recovery. As a senior leader with the SHE RECOVERS Foundation, she develops educational programs and helps shape trauma-informed standards of community care for women in recovery. Lisa lives and works on a remote island, where slow living, ritual, and reciprocity with the natural world continue to shape both her own recovery and the way she leads.
Healing happens in relationships, with ourselves, others, and the environments that surround us. Every aspect of The Inside Work has been designed with these relationships in mind.
$8500 CAN all-inclusive. Vitamin therapy, restorative health programming, and single rooms available for an additional cost, subject to availability.
Women are often taught that we need to be more: disciplined, productive, tolerant, resilient, and in control when it comes to navigating life stressors and changes.
The Inside Work is an invitation to reject the story that your struggles are evidence of personal failure, and instead listen to what your body is longing for.
You deserve to reclaim the parts of you that have been waiting to be called back home.
This is the inside work.
No. The Inside Work is designed for women who identify as being in recovery, women who are questioning their relationship with certain coping behaviours, and women who simply recognize that something in their lives needs to change.
Recovery is understood broadly and may include recovery from substances, mental health issues, disordered eating, burnout, perfectionism, people-pleasing, overworking, self-abandonment, and/or related life challenges.
No. The Inside Work is not a detoxification or medically supervised withdrawal program. Participants who require detoxification or medical stabilization must complete that process prior to attending, and can do so at The Healing Institute.
Please contact us to discuss whether this program is the best fit for your current needs.
The primary format is therapeutic group programming. Individual sessions or consultations may be available and will be outlined prior to registration.
The Inside Work combines a trauma-informed approach with clinical education and therapeutic exploration. While psychotherapy-informed approaches are integrated throughout the experience, the program is not intended to replace ongoing mental health treatment or medical care.
Women experience midlife differently. While hormonal transition is a central focus of the program, participants may be at different stages of the journey. The material is designed to support women navigating the physical, emotional, mental, relational, spiritual, and identity shifts that often emerge during midlife.
Program-specific medical services, assessments, and testing will be outlined before registration opens. Any optional medical services would be discussed during the intake process.
Accommodation options will be provided prior to registration. Private and shared accommodations are available at The Healing Institute.
Each day includes a blend of education, therapeutic exploration, group discussion, reflective practices, embodiment work, nature-based experiences, rest, and integration time. The schedule is intentionally paced to support healing without overwhelm.
The Inside Work is designed to be accessible to women with varying levels of mobility and physical capacity. Participation in movement and experiential activities is invitational, and accommodations will be made whenever possible.
Yes. All general programming is wheelchair accessible and accessible accommodations are available. Some of the natural landscape, such as walking trails and parts of the beach, are not wheelchair friendly.
Registered and certified service animals are welcome. Please notify us of your needs upon registration.
Meals are designed to be nourishing, balanced, joyful, and aligned with the program's recovery-focused philosophy. Dietary restrictions, allergies, and accommodations will be discussed during the intake process.
Participants leave with practical tools, personalized next steps, resources, and ongoing recommendations for support. Optional follow-up offerings and community connection opportunities may also be available.
The program is intentionally kept small to support meaningful connection, individualized attention, participant wellbeing, and a strong sense of community. Each cohort is limited to a maximum of 15 participants.
A pre-program conversation or intake process will help determine whether The Inside Work is aligned with your needs, goals, and current circumstances. If another program would better serve you, we will do our best to help guide you toward alternative resources.