The Great Unlearning

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The Great Unlearning is an 8 week learning journey that invites parents, caregivers, educators, and fellow seekers into a deeper process of questioning what we have been taught to believe about learning, childhood, success, authority, and freedom. Held as a gentle but honest arc, the journey creates space to notice the inherited ideas, fears, habits, and systems that shape how we relate to children and to ourselves. It offers room to loosen those patterns and make contact with more life-giving ways of learning, living, and being in relationship.

Across the journey, participants move through reflection, dialogue, community inquiry, and practical experiments that support both inner and outer shifts. The arc unfolds through themes of deschooling, deprogramming, reimagining, and remembering, inviting people to meet the hidden curriculum of modern education and to reclaim curiosity, trust, presence, and relational intelligence. The Great Unlearning is less about mastering a new method and more about entering a living process of release, restoration, and return.

The Great Unlearning is an 8 week learning journey that invites parents, caregivers, educators, and fellow seekers into a deeper process of questioning what we have been taught to believe about learning, childhood, success, authority, and freedom. Held as a gentle but honest arc, the journey creates space to notice the inherited ideas, fears, habits, and systems that shape how we relate to children and to ourselves. It offers room to loosen those patterns and make contact with more life-giving ways of learning, living, and being in relationship.

Across the journey, participants move through reflection, dialogue, community inquiry, and practical experiments that support both inner and outer shifts. The arc unfolds through themes of deschooling, deprogramming, reimagining, and remembering, inviting people to meet the hidden curriculum of modern education and to reclaim curiosity, trust, presence, and relational intelligence. The Great Unlearning is less about mastering a new method and more about entering a living process of release, restoration, and return.