We want you to receive the retreat you deserve.
Leaf in Motion was born from years of living, learning, and moving across different lands — noticing how deeply environment, rhythm, and human connection shape our sense of grounding.
While exploring practices such as yoga, sound meditation, Tai Chi–inspired movement, and land-based living across Asia, Europe, and beyond, one truth became clear: the same practice feels different in different places — and that difference matters.
During a reflective period in Nepal, a small moment crystallized this understanding — a leaf falling into an open hand, a quiet reminder to trust timing, movement, and subtle guidance rather than force or urgency.
Leaf in Motion was created to share this approach with others — a retreat practice shaped by season, land, and embodied presence, where slowing down becomes a way to reconnect, listen, and find clarity through place..
Why Leaf in Motion retreat exist?
rooted but travels
changes shape with seasons
is light, but essential
falls when it’s time
feeds the soil for what comes next
a seasonal entry point
a symbolic exchange of energy, time, and presence
It invites you into a season of life - bring the seasonal ceremony back to modern life.
Just as leaves change with time and place, each retreat offers a container shaped by where you are, not where you should be.
A Leaf is…
How Leaf in Motion is Different
Every Leaf in Motion retreat is shaped by season as a living rhythm, and by land as a teacher — supporting clarity, vitality, and grounded presence through embodied experience.
01
Intentional
Structure
02
Authentic
Energy
03
Land-Led Experience
Who Holds This Space
Hi, my name is Jade, i’m glad you’re here:)
We're not here to follow trends—we're here to build something timeless. With a blend of creativity, confidence, and heart, we hold space for you.
Leaf in Motion retreats are held by a facilitator whose work sits at the intersection of movement, sound, and land-based practice.
With 8 years of practicing yoga and formal training in yoga teaching (RYT 200), sound meditation using the Tibetan singing bowls method studied in Nepal, and ongoing study of Tai Chi–inspired and traditional movement forms, her approach blends Eastern wisdom and Western living with contemporary nervous-system–aware practices.
Years of living and working across China, Australia, Southeast Asia, and Europe have shaped a sensitivity to how land, culture, and rhythm influence the body and mind. Rather than applying one fixed method everywhere, each retreat is adapted to the season, environment, and people present.
Her role is not to lead from authority, but to hold structure with softness — creating a container where participants feel safe to slow down, explore, and reconnect through shared daily life, movement, and stillness.