Inside the Chapel of Sacred Mirrors (CoSM) Daily Schedule

Inside the Chapel of Sacred Mirrors (CoSM) Daily Schedule
The bell rings at 7:30 AM, echoing through the dormitories overlooking CoSM's forty wooded acres. Unlike the regimented silence of traditional retreat centers, mornings here unfold with an artist's sense of improvisational structure—there's a container, yes, but what fills it changes day by day.
Morning Rhythm: Waking to the Visionary
By 8:00 AM, retreat participants gather in the Entheon—CoSM's temple building—for morning meditation. On your first day, you might feel disoriented by the Sacred Mirrors themselves: life-sized paintings depicting the human body from skeletal to spiritual, surrounding you as you sit. Alex Grey's anatomically precise renderings of energy centers and transcendent consciousness create an atmosphere unlike any meditation hall you've encountered. Some programs begin with twenty minutes of silent sitting; others start with guided visualization drawing on Vajrayana Buddhist techniques adapted through the lens of psychedelic mysticism.
Morning asana follows at 8:30 AM, though "yoga" feels like an incomplete description. The practice here often incorporates ecstatic movement, sacred geometry visualizations, and occasional sound work—participants toning together before flowing through sequences. By day four of a week-long program, your body knows this rhythm intimately; the initial self-consciousness dissolves into something more primal and communal.
Breakfast is served at 9:30 AM in the main building's gathering space. Expect vegetarian fare with vegan options—steel-cut oats with fruit, scrambled tofu alongside eggs, fresh-baked bread, strong coffee. Meals here aren't silent; conversation flows freely, though there's an understanding that mornings remain somewhat contemplative.
Late Morning: Workshops and Sessions
The program intensifies at 10:30 AM. Depending on which retreat you've chosen, late morning might bring painting workshops where participants work with acrylics and canvas, attempting to translate inner vision into form. Alex or Allyson Grey occasionally teaches these sessions personally, though visiting artists and ceremonial leaders also guide programs.
Other retreats focus on sacred geometry, participants learning to construct mandalas or exploring the mathematics underlying visionary states. Neo-shamanic programs might gather participants for talking circles, integration work, or teachings on entheogens and consciousness. There's remarkable diversity here—one week might emphasize Tantric practice, another weekend focuses entirely on dance.
Sessions typically run until 12:30 PM, with a brief break before lunch.
Midday: Communal Gathering
Lunch at 1:00 PM is the heartiest meal—grain bowls with roasted vegetables, hearty soups, substantial salads. The kitchen accommodates various dietary restrictions but maintains a firmly plant-forward approach. Eating together in the light-filled common space, surrounded by visionary art and windows overlooking the forest, participants begin bonding across the differences that separate them in ordinary life.
Afternoon: Integration and Exploration
From 2:00 to 4:30 PM, the schedule opens. Some retreats offer optional workshops—additional painting time, altar-making, discussions of psychedelic philosophy. Others leave afternoons entirely unstructured, allowing participants to walk the trails, visit the gift shop and library, rest in their rooms, or simply sit with the art.
The difference between day one and day four becomes pronounced here. Initially, you might feel compelled to fill the space, nervously signing up for every option. By midweek, you understand the gift of emptiness—time to process, to let insights settle, to simply be without agenda.
Some programs offer massage or energy work sessions as paid add-ons, bookable in these afternoon slots. Private sessions with teachers or integration counselors can also be arranged, particularly valuable for those processing difficult psychedelic experiences.
Evening: Deepening Practice
Dinner arrives at 6:00 PM—lighter than lunch, often soup and bread, salads, simple pasta dishes. The energy shifts as daylight fades.
Evening sessions beginning at 7:30 PM vary dramatically by program type. Full moon ceremonies might take participants outdoors for ritual. Ecstatic dance weekends transform the Entheon into a pulsing ceremonial space. Other programs offer lectures, film screenings about visionary art and entheogenic spirituality, or extended meditation.
By 9:30 or 10:00 PM, formal programming concludes, though conversations often continue informally—small groups gathered around the fire circle outside, quiet discussions in common spaces.
The Arc of Days
Weekend programs compress this rhythm into intensive bursts. Week-long retreats allow deeper settling. By your fourth morning, you're no longer studying the schedule—you've become part of the living pattern, your nervous system entrained to CoSM's unique frequency where visionary art, spiritual practice, and the question of what consciousness truly is merge into daily experience.



