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Back to Findhorn Foundation
For Beginners

Best Programs at Findhorn Foundation for Beginners

4 min readMay 2026at Findhorn Foundation
Best Programs at Findhorn Foundation for Beginners

Best Programs at Findhorn Foundation for Beginners

You think you'll be the only one who doesn't understand the lingo, who can't tell a deva from a divot, who feels out of place in meditation. You won't be. Every week at Findhorn, someone arrives convinced they've made a mistake—they're not spiritual enough, not experienced enough, too skeptical or too mainstream. Then they spend seven days weeding carrots alongside former bankers and retired teachers, and the fear looks silly in hindsight.

The real question isn't whether you belong. It's whether you're willing to get your hands dirty, literally, and sit with discomfort long enough to see what's underneath.

The Programs That Won't Throw You In Too Deep

Experience Week is where most first-timers should start. You live in the community, work in the gardens or kitchen for three hours each day, attend workshops on Findhorn's principles, and get the full texture of the place without committing to a specific practice you might hate. You'll learn why they talk to plants without being forced to do it yourself. You'll see the bones of intentional community—the meetings, the work rotas, the way dishes get done when nobody's in charge—and you'll know by day three whether this framework speaks to you or leaves you cold.

Sacred Dance workshops run most months and ask nothing of you except a willingness to move in a circle with strangers. No previous dance experience. No flexibility requirements. Just simple, repetitive movements set to music from a dozen traditions. It's gentle enough for anyone who can stand upright, and powerful enough that people frequently cry. If you're someone who lives in your head, this is the crack that lets the rest of you in.

Art as a Spiritual Practice programmes give your hands something to do while your mind settles. You're painting, sculpting, working with clay—media that don't require talent but do require presence. The instruction is loose. The emphasis is on process. You'll spend a week making things that won't win prizes but might surprise you, and you'll do it alongside others who are just as unsure about their place here.

Introduction to Findhorn weekends exist, but they're too short. You arrive Friday evening, spend Saturday in workshops, leave Sunday afternoon. By the time you've oriented to the space and the people, you're packing. Take these only if a weekend is genuinely all you can spare, and know you'll leave with questions unanswered.

What "Level" Actually Means Here

Findhorn doesn't traffic in hierarchies the way Buddhist centers or yoga studios do. There's no Level 1, 2, 3. No prerequisites. No teachers who've been ordained by other teachers in unbroken lineages. What they mean by "foundation" or "introduction" is simply whether a program assumes you know what the Park is, what attunement looks like, why someone might thank a carrot before pulling it from the ground.

The advanced programs aren't harder in the sense of requiring more skill. They're harder because they assume you've already wrestled with the basics and are ready to go deeper without needing your hand held. They move faster. They skip the orientation. They don't pause to explain why everyone's standing in a circle holding hands before lunch.

What to Skip on Your First Visit

Deep Ecology intensive programmes. These pull at threads that can unravel you if you're not ready—grief about the planet's condition, rage about systems of extraction, despair that masquerades as realism. Without a foundation in practice, this emotional weight has nowhere to land.

Longer facilitation trainings. You don't learn to hold space for others before you've learned to hold it for yourself. These assume fluency in group process, comfort with conflict, and enough self-knowledge that you won't project your unresolved material onto participants.

Advanced meditation retreats. If you've never sat in silence for a day, don't start with five. Findhorn's meditation practice is less structured than Vipassana or Zen—more intuitive, more freeform—which sounds easier but often isn't. You need some baseline before all that unstructured space becomes useful rather than destabilizing.

How Long to Stay

A weekend gives you a taste. Five days gives you a rhythm. A week gives you a chance to actually change.

Most people should start with a full week. Not because shorter programs aren't valuable, but because it takes three days for your nervous system to downshift from whatever speed you arrived at. The real work—the moments when something shifts—happens on day four, five, six, when you've stopped performing and started inhabiting.

If you can only manage a weekend, take it. But know you're seeing the lobby, not the house.

When You're Ready for More

You'll know you're ready for advanced programmes when you stop thinking of Findhorn's practices as strange and start thinking of them as a language you'd like to speak more fluently. When you find yourself wanting longer meditations, not shorter ones. When you're more interested in questions than answers, in sitting with discomfort than resolving it quickly.

Or when you go home and the world feels louder, harsher, more fragmented than it did before you left—and you realize you need to learn how to carry what you found in Scotland back into your regular life. That's when you come back for the deeper work.

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