ReLoHu · Retreats

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The ceremony opens something.
ReLoHu maps it.

Ayahuasca, psilocybin, San Pedro, ibogaine: whatever medicine you work with, the question that follows is always the same: how do you make it last? Most people don't. Not because they weren't transformed. Because they had no map of where they went.

The problem nobody names

Most people who work with plant medicine find that, in the end, it changes very little. Not because the experience wasn't real. Because integration is harder than anyone tells you.

You leave the retreat cleaned out. Opened. Certain that something has shifted for good. And then you go back. Back to where you live, back to who you're around, back to the same environment that produced the same patterns that sent you to the ceremony in the first place.

The same things that caused the problems before you left are the same things that erode the benefit after you return. The trash builds back up. Most retreat centers know this and still don't have a real answer for it.

Integration support at most centers is thin. When it exists, it's expensive. And it almost never goes deep enough to work with the specific interior landscape the medicine revealed.

What you bring in is what the medicine has to work with

Going in cold and going in mapped are not the same experience.

This is something most people who work with plant medicine learn the hard way: the state you enter with is not neutral. Your patterns, your unresolved terrain, your unexamined assumptions about yourself, all of it goes into the ceremony with you. The medicine amplifies what is there. If what is there is unnamed, the experience can still be powerful, but it works without a map. It pulls at whatever it finds.

A ReLoHu session before a ceremony names what you are carrying in. Not to manage it or soften it, but to make it visible. You arrive knowing your terrain. The patterns that will surface, the unresolved material the medicine is likely to find, the intentions that are actually yours rather than ones you think you should have. The medicine has something specific to meet. That changes the quality of everything that follows.

Most people go into their first ceremony, and many of their subsequent ones, completely cold. They have not named what they are bringing. They hope the medicine will find what matters. Sometimes it does. More often, it finds the loudest thing, not necessarily the most important one. Arriving with a map gives the medicine a different kind of substrate to work from.

What's been missing

We can map stars. We can map terrain. We can map galaxies. Why don't we map ourselves?

Every human being is a universe. The interior world is genuinely complex, genuinely structured, and genuinely chartable, if someone is actually willing to do the work of charting it.

The retreat gives you an experience. What it rarely gives you is a map of what that experience revealed. Where you are, how your terrain is configured, what was being worked on, and where to direct your intention next.

That is what ReLoHu does. Not therapy. Not a framework thrown over you. A map. Yours specifically, built from a real conversation, delivered as a document you keep.

Where ReLoHu fits

Before. Between ceremonies. After. And as far after as you need.

Before: give the medicine something to meet

A ReLoHu session before the retreat maps your current interior landscape: your patterns, your unresolved terrain, your intentions. The medicine has more to work with when you arrive knowing where you are. Instead of hoping the ceremony finds something, you show it where to go.

Between ceremonies: substrate for the next one

Without something to orient you between ceremonies, you can go session after session without a substrate for the medicine to work on. A ReLoHu session in between tells you where you are now, what was opened, and where to direct your intention for what comes next.

After: integration that actually holds

Integration is where almost everyone fails. Not for lack of trying. Because they try to integrate without knowing specifically what they're integrating into. A post-ceremony ReLoHu session maps what the experience revealed and gives you something concrete to orient around as you return to ordinary life.

Months later, when the trash builds back up

Your map doesn't expire. But your terrain keeps changing. Returning clients book depth sessions that pick up exactly where the first map left off, tracking what has evolved and what still needs to be worked.

Why AI matters here

You can't have a human with you at every moment of integration. You can have your map.

Integration happens in ordinary moments: in the middle of a difficult conversation, at 2am when something surfaces, during a walk when a pattern becomes suddenly visible. A therapist can't be there. A retreat center can't be there. Your map can.

The AI behind ReLoHu holds the information from your session and runs on David Benson's proprietary methodology. When you have your map, you have something to return to that knows your specific terrain, not a generic wellness resource built for no one in particular.

David Benson spent a lifetime wishing he had access to something that doesn't quite exist yet: not just a therapist or a coach, but a real witness. Someone who could be with him all day, hearing his thoughts as they happened, seeing his experiences as they unfolded, not just receiving a summary of them an hour later in an office. Hearing something after the fact is not the same as being present for it. That gap is what ReLoHu is working toward. Right now it produces reports. What it is becoming is something you can return to in the exact moment you need it, during the experience itself, not only afterward. ReLoHu is a futuristic, human-centered service that could only exist now, with the help of AI. It is always improving and adapting to what people actually need.

"I went through ceremony after ceremony without knowing what to do next. I had no substrate for the medicine to work on. If ReLoHu had existed then, each ceremony would have had something specific to meet."

David Benson, Founder of ReLoHu

What a session produces

A Terrain Map: your psychological patterns, relational architecture, and behavioral drivers

An Archetype Report: the deeper structural forces shaping how you move through the world

People You Are Similar To: real people and fictional characters whose psychology maps onto yours

Your Strengths and Weaknesses: both sides, honestly named

Unique Things You Probably Never Knew About Yourself

Each report is delivered as a document you keep. They don't expire. They are yours.

A dedicated map type

The Integration Map

Post-ceremony integration now has a dedicated map type. The Integration Map is a structured ReLoHu session focused specifically on what the experience revealed: where it landed in your existing terrain, what it moved, what it opened, what remains unresolved.

Unlike a general Terrain Map, the Integration Map is designed to be done in sequence: Terrain Map first, so there is a landscape to map the experience onto. Integration Map after, so the experience has somewhere specific to go.

This is what has been missing from integration support everywhere else. Not a conversation. Not a circle. A document. Something you can return to as the experience continues to unfold over weeks and months.

Start before you go in, or after you return

The retreat gives you the experience.
ReLoHu gives you the map.

A 15-minute orientation call with David Benson is free and requires nothing. If ReLoHu is right for where you are in your process, you'll know quickly.

Full Session $295 · Terrain Report included · One session, one price.

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