THE GOOD LIFE GAP SEMESTER
Winter-to-Spring 2026
Envision Your Good Life & Discover Your Great Work
On-site in Maine: February 23 - May 9, 2026
3 College Courses | 12 Credits | Transferable
Step away from the confusions of everyday life and make yourself at home on a 60-acre homestead peninsula in the coastal woodlands of Maine. This immersive, experiential program allows you to live in intentional community with a cohort of 20 fellow students who like you are setting aside a season to explore the good life. The program engages the whole person: body, mind and soul. You’ll partake of experiences in nature, learn to forage & cook, read inspired texts (one at a time), live into the big questions, practice mindfulness, connect to creativity and cultivate friendships based on the deeper things. Along the way you’ll complete 3 college courses (one at a time) for 12 credits with award-winning professors who embody the spirit of experiential learning.
For students seeking a full semester of college credits (15-16), we can offer additional independent studies. Please inquire. For students in the midst of college applications, we offer guidance and support. We are very often well positioned to write letters of recommendation.
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SPACIOUS REFLECTION: We create an environment in which students can think deeply about questions of the good life and begin to discern their own calling: “...the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet,” in the words of Frederick Buechner.
NATURE IMMERSION: We encourage students to connect to nature as a source of grounding, contemplation, insight and joy. Students live on campus here in the coastal woodlands of Maine. They learn to identify trees and plants, hike the preserves, and camp on the Maine Island Trail. Students slow down, sync up with nature and come to recognize their reciprocity with the earth.
INSPIRED ACADEMICS: Our programs are saturated with ideas to live by. We create a retreat-like setting, alive with creative thinking, good books and lively discussion. Our professors guide students through reflective exercises, facilitated conversations and immersive experiences in a non-ideological, non-dogmatic way. All courses at Seguinland Institute bear college credit through our affiliation with UMaine Farmington.
MINDFULNESS: We try to create a context in which students can cultivate the inner resources necessary for personal and community-oriented thriving. This includes daily mindfulness practice: the development of skills for calming and focusing the mind, knitting together fractured attention spans, and learning to sit with mystery.
CREATIVE ARTS: Creativity is the lifeblood of human thriving–for individuals and communities. Too many believe that creativity is the domain of the select few, “the artists”. We create space for all students to explore and expand their innate capacities for creative expression.
BACK TO THE LAND: Our campus is on the site of an old family homestead. In this spirit, we grow some of our own food and try “to live sanely and simply in a troubled world,” to quote Helen & Scott Nearing. We encourage students to grapple with the interconnections between the good life and the food life, as so many pressing issues of our time are food-related: climate change, health, inequality.
THE GOOD LIFE FOR ALL: Questions of the good life for one are inseparable from questions of the good life for all. We encourage our students to recognize that their own well-being is tied up with that of everyone else’s. We seek to instill in our students the skills to build strong and inclusive communities in the 21st Century.
SPRING SEMESTER EXPERIENTIAL COURSES
This program helped me feel more affirmed in the hope I have for my future. I feel so alive. The staff & faculty were like family who supported me with kindness and openness through this huge change in my life. It felt like growing up in the best way. Living in community takes effort & I’m glad I learned how to put that effort in. Something I wrote in my journal on the last few days of this program:“I didn’t know back then what all of this could mean; I’m glad I know now.”
- Arushi, Semester Alum
3 College Courses | 12 Credits | Course Credit via University of Southern Maine
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Prof. Philip Francis, PhD
How do I go about living a good life? What will I do with my one wild and precious life?
This course is an experience of living into these questions.
Readings and conversations will be integrated with hands-on experiences in nature and adventures in homesteading.
Students may read Henry David Thoreau’s In the Maine Woods while following the footsteps of his 1846 journey through Maine.
Students may read Robin Wall Kimmer’s “Maple Sugar Moon” in Braiding Sweetgrass while learning to tap maple tree and boil sap to make syrup for the pancakes we cook up together.
Students may read the Nearing’s Living the Good Life while learning the homesteading skills they imparted to generations of back to the landers.
Throughout the course students are guided through a process of articulating their values & visions of the good life while reading the best of American and Indigenous nature writing.
The course will take place in the closing weeks of the Maine winter. Within every season there is an invitation and an insight. Winter invites us to sync up with its rhythms, to slow down, conserve our energies, take stock, get perspective, prepare for the long haul, and secure a warm place around the fire with fellow travellers; warm beverages all around. Winter also invites us to step away from the fire, to walk out into the silent snow-covered landscape, to find new forms of adventure and joy; hidden reserves of warmth and resilience within. It was in the middle of winter that Albert Camus “at last discovered” that there was within him “an invincible summer.”
The Wintering edition of the Good Life Course at Seguinland is an invitation to embody this season of fire and ice on the coast of Maine, to discover your own invincible summer, and to allow your vision of the good life to emerge from the reflective rhythms of this time and place.
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Prof. Marsha Dunn, MSW
The second and third courses in our Winter-to-Spring Semester explore the theme of Community-Building in the 21st Century. Given the breakdown of community in the modern world - in light of the palpable desire for belonging – these courses will be imbued with a sense of timelines and the work of hope.
This course we will explore the role of art & creativity in building thriving, resilient and joy-filled communities. We’ll spend time with community-focused storytellers, dancers, musicians, visual artists, poets and more. We will combine fieldtrips and hands-on studio time with discussions and artist talks.
Our hope is that student emerge from this course empowered to become community-builders in their own way, time and place.
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Taught by Seguinland Faculty
The second and third courses in our Winter-to-Spring Semester explore the timely theme of Community-Building in the 21st Century.
In this course, we will explore the role of food in building thriving, resilient communities. We’ll spend time with poet-farmers, oysterwomen, rebel foragers, food forest philosophers, and wild mushroom hunters. We will combine field trips and hands-on planting with food making and philosophical discussion.
The course will culminate in the creation of an immersive, participatory, celebratory and sumptuous art-food installation - a feast for the eyes and the belly.
SPRING SEmester TRIPS & SPECIAL EVENTS
I found a community full of love, respect, support & amazing perspectives on life. I created bonds that will hopefully last for life. I found staff who understood us & treated us like adults. I found knowledge & peace while holding my new friends’ hands. I found a new family. I loved it and would totally recommend it!
-Pia, Semester Alum
This program is full of soulful adventures. We will spend time immersed in the natural world, engaging the beauty and serenity of this time of year: from winter-to-spring. Weather depending, outings may include cross-country skiing at the Hidden Valley Nature Center followed by Scandinavian sauna basking, snow shoeing at the oceanfront Reid State Park and searching for art-installation-trolls at The Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens, ice skating on the campus pond and then soaking in our lux wood fired cedar hot tub. We’ll definitely be tapping the maple trees and making maple syrup. We’ll also hangout with artist and musicians in their studios to learn about their creative processes. We’ll volunteer at inspiring local community organizations, such as Scattergood Farms, Cultivating Community and Veggies to Table. Along the way, you’ll have the opportunity to engage with a range of fascinating guests and speakers: visiting artists, philosophers, songwriters, climate scientists, foragers and more. This multifaceted program is intended to engage you at all levels: body, mind & soul.
SAMPLE DAILY EXPERIENCE
Breakfast & Morning Nature Walk
Eat a good breakfast in your riverside cottage. Take a morning nature walk on the trails, jog, or bike. Cross the salt marsh on a wooden footbridge and arrive at the Gathering Space, our classroom built up in the trees.
Mindfulness Practice
Participate in mindfulness practices led by Ida, who hails from the north of Sweden. Practices are designed to calm your mind, deepen your focus & knit together your attention span. Sessions are lighthearted, exploratory & even fun: may include forest walks, yoga, meditation or centering breath. Getting all Zen.
Good Life Conversations
Each day we explore a different set of questions & themes on living a good life and building community. Through facilitated discussion, mini-lectures, creative projects, inspired readings, journaling by the river & informal conversations students begin to clarify their vision of the good life and build a community-centered sense of meaning & purpose.
Lunch
Eat well & soak up your surroundings.
Afternoon Experiential Learning
Dive deeper into the day’s theme through site visits, outdoor exploration and creative projects. Examples may include: visit an artist collective for studio visits and conversations with artists, go dogsledding with a Wabanaki musher, or work with a expert forager to study plants and prepare a foraged feast!
Open Time
Time to chill, read, journal, work on projects, exercise, rest or socialize.
Dinner Preparations
Prepare dinner in the cookhouse: cooking, cleaning & “vibe crew” responsibilities rotate.
Communal Dinner
Gather for a family-style meal around one long table. Student-led games and spontaneous 80s dance parties may follow. Post-dinner is usually free time, though occasionally we have special musical performances or film screenings in the evening.
FOOD LIFE
How Well You Will Eat
We relish the connections between the good life & the food life. We want you to feel healthy & nourished during your time here. We source some food from our own garden, and more from farmer’s markets, local farms & regular old grocery stores.
Collective Cooking & Dining
We want you to come away with more cooking skills than when you arrived. Everyone participates in preparing meals, most of which are prepared collectively in the cookhouse under the guidance of Katie, our “Good Food Facilitator”, and eaten family style at a long table. Some meals are prepped for you by guest chefs.
Highlights
Traditional Maine lobster bake. Workshops on pickling, canning, preserving, fermenting & baking. Guest chefs. Favorite family recipes brought by students. We happily accommodate dietary restrictions and preferences including vegetarian, vegan, GF, Kosher, etc.
“This program has changed my life, and has left me with some of the best friends I have ever met. Prior to arrival, I knew it was going to be a fun and adventurous experience. However, it also ended up being insightful and meaningful, and truthfully life changing. I discovered new passions and respect for the world, myself and others. Not a day goes by where something doesn't remind me of my time spent at Seguinland.”
-Tim, Alum Fall Semester & Wintering
COTTAGE LIFE
Riverside Accommodations:
During most of your time at Seguinland Institute you will stay in one of our small riverside cottages. Each cottage has a kitchen, bathroom(s), and a porch for river watching. Cottages have 1-3 bedrooms. Students stay in doubles or triples.
Our Directors of Community Life’s attention to the student experience will be a welcome support as you adjust to cottage life, connect with the Seguinland community & maintain positive cabin mate relationships.
Treehouses:
Everyone spends a bit of time in a lux treehouse with river views and a wood-fired cedar hot tub 18’ up in the trees.
PROGRAM FEES
Tuition: $13,900
Cost includes everything: tuition & 12 college credits, room & board, gear & books, journals & marshmallows. Travel to/from is Maine NOT included. We can provide pick up at the airport in Portland & the train/bus station in Brunswick.
529 FUNDS:
Yes, families are usually able to use 529 funds to pay for the full amount of our programs. Please inquire and consult with your financial advisor.
Scholarships:
Need-based & BIPOC scholarships are available. Please don’t hesitate to inquire.
“All thriving is mutual.”