A practical 7-day integration guide to help you capture what your journey revealed and turn it into real-life change.
Your job felt hollow. Conversations with your partner felt superficial. The way you parented, worked, and moved through your day—it all felt like a costume from a life you no longer fit.
I know this feeling intimately. After my own profound transcendental experience, I was left with a sense of clarity and a terrifying problem: my old life didn’t have room for this new truth. I was living a double life—the person I knew I could be, and the person my daily reality demanded.
This is the silent suffering of integration. It’s not that you’re failing. It’s that you’re trying to pour a gallon of truth into a pint-sized container. The insight doesn’t fit. So you compartmentalize it, and slowly, it begins to fade. You start to fear it was all a dream.
You don’t need another breakthrough. You need a way to hold onto the one you already had. The Great Remembering is a practical integration guide that helps you capture what your journey revealed, understand what it meant, and begin applying it to your real life.
Because insight alone doesn’t change your life. Integration does.
The Great Remembering is built around 6 practical pillars designed to help you capture your insights, process what surfaced, and begin applying it to your real life.
Everything inside is designed to help you capture what your journey revealed and begin applying it to real life.
All of this is designed to give you far more than insight — it gives you a practical system for actually integrating it.
Regular Price: $47
Today: $27
Most people leave a profound experience with the best intentions. They tell themselves they won't let it fade. They mean it. Three weeks later, they're back in the same patterns. The same reactive conversations. The same hollow Monday mornings. Not because they failed — but because insight without a container doesn't hold.
You wake up and the experience isn't a fading memory you're desperately trying to hold onto — it's a reference point you actually live from. You have language for what happened. You can explain it to your partner without sounding unhinged. You know which parts of your old life need to change, and you've already started.
The anxiety that followed your journey — that disorienting gap between who you felt yourself to be and the life you came back to — has quieted. Not because you suppressed it, but because you did something with it.
You have a 10-minute daily practice that keeps you grounded without requiring an hour of meditation. You've identified the three things your experience was actually asking you to change. And you've started changing them — not dramatically, not by blowing up your life, but in the small, compounding ways that actually last.
Journaling is unstructured reflection. It’s useful, but it tends to circle the same insights without moving you forward. The Great Remembering is a structured process — it gives your reflection a sequence, a purpose, and a destination. You’re not just writing about what happened. You’re working with it systematically until it becomes something you actually live.
No. The 48-Hour Download pillar is designed for fresh experiences, but the rest of the framework works regardless of when your journey happened. If anything, some distance can help — you’ve had time to notice what changed and what didn’t, which gives you better material to work with. Many people find it most useful when they’re trying to understand why the insight hasn’t translated into lasting change yet.
No. The workbook uses guided prompts and structured exercises — you’re responding to specific questions, not staring at a blank page. If you can write a text message, you can work through this.
The core daily practice is 10 minutes. The deeper pillar work — the 48-Hour Download, the Meaning Extraction — will take longer when you first do them, typically 30–60 minutes per session. You move through the workbook at your own pace. There’s no deadline.
No, and it doesn’t try to be. This is an integration tool for people who are fundamentally okay but navigating a significant shift in perspective. If you are in acute distress, experiencing psychosis, or struggling with a mental health crisis, please seek qualified professional support. The workbook includes a curated list of trusted resources if you need them.
The workbook includes an Integration Emergency Kit specifically for difficult, disorienting, or emotionally intense experiences. It won’t replace professional care for serious trauma, but it will give you grounded, practical tools for navigating the harder edges of integration. If you’re unsure whether this is the right fit, err on the side of speaking with a qualified integration therapist first.
You get the 110+ page Great Remembering workbook, the complete 6-pillar integration framework, guided exercises and trackers, the Integration Emergency Kit, a curated reading list and support resources, and a guided email series to walk you through the process step by step.
If you complete the 7-day workbook and don’t have a clear, actionable framework for integrating your experience, email us within 30 days for a full refund. No questions asked.
If you’ve had a meaningful experience and want a grounded, practical way to integrate it into real life, this workbook is likely a good fit. If you’re looking for a passive read, another peak experience, or a substitute for therapy or crisis support, it probably isn’t.
Stü (the Author) knows what it's like to have your life quietly dismantled by a single experience.
After a powerful transcendental session left him with a clarity he couldn't explain and a daily life that suddenly felt like a costume, he began obsessively building what didn't exist: a grounded, non-dogmatic system for translating profound insight into the practical demands of a real life — a career, a marriage, two young kids, and a mortgage.
He is not a shaman. He is not a therapist. He is a systems thinker, spiritual technologist, entrepreneur, and former touring musician who has done the integration work himself and built a framework rigorous enough to teach. He is completing his certification in psychedelic integration coaching, studied contemplative practice across multiple traditions, and has spent the last decade helping high-achieving individuals navigate identity collapse, burnout, and the kind of life transitions and transformations that don’t come with instructions.
The Great Remembering: Integration Guide for Transcendental Experiences is the system he wishes had existed when he needed it most - and now he is excited to share it with you. From everyone here at StillPoint, we wish you safe travels.
Our Grounded Guarantee: If you complete the 7-day guide and don’t have a clear, actionable framework for integrating your experience, simply email us within 30 days for a full refund. No questions asked.