All three Master Class alumni remained in contact with their cohort members years later. The relational structure of the course — solo work first, then a one-on-one partner, then a small group — mirrors a natural progression of vulnerability. Matthew notes the cadence felt perfect: “I realize I got to start just with me, and then all right now I have a safe space with just one partner, and now I have some other folks to bring in.”
Eva found the group container initially terrifying but ultimately powerful — not just for the curriculum itself, but because the relational dynamics (choosing a partner, being chosen, showing vulnerability to strangers) became their own transformative material. The “noise and background work” of navigating social awkwardness while doing inner work was itself the work.
Joe observes that the only discount they offer is a community discount, because they’ve seen how much having people to do the work with matters for long-term integration. The community craving persists: every alumnus he speaks to wants more in-person connection around the work.