Teacher Training · 7-Month Certification · 2026 Cohort

A healing practice for your clients that finally fills you back up.

Get certified in the seven-step Morning Altars modality — a nature, creativity, and ritual practice you can bring into your sessions, groups, and community. For therapists, coaches, death doulas, and the helpers who hold everyone else.

Seven months · Begins Oct 4, 2026 · Limited to 100 practitioners · Scholarships & payment plans available

An intricate radial nature altar of acorns, seed pods, leaves, and berries arranged on the forest floor
A global community of 650+ certified practitioners across 15+ countries
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Esther Perel
"Day Schildkret, founder of the Morning Altars movement has created a beautiful commentary on nature and ritual."
Esther PerelPsychotherapist & bestselling author

If you're the one who holds everyone else

Is your work pulling you further from the nature, ritual, and creativity that lights you up?

Day Schildkret kneeling beside a colorful flower-and-fruit nature altar in the woods
01

You hold grief, trauma, and transition all week — and quietly wonder who holds you.

02

Talk, screens, and four walls only reach so far. You sense your clients need something embodied — beyond "so how does that feel?" — but you don't have the modality.

03

You've done meaningful work for years, often without a single peer you can go deep with. You're ready for a community that gets you.

04

You already believe nature, creativity, and ritual are medicine. You've just never had a structure to bring them into your practice — or the permission to receive them yourself.

The practice at the center of it all

You gather what the earth gives. You make it beautiful. Then you let it go.

Most people who find this work say the same thing: "I've been doing this my whole life — I just never knew it had a name." If that's you, welcome home.

No artistic background required

Nothing is bought and nothing is drawn. You arrange what's already on the ground — leaves, petals, stones, bark. That's exactly why it works for clients who'd never call themselves creative.

Impermanence is the teaching

You build it, behold it, and let it return to the earth. For anyone holding grief or change, the altar isn't a metaphor for letting go — it's the practice of it.

Sacred, not religious

Ceremony and reverence without dogma or belief requirements. It meets people of every faith and none — which is why it travels into hospices, prisons, classrooms, and grief circles alike.

What it gives back to you

A practice you receive and a practice you give — at the same time.

Healing

What happens when you let your body touch the living body of the earth — on purpose, every month.

Creativity

The antidote to fear. A reliable way to meet uncertainty with your hands instead of your worry.

Belonging

Slowing down, unplugging, and remembering you're part of a planet that is alive and on your side.

Community

Seven months alongside other nature-loving healers who get it — and a lifetime in the circle after.

The modality you'll be certified to teach

A seven-step practice you can adapt for anyone you serve.

Each step is a teachable, repeatable doorway — for a grief group, a 1:1 client, a classroom, a memory-care room, or yourself on a hard morning.

1Boots and a gathering basket on a forest path

Wander & Wonder

Childlike exploration, attentiveness, and awe — the doorway back into presence.

Wonder & uncertaintyTracking stories outdoors
2A person sitting on a hilltop at sunrise with a gathering basket

Place

Belonging, slowing down, and the sensory work of truly meeting where you are.

Meeting the placeSpiraling to the center
3Hands sweeping a small ground space clear with a brush before building an altar

Clear & Create

Opening creative channels and working with art as healing — no artistic background required.

Playing with possibilitiesCreate a rippling altar
4Two hands cupping a gathering of acorns

Gift & Share

Reciprocity, gratitude, and the practice of offering — turning a private act into ritual.

What is fierce trust?Create a broken-whole altar
5A circular altar of leaves and nuts beginning to scatter

Let Go

Impermanence, grief, and rest — the hardest, most needed medicine for the people you serve.

Impermanence as a guestCreate a changing altar

Two further steps — facilitation and the four directions of holding space — complete the seven-step modality and prepare you to lead it for others.

Wherever you already work, this work goes.

Graduates bring Morning Altars to the people they already serve — and the people they've always wanted to reach.

Grief & loss circlesTherapy clientsEnd-of-life & hospice Women's & mothers' retreatsTrauma survivorsVeterans & first responders Memory care & eldersRecovery communitiesSchools & youth CongregationsCaregiversBurned-out professionals

What the seven months include

Everything to embody the practice — and to teach it with confidence.

Live & experiential

Seven full-day intensives

One Sunday a month, fully online and hands-on. You'll be outside, building altars — not watching slides.

Weekly

Practicum lessons

Creative blocks, facilitation, holding groups, impermanence — plus business, pricing, and self-worth for your own offering.

Monthly

Mentored practice groups

Small groups with certified mentors to review material, practice facilitation, and be witnessed.

Lineage

Elder(berries) mentorship

Alumni return as guides for new cohorts, so you're held by people who've walked the path before you.

Always on

Private community & library

A members-only forum, every session recorded, plus a growing library of resources and collaboration space.

Your work

A signature final project

Design a personalized offering for your specific clients or community, and craft the vision you'll take into the world.

The outcome

Certification to teach the Morning Altars modality

Graduate certified to bring this seven-step nature, creativity, and ritual practice into your sessions, groups, workshops, and community — as a distinct offering that's unmistakably yours, with lifetime membership in the practitioner community.

You won't do this alone

650+ practitioners. 15+ countries. One circle.

The part graduates name most often isn't the certification — it's finally finding their people. If you've spent years being the "too woo" one, the only nature-and-ritual person in your field, or the practitioner with no one to share the work with — this is where that ends.

Your cohort becomes a lifelong circle, and membership in the wider community is yours for good.

A circle of practitioners gathered together outdoors by the coast at golden hour
Day Schildkret sitting on a hillside at golden hour with a gathering basket

Your teacher

Day Schildkret has spent over a decade making peace out of the pieces.

Morning Altars began in grief — his father's death, a breakup, his mother's dementia. Sitting under a tree one morning, Day began gathering leaves, petals, and bark into a single symmetrical pattern. After months of pain that nothing had touched, something shifted.

Since then he has created over 1,000 nature altars and brought the practice to the people who need it most: families who buried children, wildfire-devastated towns, veterans with PTSD, prison and recovery programs, dementia patients, and 9/11 survivors. People don't just take this training — they come to study with Day. Now he trains the helpers and healers who carry the work forward.

  • Author of two best-selling books
  • Taught at Esalen, the 9/11 Memorial Plaza & Google
  • Permanent exhibit, Oakland Museum of California
  • Studied for years with Stephen Jenkinson
  • Featured on CBC, NBC, FOX & CBS

What graduates have already carried into the world

The reach of past cohorts, across the communities they serve.

10,000
Elementary students
8,000
Therapy clients
7,500
Grieving families
6,000
Summer campers
5,500
Memory-care residents
5,000
Congregational families
4,000
Yoga students
500
Veterans

From the practitioners who've gone through it

"It was on Zoom — but it felt like I entered a sacred space and sat by a fire."

"This changed everything — my direction, my comfort with my creativity, and it gave me a platform to take this out into the world."

Renee Rossi
Renee RossiRole to confirmCohort 1

"A gentle yet powerful transformative experience of reawakening my inner artist."

Jiling Lin
Jiling LinRole to confirmCohort 1

"This training changed me and my approach to healing myself and serving others in so many good ways."

Davina Estrella Ramay
Davina Estrella RamayRole to confirmCohort 3

The shape of the year

One Sunday a month, for seven months.

  • FormatOnline, live & experiential
  • Commitment7 daylongs + weekly practicums
  • Daylong hours8am–5pm PT / 11am–8pm ET
  • Cohort sizeLimited to 100 practitioners
  • BeginsOctober 4, 2026
  • CompletesApril 25, 2027

The seven daylongs

  1. Sun, Oct 4, 2026
  2. Sun, Nov 8, 2026
  3. Sun, Dec 13, 2026
  4. Sun, Jan 17, 2027
  5. Sun, Feb 21, 2027
  6. Sun, Mar 21, 2027
  7. Sun, Apr 25, 2027

Frequently asked questions

I'm not an artist. Can I really do this?

Yes — and so can the people you serve. Morning Altars uses what nature already makes: leaves, petals, stones, bark. There's nothing to draw, paint, or "be good at." The creativity is in arranging and noticing, which is exactly why it reaches clients who would never call themselves creative.

Is this the right time? I'm in the middle of a lot.

Most people arrive in the middle of something — a loss, a transition, a season of depletion. That's rarely a reason to wait; for many it's exactly why the training becomes part of their own healing, not one more thing on the pile. If this work found you now, that's worth listening to.

Am I qualified enough to be here?

You don't need to be a certain kind of healer or "far enough along." If you already hold others — formally or informally — you have what this is built on. The application is a conversation, not a test, and it's there to make sure the fit is right for you.

What does the certification let me do?

You graduate certified to bring the seven-step Morning Altars modality into your own sessions, groups, workshops, and community offerings — as a distinct service that's yours. Your final project is designing exactly that offering for the people you serve.

What's the investment — and what if money is tight?

We never want money to be the reason this work doesn't reach the people who need it. Tuition, payment plans, and need-based scholarships are all discussed on your application call so we can find a fit for your situation. Many participants attend on a scholarship — it's an honor system, and your honest need is enough. Applying is free and places you with no obligation.

It's online — does that take away from the experience?

The live sessions are on Zoom, but the practice itself happens outside, with your own hands, in your own place. Graduates consistently describe the daylongs as feeling like sacred, in-person space — and the format means a global circle of peers you'd never otherwise meet.

Is this religious?

No. Morning Altars is sacred but not religious — ceremony and reverence without dogma or belief requirements. Many participants have left organized religion but still long for ritual and the sacred; this fills that gap, and it meets the people you serve across every faith and none.

What if I miss a daylong?

Every session is recorded and lives in the private library, so you can catch up if life intervenes. The monthly practice groups and forum keep you connected to your cohort between daylongs.

2026 cohort · 100 places · Early-bird open

The people you hold deserve a practitioner who is also being held.

Apply for the 2026 cohort. It takes a few minutes, there's no obligation, and it's the first step toward a practice that changes your work — and refills you.

Apply for the 2026 Cohort

Begins Oct 4, 2026 · Limited to 100 practitioners · Scholarships & payment plans available

Not ready to apply? Begin with a free guided altar practice →