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Awakening the Senses—and Finding Confidence—at the Euphoria Retreat in Greece

Our time is spent largely within the resort, an architectural marvel with a spiral staircase, monastic arches, a hammam, and a pool with spherical stone walls. But the real work takes place in the yoga room on the third floor. It was there, nestled into plush floor cushions, that Effaimoglou introduces us to Euphoria’s Methodos, an interpretation of the Five Elements theory. This centuries-old idea, found in both traditional Chinese medicine and ancient Greek philosophy, uses the fundamental elements of water, wood, fire, earth, and metal to better understand ourselves and how we move through the world. The elements correlate with the seasons, life phases, bodily organs, and, according to Methodos, leadership qualities: Water for patience, wood for drive, fire for spirit, earth for pragmatism, and metal for harmony and justice.

We use somatic meditation to physically experience the elements and identify our leadership archetype. My impatience quickly reveals that I’m not a water leader. But when the tranquil backdrop of soothing whale sounds shifts to a heartbeat-like drum, my posture straightens, and I confidently march to the beat with an innate sense of power and purpose. “After winter comes the life force of spring,” says Vandourou. “It’s the season of wood.”

Euphoria Retreat's Finnish sauna

Euphoria Retreat’s Finnish sauna

Euphoria Retreat

We cycle through the elements just like this. For fire, I shimmy my shoulders with the same abandon I did during my clubbing days. Our group dances together, twirling and dipping one another. Transitioning to metal, I sprawl on the floor like a starfish and channel the emotions (grief, impatience, fear) I most struggle to manage, envisioning them floating into the distance. It’s fun—enlightening even.

Euphoria Retreat

Designed to tie in the five elements and the five senses, this Greek idyll is built into a mountain and has a large spherical pool as its physical and spiritual center.

Still, nothing feels as transcendent as embodying the wood archetype. Discovering that the emotion most closely linked with wood is anger was disheartening, but Effaimoglou, a fellow wood leader, reassures me that the element’s strength lies in transforming anger into drive, kindness, and generosity. She likens wood types to seeds planted in winter, compelled to surface when the sun returns. This is wood in its most balanced state—overcoming obstacles with flexibility, outsmarting challenges with cleverness, and pushing through with sheer determination.

During a walk in the forest near the end of the retreat, I’m captivated by the towering trees, which appear to connect earth and sky. The head senior therapist tells us that, according to the ancient Greeks, cypresses symbolize resilience. My gaze travels down an elongated tree trunk, and I realize that my growth is defined by relishing change, not resisting it.

Little did I know how much change awaited me back in New York: Within days of touching down, I was given an opportunity to oversee a sizable business opportunity with a growing team. But things feel different now; I am acutely aware that change is the only constant. Knowing I have the tools to weather it has brought me the calm and confidence I’d been searching for. With the optimism of a seedling preparing to sprout, I whisper a promise to myself: Keep growing.

This article appeared in the March 2024 issue of Condé Nast Traveler. Subscribe to the magazine here.