advanced search


Events Calendar
Omega Catalog Mind, Body, Spirit - OCSL

Something to Live For

Repacking Your Bags for the Second Half of Life

Registration for this workshop has ended. Go to the Search Workshops page to look for upcoming workshops.

If you are at midlife and ready to take a powerful next step in living a meaningful life, this workshop is for you. Led by Richard J. Leider, ranked by Forbes magazine as one of the top five most respected coaches in the nation, we explore the issues and questions that arise in the second half of life, including:

  • How do we find renewed meaning and how does this express itself in our life’s work?
  • How do we discover new maps, provisions, and travel partners?
  • What is calling us and how do we discern our calling?

At midlife, we often sense that time is running out, but something essential is still missing. We might realize that our work no longer fits our gifts, passions, and values. We may feel stuck in the drain of indecision. Yet something keeps calling us to repack our bags and lighten our load for the journey ahead.

This practical, highly interactive workshop, suitable for both laypeople and helping professionals, provides the time, framework, tools, and skilled coaching for unpacking and repacking your bags for the second half of life’s journey.

Richard J. Leider, founder of The Inventure Group, and Senior Fellow at the University of Minnesota’s acclaimed Center for Spirituality & Healing, is an internationally recognized coach who works with many leading organizations. His books include the best-sellers Repacking Your Bags, The Power of Purpose, and Something to Live For. inventuregroup.com

Richard Leider

For more information: Call 877.944.2002 (US) or 845.266.4444 (International) or email us at registration@eomega.org

Back to top | Printable Version | Share This Page | Site Map | Terms and Conditions

Omega Institute for Holistic Studies, Inc. is qualified as a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Contributions are tax-deductible, as allowed by the law.