Now is the time to rewire your relationship to fear.
Less avoiding what matters to you, less reacting from pain instead of love, less playing small.
This is where you discover what you can do with just a little more courage.
We know the name sounds kinda intense. Like you’re going to have to take on Russell Crowe in a ring or something. But this isn’t about being a badass (though you might find that happens after a few gatherings with us).
Courage Club is actually a place where it’s okay to be afraid. A place where you get to listen to your fears. Maybe even laugh at them a little. And ultimately learn how to move through fear to live the life you want.
Each monthly gathering includes a mix of sharing our stories, learning the science and secrets of freeing yourself from fear, and practicing ways to take bold action. By the time you leave, maybe even spiders won’t seem so scary.
From San Francisco to Puerto Rico, Courage Club events have helped thousands of people rewire their relationship to fear. Join founder Galen Bernard and a community of caring, daring peers for Denver’s next gathering. Held at the beautiful Archipelago.
*A 303 Magazine pick for top things to do in Denver*
Check out courageclub.co and @crgclb on social media for more about Courage Club.
INFO ON COURAGE CLUB FOUNDER GALEN BERNARD
Galen is out to create an antidote to fear. A coach and community designer, he has helped people across the U.S.—creators and creatives, students and seniors, the bold and the just beginning—discover the thrill on the other side of fear.
Before creating Courage Club, he was executive director of the social innovation space New Leaf Initiative, which put State College, PA, on the map as one of Entrepreneur magazine’s best cities in the U.S. He trained in peer support while a director at a chapter of the country’s largest grassroots mental health organization. Always seeking to support people who want more than the status quo in life, he mentors leaders of positive social change for StartingBloc and Watson University. He used to be so afraid of the dark he needed a nightlight for sleepovers as a kid. Now he loves starry skies.