Inside a Controversial $15,000 “Orgasm Retreat” in California
Jana Hocking, a sex and dating columnist for the Mail Online, recently shared her experience at the Back to Body Sex Retreat, a five-day program in Joshua Tree National Park priced at $15,000. Speaking on the Just Between Us podcast, Hocking said the retreat was designed to help women reconnect with their own pleasure and sense of embodiment.
Beyond Expectations
Hocking initially imagined an extroverted atmosphere, but found instead that many participants were carrying wounds from past relationships, divorce, or sexual disconnection. “They needed to learn how to enjoy intimacy again,” she observed, describing the retreat as more emotionally charged than she anticipated.
The Program
The retreat opened with group discussions, where participants shared their reasons for attending, followed by guided exercises led by founder Pamela Madsen and her team. Sessions included meditative practices, self-reflection, and anatomy-based education.
For Hocking, a central takeaway was confronting the difference between “performing” pleasure and genuinely experiencing it. “I realized I was performing… but am I having a real orgasm?” she reflected.
Controversial Methods
Some sessions, including live demonstrations, sparked debate online for their unconventional approach. While not every participant resonated with the practices, Hocking emphasized that the goal was to challenge taboos and normalize open conversations about female sexuality.
A Personal Outcome
Although Hocking was the only attendee who did not climax during the retreat, she left with a deeper sense of self-awareness. “I’m more equipped to reach climax on my own terms,” she said, highlighting that empowerment was more important than any single outcome.
Broader Conversation
The retreat has drawn mixed reactions — curiosity from some, discomfort from others. Yet it also underscores how often women’s pleasure is overlooked in mainstream discussions of intimacy. For those who attended, the experience was less about spectacle and more about healing, reclaiming agency, and rewriting personal narratives around sexuality.
Reflection
Beyond the headlines, the story points to a wider truth: intimacy is not just physical but deeply emotional, often tied to healing past wounds and rediscovering one’s own dignity. While the methods may not suit everyone, the retreat has sparked an overdue conversation about women’s right to wholeness in both body and soul.