Moab, Utah — November 9-11, 2026

The Poetics of ACT

Kelly G. Wilson, PhD

Co-Founder of Acceptance & Commitment Therapy

The Poetics of ACT:

Finding Beauty in the

Midst of Darkness

Kelly G. Wilson, PhD

Professor Emeritus of Psychology, 
University of Mississippi
Founder, OneLife Education and Training

12 APA-Approved CE Credits


November 9-11, 2026 in Moab, Utah


Join us for grounding in stunning Moab, as ACT co-founder Kelly G. Wilson offers a compass for navigating uncertainty. In the high desertโ€™s open landscape, together we move forward with clarity, even when the path is not straightforward.

We are thrilled to invite you to our dream inaugural program with fellow life traveler Kelly G. Wilson, co-founder of Acceptance & Commitment Therapy (ACT).

Join us for much needed connection, reflection, and restoration during this pivotal moment. Grounding in the poetry of ACT, we replenish our capacity to remain present, open, and values-directed while navigating the complexity of our time.

Destination Psych CE participants can expect thoughtfully designed half-day learning sessions at the stunning Red Earth Venue. Beauty, stillness, and wonder create space for reflection, dialogue, and deep engagement with the work.

The Red Earth Venue, Moab, UT

Our gathering begins with time to connect and settle into the shared experience. Each subsequent day offers space for reflection, learning, and integration. Come early, stay later, and experience the landscape in your own way.

The Freedom to Choose Your Way

Moab meets each of us where we are โ€” whether that means experiencing the thrill of an ATV ride or climbing sandstone cliffs, the quiet of a hike beneath ancient arches, or the awe of standing on canyon walls catching the late light. The landscape invites both movement and stillness.

We designed an experience where rigorous professional development and restorative spaciousness coexist. Learning in the high desert, surrounded by red rocks quietly reinforces the flexibility we seek to cultivate.

Moab sits at the convergence of some of the most iconic public lands in the country. Arches National Park, Canyonlands National Park, and Dead Horse Point State Park lie within minutes of one another, creating a rare density of access and possibility. This is a landscape built for exploration โ€” on foot, by bike, by vehicle, or by climbing route. You can hike, drive, ride, scramble, float, or climb. You can move gently or push yourself hard. Few places offer this range of engagement in such close proximity.

The Poetics of ACT Schedule and Details

Monday Foundations: The Case for the Poetic Stance

Monday –Arrival is a new beginning — afternoon start, easing in, getting oriented to the place and each other, ending with a sunset social. It’s the day of opening and settling. We ask a foundational question: how did we come to do this work the way we do, and is there another way? Participants will be introduced to a process-based, poetic orientation to clinical practice — grounded in both contextual behavioral science and the psychoanalytic tradition — and will begin exploring their own presence and attention as active ingredients in therapeutic change. The day will be experiential throughout.

12:15 โ€“ 1:00 PMCheck-In and Welcome – Gathering and settling: Destination Psych CE registration, introductions, and orientation to our beautiful space and our learning journey ahead.

1:00 โ€“ 2:45 PMThe Problem with Protocols (1.75 CE) — How medical and pharmacological research models narrowed our assumptions about therapeutic change โ€” and why a process-based, poetic orientation represents a substantive alternative.

2:45 โ€“ 3:00 PMBreak

3:00 โ€“ 5:00 PMThe Poetic Stance in Practice (2 CE) — Differentiating protocol-driven from process-based approaches. Therapist variables โ€” attention, presence, responsiveness โ€” as active therapeutic ingredients. Experiential introduction to a poetic clinical orientation.

5:00 โ€“ 5:15 PM Reflection and Close (.25 CE) — Brief structured reflection. Questions and close of formal instruction for our first day.

5:15 โ€“ 6:30 PMSocial Hour (Optional) — We welcome you for an informal gathering of fellow travelers to Destination Psych CE. Light refreshments provided as we enjoy the high desert sunset together.

TuesdayInside the Room: Process, Suffering, and Language

On Tuesday, we dig deeper. An optional morning walk to settle in, then the clinical heart of the workshop โ€” psychological suffering, collaborative case formulation, the real-time practice of following what is alive in a session. The work is experiential throughout: we learn by doing, by noticing, by practicing with each other what we are learning to do with clients. Lunch is on-site and unhurried โ€” a full hour on 17 private acres between Arches and Canyonlands. Then we turn to language: the narratives, rules, and self-stories that shape what clients can see and do.

8:00 โ€“ 9:00 AMMorning Gathering (optional) — Enjoy breakfast offerings, with flexibility for optional outdoor explorations. Time for dwelling in the red rocks or sleep in and come ready for the day’s learning to begin.

9:00 โ€“ 11:30 AMSuffering, Formulation, and the Limits of What We Know (2.5 CE) — A process-oriented understanding of psychological suffering applied to collaborative case formulation. How identity and behavior are shaped by experience outside awareness. Clinical decision-making in real time.

11:30 AM โ€“ 12:30Lunch — A brown bag lunch is provided on-site with views of our stunning red rocks surrounding โ€” time to connect, move in nature, and let the morning settle.

12:30-2:00 PMLimitation, Possibility, and the Work of Language (1.5 CE) — Noticing and tracking shifts between contexts of limitation and contexts of possibility. ACT-consistent methods for exploring verbal narratives, self-stories, and rule-governed behavior with clients.

2:00 PMCE portion of the day concluded โ€” Free Time The afternoon and evening are yours. Moab rewards those who wander โ€” the landscape meets you where you are.

2:30-3:15 PMSound Bath (optional) — Crystal Blanks โ€” trauma-informed practitioner and Moabโ€™s own โ€” leads an immersive sound bath on the grounds of Red Earth Venue.

WednesdayIntegration: Self, Values, and the Living Practice

On Wednesday we move towards closure. We begin the day with an optional morning reflection time โ€” and then start the final stretch of work: integrating self and identity as a living thread through all six ACT processes, finding the pace that serves the work, and practicing the art of collaborative values-based direction with clients. As on every day, the learning is experiential โ€” we stay close to what is alive rather than what is known in advance. We close gently, with time for reflection and goodbye. What you carry out is yours to keep.

8:00 โ€“ 8:45 AMMorning Gathering (optional)–Enjoy breakfast offerings, and optional outdoor reflection time before our practice together begins.

8:45 โ€“ 10:30 AMSelf, Identity, and the Six Processes (1.75 CE) –Integrating work with self and identity as a central thread โ€” not an add-on โ€” woven through acceptance, defusion, present-moment awareness, values, and committed action. Shared experiential practice.

10:30 โ€“ 10:45 AMBreak with light refreshments

10:45 AM โ€“ 12:45 PMSlow Is Fast โ€” Values, Pacing, and the Living Practice (2 CE) — The principles of slow is fast, small is big, and less is more as guides to therapeutic pacing. Collaborative formulation of values-based directions with clients. Experiential exercises and structured dialogues for building therapist flexibility, presence, and creativity. Closing practice and integration.

12:45 -1:00 PMConclusion (.25 CE) — Final reflections and integration, evaluations, and close of our shared learning together. Destination Psych CE sends you off with warm wishes… until we meet again!

What’s Included with RegistrationThe Practical and the Poetic
The Practical InclusionsThe Poetic Moments
12 APA-approved CE credits*Three days of inspiration with a luminary in our field โ€” Kelly G. Wilson, co-founder of ACT โ€” actively engaged in workshopping the Poetics of ACT and the art of psychotherapy.
Refreshments throughout Monday + hosted sunset social hour with hors d’oeuvresThe first evening ends outside under the new moon โ€” which in Moab’s dark sky country means a night sky densely packed with stars only visible because of the darkness.

Arches National Park is 8 minutes away and open through the night. The Windows Section, just 9 miles inside the park, offers a sky full of stars framed by some of the most iconic arches on earth.
Light breakfast + brown bag lunch on the private grounds (Tuesday)An open lunch hour on 17 private acres of red rock formations โ€” time to soak in the vastness and majesty. Yours to spend however you need.
Breakfast offerings (Wednesday)The day closes by 1:00. The possibilities after are nearly endless and entirely yours to choose.
Open access to Red Earth Venue’s 17 private acres throughoutRed rock, open sky, and the particular stillness this place holds โ€” before each day begins, following the scheduled workshop, whenever you need it.
An optional sound bath with Crystal Blanks of Mindful Movement Moab, following Tuesday’s workshopTuesday afternoon finds its close in sound. Crystal Blanks โ€” trauma-informed practitioner and Moab’s own โ€” leads an immersive sound bath on the grounds of Red Earth Venue. Crystal bowls, Tibetan gong, chimes. A different kind of settling after a day of deep work โ€” the perfect negative space between the workshop and the open evening ahead.

Early bird registration: $1,180 through June 15. Standard registration: $1,380 after June 15.

Lodging and travel are arranged independently by each participant.

*CE Approval Information

*12 APA-Approved and ASWB-Approved CE Credits: Many state mental health professional licensing boards accept APA approval for continuing education requirements. However, CE acceptance varies by license type and state, and we strongly recommend that participants verify with their state licensing board that these credits will be accepted toward their license renewal prior to registering.

Current approvals include:
  • American Psychological Association (APA)
  • New York State Education Department โ€” all licensed mental health professionals
  • Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB)

This program offers 12 continuing education credits through the co-sponsorship of CE Learning Systems (CE-Go). CE Learning Systems maintains responsibility for this program and its content.

My State Licensing Board Does Not Automatically Accept APA or ASWB Approval

Not all licensing boards automatically accept APA-approved continuing education โ€” and we don’t want that to stand between you and this experience. If your board requires documentation to approve credits from a non-pre-approved provider, or if you’d like to seek advance approval before registering, we’ve put together everything you are likely to need in one place.

The Board Submission Packet includes a program description, learning objectives, schedule with contact hours, presenter credentials, CE approval documentation, and a ready-to-send cover letter.

Download Program Brochure

Lodging Options in Moab

Attendees are responsible for their own lodging, and are welcome to book at the location of their choosing. We have, however, reserved a few spaces at the Moab Springs Ranch for those that are interested in this venue.

Moab Springs Ranch

Moab Springs Ranch is a historic property located on beautiful grounds near Arches National Park, just north of downtown Moab. The ranch offers modern bungalows and townhomes, the Meadow private park with natural spring-fed waterscape, a hot tub, and fresh roasted coffee in every room. It is 15 driving minutes from Red Earth Venue.

A variety of bungalows and townhomes have been reserved for Destination Psych CE participants. To book your stay, please call the Front Desk at 435-259-7891 and identify yourself as a conference attendee. Moab Springs Ranch associates will be happy to discuss available options so you can choose the best fit for your needs.

Moab Offers Activities for All Ages & Stages of Life

Moab works well for shared travel. Some participants arrive with partners, others with children or teens, close friends, or colleagues who are also companions. While learning sessions are underway, companions have access to an unusually wide range of activitiesโ€”active, exploratory, or restorativeโ€”within close reach.