What is a
Darkness Retreat?
An extended period of voluntary solitude in complete darkness - no light, no screens, no external stimulation. This page explains what darkness retreats are, where the practice comes from, what research tells us about what happens to the brain and body in extended darkness.
What actually happens in a darkness retreat
In today's fast-paced, hyperconnected world, darkness retreats reflect a growing desire to step away from constant stimulation and reconnect with the inner self. These are the key features you typically find in a darkness retreat:
An extended period across multiple sleep cycles - immersed entirely in a space completely free of light and visual distraction.
Without light, the mind slows down. People enter the darkness to rest deeply, reflect, and experience their inner world with profound clarity.
When external input drops away, the nervous system reorganizes. What surfaces is subtle, yet distinctly different from everyday awareness.
Daily check-ins, guided breathwork, and contemplative practices provide a secure container - so the process is safely held throughout.
Where the practice comes from
Voluntary darkness is one of the oldest contemplative technologies in existence. It appears, in different forms, across traditions that have almost no other contact with each other.
Dark Retreat in Tibetan Buddhism
The most sophisticated documented lineage of darkness practice comes from the Bon religion and Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism, where the practice is known as mun mtshams. In these traditions, darkness is understood to be a condition uniquely suited to certain kinds of contemplative investigation. The external world is removed so that what is ordinarily obscured by it can become visible.2
The practice requires significant preparation and is traditionally considered advanced — suitable only for practitioners with an established meditation practice and clear intention.2
Darkness Across Other Traditions
Indigenous cultures across the Americas, Africa, and Australia have long used periods of darkness or sensory isolation as part of initiation and vision-seeking practices. In ancient Greece, the physician Galen and others recommended dark room confinement for certain mental conditions.1
Cave hermitages throughout Christian and Jewish contemplative history, and meditation cells in Buddhist monasteries across Asia, reflect the same underlying intuition: that darkness creates conditions for a kind of attention that ordinary life does not.1
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1
Sensory Deprivation and the Brain: Neurobiological Mechanisms, Psychological Effects, and Clinical Implications. MDPI Brain Sciences. 2026;16(2):122.
mdpi.com/2076-3425/16/2/122 -
2
Dark retreat (mun mtshams). Wikipedia & Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia.
Wikipedia — Dark retreat ·