CO-CREATIVE EXPERIENCES WHERE RESISTENCE MELTS AND EMBODIED ALCHEMY BEGINS.

Step into the Mystery, and Let the Magic Unfold.

At How to Play in the Dark, transformation doesn’t just come from merely facing hardship—it comes from meeting it with curiosity, creativity, and a playful sense of adventure. Here, you don’t just think about shifting beliefs—you experience it. Through movement, expression, and co-creation, you step directly into the shift, embodying change in real-time

What is Playing in the Dark?

It’s a practice of returning to yourself—especially in the moments that feel messy, uncertain, or tender.

Here, PLAY is more than just fun, it is about reclaiming your imagination, your voice, and your freedom to explore and express without judgment. 

We define PLAY as:
Presence. Love. Action. Yay.

When you approach life with loving presence, take inspired action, and celebrate along the way, you’re stepping into the realm of play. It’s where creativity flows freely, old patterns can shift, and new possibilities unfold.

And the DARK isn’t something to fear—it’s the sacred terrain where grief, rage, shame, and confusion live alongside mystery, magic, and deep insight.

By welcoming the parts of ourselves we’re taught to hide, we open space for healing and transformation to unfold. This work isn’t linear or predictable—it’s alive, embodied, and shaped by truth. And it all begins with the willingness to turn toward what’s real.

When You Learn to Play in the Dark…

It awakens the part of you that sees struggles not as burdens, but as invitations.

The Playful One ignites—

The one who is free, takes bold risks, and embraces child-like wonder.

The one who trusts your imagination as an endless reservoir of possibility.

The one who knows the contagiousness and connective power of play.

The one who finds humor and delight in the absurdity of life.

The one who moves open-heartedly and loves life without limits.

The one who embodies curiosity and moves lightly through the world.

The one who leads with confidence, compassion, and tenderness.

The one who trusts your expressiveness and flows through emotions with ease.

The one who lets your body lead, and your mind follow.

The one who has the power to reshape reality creatively.

The one who dances with life’s rhythms and beats your own drum.

The one who finds joy and lightness, even in the darkness.

This is who you are, when you say yes to the Mystery

THE STRUGGLE IS REAL

It’s Easy to Feel Lost in the Dark

When life feels heavy, chaotic, scary, paralyzing, painful, constricting, confusing, or just too much—it’s easy to forget what’s possible.

To disconnect from your joy, your power, your creativity—and lose your way.

You might find yourself trapped in the same cycles, unsure where to turn or how to begin again.

But what if this darkness wasn’t something to escape…

What if it’s a doorway?

A threshold into a new kind of aliveness.

Not by pushing through, but by playing your way through—with curiosity, courage, and connection.

When you’re in the dark, it can feel like you…

  • Are caught in the sacred tension between growth and struggle—ready for something new but unsure how to shift.

  • Crave real connection and soul-aligned community—but keep showing up in spaces where you can’t be fully seen.

  • Have been holding so much for so long—and are exhausted from trying to do it all alone.

  • Want to live with more freedom—but the old protective patterns still have a grip on you.

  • Have forgotten how to feel joy, pleasure, and play—and it’s starting to take a toll.

  • Sense something deeper is calling—but the next step feels uncertain, or out of reach.

  • Know you’re meant for more—but self-doubt and judgment keep clouding your path.

    If you stay here too long, the risk isn’t just stagnation.
    It’s disconnection. Burnout. A life that no longer feels like your own.
    And that’s not the life you came here to live.

  • "Danielle is a masterful and intuitive facilitator. How to Play in the Dark is a space of deep exploration, creativity, healing, and connection. I felt so deeply seen and held as we explored our edges and our darkness with curiosity, compassion, and of course - play! It's hard to capture in words, but this experience is sacred, healing, and, dare I say, holy. If you want to receive support around a challenge, in a way that feels honoring and authentic while also bringing lightness, joy, and transmutation, I highly encourage you to attend this potent experience. It's one of a kind." -Kimberly

  • “Danielle creates the safest spaces because she cares so deeply about feeling safe.” -Julie

  • “In my 55 years, I have never been a ‘group person’, feeling a private, vulnerable, not my cup of tea vibe, maybe protection.  The experience I had, facilitated and held with such profound love and grace by Danielle, was like spiritual honey and homecoming. To gather in the dark, to transform the dark, in such a space of power and safety was like a long awaited and yearned for exhale. It was important. It was beautiful. It was nurturing and gently nudging that edge simultaneously. It was healing and transformative. And it was stabilizing. I am profoundly grateful to Danielle for creating and guiding this experience, the effects of which will Ripple and alchemize much more than I can even know now. Just beautiful.”  -Laurel

  • “How to Play in the Dark was a beautifully co-created and guided experience.  It allowed for transformative deep healing in a safe, supportive, space.  I left feeling truly illuminated!  I was able to step into my passion with the most amount of ease and aligned upliftment.  I highly recommend working with Danielle and this brilliant offering!!” -Jenn

  • “Danielle's "How to Play in the Dark" gathering is hard to describe fully, but it was transformative, healing, magical and fun (yay)! Celebrating the power of community in dark times, finding laughter along the way.  Her insightful guidance helped me connect with my needs in a profound way. Wholeheartedly recommend, it's truly a unique and beautiful experience!” -Danyeal

  • “How to Play in the Dark experience was EPIC, y'all!!!! 100/10 would recommend!!!!” -Amelia

  • “I had no idea what to expect but I trust Danielle so I leaned in. The space Danielle held supported me to feel like I could relax into the mystery. I was delighted to find that the edges I met were more enjoyable than painful. Where play and healing were remembered as the same thread. Most notably, I loved doing this with others and seeing how sweetly intimate it felt! Like I was a tween at a sleepover playing with friends again. I highly recommend How to Play in the Dark for anyone who is curious to explore beyond the layers of which they already understand.” -Naiya

Danielle Rifkin, LPC, ATR is the founder of How to Play in the Dark.

She is a Somatic, Art & Play Therapist and Grief Ritualist who blends deep presence with creative practice to help people access their most authentic, embodied selves.

With over a decade of experience holding grief circles, art groups, and immersive healing spaces, Danielle brings a rare combination of clinical grounding, sacred ritual, and playful innovation.

She earned her Master’s in Transpersonal Counseling Psychology from Naropa University and has worked across diverse therapeutic settings. She has facilitated hundreds of groups, always with the intention of creating spaces where people feel safe enough to reveal their full truth—where nothing needs to be fixed or hidden.

Danielle believes that the most powerful transformations happen in community and through experience—when the body feels safe enough to surrender, and the soul feels free enough to emerge.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

  • At How to Play in the Dark, “play” is a transformative experience that invites you to meet the moment with curiosity, presence, and openness. It's not just about fun—it's about reconnecting with your aliveness, your imagination, and your deeper self.

    We define PLAY as:
    Presence. Love. Action. Yay.

    When you approach life with loving presence, take inspired action, and celebrate along the way, you’re stepping into the realm of play. It’s where creativity flows freely, old patterns can shift, and new possibilities unfold.

    Play can look like: Imagination. Innovation. Freedom. Movement. Confidence. Expression. Curiosity. Connection. Humor. Embodiment. Adventure. Trust. Spontaneity. Vulnerability. Laughter. Lightness. Surprise. Wonder. Choice. Surrender. Exploration. And so much more.

    Play gives you permission to be fully human. It invites you to stretch, explore, and shift—without judgment. When we engage with life playfully, we open the door to healing, transformation, and powerful change.

  • The “dark” isn’t something to fix or fear.

    At How to Play in the Dark, the dark is the sacred terrain of transformation. It’s where truth lives—raw, tender, sacred, and often uncomfortable.

    The dark holds: Grief. Shame. Fear. Rage. Anxiety. Overwhelm. Vulnerability. Depression. Emptiness. Loneliness. Blocks. Struggles. Endings. Contraction. Confusion. Wounds. Shadow. The unconscious. The unknown. The unseen. The sacred. The feminine. The mystery. The truth. And so much more.

    These are the parts we’re often taught to hide. But in the dark, there’s also depth, meaning, and immense creative potential. It’s the compost—the fertile ground where insight and healing emerge.

    When we learn to play in the dark, we stop resisting what is. We meet ourselves fully and open to what’s waiting beneath the surface.

  • Not usually—but we could!

    The word “dark” here is metaphorical. It refers to the internal experience of not knowing, feeling lost, or moving through challenge. Sometimes we’re “in the dark” about ourselves or what’s next. That’s what we explore.

    That said, if turning off the lights or blindfolding supports the work, we might go there. It’s always invitational, never performative.

  • Play isn’t just a break from the serious stuff—it’s a way through it.

    Research shows that play:

    • Boosts problem-solving ability by 43% (University of California, 2013)

    • Enhances adaptability up to 60% (National Institute for Play)

    • Lowers cortisol (stress hormone) and raises serotonin (mood regulator)

    Play helps us try on new roles and possibilities in a low-stakes, creative space. It activates the brain’s neuroplasticity—meaning it rewires us toward more openness, resilience, and innovation. When we give ourselves permission to play, we create space for creativity, problem-solving, and connection—essential ingredients for both personal and collective transformation.

    It also helps us regulate our nervous systems and show up more fully in life.

    So the next time you're stuck, overwhelmed, or spinning—play might just be the bridge back to yourself.

  • That’s a powerful and important question.

    Safety and agency are at the core of How to Play in the Dark. You're never expected to push past your limits. Your "no" is always honored—seen not as a disruption, but as a gift. There is no such thing as "ruining the mood" when you're being true to yourself. 

    We begin each group with co-created “Rules of the Playground”—shared agreements rooted in consent, nervous system awareness, and collective care. You'll learn how to discern between a growth edge and a trauma response, and how to trust your body’s signals.

    We use simple check-ins throughout each experience to help everyone stay present and attuned. If something feels off, you’ll have tools and support to name it.

    You will never be thrown into the deep end. Every invitation is just that—an invitation. You get to choose your pace. And you're guided by facilitators who can hold complexity, sensitivity, and emotion with presence and care.

    This space is designed to welcome your full self—and that includes your boundaries.

  • Each group is a living, breathing, creative collaboration—shaped in the moment by the people in the space. Nothing is pre-scripted. It is emergent. We follow what’s alive and let the group’s energy, imagination, and expressiveness lead.

    While the possibilities are endless, some modalities that have emerged in previous groups include:

    • Ritual theater and psychodrama

    • Embodied movement, intentional touch, and somatic practices

    • Parts work (like IFS) and gestalt dialogue

    • Grief rituals, breathwork, emotional release

    • Storytelling, improvisation, dance, visual art, song

    • Rage practices, sacred silliness, and quiet witnessing

    Some moments are big, bold, and liberating. Others are subtle, slow, tender, and deeply grounding. There’s no right way to play here. What emerges is always co-created by the natural unfolding of wants to be seen, felt, and expressed. 

  • Nope. You don’t need to know anything before you arrive.

    Many people feel awkward, self-conscious, or unsure about play at first. That’s part of the experience. We explore how your nervous system responds to play, how conditioning or trauma may have shaped your relationship with it, and what play can mean for you now.

    There’s no pressure to perform. There’s no need to "fake it" if you’re not feeling it. You’re welcome just as you are.

  • Not at all.

    You don’t need to have clarity or words for your experience before you arrive. We’ll guide you gently into the space and support you in uncovering what’s true for you in the moment.

    You’re never required to share or be at the center of anything. You might choose to witness, support, or simply be present—and that is just as powerful.

    Everything is invitational. Your pace. Your process. Your choice.

  • This space is for people who are ready to:

    • Bring their curiosity

    • Explore their edges

    • Reclaim creativity

    • Grow in community

    Every group looks different—because every person brings something unique. We adapt to the people in the room. You don’t need to show up any particular way—just bring your whole self.

    This work is especially powerful for:

    • People building intimacy, trust, and honest communication in community

    • Groups exploring themes like anger, power, shame, body image, or self-compassion

    • Existing communities wanting to deepen connection or bring fresh creativity to their space

    • Businesses, retreats, or teams craving collaboration, authenticity, and playful innovation

    • Couples seeking to navigate polarity dynamics or bring more ease, creativity, and support to their relationship

    If you're feeling the spark, let’s co-create something that fits your world.