Half-day Introspective Retreat Conducted at Meiji Jingu: Re-examining Autonomy Through the Lens of 'Death'
Shoichi Kono, a member of the social experiment community "DICT," conducted a half-day introspective retreat titled "Questioning Autonomy in the Eternal Forest" at Meiji Jingu in April 2026, targeting MBA students and alumni. By viewing life through the perspective of Thanatology and focusing on "death," the retreat provided a space for participants to re-evaluate their lives, decision-making, and the nature of autonomy. This project was developed as an exploratory practice distinct from typical lectures or workshops, utilizing place, physical sensation, and dialogue.
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: May 21, 2026 at 19:00
- 🔍 Collected: May 21, 2026 at 10:31
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: May 21, 2026 at 21:23 (10h 51m after Collected)
## Half-day Introspective Retreat Conducted at Meiji Jingu: Re-examining Autonomy Through the Lens of 'Death'
Shoichi Kono, a member of the social experiment community "DICT" (operated by Link & Innovation Co., Ltd.) and a specially appointed researcher at Hosei University Graduate School, conducted a half-day introspective retreat titled "Questioning Autonomy in the Eternal Forest" at Meiji Jingu in April 2026. This project is an exploratory practice, rooted in Thanatology, that re-examines one's "current" way of living, decision-making, and autonomy by contemplating the "end."
The participants were MBA students and alumni. The project treated Meiji Jingu, a historical and symbolic space, not merely as a venue but as a collaborative entity that generates practical wisdom. It was designed as an opportunity to reconsider one's job titles, responsibilities, evaluations, and anxieties through the interplay of place, history, physical sensation, and dialogue.
*Note: This project was conducted as an individual research practice by Kono and is not an official program of his affiliated institution.*
### From Thanatology to Practice in Historical Space
In modern society, many people make decisions while remaining strongly tied to their professional roles, titles, achievements, and the evaluations of others, making them susceptible to future anxiety and rigid thinking. Addressing this, Kono has explored the question, "Could contemplating death allow us to rethink how we live in the present?" from the perspectives of Thanatology, through both research and practice. "Questioning Autonomy in the Eternal Forest" positioned these research interests in a concrete setting, exploring the practical feasibility of "Death Reflection" within a historical and symbolic space.
### Set in the Forest of Meiji Jingu
The Meiji Jingu forest, chosen for this project, is known for being designed with a vision 100 to 150 years into the future. By focusing on the philosophy of this space, which considers the natural cycle of the forest—such as the generational shift from pine to broad-leaved trees—the project positioned Meiji Jingu as a site for participants to rethink their own titles, responsibilities, anxieties, and philosophies of life, asking: "What should I let go of, what should I keep, and what should I live for?"
### A Half-day Introspective Retreat: "Not a Lecture, Workshop, or Tour"
The day began with input sessions and pre-surveys, followed by a personal introspective walk at Meiji Jingu, sharing sessions after regrouping, and closing remarks. Structured as an "introspective retreat" or "breathing room for finding one's own questions," it deliberately avoided providing right answers or results, focusing instead on extracting questions that have not yet been articulated from within, amidst the silence of the century-old forest.
### Opportunity for MBA Students and Alumni to Re-examine Role Understanding
Given that the participants—MBA students and alumni—are highly conscious of their careers, responsibilities, and achievements, the organizers believe that contemplating "death" holds unique significance in relativizing their roles and ways of living. In the post-retreat survey, all three participants agreed to research cooperation and shared the following:
- "The sunlight streamed in, casting shadows on the trees in the foreground, while the trees behind glowed with bright, beautiful green."
- "I felt that the concept of looking at current brightness by becoming conscious of the 'death' in 'Death Reflection' is naturally expressed in the forest."
- "I realized that life and death are not separate, but are side-by-side and continuous."
Comments such as "I feel less burdened than before the session," "I want to make people around me smile," and "I will live honestly with myself" suggest that participants were not simply denying their titles or responsibilities, but rather re-examining their relationship with them and reinterpreting their meaning.
### Uniqueness at the Intersection of Research, Education, and Place-making
The project’s characteristic lies not in presenting answers or changes as short-term outcomes—as typical self-improvement programs or trainings do—but in its configuration that allows participants to encounter their own "yet-to-be-articulated questions" while integrating place, history, physical sensation, and dialogue. By connecting the design philosophy of Meiji Jingu to their own existential questions, the project’s uniqueness as a research practice lies in its ability to reconstruct introspection not just as an individual mental task, but within the relationship with the environment.
### Future Developments
Kono intends to continue developing new research areas by advancing innovations in collaboration with people, places, and history, as well as developing new methods. Based on the insights gained from this project, he aims to connect his "Death Reflection" research, which encourages the multi-layered identity development of management-level individuals, with research into co-creative learning communities. He seeks to present a practical model that balances personal internal transformation with community emergence.
Shoichi Kono, a member of the social experiment community "DICT" (operated by Link & Innovation Co., Ltd.) and a specially appointed researcher at Hosei University Graduate School, conducted a half-day introspective retreat titled "Questioning Autonomy in the Eternal Forest" at Meiji Jingu in April 2026. This project is an exploratory practice, rooted in Thanatology, that re-examines one's "current" way of living, decision-making, and autonomy by contemplating the "end."
The participants were MBA students and alumni. The project treated Meiji Jingu, a historical and symbolic space, not merely as a venue but as a collaborative entity that generates practical wisdom. It was designed as an opportunity to reconsider one's job titles, responsibilities, evaluations, and anxieties through the interplay of place, history, physical sensation, and dialogue.
*Note: This project was conducted as an individual research practice by Kono and is not an official program of his affiliated institution.*
### From Thanatology to Practice in Historical Space
In modern society, many people make decisions while remaining strongly tied to their professional roles, titles, achievements, and the evaluations of others, making them susceptible to future anxiety and rigid thinking. Addressing this, Kono has explored the question, "Could contemplating death allow us to rethink how we live in the present?" from the perspectives of Thanatology, through both research and practice. "Questioning Autonomy in the Eternal Forest" positioned these research interests in a concrete setting, exploring the practical feasibility of "Death Reflection" within a historical and symbolic space.
### Set in the Forest of Meiji Jingu
The Meiji Jingu forest, chosen for this project, is known for being designed with a vision 100 to 150 years into the future. By focusing on the philosophy of this space, which considers the natural cycle of the forest—such as the generational shift from pine to broad-leaved trees—the project positioned Meiji Jingu as a site for participants to rethink their own titles, responsibilities, anxieties, and philosophies of life, asking: "What should I let go of, what should I keep, and what should I live for?"
### A Half-day Introspective Retreat: "Not a Lecture, Workshop, or Tour"
The day began with input sessions and pre-surveys, followed by a personal introspective walk at Meiji Jingu, sharing sessions after regrouping, and closing remarks. Structured as an "introspective retreat" or "breathing room for finding one's own questions," it deliberately avoided providing right answers or results, focusing instead on extracting questions that have not yet been articulated from within, amidst the silence of the century-old forest.
### Opportunity for MBA Students and Alumni to Re-examine Role Understanding
Given that the participants—MBA students and alumni—are highly conscious of their careers, responsibilities, and achievements, the organizers believe that contemplating "death" holds unique significance in relativizing their roles and ways of living. In the post-retreat survey, all three participants agreed to research cooperation and shared the following:
- "The sunlight streamed in, casting shadows on the trees in the foreground, while the trees behind glowed with bright, beautiful green."
- "I felt that the concept of looking at current brightness by becoming conscious of the 'death' in 'Death Reflection' is naturally expressed in the forest."
- "I realized that life and death are not separate, but are side-by-side and continuous."
Comments such as "I feel less burdened than before the session," "I want to make people around me smile," and "I will live honestly with myself" suggest that participants were not simply denying their titles or responsibilities, but rather re-examining their relationship with them and reinterpreting their meaning.
### Uniqueness at the Intersection of Research, Education, and Place-making
The project’s characteristic lies not in presenting answers or changes as short-term outcomes—as typical self-improvement programs or trainings do—but in its configuration that allows participants to encounter their own "yet-to-be-articulated questions" while integrating place, history, physical sensation, and dialogue. By connecting the design philosophy of Meiji Jingu to their own existential questions, the project’s uniqueness as a research practice lies in its ability to reconstruct introspection not just as an individual mental task, but within the relationship with the environment.
### Future Developments
Kono intends to continue developing new research areas by advancing innovations in collaboration with people, places, and history, as well as developing new methods. Based on the insights gained from this project, he aims to connect his "Death Reflection" research, which encourages the multi-layered identity development of management-level individuals, with research into co-creative learning communities. He seeks to present a practical model that balances personal internal transformation with community emergence.
FAQ
「永遠の杜で、自律を問う」とはどのような企画ですか?
死生学の問題意識を背景に、明治神宮という歴史的・象徴的空間を活用して「死」を見つめ、個人の役割や自律のあり方を問い直す半日の内省型リトリートです。
企画の対象者は誰ですか?
MBA課程の学生および修了生が対象です。
明治神宮を会場に選んだ理由は?
100年先、150年先を見据えて設計された森という思想に着目し、参加者が自身のあり方や死生観を見つめ直す場として最適であると判断されました。
このリトリートではどのような体験が行われますか?
導入インプット、明治神宮内での個人内省ウォーク、シェアリング、事後アンケートなどで構成され、正解や成果を求めるのではなく、内なる問いを見つける余白を重視しています。
企画の目的は何ですか?
職業上の役割や評価と結びついた現代人の意思決定や思考の硬直に対し、死生学の視点から「今」の生き方を問い直し、研究と実践の両面からその可能性を探求することです。