The Long & Short Lab
Summer Reset
JUNE 2026
A small weekly reset before summer
June is already filling up. Before it does, this is one hour a week to get out of autopilot and back into your own life.
The Summer Reset Lab is a small, practical group running four Wednesday lunchtimes in June. Calm, useful, and genuinely enjoyable. No homework. No pressure. Just something real to take back into your week.
A few places left.
What to expect
Each session is one calm hour. That's it.
We start by giving you a moment to actually arrive, not just log on and crack on, but land.
From there we work with one simple focus. Something worth thinking about, whether that's what's not working, what you actually want, or what might make the next few weeks feel less like you're just getting through them.
When you sign up, we'll send you a short list of topics and you choose what feels most useful. We shape the sessions around that, so it's never generic and never off the point.
There's space to reflect quietly or to share. Sharing is always optional, though people from the March Lab said it became the part they looked forward to most.
You'll leave with something small and concrete. Not a to-do list. Not homework. Just one thing that might make this week feel slightly more like yours.
When & where
Four Wednesdays in June 2026
3rd, 10th, 17th and 24th June
12–1pm (UK time)
Live on Zoom
The details
£120 for four sessions.
If you were part of the March Lab, your place is £99.
You can share that rate with a friend too. Just get in touch for the code.
We keep the group small so it stays personal, relaxed, and easy to be part of.
With Carol & Lexie
We've been working together for years, as collaborators and friends. We created the Lab because we wanted a space we'd genuinely look forward to spending an hour in ourselves. Curious, warm, and actually useful.
People keep coming back. So we keep running it.
From the March Lab
“It gave me something I didn’t know I needed.”
“I had space to think clearly again.”
"I could use this straight away in real life."
"The sharing was much more powerful than I expected.”
