Why I’m Building Station 7600 — And Why the CLIMB Might Just Save Your Life
- Matthew Carlson

- Jul 23
- 1 min read
Right now, I’m putting down roots for Station 7600 — a high-elevation trauma reset retreat in Colorado’s San Luis Valley, at 7,600 feet.
It’s not a wellness getaway. It’s not therapy in a beige office.
It’s real work in the real world — body-based, peer-led, trauma-informed, and built by someone who’s been there.
Participants will complete the CLIMB Reset Passport in the field.
They’ll train their nervous systems under the open sky.
And if they’re ready, they’ll summit the mountain that gave this practice its name:
Challenger Point — 14,087 feet.
When you make that climb — literally and metaphorically — you’ll earn the Challenger Patch and the Coin. Not for showing up. Not for checking boxes.
For doing the work.
Why I’m Doing This
Because therapy should look like something you can believe in.
Because you deserve more than surface-level support and slogans.
Because the people holding the line need someone in their corner who gets it.
This is my life’s work now.
Every day, I’m laying the foundation.
One reset. One climb. One responder at a time.
If you’re tired of just surviving — come CLIMB.
If you’re building a peer team — reach out.
If you’re done pretending you’re “fine” — let’s go higher.



Comments