This album has become something of a companion. Journey to Arcturus moves slowly, spaciously, without urgency. It doesn’t push for direction or clarity. Instead, it creates room to feel. There’s something deeply regulating in the way it invites presence—not as a goal, but as a place to arrive, again and again.
The title holds particular meaning. In Gestalt circles, Arcturus appears as a symbol for inner orientation—something luminous and just out of reach. There’s even a Gestalt-adapted edition of the 1920 novel A Voyage to Arcturus, published by the Gestalt Legacy Project. Like the album, the book explores personal transformation not through explanation, but through experience.



