Within many languages, including Amazonian Quechua, Tibetan, Aramaic, Latin, Greek, and others, the word for “breath” is the same word that is used to describe life, spirit, and soul.
Date & Time
First Sunday of the Month
Location
1064 South North County Boulevard, Pleasant Grove, UT 84042
More Details
Physiologically breathing is an involuntary process. Most of us breathe about 12 to 20 times per minute. It is one of the basic foundations of life. But spiritually speaking, your breath is one of the natural mechanisms within you that can move you into deeper spiritual states of awareness.
In this breath journey, you will be led through a deeply transformative circular breathing exercise combined with powerful music, drums, and sound bowls. Most people describe their experience in a breath journey as life-changing.
Breath Is Life
To be clear this breath journey has a totally different purpose than the Wim Hof Method which is designed more towards physical endurance, boosting the immune system, etc and you have to be willing to take cold baths. The breathwork we will be doing has its roots in amazonian and Tibetian yoga traditions and is designed to connect you with your inner intelligence, get insights into your life, and release energetic body blocks.
This breath journey is focused on bringing you to an expanded state of awareness where the mind chatter subsides and you embrace the divine guidance that already exists within you. Keep in mind that during the process, it’s common for you to experience a wide spectrum of feelings. Such sensations can include deep relaxation, joy, serenity, sleep or meditative states, and possibly the release of past trauma. Even past life experiences have been reported too.
This practice is similar in many ways to The Rebirthing Method from Leonard Ore, and Holotropic Breathwork, which was brought forward by Stanislov Grof. Both of these modern methods have origins in ancestral wisdom traditions that we utilize.
This type of breathwork should be avoided by anyone with a history of the following: cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure, glaucoma, retinal detachment, aneurysms, significant recent physical injuries, or surgery. Pregnant women should avoid this type of breathwork as well.