Holotropic Breathwork For Emotional Release and Trauma Integration

 
Holotropic Breathwork For Emotional Release and Trauma Integration
 

It's common to utilize breathing techniques to help with anxiety, slow down the mind, or support relaxation, but breathwork can also be incredibly potent for trauma healing. Holotropic Breathwork is an amazing modality that utilizes breath, embodiment, gentle altered states of consciousness, and emotional expression to create the conditions for any deeply embodied pain that we've held in for years or decades to be released and integrated.

Surrendering to a painful emotion for a moment is less painful than a lifetime of resisting it
— Jazmine Russell, Depth Work Podcast Episode 13

What will you learn in this episode - Holotropic Breathwork For Emotional Release and Trauma Integration:

  • How holotropic breathwork is specifically useful for trauma processing

  • How trauma-holding patterns in the body are linked to breath

  • How breathwork can help us bravely surrender to uncomfortable emotions

  • Who breathwork is not for

  • What breathwork taught me as a personal practice and as a facilitator.

Holotropic Breathwork has taught me:

  • the body has its own unique wisdom that’s much deeper than the mind

  • to trust the process and get out of my own way

  • emotions have to be felt to be healed and integrated

  • there’s nothing more cathartic than a good yell or cry

  • how to self-soothe and return to centre

  • there’s nothing inside me that I have to be afraid or ashamed of

  • breath and spirit are intimately intertwined

  • altered states can be incredibly generative

Trauma survivors develop holding patterns in the body, which are areas in the body that carry or adapt to the pain and distress we experienced. It’s where we may hold tension, and emotional pain, and maintain self-protective ways of carrying ourselves. Holding patterns can look like holding our breath, clenching the diaphragm or stomach, prolonging eating to keep our nervous system in sympathetic mode, using one side of the body more or less than the other, and many other things.
— Jazmine Russell, DEPTH Work Podcast Episode 13

DEPTH Work - A Holistic Mental Health Podcast

This is a space for those who love to dive into the underbelly, to revel in the mystery, question assumptions about what is normal, play in both/and, and honour the wide range of human emotions.

As a complex trauma survivor, holistic counsellor and co-founder of a mental health institute, I learned that there is immense wisdom in our pain and what we call crazy is just what we are yet not willing to understand and explore. Let’s dive in!

Research:

More info on holding patterns: Peter Levine's  Waking The Tiger & In an Unspoken Voice

History of Holotropic Breathwork: http://www.dipsu.dk/Holotropic Breathwork by Stanislav Grof, MD.pdf

Study of breathwork conducted in hospitals: http://metslesvoiles.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/HB.pdf


1:1 Breathwork Sessions


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SpiritualityJazmine Russell