Airwaves
A Breathwork Blog by Breathing Space
Blog Categories
10 Niche Breathwork Specializations to Grow Your Practice
As a breathwork facilitator, you have the power to transform lives through the simple act of conscious breathing. But did you know that you can further specialize your practice and reach a wider audience by tailoring your offerings to specific niches? By focusing on a particular area of expertise, you can not only deepen your impact but also attract clients who are specifically seeking your unique skills and knowledge.
We Have the Power to Change Our Narrative.
My reason for training as a facilitator goes right back to birth. I was born blue and not breathing. I was taken away by doctors for around 10 minutes. My mum was delirious and unsure what they did, but on returning I was able to take my first breath and the blue colour faded.
During my childhood and for the first 14 years of my life I had serious breathing issues. I couldn’t breathe through my nose at all. I was asthmatic and needed an inhaler. I suffered from severe snoring and sleep apnea. I would breathe loudly and was teased about it relentlessly at school.
Breathwork for Creativity
Have you ever stared at a blank page, a canvas, or a musical instrument, feeling utterly devoid of inspiration? That frustrating sense of being creatively blocked, stuck in a rut, unable to tap into the flow of ideas and expression? It's a feeling many of us know all too well- myself included.
Perhaps you've tried every trick in the book - brainstorming, taking breaks, seeking external inspiration - but nothing seems to break through the dam. You want to express yourself authentically, but something feels constricted and held back.
Breathwork for Emotional Regulation
Up until recently, if you'd asked me, I would have smugly said, "I'm not an angry person, it’s just not something I experience." But life, as it often does, had a few lessons in store for me when I became a parent. As I've gone on my own journey of self-discovery, I've come to realise that anger has been lurking beneath the surface all along.
Growing up in a household where anger was seen as a "bad" emotion, I learned to suppress it, to bury it deep within so I could still be a “good girl”. Over time, I developed a clever disguise for my anger: sadness. In my family sadness is more acceptable, more palatable, and somehow less threatening. Sadness got hugs. Anger got silent treatment.