
Transcendental touch
Sessions are specific towards energetic and somatic release, exploring symptoms of anxiety, depression, PTSD and other trauma related disorders and experiences including generational trauma and visiting the masculine/feminine energies.
This can be a subtle but powerful modality that relies heavily on both the client and practitioner’s ability to work together. Sessions are not time specific, ending when significant balance has been experienced.
What is the energy of a hug? Can you feel it? It's more than just physical touch—it's an exchange, a pull, a magnetic connection between two people. The experience of a hug extends far beyond its physical form. One can engage in the act of hugging without truly connecting to its essence—just as it’s possible to carry the memory, the emotional imprint of a hug, long after the physical contact has faded. This is what I call transcendental touch. It may be tangible or simply hover just beyond the skin, but its true power lies in the feeling it evokes—the kind of embrace that lingers within you.
A hug, when truly felt, goes far beyond the act itself. You can go through the motions without ever touching the real essence of it. And yet, you can carry the memory of a meaningful embrace for years—the emotional imprint long outlasting the moment. I think of this as transcendental touch. It may be physical or exist just beyond the skin, but its power lies in how it moves you, what it stirs within.
Often, when receiving such a touch, unburdens you from weight you may not have realized you were carrying—tension, sorrow, grief, daily annoyances or strain that has overstayed its welcome. It’s a release, both subtle and profound, often manifesting as the easing of physical pain and the softening of emotional heaviness. It’s a shift—quiet, yet deeply transformative.
I’ve always been drawn to touch therapies. Ever since my grandmother laid her hands on my back and lulled me to sleep, I’ve been a devoted massage lover. Even then, I could sense something deeper at play—an energetic pull that went beyond muscle and skin. Unfortunately, the way energy work is often taught can make it accessible to those who may not be truly attuned or grounded in it.
Yet through years of personal experience and close observation, I’ve come to believe that genuine energy work holds a powerful, often underestimated role in healing. In fact, it can be even more transformative than therapeutic massage or other bodywork, particularly when addressing deep-seated, generational wounds—especially those carried through the feminine line.