Get Free Access

How to Do Holotropic Breathwork | Deep Step-by-Step

Therapist-Reviewed

Holotropic Breathwork Breathing Toward Wholeness Holotropic Breathwork is a method of self-exploration developed by Christina Grof and Stanislav Grof that uses accelerated breathing, carefully sequenced music, focused inner awareness, supportive facilitation, and integration practices to help people access non-ordinary states of consciousness. In its original form, it is not just a breathing exercise. It is […]

somatic-breathwork
Table of Contents

Holotropic Breathwork
Breathing Toward Wholeness

Holotropic Breathwork is a method of self-exploration developed by Christina Grof and Stanislav Grof that uses accelerated breathing, carefully sequenced music, focused inner awareness, supportive facilitation, and integration practices to help people access non-ordinary states of consciousness. In its original form, it is not just a breathing exercise. It is a structured process.

A lot of online content reduces Holotropic Breathwork to “breathe fast and see what comes up.” That is not a good explanation. The method came out of decades of clinical and transpersonal work, especially after psychedelic therapy research was disrupted and the Grofs began exploring non-drug ways of entering altered states for healing, insight, and integration.

What makes the practice powerful is not just the breathing. It is the combination of physiology, emotional activation, symbolic material, music, environment, facilitation, and what happens afterward. For some people, sessions feel emotional and cathartic. For others, they feel deeply somatic, visionary, spiritual, physical, or quietly clarifying. Sometimes the experience is intense. Sometimes it is subtle. Either way, the point is not spectacle. The point is contact with material that ordinary consciousness often keeps filtered out.

This guide explains what Holotropic Breathwork actually is, where it came from, what it does in the body and brain, what a real session usually looks like, and how to work with modified versions safely and responsibly. Because this is one of those practices that deserves more respect than the internet usually gives it.

Before You Start: What Holotropic Breathwork Is and What It Is Not

Holotropic Breathwork is often grouped under the general term “breathwork,” but it is not interchangeable with every other breathing method. It is not the same thing as slow coherent breathing, diaphragmatic breathing for relaxation, box breathing, alternate nostril breathing, or casual connected breathing. Holotropic Breathwork is specifically designed to open a non-ordinary state of consciousness through intensified breathing, music, and inner process.

That means it should not be approached like a quick nervous-system hack. It is closer to an inner journey than a productivity tool. In traditional settings, participants work in pairs, rotating between a breather and a sitter, while trained facilitators hold the structure of the day. Sessions often include preparation, an extended breathwork journey, optional bodywork, and post-session integration such as drawing or reflection. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}

1. It is experiential

The method is built around direct experience, not just insight through talking or analyzing. Breath, sound, sensation, imagery, and emotion all become part of the process.

2. It is structured

A true Holotropic session has a framework: preparation, breathwork, support if needed, and integration. It is not random intensity for its own sake.

3. It is not casual

Because it can produce strong physical and psychological effects, the original model is typically practiced with trained facilitators rather than improvised alone.

Where Holotropic Breathwork Came From

To understand Holotropic Breathwork, it helps to understand its roots. Stanislav Grof, a psychiatrist, became widely known for his work in psychedelic psychotherapy and consciousness research. As legal and political restrictions increasingly limited psychedelic therapy, he and Christina Grof began exploring ways to access similarly powerful states without psychoactive substances. Their work eventually led to the development of Holotropic Breathwork at Esalen in the 1970s and, later, broader training and facilitation models.

The framework drew from multiple streams at once: psychedelic research, depth psychology, trauma and body awareness, ritual, cross-cultural spiritual practices, mythology, and transpersonal psychology. The official Holotropic materials explicitly describe the method as integrating insights from psychedelic research, anthropology, depth psychology, transpersonal psychology, Eastern spiritual practices, and mystical traditions. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}

That history matters because it explains why Holotropic Breathwork often includes symbolic, archetypal, emotional, and somatic dimensions all at once. It was never intended to be just a respiratory technique. It was intended as a pathway into the psyche.

What Happens in the Body During Accelerated Breathing

The physiology matters here. Holotropic-style breathing generally involves breathing more quickly and more deeply than usual for a sustained period of time. This changes carbon dioxide levels in the blood, which can shift blood pH and influence cerebral blood flow. Hyperventilation and related breathing patterns are known to reduce carbon dioxide and can contribute to cerebral vasoconstriction, which is one reason people may feel lightheaded, tingly, or physiologically altered during intense breathing practices.

That does not explain the whole experience, but it explains part of it. Tingling in the hands or face, changes in muscle tone, emotional intensity, shifts in visual or sensory experience, and states of deep activation can all be related, at least in part, to respiratory chemistry and nervous-system arousal. So if someone tells you the entire experience is “purely spiritual,” that is incomplete. If someone tells you it is “only carbon dioxide,” that is also incomplete. It is both a physiological and a psychological event.

What the research helps us understand

Broader breath-control research suggests that changing the breath can influence autonomic regulation, heart rate variability, emotional control, and central nervous system activity. Reviews of slow breathing show links with parasympathetic regulation and psychological flexibility, while broader breathwork meta-analytic work suggests breath-based interventions may improve stress and mental health outcomes, though the quality and type of breathwork vary widely across studies. Holotropic Breathwork itself sits at the more intense end of this spectrum and should not be treated as equivalent to gentle calming breath practices.

In plain language: changing the breath changes the body. Changing the body changes what the mind can access.

Why the Experience Can Feel So Immersive

Holotropic Breathwork is immersive because it amplifies more than one system at a time. The breathing intensifies body sensation. The music shapes emotional momentum. The lowered ordinary filtering of attention can make imagery, memory, emotion, and meaning feel closer and less abstract. This combination often makes the experience feel less like “thinking about yourself” and more like entering a direct encounter with yourself.

For some people, what comes up feels biographical: grief, fear, anger, shame, or remembered scenes. For others, it may feel highly somatic: shaking, pressure, trembling, tension, release, or waves of energy. For others, the material feels symbolic, mythic, or spiritual. The original Grof framework is deliberately broad enough to allow for all of those possibilities without reducing them into one flat explanation.

That said, not every session is cinematic. Some are quiet. Some feel frustratingly blank. Some do not make sense until later. The method is not invalid if it does not give you fireworks. Sometimes the deeper movement is subtle and unfolds after the breathing has ended.

Section 01

What a Traditional Holotropic Session Usually Includes

If someone is trying to do “true” Holotropic Breathwork, this is important. The original method is more than a breathing rhythm. It is a whole container.

The Structure

  • Preparation and orientation before the session
  • A clear explanation of the method and safety considerations
  • Breather and sitter roles, often alternating within a workshop
  • An extended breathwork journey supported by music
  • Facilitator presence and optional bodywork if needed
  • Integration afterward, often including drawing, writing, or reflection
This is one reason people who dismiss Holotropic Breathwork as “just hyperventilation” are missing the method. The breathing matters, but the container matters too.

Why This Helps

Strong altered states are easier to move through when there is structure. A clear beginning, a supported middle, and an intentional ending help the nervous system feel held rather than scattered.

The sitter role also matters. In many traditional workshops, the sitter is there to stay present, grounded, and attentive, not to interpret or interfere. The breather is supported without being managed.

That combination of autonomy and support is a big part of what allows the process to unfold deeply.

Why music is such a big part of the method

Music is not background decoration in Holotropic Breathwork. It helps shape pacing, emotional tone, and the unfolding arc of the experience. It can intensify activation, support release, deepen sorrow, evoke beauty, or help guide the person back toward integration.

This is one reason a self-led session with no preparation, no pacing, and no integration often feels shallow, chaotic, or simply too raw. The method was designed as a sequence, not just a breathing trick.

Practice 01

A Gentle At-Home Preparation Practice

This is not full Holotropic Breathwork. It is a preparatory exercise that helps you build familiarity with the body, the breath, and your own responses before doing anything more intense.

The Practice

  • Lie down comfortably on a mat, bed, or padded floor space.
  • Dim the lights and remove obvious distractions.
  • Place one hand on the chest and one on the belly.
  • Breathe through the mouth or nose in a steady, connected rhythm for 2 to 3 minutes.
  • Let the inhale and exhale meet with as little pause as feels manageable.
  • Afterward, stop and lie still for several minutes.
Keep this soft. The purpose is orientation, not intensity. You are learning how your system responds when the breath becomes more continuous.

What to Notice

Notice where the breath naturally travels. Does it stay in the chest? Does the belly move at all? Do you start bracing when the breath connects? Does emotion come up immediately, or does your mind become more active?

Notice whether you feel calmer, more activated, more irritated, more emotional, or simply more aware of your body. All of that is useful information.

The point of this first practice is relationship. Before going deeper, it helps to know how your body says yes, no, too much, or not enough.

What is happening in the body?

Even a gentle connected-breath practice can increase interoceptive awareness, which is your ability to perceive internal bodily signals. The more continuous the breath becomes, the more obvious subtle sensations often become as well.

In practical terms: this is how many people begin noticing that they have been living slightly disconnected from their breathing most of the time.

Practice 02

A Modified Holotropic-Style Breath Journey

Again, this is not a substitute for a facilitated Holotropic workshop. It is a shorter, safer, more contained version inspired by some of the method’s core elements: continuous breathing, music, inner attention, and rest afterward.

The Practice

  • Choose a 15 to 20 minute music track or playlist that feels emotionally spacious rather than jarring.
  • Lie down in a comfortable position and commit to staying with the process for the full window.
  • Begin breathing through the mouth in a connected, slightly fuller rhythm than normal.
  • Do not strain. Instead, think of the breath as continuous, committed, and alive.
  • If emotion, imagery, body sensation, or memory arises, let it be there without trying to force more.
  • After 10 to 15 minutes, gradually soften the breathing and allow your system to settle.
  • Rest quietly for at least 5 minutes after the active phase ends.
If you become highly panicked, dissociated, or physically unwell, stop. Return to slower breathing, open your eyes, orient to the room, and ground through the senses.

How to Work With What Comes Up

If your chest tightens, notice the tightness before trying to explain it. If sadness comes, let the sadness move without narrating it to death. If nothing comes, stay with the breath anyway.

The most useful stance here is curiosity without force. Chasing a breakthrough usually makes the experience shallower, not deeper. You do not need to manufacture significance. Let the body and psyche show you what is present.

If the practice starts feeling too big, scale down rather than pushing through. It is better to titrate than to flood yourself and call it courage.

Why this can feel so intense

Sustained accelerated breathing can increase physiological arousal, reduce carbon dioxide, and alter how sensations are perceived. Combined with music and internal focus, this can loosen some of the usual cognitive filtering and make emotional material feel much more immediate.

That does not mean every sensation is a hidden trauma surfacing. It means the system is in a different state, and different states reveal different layers of experience.

Practice 03

Somatic Tracking During Breathwork

One of the most useful skills in any deep breath practice is learning how to stay with body sensation without immediately turning it into a story.

The Practice

  • During the breathing, choose one area of the body to track such as the throat, chest, belly, jaw, or hands.
  • Notice the raw qualities of sensation: tight, fluttery, warm, numb, buzzing, heavy, sharp, hollow, shaky.
  • Keep naming what is there in simple sensory language.
  • If the mind starts analyzing, return to the sensation itself.
Describing the sensation simply helps keep you in contact with experience instead of immediately leaving it for interpretation.

Why This Helps

Many people either over-identify with what comes up or flee into analysis. Somatic tracking gives you a third option. You stay close to the experience without drowning in it and without immediately converting it into meaning.

This is especially important in intense inner work. The body often knows before the mind has words. Learning to stay with sensation helps the process unfold in a more grounded way.

Why this matters psychologically

The more capacity you have to stay with body sensation, the less likely you are to need instant explanation or immediate avoidance. That increases tolerance for emotional experience and can make deeper practices more workable over time.

Practice 04

Post-Session Integration the Grof Way

One of the most overlooked parts of Holotropic Breathwork is what happens after the breathing stops. The method has always emphasized integration, not just the altered state itself.

The Practice

  • After resting, draw or sketch anything that feels connected to the session, even if it makes no logical sense.
  • Write down key sensations, images, emotional moments, or phrases that stood out.
  • Do not rush to explain everything immediately.
  • If useful, share selectively with a trusted practitioner, therapist, or skilled listener who does not hijack the meaning-making process.
Mandala drawing and nonverbal reflection have long been part of post-session Holotropic integration because not everything that arises is best processed through immediate verbal analysis.

Why This Helps

Strong experiences can become fragmented if you snap right back into normal life with no transition. Integration gives the psyche a bridge back to ordinary consciousness.

It also helps prevent a common trap: mistaking intensity for transformation. A powerful session is not automatically an integrated one. Something becomes useful when you can metabolize it, not just feel it.

Why integration matters so much

Memory, emotion, and bodily experience do not always reorganize themselves just because they surfaced. Reflection, rest, and symbolic processing help the nervous system and mind make use of the experience rather than simply being overwhelmed by it.

Who Should Approach Holotropic Breathwork Carefully

This is the part people love to skip, which is exactly why it needs to be stated plainly. Holotropic Breathwork can be a powerful practice, but it is not appropriate for everyone in every situation. The official Holotropic community and many facilitators emphasize screening and contraindications for a reason.

Medical conditions

People with significant cardiovascular disease, uncontrolled high blood pressure, glaucoma, seizure disorders, recent surgery, or serious respiratory concerns should not jump into intense breathwork casually.

Psychiatric considerations

People with severe psychiatric instability, active psychosis, or states that make reality-testing unreliable should approach with extreme care and professional guidance.

Trauma sensitivity

For people with significant trauma or dissociation, “more intense” is not automatically “more healing.” Titration, safety, and skilled support matter more than chasing catharsis.

Jordan Buchan
Written by
Jordan Buchan

Neuro-Somatic Educator • Founder, Conscious Cues

Jordan Buchan is the founder of Conscious Cues and a Neuro-Somatic Educator whose work focuses on the process of turning insight into lived experience. She helps people move beyond simply understanding themselves and into embodying real change so what they know begins to shape how they feel, respond, and live.

Lisbon, Portugal Embodiment • Integration • Authentic Relating

Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional advice. If you’re experiencing emotional or mental health challenges, please consult a licensed healthcare provider.

Interactive Connection Deck

The Depth
of Us

A guided conversation experience for people who want to slow down, feel more, and share more honestly. This is not about performing vulnerability or coming up with the “best” answer. It is about noticing what is true for you and letting that be enough.

01

Create the Container

The quality of the conversation depends on the quality of the space. Before anyone draws a card, take a moment to create a shared agreement around presence, honesty, and care.

  • Add everyone’s names so the game can rotate turns clearly.
  • Choose a share time that fits the group. Two minutes keeps things lighter and more fluid. Four minutes allows for deeper reflection and more room to settle into what is real.
  • Use prompt delay if you want the word to land first. This gives people a few seconds before they can reveal a prompt, so they have a chance to notice their own inner response before being guided outward.
  • Keep the space device-free and interruption-free. No side conversations. No multitasking. No reacting while someone is sharing.
  • Let this be a no-fixing space. No advice, no analysis, no rescuing, no trying to make someone’s experience cleaner or easier than it is.
  • Confidentiality matters. What is shared here stays here unless someone explicitly says otherwise.
  • Passing is allowed. No one is required to answer every word or every prompt. Choice helps create safety.

A safe space does not mean everyone will feel perfectly relaxed. It means people know they do not have to perform, defend, impress, or explain themselves away. It means they can share honestly and trust they will be met with respect.

02

Let the Word Land

When a card is drawn, the word appears first. This part matters. Do not rush past it. The word itself is the doorway.

Before you speak, pause for a moment and notice what happens inside you when you read the word. You are not trying to come up with something profound. You are simply noticing your first real response.

  • Notice your body. Do you feel openness, tightness, warmth, resistance, numbness, tenderness, or nothing at all?
  • Notice your mind. Does a memory come up? A person? A recent conversation? A story you tell yourself?
  • Notice your emotional response. Do you feel curiosity, discomfort, grief, relief, longing, irritation, confusion, or surprise?
  • Notice your impulse. Do you want to share immediately? Shut down? Make a joke? Change the subject? Those reactions are information too.

Sometimes the word hits instantly. Sometimes it feels blank at first. Both are valid.

If nothing obvious comes up, that does not mean you are doing it wrong. You can simply begin with something honest and simple:

  • “At first I do not feel much, but when I stay with it I notice...”
  • “This word makes me think of...”
  • “My first reaction is resistance because...”
  • “I do not know exactly why, but this word makes my chest feel...”
  • “The person I immediately think of is...”

The goal is not to be impressive. The goal is to be real.

03

Share What Is True

Once the word has landed, share whatever feels true for you in that moment.

  • You can share a memory.
  • You can share a feeling.
  • You can share a body sensation.
  • You can share a question you are still sitting with.
  • You can share a contradiction.
  • You can share that you are confused or unsure.
04

Use the Prompts as Support, Not Pressure

If you want more guidance, reveal a prompt. Prompts are there to help deepen the reflection, not to force it.

  • The word always comes first. Start with your own reaction if you can.
  • Prompts are optional. You do not need to use them if the word already opened something real.
  • You do not need to answer every prompt. Choose the one that actually stirs something in you.
  • If none of the prompts fit, ignore them. Your real response matters more than following the structure perfectly.

Think of prompts as gentle support. Not a test. Not homework. Not a demand.

Sometimes a prompt will give language to something you were already feeling but could not name. Sometimes it will open a completely different doorway. Sometimes it will do nothing. That is okay too.

05

Respect the Rhythm of the Turn

Each person has their own turn. The timer is there to create rhythm, not pressure.

  • The timer starts on the first card draw of the turn.
  • You can draw a different card during your turn if the word truly is not the one.
  • You can pause the timer if the group needs a breath or the moment needs a little more space.
  • A soft bell sounds near the end so the speaker can begin to close naturally.
  • When time ends, the next person’s turn begins.
  • If someone does not want to share, skip the turn. The card clears and the next person takes over.

Silence is allowed. In fact, silence is often part of the depth.

If someone finishes speaking before the timer ends, let there be a pause. Do not rush to fill the space. Some of the most meaningful moments happen after the words.

06

Listen Like It Matters

This game is not only about sharing. It is about how we receive each other.

  • Listen without interrupting.
  • Listen without planning what you will say when it is your turn.
  • Listen without comparing their experience to yours.
  • Listen without trying to fix, soothe, teach, correct, or improve what they shared.
  • Let their words land before moving on.

Good listening creates the safety that allows honesty to deepen.

If you are facilitating, remind the group that this is not a debate, not a therapy session, and not a place to give unsolicited advice. It is a space to witness, reflect, and let people be fully human without editing them into something easier to hold.

07

A Few Reminders Before You Begin

  • You do not need to be profound. Honest is enough.
  • You do not need to force vulnerability. Go at the pace that feels real.
  • You do not need to explain yourself perfectly. Unfinished truth still counts.
  • You do not need to share the biggest thing. Sometimes a small truth is the real one.
  • You are allowed to pass.
  • You are allowed to be surprised by your own answer.

This experience works best when people stop trying to do it “well” and start letting themselves actually be in it.

Agreements

  • The Right to Pass: Depth cannot be forced. You always have the right to skip a card or prompt.
  • Confidentiality: Everything shared in this space stays in this space.
  • No Fixing: We listen to understand, not to offer advice or solve each other's experiences.
  • Integration: We allow a moment of silence after a share to let the words land.
03

Live Practice
Circles

The library and workshops give you the map. The Practice Circle is where you actually drive. This is a guided, real-time space to turn new behaviors into second nature.

Real-Time Prep Settle your nervous system so you can show up clearly and calmly.
Witnessed Practice Try out new ways of speaking and setting boundaries in low-pressure settings.
Stay Centered Learn how to keep your cool, even when a conversation gets intense.
Integration Bridge the gap between "the lab" and your real-world relationships.
Live Practice Agenda
90 MIN SESSION

Practice Session

1Somatic Grounding & Regulation
2Exercise Demo & Modeling
3Active Practice Breakout Rooms
4Sharing Circles & Peer Feedback
5Somatic Reflection & Integration
6Weekly "Homework" Assignment
7Closing Connection & Checkout

Safe Space Protocol Active

02

Skill-Building
Workshops

Before stepping into live practice, you get the technical tools. Our workshops provide the behavioral frameworks and internal blueprints required to navigate tough moments with confidence.

Behavioral Frameworks Move beyond theory with word-for-word scripts and structured communication blueprints.
Internal Safety Learn physical tools to manage your system so you can stay present during conflict.
Foundation Prep The core instruction that prepares you for real-world application in our Practice Circles.
Skill-Building Syllabus

Workshops

From Victim to Empowerment Breaking the cycle of feeling powerlessness
Live
Building Internal Safety Blueprints for remaining calm & focused
On-Demand
Stop Abandoning Yourself Breaking the people-pleasing mechanics
On-Demand
Conflict & Repair Word-for-word templates for connection
Live
01

Therapist-Backed
Resources

This is where your awareness begins. Everything in The Resource Center is neuroscience-informed and designed to help you gain the perspective needed to stop the spiral before it starts.

Deep-Dive Guides Comprehensive, exercise-rich walkthroughs on real-life challenges.
Somatic Practices Integrated body-based exercises to move theory into physical regulation.
Relational Scripts Word-for-word communication templates for boundaries and conflict.
Worksheets & PDFs Actionable downloads to work through specific challenges.
The Resource Center
TOOL
The Interactive Feelings Wheel Explore and work through your emotions
MP3
12-Min "Emergency Landing" Somatic Regulation Audio
GUIDE
Rewiring Negative Self-Talk Video Guide & Worksheet
PDF
High-Conflict Script Communication Template
ABOUT SOFIA

I am an Intern Somatic Body Psychotherapist, Neuroscientist, Dancer, and Dance Teacher. My passion for mental health began at age 14, sparked by a natural ability to attune to people’s emotional landscapes.

Over the past 15 years, I’ve travelled the world exploring the human psyche — a journey that shaped my integrated approach, rooted in neuroscience (brain), psychology (mind), philosophy (spirit), and somatic practices like dance (body).

This embedded with my empirical experience has made it a personal and interpersonal discovery – in line with my essence and natural tendency to help those around me deal with various aspects of mental well-being.

It is this multidimensional understanding of what it means to be human that is at the heart of my work.

My work as a somatic body psychotherapist draws on the concept that life is a continuous unfolding process, from the first cell in the womb to the present moment. All aspects of our being need to be considered when navigating mental health issues.

I support each client’s unique process with openness and curiosity of all these aspects, helping transform scattered energy into a coherent source of well-being and vitality, reshaping life in ways that often exceed expectations.

Through my Neuroscience of Dance project and Dance Integrated Healing Method, I offer neurocognitive and movement-based tools for healing.

For the past six years, I’ve supported dancers and educators worldwide through sessions and workshops, focusing on injury recovery, neurological rehabilitation, memory and balance, mental health, and the therapeutic potential of dance. This integration of dance, neuroscience, and psychology began during my postgraduate research on the brain mechanisms behind dance, in collaboration with a leading researcher in the field.

My research has been published in Dance Data, Cognition, and Multimodal Communication and presented at the International Association for Dance Medicine & Science (IADMS) conference. I was honoured when this project was nominated for the IADMS Dance Educator Award (2022) and the Applied Dance Science Award (2021) from One Dance UK, which also recognised me as a Healthier Dancer Practitioner.

Personally, advocate for neurodiversity as a proud dyslexic. I love cats, cute cafes, cats, long walks, writing, cats, poetry.

Did I say cats?

[gravityform id="1"]