Rebirthing breathwork

Deepen your relationship with yourself, using the breath

Hack your nervous system

Integrate trauma

Release yourself

 What is it?

Rebirthing is a method of conscious breathwork; connecting the inhale and exhale to bring awareness to your natural breathing rhythm.

Some people even access sensory memories from birth!

It’s a simple, yet profound, tool to allow you to relax deeply and discover tensions in the body that link to emotions, thoughts and narratives.

With each phase of relaxation, you shed an old skin, stirring up sensory memories like the peeling of an onion.

Feeling into these delicate places can be a powerful way to work with challenging life events, connecting behaviours to childhood patterns from your formative years.

“The secret is embracing flow, not attaching to states. Diving into the shadows can be fun too!”

- Rob Calcutt.

 

Is this for me?

  • I work mainly on intuition, providing interventions like verbal communication and hand placements where appropriate. This interplay brings something interesting to the session, as all physical, mental and emotional responses can be honoured and incorporated into the breath process.

    Try a group breathe! Even the most independent person needs an ally and on this basis, absolutely everything works.

  • Rebirthing helps to integrate emotions we have long suppressed. It isn’t about feeling better. It’s about getting better at feeling, all the while gently noticing what this brings up for you. Remember this: you aren’t broken and don’t need fixing.

    “There is no way around it. The way out is through and the way through is in.” Michael Brown (Presence Process)

  • Traditional meditation follows a suggested breath count to access deeper states. The Rebirthing process surrenders all control, allowing you to ride the waves of your natural breathing mechanism with a detached curiosity.

    Calm, erratic, fatigued, ecstatic, frustrated, sleepy, laboured or mundane. No rules. No comparisons. No destination. All moods welcome and interesting!

  • A typical session normally takes around 90-minutes, allowing time either side to form an intent and share insights. Shorter sessions are available on request.

  • Vagus nerve stimulation (a process, naturally activated by breathwork), actually changes the expression of genes associated with stress, immune function, energy metabolism and insulin secretion [27].

    “It’s almost like yin and yang,” says Mladen Golubic of the Cleveland Clinic’s Center for Integrative Medicine. “The vagal response reduces stress. It reduces our heart rate and blood pressure. It changes the function of certain parts of the brain, stimulates digestion, all those things that happen when we are relaxed.” [28]

Tailored packages to navigate the urban jungle

Coming soon!

My other services

Gong bathing

Shamanic journeying

Tarot coaching

Online

I now work online and have clients as far flung as the Scottish Highlands.

or

Alternatively you’re welcome to visit my cozy, North London gong room.

In-person

Health studies

  • Sound therapy

    The juncture between Alpha and Theta brainwaves, reached by sound therapy, is often called the crossover point by neuroscientists. Here, subjects have experienced “seemingly miraculous resolutions of complex psychological problems”[3] including a significant reduction in anxiety levels[4].

    Sound therapy has also found success in shifting patient anxiety before an operation[5].

    Breathwork

    Vagus nerve stimulation (a process, naturally activated by breathwork), actually changes the expression of genes associated with stress, immune function, energy metabolism and insulin secretion[27].

    “It’s almost like yin and yang,” says Mladen Golubic of the Cleveland Clinic’s Center for Integrative Medicine. “The vagal response reduces stress. It reduces our heart rate and blood pressure. It changes the function of certain parts of the brain, stimulates digestion, all those things that happen when we are relaxed.”[28]

  • Breathwork is extremely effective in treating depression. It has even shown success among those resistant to antidepressant medications.[30]

    Neurons in the brainstem are constantly monitoring our breath patterns. Studies show that if these neurons are surgically removed, our natural stress responses are bypassed and we feel much calmer[31]. Changing your breathing rhythm has a similar effect, tricking the brain into shifting your mood.

  • Sound therapy

    14 out of 15 patients with acute migraines (and 5 out of 6 with chronic migraines) underwent a course of ‘brainwave entrainment’ sound therapy and experienced a complete relief of symptoms in just five minutes! So a single session may be enough.[6]

    Breathwork

    In a recent study of 40 chronic migraine sufferers, vagus nerve stimulation (a process, naturally activated by breathwork), applied for four hours a day over three months, showed a 50% reduction in persistent headaches[29].

  • The part of the brain called the amygdala[32] is strongly linked to emotional processing. Studies show that stimulating the amygdala with a large inhale will allow us to identify fearful objects much quicker[33]. It therefore corresponds that when we’re in a panic state, our breathing naturally becomes faster to help us cope with dangerous situations.

  • When we drift off to sleep on our journey to the unconscious, our brains pass through various brainwave cycles. The act of inducing Theta brainwaves through sound therapy can shortcut this process to achieve deep, altered states; perfect conditions for stress reduction and sleep[7].

  • Clinical studies of vagus nerve stimulation (a process, naturally activated by breathwork) have shown to prevent weight gain in response to a high fat diet[39].

    The vagus nerve plays an important role in controlling metabolism and a calorie rich diet has been shown to reduce its efficiency.

  • Sound therapy

    Neuroscientists trained a group of alcoholics to enter Theta brainwave states (a process naturally activated by sound therapy). These participants showed a much greater recovery rate than those in a separate control group[8]. Thirteen months later, the group demonstrated “sustained prevention of relapse”, these findings were again confirmed after three years[8].

    Breathwork

    Vagus nerve stimulation (a process, naturally activated by breathwork) may help addicts overcome substance abuse. A groundbreaking study in VNS and cocaine use lead to a significant decrease in drug seeking behaviours among participants[40].

  • Breathwork, along with the relaxation response of vagus nerve stimulation, reduces cytokine production[45][46].

    Eh? 😉 In English, cytokines are substances secreted by immune system cells, which connect with other cells, in search of assistance, causing buildup and inflammation.

    Trials of vagus nerve stimulation (a process, naturally activated by breathwork) were carried out on 14 patients with treatment-resistant fibromyalgia. Five reported pain relief and improved physical function after just three months, twelve reached this point at eleven months and two were pain free![49]

    In a separate study, three multiple sclerosis (MS) patients displaying routine symptoms of postural cerebellar tremor (PCT) and dysphagia showed sustained improvements over the course of three months[50].

Contact me

rob@urbanhealer.co.uk
07810 267778

London, N15

@roburbanhealer