AHBI Advisory Board
Chris Bache
is an award-winning professor, Director of Transformative
Learning at the Institute of Noetic Sciences, and author of Lifecycles
and Dark Night, Early Dawn in which he explores the interplay of deep
inner work and collective social transformation. As humanity enters the dark
night of our collective soul, the magnitude of the crisis confronting us and the
fractal dynamics of consciousness seem to be opening new possibilities for
leveraging social change through work in deep states of consciousness.
Christina Grof
is an author, teacher, artist, psychotherapist, founder of the Spiritual
Emergence Network, and co-creator of Holotropic Breathwork. She is
past-president of Grof Transpersonal Training, vice-president emeritus of the
International Transpersonal Association (ITA), and an advisor to the board of
the Spiritual Emergence Network. For almost thirty years, she has been active in
the field of Transpersonal Psychology, which includes the spiritual aspects of
human nature, as well as the emotional, mental, physical, and social aspects, as
essential to a full understanding of the whole person
Stanislav Grof, MD, PhD
is a psychiatrist with over forty years experience of research into non-ordinary
states of consciousness (induced by psychedelic substances and various non-drug
techniques) and one of the founders and chief theoreticians of transpersonal
psychology.
His web site, initiated in October 2007, is at
www.stanislavgrof.com. He is the founder of the International Transpersonal Association (ITA)
and its past and current president. In this role, he has organized large
international conferences in the United States, the former Czechoslovakia, India,
Australia, and Brazil. At present, he lives in Mill Valley, California,
conducting training seminars for professionals in Holotropic Breathwork and
transpersonal psychology and writing books. He is also Professor of Psychology
at the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS) in San Francisco and at
the Pacifica Graduate School in Santa Barbara and gives lectures and seminars
worldwide. In 1993, he received an Honorary Award from the Association for
Transpersonal Psychology (ATP) for major contributions to and development of the
field of transpersonal psychology given at the occasion of the 25th Anniversary
Convocation held at Asilomar, California. In 2007 Stan was awarded the
prestigious Vision 97 award from the Dagmar and Vaclav Havel Foundation for his
pioneering work on the frontiers of human consciousness.
He has published over 140 articles in professional journals, as well as 17
books which have been translated into German, French, Italian, Spanish,
Portuguese, Dutch, Swedish, Danish, Russian, Czech, Polish, Bulgarian, Greek,
Turkish, Japanese, and Chinese.
Kylea Taylor, M.S., M.F.T.
was one of the three initial incorporators of AHBI and has served on AHBI's
Board's Executive Committee from that time on. She was Editor of its
newsletter, The Inner Door, from 1991 until her retirement from day-to-day
involvement in AHBI at the end of 2006. She also worked on all of AHBI's past
conferences and spearheaded the project to complete AHBI's website renovation.
She is the author of The Breathwork Experience (published also in Italian
and Spanish) and The Ethics of Caring(Hilfe fur die Helfer in
German), The Holotropic Breathwork Workshop Manual, and she is the editor
of the recently published AHBI anthology, Exploring Holotropic Breathwork.
Taylor started studying with Stan Grof in 1984 and has been a staff trainer for
the Grof Transpersonal Training, Mill Valley, CA since 1993. For 11 years she
did monthly public Holotropic Breathwork workshops in Santa Cruz, CA, where she
has a private therapy and consulting practice. Kylea is a California licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (MFC#
34901) in private practice in Santa Cruz, CA.
Jack
Kornfield trained as a Buddhist monk in the monasteries
of Thailand, India, and Burma. He is one of the key teachers to introduce
Buddhist mindfulness practice to the West. He is a founding teacher of the
Insight Meditation Society and Spirit Rock Center and has taught meditation
internationally since 1974. For many years he has led periodic week-long "Insight
and Opening" retreats combining Buddhist mediation practices and Holotropic
Breathwork with Stan Grof. He holds a PhD in clinical psychology, and is a
husband and father. His books include A Path with Heart; Buddha’s Little
Instruction Book; Teachings of the Buddha; Seeking the Heart of Wisdom; Living
Dharma; A Still Forest Pool; Stories of the Spirit, Stories of the Heart; After
the Ecstasy, the Laundry; and The Art of Forgiveness, Lovingkindness
and Peace.
Richard
Tarnas, a professor at the California Institute of Integral Studies, founded
the graduate program in Philosophy, Cosmology, and Consciousness. He is the
author of The Passion of the Western Mind, a bestseller and widely used text in
universities, and Cosmos and Psyche, which recently won the Book of the Year
Prize from the Scientific and Medical Network in England. We are
living at the end of an era. The old structures of the world are cracking apart,
the moment of creative chaos is upon us, and the drama of our time has become a
great question: What new principles, what new structures will emerge to shape
our future? Everything is at stake, from the deep ecology of our planetary
biosphere to the deep ecology of the human spirit. Richard Tarnas illuminates
this challenging moment in our history and provides a larger context for both
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AHBI BOARD of Directors
President
Ted Riskin, LCSW, is a psychotherapist specializing in relationship issues and cognitive therapy. Along with his Grof certification, he is also certified in Core Energetics, hypnotherapy, and EMDR. Since January 1997, he has been facilitating Holotropic workshops regularly in New Jersey, New York City, and Florida. In the non-Holotropic Breathwork realm, he is certified in Breath Therapy and has taught in this program, and he is a member of the International Breathwork Foundation, having presented at two of their conferences. Unable to kick his 1 CD per week music habit, he uses the CDs to create session sets that he makes available to Holotropic practitioners internationally, as well as to several training programs in other forms of Breathwork. In addition, he has been the music editor for The Inner Door since August 1999. Ted has practiced meditation for the past 25 years and has been active in the human development movement for the past 19.
Vice President
Marty Boroson studied philosophy at Yale University and earned an MBA from the Yale School of Management. He was certified to facilitate Holotropic Breathwork in 1993 and facilitated monthly workshops in Ireland with the Transpersonal Group until 2000. His article, Radar to the Infinite , relating Holotropic Breathwork to the spectrum psychology of Ken Wilber, was translated by AHBI into German, Spanish and Portuguese. He is the author of the creation story, Becoming Me, based on his holotropic adventures, and now uses this book to teach interfaith spirituality to children and adults. A student of Zen Buddhism, Marty recently co-facilitated a holotropic and Zen workshop at the Sweetwater Zen Center in California, and is fascinated by the experiential differences between these two forms. He trains managers in holistic approaches to decision-making, and lives in England.
Treasurer
Leonard Gibson, Ph.D., graduated from Williams College and earned doctorates
from Claremont Graduate School in philosophy and The University of Texas at Austin
in psychology. Lenny has over thirty-five years of experience exploring and working
with non-ordinary states of consciousness. He has taught at The University of Tulsa,
Oklahoma, and Lesley College in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He served his clinical
psychology Internship at the Veterans Administration Hospital , Boston
Massachusetts. Lenny teaches Transpersonal Psychology at Burlington College. He is a
cancer survivor.
Secretary
Ken Sloan was born in 1946 in Decatur, Texas, USA. His early experiences of three years of living and playing as a child in an isolated area of Hawaii have proven to be the most important influences of his life. His professional work over the last twenty years has been consulting on information and organization for large multinational firms, mostly banks. He was certified for Holotropic Breathwork facilitation in 1997 and lives since 1998 in Steinen, Germany, in the southwest corner of the Black Forest with his partner Petra, their two children Lara and Sariya, a lot of animals and twenty seven large trees. Since 1998 Ken and Petra (who is also certified in Holotropic Breathwork), have given regular residential Holotropic Breathwork weekend workshops in their home which doubles as a Buddhist retreat center. Ken was trained and certified in 2005 by Albrecht Mahr to lead systems constellations. Web site (German only!) is at www.breathwork.de
Ana Maria Aguirre is a 1969 graduate of the Catholic University of Argentina in psychology and philosophy. She offers both Gestalt and transpersonal therapy. She has had formal training in the US working with the terminally ill with Dr. Elizabeth Kubler-Ross. She was certified as a facilitator of Holotropic Breathwork in the US by Grof Transpersonal Training in 1996. She has been the coordinator and organizer for the training in Argentina since 1996. She has been a member of the Association of Transpersonal Psychology since 1980 and a founding member of the Association Transpersonal Argentina. Ana Maria is the director of Trans-formar, an institution dedicated to the Holotropic Breathwork and other complimentary activities.
Bonnie
Bright is one of the newest practitioners of Holotropic Breathwork on the
AHBI board, experiencing her first session in 2006. Because of the tremendous
impact HB had on her, Bonnie is actively moving toward certification. Bonnie
brings 15 years of experience in corporate training, marketing communications,
and public relations to AHBI, having worked in a variety of industries including
retail, technology, and media. Bonnie ran her own internet and marketing design
firm for several years and is a previous board member of AWRT (American Women in
Radio & Television). As a new AHBI board member, she is heading up the PR
committee to help get the word out to the general public about Holotropic
Breathwork. Bonnie is an avid student of the Enneagram, a psycho-spiritual
personality typology system, having completed over 350 hours of training since
January 2006. She is currently finishing a Master's Program in Depth Psychology
in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her thesis work focuses on shamanism, the goddess,
and the disappearing honeybees.
Elena Francisc joined the AHBI Board in November of 2007. She is the first Board Member from Eastern Europe having been born and growing up in Romania and living and working there now. She spent some years in Canada as an adult getting a bacholer's degree in Psychology with a minor in Italian at the University of Waterloo. After the fall of the iron curtain she returned to Romania to help rebuild the country . Her activities in Romania since then have included being editor of the Romanian edition of Cosmopolitan Magazine for seven years where she focused her work on increasing women's self-consciousness and self-confidence, participating in making changes to Romania's laws to protect women against violence, and founding a transpersonal publishing house to make transpersonal books available in Romanian (www.efpublishing.ro). Her goal with the publishing house and the events she organizes is to bring together both psychological and spiritual principles in the process of healing and growth. She has been involved in Holotropic Breathwork for many years.
Nieves Martinez was born in Madrid, where she lives. She also lived in England for some time many years ago. She has a Bachelor of Economics/Business and she has been working over the last 18 years in an English bank, 16 of them as a Corporate Analyst. She is also a Yoga teacher since 1994, trained in India, and practises Yoga and meditation since 1993. Her adventure with Holotropic Breathwork started in 1996. She entered the training in 1999 and became certified in 2002. Since she finished the training she has been offering Holotropic Breathwork workshops in Madrid for some years and also private sessions, although currently only offers private sessions and workshops as pre-arranged. She has been also facilitating in the training held in Spain. She is currently taking a Ph.D. Programme in Psychology at Madrid University, where she is doing research on Holotropic Breathwork.
Karey Pohn has more than 20 years experience as a management consultant, Lawyer, and entrepreneur. She obtained her BS in Finance and JD from the University of Colorado. Karey is a licensed attorney in California and Illinois. She also has a Ph.D. in Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute, California. Karey has researched the organizing principles of play and creativity. Her dissertation is a website—www.cosmicplay.net— Playing the Cosmic Game: Exploring Play’s Archetypal Aspects Through the Kaleidoscope of Culture. It is based on the work of Dr. Stanislav Grof and shows how this universal death/rebirth archetype is truly at the heart of the cosmos, and she illustrates this through the myths of Shiva’s dice game, quantum physics and chaos theory and in popular culture using Disneyland and the movies Mary Poppins and Chicago.
Karey brings the entrepreneurial knowledge of having been a partner of an international importing manufacturing business Additionally, she is a Certified Trainer in Neuro Linguistic Program. Her legal and academic background, along with her professional experience enables Karey to help her clients anticipate challenges and develop creative strategies to achieve their goals. Karey has worked with geographically diverse clients from Australia, Europe, and Asia. Her experience includes organizational and leadership development, team building, process analysis and development, as well as cultural integration issues related to mergers/acquisitions.
Mark Seelig was born in Germany and has been living in the US several years. He
taught Jungian and transpersonal psychology at Frankfurt-Main University,
Germany, and co-founded the German College for Transpersonal Psychology and
Psychotherapy. Mark now is a therapist in private practice, using various ways of
inducing non-ordinary states of consciousness in ritual settings. He also
facilitates Holotropic Breathwork and Neo-Reichian Bodywork at a
psychosomatic clinic in Kassel, Germany. Complementing his work, he has been
using archetypal astrology for many years. His favorite hobbies are traveling,
and studying the North Indian bamboo flute 'Bansuri'. "As a European AHBI Board
member I hope to be able to serve as a connection to people in and around my
country".
Oliver Williams works as a map-maker and illustrator for The New York
Times and other publications. His self-exploration began in 1972 when he
came to the US from his native England to pursue primal therapy, and has
continued with Holotropic Breathwork since 1992. He trained with Stan
and GTT, certifying in 1996, and in addition to offering monthly HB
workshops in NYC began work at that time to bring legitimacy to HB
within the evidence-based medical community through clinical research.
He was invited in 2006 to join the AHBI board to found and chair the
research committee with the goal of mounting research utilizing the
broad facilitator base worldwide. He has facilitated at Insight and
Opening retreats in Europe and the US, facilitates bi-monthly with Tim
O'Connell, PhD, in New Jersey and offers private HB sessions in New York City. Oliver is divorced,
the father of two sons.
Cary Sparks, (ex officio) co-directs GTT with her husband Tav. She has been administrator of the training program since 1990, working at that time with Stan and Christina Grof. In 1999, the Grofs retired from training. Tav and Cary took over the management of GTT, caretaking the continuation of the practice of Holotropic Breathwork as developed by Stan and Christina. Cary is a certified HB practitioner since 1986.
Besides the breathwork and her family, Carys passions are writing and riding/training horses. She is currently working on her second novel, Inscensed, set in the world of transformational workshops (not breathwork!), while querying agents for her first, The Colin Firth Film Festival. She trains warmblood sporthorses and Thoroughbred ex-racehorses, several of whom have gone on to have successful show careers.
Tav Sparks, (ex officio) is the Director of Grof Transpersonal Training and leads most of the training events in the United States and worldwide. He has been the primary faculty member since the training began in 1989. Since 1985, Tav has led numerous workshops internationally in Holotropic Breathwork and in transpersonal approaches to wellness and recovery. He is the author of The Wide Open Door: The Twelve Steps, Spiritual Tradition, and the New Psychology; the training manual Doing Not Doing: A Facilitator's Guide to Holotropic Breathwork; Through Thunder - A Poetic Death Rebirth Journey and seven screenplays combining the transpersonal perspective with modern popular culture. His current project is the book Movie Yoga: How to Turn Your Local Cinema into a Temple of Transformation. Since 1990, he has been program coordinator for three conferences of the International Transpersonal Association (ITA) and served as a member of the ITA Board of Directors.
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AHBI Legal Advisor
Jack Silver,
AHBI legal Advisor,
is active on a number of environmental boards in his community and is interested
in stronger ties to the breath community and the inner environment it seeks to
protect and enhance.
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THE MISSION OF AHBI
The mission of AHBI is to support the practice of Holotropic
Breathwork as a resource for healing and transformation.
We aim to do this by:
- Striving to make Holotropic Breathwork available to all who might
benefit from it.
- Supporting the practice of Holotropic Breathwork facilitators and
participants.
- Enabling connections and communications among all who are interested
in Holotropic Breathwork.
- Promoting awareness about Holotropic Breathwork by distributing
information and research in a variety of languages and formats.
- Supporting research into the theory, practice, and effects of
Holotropic Breathwork.
Commentary: The Board approved this new mission on July 8,
2007 with two primary intentions: (1) to emphasize that membership in
AHBI primarily supports its charitable role, and (2) to welcome into
membership all who wish to support the practice of Holotropic
Breathwork. We also affirm our intention to work internationally as much
as possible. We note that the specific points of this mission statement
are not listed in order of priority; indeed we expect the priority of
these points to change over time, in response to the needs of our
community, the capabilities of our organization, and the availability of
resources. We also note that our intention to support research refers
primarily to formal academic research.
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PRINCIPLES OF HOLOTROPIC BREATHWORK
By Stanislav and Christina Grof
Edited by AHBI
Theoretical Position:
- The theory of Holotropic Breathwork encompasses a broad understanding of the
human psyche that includes the biographical, perinatal, and transpersonal dimensions.
Phenomena from all these domains are seen as natural and normal constituents of the
psychological process; they are accepted, and supported without preference.
- Recognition of the fact that non-ordinary states of consciousness induced by
Holotropic Breathwork, as well as similar states occurring spontaneously, mobilize
intrinsic healing forces in the psyche and the body.
- As the process is unfolding, this inner healer manifests therapeutic
wisdom which transcends the knowledge that can be derived from the cognitive
understanding of an individual practitioner or from any specific school of psychotherapy
or body work.
Practical Approach:
- The basic elements in Holotropic Breathwork are deeper and accelerated breathing,
evocative music, and facilitation of energy release through a specific form of bodywork.
This is complemented by creative expression, such as mandala drawing, and
discussion of the experience. Holotropic Breathwork can be conducted on a one to one
basis, or preferably in a group situation, where participants alternate in the role of
experiencers and Sitters.
- Before the first breathing experience, participants receive an in-depth theoretical
preparation that includes a description of the major types of phenomena that occur in
holotropic sessions (biographical, perinatal and transpersonal) and technical instructions
for both experiencers and Sitters. Physical and emotional contraindications are discussed
and if there are any concerns, expert assessment is obtained. The facilitator makes clear
agreements with clients that they will not damage persons or property or engage in sexual
behavior with others during a Holotropic Breathwork session, and that they will stay to
participate in and complete the entire session.
- Holotropic Breathing is faster and deeper than usual; generally no other specific
instructions are given before or during the session as to the rate, pattern, and nature
of breathing. The experience is entirely internal and largely non-verbal, without
interventions. Exceptions are constriction in the throat, management problems, excessive
pain or fear threatening the continuation of the session, and explicit request of the
Breather.
- Music (or other forms of acoustic stimulation drumming, nature sounds, etc.)
is an integral part of the Holotropic process. Typically, the choice of music follows a
characteristic pattern that reflects the most common unfolding of the holotropic
experiences: at the beginning, it is evocative and stimulating, later it becomes
increasingly dramatic and dynamic, and finally it reaches a culmination. Following
the culmination, it is appropriate to shift gradually to quieter music and end with
peaceful, flowing, and meditative selections. Although this seems to represent the
statistical average, it should be modified if the energy in the group suggests that
a different pattern is indicated.
- The role of the Sitter during the session is to be responsive and non-intrusive,
to ensure effective breathing, create a safe environment, respect the natural
unfolding of the experience, and provide assistance in all situations that require
it (including physical support, help during bathroom breaks, bringing tissues or a
glass of water, etc.). It is important to remain focused and centered while facing
the entire spectrum of possible emotions and behaviors of the Breather. Holotropic
Breathwork does not use any interventions that come from intellectual analysis or
are based on a priori theoretical constructs.
- It is important to leave sufficient time for the sessions, usually between two
and three hours. However, as a general rule, the process is allowed to reach a
natural closure; in exceptional cases, this can take a few hours. In the termination
period the facilitator offers energy release work, if the breathing has not resolved
all of the emotional and physical tensions activated during the sessions. The basic
principle of this work is to take the clues from the experience and create a situation
where the existing symptoms are amplified; while the energy and awareness is held
in this area, the subject is encouraged to express fully his or her reaction, whichever
form it takes. This form of energy release work is an essential part of the
holotropic approach and plays an important role in the completion and integration
of the experience.
- Facilitators of Holotropic Breathwork should recognize that, when they utilize
a technique that evokes a non-ordinary state in a client, there is a potential for
unusually intense projections, including regressed longings for nurturing, sexual
contact, or spiritual connection. These projections are often focused on the
facilitator. In such cases the facilitator should be sensitive to the imbalance of
power in the facilitator and client roles and take care to assist clients with
such feelings as they arise. Facilitators make agreements to conduct their practice
of Holotropic Breathwork in an ethical manner.
- Discussion groups take place on the same day after an extended break. During
these sessions, the facilitator does not give interpretations of the material,
based on a specific theoretical system, including that of Holotropic Breathwork.
It is preferable to ask the experiencer for further elaboration and clarification
reflecting his or her insights from the session. Jungian amplification in the form
of mythological and anthropological references can be very useful in the discussion
of the holotropic experiences, as well as the mandalas. On occasion, references to
the facilitators own experiences in the past or experiences of other people
might be appropriate.
- There are many approaches that complement Holotropic Breathwork Gestalt
practice, Dora Kalffs sandplay, bioenergetics, various forms of massage,
acupuncture, etc. However, whenever these are used, it should be clearly indicated
that these are not a part of Holotropic Breathwork. If the practice of conducting
the sessions itself departs significantly from the above descriptions, the name
Holotropic Breathwork should not be used for such a procedure. We ask that it be
replaced by a different term and not associated with our names.
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THE HISTORY
- The original idea for the formation of AHBI was the inspiration of Cary Sparks in 1988,
after she received her Holotropic Breathwork Certification.
- Carlin Scherer provided the original funding for the start-up organization.
Cary Sparks, Tav Sparks, and John Scherer organized and edited the first issues
of The Inner Door, which later became AHBIs quarterly newsletter. The
organization was transformed into a membership-operated organization and created
as an official non-profit organization in 1989. Cary Sparks, Kylea Taylor, and
Laurie Weaver were the incorporating officers.
- AHBI had its first meeting on April 8, 1990, with Stanislav and Christina
Grof present. A statement of purpose was developed. Laurie Weaver was elected
as the first AHBI President.
- In July 1991, Kylea Taylor became editor of The Inner Door. Kylea
remained
the acting editor until 2007 when she retired from AHBI (but not from life!).
Sharanya Naik graciously served as interim editor for the May 2007 Tribute to
Kylea issue while the search for a new editor was launched under the leadership
of Kevin Sachs. The new editor, Alysson Troffer, began her work in July
2007. The Inner Door was printed and distributed for
ten years by Richard and Carleen Blum and is now printed and distributed by the
AHBI office.
- The first AHBI conference was held in January 1992 in Orlando, Florida with
Stanislav and Christina Grof in attendance. The Grofs made educational presentations,
and there were presentations by others about using Holotropic Breathwork with
various therapeutic populations such as those in addiction and recovery, those
engaged in community building, and in creativity.
- The second AHBI conference was held in May 1993 in San Rafael, California.
Its topic was Creativity of the Human Psyche. John Mack, M.D., Jim Fadiman, and
Brenda Love gave presentations. An AHBI meeting was held. The AHBI Board
committee proposed Holotropic Breathwork Ethical Agreements, which were approved.
Charlie Knutila was elected the next AHBI President.
- The third AHBI conference was held in October 1994 in San Francisco,
California. The conference topic was Moving toward Conscious Relationship
Nature, Self, and Other. Jim Fadiman gave a presentation on
The Holy Triangle of Relationship. Presentations were also given about
using Holotropic Breathwork with female trauma survivors and those with
disocciative identity disorder, and on the use of shamanic inebriance in ethnic cultures.
A discussion was also held on the evolution of the AHBI Ethical Agreements.
- In February 1996, Carol Trescott was elected President. In August 1996
an AHBI meeting was held in Byfield, Massachusetts. Charlie Knutila was
re-elected as AHBI President.
- Another AHBI meeting was held in August 1997 in Byfield, Massachusetts.
Several informational presentations were given by AHBI members on topics such
as trauma, multiple personality disorder, and electronic mixing of music sets
using a personal computer. Lenny Gibson was elected President of AHBI.
- In 1999, AHBI hired its first part-time employee, Sarah Burdge, for
the position of Office Coordinator. Later Glenn Wilson became the AHBI Office
manager and administrator.
- AHBI went through a long and challenging "transformation process" led by
Marty Boroson from 2004 through 2006. This process climaxed with Kylea
Taylor's retirement from AHBI at the end of 2006. Was there an AHBI "after
Kylea?" It wasn't so clear. But thanks to a lot of good work by
involved people AHBI re-emerged in the summer of 2007 with a new board, a new
mission, an advisory board, a new Inner Door editor, and a plan for implementing
its mission (see above).
Would you like to help out in fulfilling our mission?
Bringing breathwork to more people, improving communication between those
involved in breathwork, and sponsoring research? Then feel free to join us
in whatever way works for you.
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ETHICAL AGREEMENTS OF FACILITATORS
Preface
- The practice of Holotropic BreathworkTM
involves work with clients in
nonordinary states of consciousness. It is described in the "Theoretical
Principles of Holotropic Breathwork" by Stanislav and Christina Grof.
As individuals or as individuals working in organizations, we subscribe to
the value of self-examination in order to promote personal growth in ethics.
Because practitioners who keep these Agreements avoid behavior which may be
exploitative to participants and may also bring injury to the larger Holotropic
Breathwork community, we subscribe to the principle that we need to give and
receive feedback from each other in order to maintain the highest integrity
in the Holotropic Breathwork community. We make the following agreements
which specifically apply to our relationship with clients as practitioners
of Holotropic Breathwork.
Agreements
- We commit ourselves, as practitioners-in-training to practice Holotropic Breathwork only
within the limitations of our training and competence, and to do so under the direct
supervision of a Certified Holotropic Breathwork Practitioner.
- We commit ourselves, as Holotropic Breathwork Practitioners to be open to receive
feedback from other Holotropic Breathwork Practitioners. We also commit ourselves to
give feedback to other Practitioners, especially when we believe that the other
Practitioners have failed to keep one of the following agreements.
- We will keep workshop clients/participants confidences within the limits of the
state law.
- We create a safe setting for clients, as defined by the Holotropic Breathwork
Principles.
- We will represent ourselves and act only within the bounds of our experience and
competence and help our apprentices and trainees to do the same.
- If we are certified and qualified to supervise trainees as apprentices, we agree
to be responsible for providing ethical guidance to our apprentices (including these
agreements) while they are under our supervision.
- We continue to increase our Holotropic Breathwork competence.
- As researchers, educators, and authors we are dedicated to presenting accurate
information and to citing our sources.
- Dual relationships risk role confusion and the appearance or reality of exploiting
clients for personal gain. We agree to discuss with our peers any of our relationships with
participants or apprentices. We agree to avoid and refrain from dual relationships, which
may be exploitative sexually, emotionally, spiritually, economically, hierarchically, or
ideologically.
- We do not invite, project, respond to, or allow any sexual contact with our clients or
apprentices.
- We provide referrals to workshop participants who require follow-up or referral to local
community resources.
- We seek appropriate professional assistance for our own personal problems or
conflicts which may impair our work performance or professional judgments.
- We respect the emotional, physical, mental, and spiritual autonomy of our clients. We
enable them to choose freely with respect to participating in Holotropic Breathwork,
following suggestions, and accepting physical interventions.
- We maintain clear and honest business practices, including making agreements
regarding appointments, workshop times, and fees.
- In establishing the rates for our services we consider the financial situation of our
clients.
- We recognize a responsibility to participate in activities that contribute to the
community, including devoting a portion of our services for little or no financial reward.
I, the undersigned, agree to uphold the above Agreements of the Holotropic Breathwork
community and the Association for Holotropic Breathwork International.
_____________________________________________ ____________
Signature, Holotropic Breathwork Practitioner Date
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THE INNER DOOR
- The Inner Door is the publication ( ISSN # 1524-623X ) that has been published
by the Association for Holotropic Breathwork for its members since 1989. Since July
1991 it has been published quarterly. From 1991 until the end of 2006
Kylea Taylor was the editor of the Inner Door. In July 2007 Alysson
Troffer became the new editor of the Inner Door.
Go to Inner Door Archive
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