Gisèle Lupi Yoga

Gisèle Lupi Yoga Yoga 🧘🏽‍♀️ Muay Thai 🥊 Travel 🌐 Restorative Living 🌟
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Just a few steps from Ta Phrom....                          Fly High Yoga ClassesCome and fly, stretch, swing, turn upsi...
13/11/2025

Just a few steps from Ta Phrom....
Fly High Yoga Classes
Come and fly, stretch, swing, turn upside down with expert guidance on the FlyHighYoga belt. You will have fun, safely exploring poses that defy gravity and feel amazing.
Limited spaces, please DM

Brilliant article, brilliant book! JH Kim 🎯❤️
07/11/2025

Brilliant article, brilliant book! JH Kim 🎯❤️

I once had a doctor look at my chart and ask, "So, the trauma is in the past?" I didn't have the words then. I just remember the thrumming in my own veins, the way my shoulders would lock for no reason, the stomach that felt like a clenched fist days after an argument. My body knew what my mind was trying to bury. It was a living, breathing archive of every shock my system had ever endured.

Reading Bessel van der Kolk's "The Body Keeps the Score" is like being handed the key to that archive. This book is not just a text on trauma; it is a radical re-envisioning of the mind-body connection. Van der Kolk, a pioneering psychiatrist and researcher, lays out, with devastating clarity and profound compassion, how trauma literally rewires the brain and gets trapped in the body, not as a memory, but as a physical, present-tense reality.

1. Trauma is a Civil War Within the Self
Van der Kolk’s central thesis is that trauma is not the story of something that happened back then. It is a physiological state to be re-lived. The brain's alarm system gets stuck on 'on,' leaving the body in a constant state of defense, at war with its own senses, its own safety. The past is not past; it is an ever-present physiological emergency.

2. The Mind Can Lie, But the Body Always Tells the Truth
We can construct narratives to survive, to make the unbearable seem neat. But the body refuses to be edited. It speaks in the language of migraines, autoimmune flares, chronic pain, and a heart that races in a quiet room. Healing begins when we stop arguing with the story and start listening to the flesh.

3. The Path Out is Through the Body, Not Just the Mind
Talk therapy can only take you so far when your body is still on the battlefield. Van der Kolk presents a powerful array of somatic therapies—yoga, EMDR, neurofeedback, and sensorimotor psychotherapy—that bypass the storytelling brain to speak directly to the nervous system. The goal is to teach the body that the danger is over, and that it is safe to inhabit itself again.

4. The Emotional Brain is Held Hostage
Trauma fundamentally alters brain structure. It hijacks the rational, "thinking" part of the brain (the prefrontal cortex) and gives ultimate authority to the emotional, survival brain (the amygdala). This is why traumatized people can't just "calm down" or "think rationally." Their brain's command center has been overthrown.

5. Trauma Shatters the Sense of Self
A core wound of trauma is the loss of ownership of one's body and mind. Survivors often feel disconnected, numb, or as if they are watching their life from a distance (dissociation). Healing, therefore, is not just about processing a memory, but about reclaiming the self—the right to feel, to desire, and to be present in one's own skin.

6. The Power of Rhythm and Relationship
Van der Kolk highlights two of the most fundamental regulators of our nervous system: rhythmic movement (like drumming, dancing, or swimming) and attuned, safe relationships. These are primal sources of comfort that can help re-regulate a dysregulated system and rebuild a sense of connection that trauma destroyed.

7. Trauma is Transmitted and Collective
The book extends beyond individual experience to explore how trauma can ripple through families (as in generational trauma) and entire societies. The body of a culture, like the body of a person, can hold the score of historical atrocities, shaping behaviors and health for generations.

8. The Limitations of Medication and Talk Therapy Alone
While sometimes necessary, van der Kolk argues that medication often just numbs the symptoms, and traditional talk therapy can sometimes re-traumatize by forcing a person to relive the event without providing the bodily tools to process it. True integration requires a bottom-up approach, starting with the body's physiology.

9. Healing is the Recovery of Play and Imagination
Trauma makes the world a terrifying and predictable place. Recovery involves rediscovering the capacity for play, creativity, and imagination. These are not frivolous; they are biological imperatives that allow for flexibility, spontaneity, and the creation of new, safe experiences.

10. You Can Re-write the Score
The book’s ultimate message is one of profound hope. Neuroplasticity means the brain can change. The body can learn new rhythms. While the scar of trauma remains, the debilitating pain does not have to. We are not condemned to be prisoners of our past. We can learn to live in the present, with a body that is no longer an enemy, but a trusted ally.

There is a line in the book that serves as a guiding light for the entire work: "The body keeps the score, and the body can be the door to the healing process." "The Body Keeps the Score" is a monumental, essential, and life-changing book. It is for anyone who has ever felt trapped by their own physiology, for anyone who has been told "it's all in your head," and for anyone who seeks to understand the deepest roots of human suffering and resilience. It is a difficult, often painful read, but it is also a map—the most comprehensive and compassionate one we have—leading out of the wilderness of trauma and back home to the self.

BOOK: https://amzn.to/4nJdTR7

You can ENJOY the AUDIOBOOK for FREE (When you register for Audible Membership Trial) using the same link above.

That’s an insightful observation, Gisèle — and it connects deeply to both physical mechanics and energetic flow. Here’s ...
02/11/2025

That’s an insightful observation, Gisèle — and it connects deeply to both physical mechanics and energetic flow. Here’s a clear breakdown:

1. What’s Happening Physically

If your breath stays mostly in the belly:

The diaphragm is working well — it descends, pushing the abdominal organs down and expanding the belly.

But if the ribs don’t expand, the intercostal muscles (between the ribs) may be underused or tight, and the lateral and posterior lungs may not be fully ventilated.

This limits the upper and side lobes of the lungs, reducing overall lung capacity and making buoyancy less stable when diving — hence the bobbing. The diaphragm moves up and down strongly, changing your volume of air, but without the ribs expanding to distribute that change more evenly through the torso.

2. Energetic Effects

In yogic and subtle anatomy terms:

Predominantly belly breathing activates apāna vayu (downward-moving energy), grounding but potentially heavy or dull if not balanced.

Limited rib or chest movement can mean prāna vayu (upward, heart-lung centered energy) isn’t fully circulating.

Over time this can manifest as feeling contained, inward, or less expressive, sometimes emotionally flat or energetically “undercharged.”

Ideally, the breath cycles through apāna → samāna → prāna — from belly to diaphragm to chest — creating an energetic loop that supports vitality and presence.

3. Possible Physical Causes

Tight intercostals, serratus anterior, or pectorals

Restricted thoracic spine mobility

Habitual posture (slight slouch or forward rounding)

Long-standing breathing habits emphasizing abdominal calmness (common in meditation)

4. Remedy and Repatterning

To restore full-range breathing without losing the belly awareness:

a. Rib and Side-Body Awareness

Lie supine, hands on lower ribs.

Inhale into the sides of your ribs — feel the hands move sideways.

Exhale slowly, let the ribs soften inward.

Do 5–10 minutes daily before practice.

b. Thoracic Mobility

Seated or kneeling, interlace fingers behind the head and gently lift the sternum as you inhale.

Focus on expanding the back ribs.

Add gentle twists and side bends to wake up the intercostals.

c. Layered Breathing (3-Part Yogic Breath)

Inhale: belly → ribs → upper chest.

Exhale: chest → ribs → belly.

Use this pattern during pranayama warm-ups to retrain intercostal and costovertebral movement.

with thanks to PAC Yoga
30/10/2025

with thanks to PAC Yoga

A very short sample of supported restorative yoga postures anyone can do with a couple of pillows or bolsters and blocks

My dual niche is clear: Core niche — Introspective adults seeking depth, calm, and inner restoration.Adults aged 35–65, ...
24/10/2025

My dual niche is clear:

Core niche — Introspective adults seeking depth, calm, and inner restoration.
Adults aged 35–65, predominantly female, educated, mid to late career professionals or retirees seeking recalibration from stress, overwork, or life transition.

Drawn to personal guidance, meditative pacing, and integrative self-inquiry rather than rigid aesthetics.

Psychographic: introspective, spiritually curious, values authenticity, depth, and solitude. Prefers immersive, quiet environments over social or fitness-oriented yoga.

Secondary niche - High-performance individuals
This group—athletes, fighters, and physically disciplined practitioners seeking conditioning or recovery through yoga.

Psychographic: competitive, disciplined, and goal-oriented. They value precision, endurance, and mastery, drawn to structured practice that refines power, breath control, and recovery. They use yoga as advanced body training and for mental clarity, integrating it into life and/or combat.

My range spans from restorative, meditative teaching to advanced physical training for high-capacity bodies.

The primary niche is non-performative—introspective, inward, focused on self-inquiry.

The secondary niche is performative in discipline but not in display—its performance is functional, not aesthetic.

14/10/2025

Kuala Lumpur
Putatan
Kuala Lumpur( city centre)
Golden Fish
Guangzhou
Shah Alam (Subang Hi-tech Industrial Park)
City Garden
Seongnam-si (Bundangnaegok-ro)
Tuen Mun San Hui
Inanam
Sekinchan
Yeongdeok
London
Sungai Siput Utara
Mid Calder
Singapore (Queenstown Estate)
Miri
Bayan Lepas
Singapore
Kuala Selangor
South San Gabriel
Maran
Chai Wan
Papar
Nāngloi Jāt
Vagholi
Wellington
Mango Hill

In the last 6 weeks I have taught small group classes to people from the above 29 places. In a recent post, another teacher said that "by teaching drop in group classes, teachers often offer formulaic classes to hopefully serve everyone, and end up serving noone."
I can understand you thinking that way...however that is not my experience. It takes hard won understanding to tune in and intuit what is needed, how much to challenge, or the effective 'yoga' for each one time student in a group class. Another level of discernement entirely is required of me to drop the "menu" (warm up, postures, savasana),and enter the field of co-creation as I weave the class for the wellbeing of all...also, here, movement is universal, english is not.

I've made peace with perhaps not pleasing all of the people all of the time...hahaha, myself included, and still I'm open to learning from every student as they pass through. Gifting each other with intention and presence for just 50 minutes in this lifetime.

( my personal preference is at least 90 minutes for a class)

It's only taken me two years to finally create this laminatable multi linked qr code poster!
14/09/2025

It's only taken me two years to finally create this laminatable multi linked qr code poster!

End of August, Bangkok, 2 weeks of family reunion and NO Classes to teach!I ended up on a play date with  at his wonderf...
11/09/2025

End of August, Bangkok, 2 weeks of family reunion and NO Classes to teach!
I ended up on a play date with at his wonderfully appointed high rise. We practiced asana, filmed some ("content") 😁 and this sound healing was a lovely gift. I also learnt a new , called sapling. So cute, so perfect. 🌱 Yogis sharing in the relational field. Priceless👌🧘🏼‍♂️🧘🏼‍♀️

Just 5 days ago in a town in East Kalimantan I taught a wonderful Rest & Rise themed yoga session for 21 local students....
17/08/2025

Just 5 days ago in a town in East Kalimantan I taught a wonderful Rest & Rise themed yoga session for 21 local students. I want to mark it as a moment of growth and celebration for myself, affirming my chosen path and travels. From contacting over a year ago on IG to being so warmly welcomed and invited to teach, I've been held and guided in the most beautiful ways in different lands & islands.

🇵🇱

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Kampong Cham

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Travelling Yoga Teacher

A committed teacher excited to transmit the possibilities and inspiration yoga potentiates.