
I invite you to a training
I invite you to a training.
In this process, I do not promise "constantly good feelings," "spiritual fulfillment," or a "sea of positivity."
Here, we learn the logic of working with the body.
In this training, the postures are not chosen by inspiration or at random.
A sequence is not built to "look nice."
Every posture exists to serve a specific function.
This training system draws from the educational lineage developed by Asokananda (Harald Brust), who spent many years researching Thai massage in Chiang Mai.
The point is not to name an authority; the point is to understand why this system still works.
This structure was created so that Western bodies could genuinely understand this tradition.
It has been tested for years with participants from all over the world and has been accepted and approved by the Thai Ministry of Public Health and the Ministry of Education.
For this reason, it values foundations.
It relies on the strength that comes from repetition of postures, regardless of level.
Because a body practice without a solid foundation will collapse, no matter how much it is decorated.
Yes, there are many postures in this training. But this abundance is not about teaching "more techniques"; it is about training the body, establishing a sense of direction and making the practitioner safe.
Because the body learns through repetition.
The mind may understand, but mastery begins only when body memory is formed.
I began learning through this curriculum.
Over the years, I have taken various advanced trainings.
Yet each time, I returned to this foundation and gained deeper understanding while practicing the very same postures.
What lightens sessions, protects the body, and clarifies touch is knowing how one body guides another. This ability develops through the repetition of fundamental techniques. And this is the most exciting part of the path: it has no end.
The training I offer in Turkey today is based on this same structure— one I have tested in practice for years and continue to simplify and deepen while teaching.
This path is not easy.
But it is honest.
And it works.
If what you are looking for is not a short-term "good feeling," but learning how to use your body in a safer, more effective, and less exhausting way, this training is for you.
