Wild Mind · Rewilding System
WILD SOMATICS

Movement · Expression · Synchrony · Lineage · Koh Phangan, Thailand

Version 1.0 2026 South Africa, Vietnam, Thailand

"Before healing, there is wholing — the recognition that nothing in you is broken, only unexplored. The work is not to fix, but to free."

Wild Somatics · Wild Mind

// The Orientation

Wild Somatics begins from a different premise than most therapeutic work. The body is not a problem to be corrected — it is an intelligence already in motion, already oriented toward its own wholeness. Movement, feeling, and expression are not symptoms to be managed. They are the channels through which life moves when it is free to.

The question at the centre of this work is not what is wrong, but what wants to move. What is at the edge of your experience — not yet speakable, not yet formed — that is pressing toward expression?

"At the edge of what we know about ourselves, something new is always trying to emerge. The work is to stay present long enough to let it."
// The Approach

This practice draws on Arnold Mindell's understanding of edges and channels — the places in experience where movement is just beginning, where the known self meets the unknown. It draws on the Wild Mind framework: the recognition that we are not singular, not fixed, and not separate from the larger field of life moving through us.

Whether you come through somatic sessions, martial practice, ancestral constellation work, or alchemical reading — the orientation is the same: toward synchrony between body, mind, and the deeper self. Toward freedom of movement, feeling, and expression. Toward the wholeness that was never actually lost.

// Where to Begin

Each offering is a different channel into the same territory. Follow what pulls at you — that pull is already information.