When I first introduced my early students to Andean energy medicine, one woman said after three weeks: "I feel as though I am truly arriving in my life for the first time." She had walked many paths before. But something fundamental had been missing — roots. As a guardian of this tradition, I accompany people on a path that does not primarily teach techniques. It leads to where healing begins: into one's own ground.
Sapichakuy — taking root At the beginning of the training stands Sapichakuy. In Quechua, this means anchoring energetic roots in Mother Earth. This practice produces something many people no longer know: a quiet sense of security and belonging that does not depend on outer circumstances. Yes, it is a shamanic training.
But at its core it is about transformation, healing, and the awakening of love — Munay — in one's own depths. Module 1 — Healing inner wounds We do not begin with tools. We begin with what remains unresolved within: everyday traumas, ancestral patterns, traces from earlier life timelines. In this module, courage is developed.
Self-compassion. The capacity to meet one's own inner life honestly, without hiding from it. Module 2 — Energetic tools Only once the inner foundation is established do the tools arrive. Stones, flowers, candles, altars — not decoration, but living connections to cosmic forces.
At the center stands the path of humility and service. These tools do not serve one's own power. They serve what wishes to work through us. Module 3 — Integration and application In the third module, the inner temples open.
Life mission becomes visible. What has been learned is anchored in daily life — and for those who find it, in service to others. Here the training becomes a way of life. For whom this path is meant This training is for people who seek a deep shift in perspective.
Who are ready to truly transform their lives. Who wish to heal ancestral trauma before accompanying others. It is not for those who expect quick techniques without inner work. Nor for those who cannot bring the time for a real commitment.
That is not a judgment — it is a question of timing. Peru as a deepening Those who walk the path further can step onto the land of Peru itself. The mountains, rivers, and sacred sites there are no backdrop. They are active teachers.
If this path calls to you, I invite you to get to know it — step by step, in your own rhythm.