Breathwork Therapy in Evanston

A guided, experiential approach that uses the breath to release stress, restore balance, and reconnect you with yourself.

Find the right therapist for you

Tell us about your needs, preferences, and insurance—and we’ll match you with a therapist who fits you, not the other way around.

Specialities:

Anxiety, Depression, Life Transitions, Trauma

Specialities:

ADHD, Anxiety, Depression, EMDR, Grief, LGBTQ+, Life Transitions, Trauma

Specialities:

Anxiety, Depression, Grief, Life Transitions, Trauma

Specialities:

ADHD, Anxiety, Career Counseling, Depression, Family Therapy, Life Transitions, Trauma

Specialities:

Anxiety, Depression, Trauma

Insurance & Access

We work with major insurance providers and offer flexible options to make care accessible.

What Somatic Therapy Feels Like

Breathwork therapy feels immersive, grounding, and deeply personal. Sessions invite you to slow down, let go of control, and allow the breath to guide the healing process.

Many people arrive feeling blocked, tense, or disconnected from their bodies and emotions. Through conscious breathing, awareness shifts inward, helping the nervous system soften and stored tension begin to release.

Over time, clients often describe feeling lighter, clearer, and more connected. Emotions that once felt suppressed or overwhelming become accessible and manageable, while stress and mental noise quiet down.

Breathwork is experiential rather than analytical. Healing happens through the body, creating space for insight, emotional flow, and a renewed sense of vitality.

Phase 1: Grounding and Preparation

We begin by establishing safety, intention, and connection to the breath. This phase supports relaxation and nervous system regulation.

Phase 2: Release and Awareness

As breathing deepens, physical, emotional, and mental patterns may surface. The breath supports gentle release without judgment or force.

Phase 3: Integration and Insight

Sessions close with reflection and grounding, helping integrate emotional shifts, insight, and calm into daily life.

How Breathwork Therapy Helps

Mental and emotional stress can, and often does, affect the body. Stressful situations or triggers can make us feel out of control of both our thoughts and our bodies, Breathwork therapy supports healing by working directly with breath, body, and awareness.

Helps calm the nervous system and release built-up tension.

Supports processing emotions that may be difficult to access through words alone.

Enhances connection to physical sensations and life force.

Encourages insight, clarity, and emotional presence.

Three easy steps

Talk with intake (free, 15 minutes)

Share what’s going on and what would feel supportive.

Get matched

We’ll recommend one to two Living Well therapists who fit your preferences and schedule.

Begin care

Start weekly sessions, build skills, and feel more like yoursel, in daily life and relationships.

Ready when you are

Overwhelm doesn’t have to define you. Together we’ll shift how stress shows up in your daily life.

We believe in offering support even if you can’t be in-person. Traffic, weather, childcare, packed calendars, none of that should keep you from getting help. 

We help many people remotely who may feel anxious, stuck, or simply not like themselves. You deserve care that fits your life and treats you as a whole human, not a diagnosis.

Warm, human-first care

We see the whole you. Sessions are warm, collaborative, and paced to your nervous system—not a protocol.

Thoughtful matching (not an algorithm)

Our intake team listens first, then hand-matches you with a best-fit clinician based on goals, style, culture, and lived experience.

Holistic + practical

We integrate talk therapy with somatic and experiential tools so change is felt, not just discussed.

Culturally responsive & affirming

Inclusive care for LGBTQ+ and BIPOC clients; we meet you where you are with curiosity and respect.

Secure & convenient

HIPAA-compliant platform, end-to-end encryption, evenings and lunch hours available, continuity when traveling in Illinois.

Insurance support

We’ll verify your benefits and outline costs up front, so there are no surprises.

Why Choose Living Well?

Your answers to
popular questions

You don’t need to have everything figured out before starting therapy.

Breathwork therapy is a guided, experiential approach that uses conscious breathing techniques to support nervous system regulation, emotional release, and stress reduction. Breathwork therapy at Living Well in Evanston can help you feel more grounded, clear, and connected to yourself.

Breathwork works by using specific breathing patterns to shift physiology—supporting relaxation, emotional processing, and increased body awareness. Sessions are guided and paced so you stay supported as sensations and emotions arise.

Breathwork therapy can help with stress, anxiety, emotional overwhelm, feeling “stuck,” low mood, burnout, and difficulty accessing emotions. Many clients also use breathwork to increase self-awareness and deepen mind–body connection.

Breathwork is generally safe when guided by a trained clinician and adapted to the individual. Your therapist will review contraindications and adjust the approach so it feels regulated and supportive.

Breathwork sessions often feel grounding and clearing. Some people experience deep calm, emotional release, or increased energy. Experiences vary, and your therapist helps you stay within a safe and manageable range.

No. Breathwork therapy can be approached in a practical, nervous-system–focused way. Some clients experience it as reflective or intuitive, but it does not require any spiritual framework.

Breathwork can support anxiety relief by helping regulate breathing patterns and calm nervous system activation. If panic is a primary concern, your therapist will use breathwork carefully and may start with gentler regulation-focused techniques.

Meditation often emphasizes observing thoughts and returning to awareness. Breathwork therapy uses structured breathing techniques to actively shift physiology, release tension, and support emotional processing.

In many cases, yes. Online breathwork therapy can be effective with secure telehealth and proper guidance. Your therapist will ensure it’s appropriate for you and help set up a safe environment for sessions.

Some clients benefit from a small number of breathwork sessions for stress relief, while others integrate breathwork into ongoing therapy for deeper emotional work. Your therapist will help recommend a pace based on your goals.

 

Tips for getting started on your journey

Explore therapist insights and practical tools to help you navigate life’s challenges.

Gentle Ways to Reconnect With Yourself
Gentle Ways to Reconnect With Yourself

When stress, burnout, or emotional exhaustion build up, it can start to feel like you are living on autopilot. You may be getting through the day, meeting responsibilities, and keeping things moving, but feeling disconnected from yourself in the process. When that happens, reconnecting does not usually begin with doing more. It often begins with slowing down enough to notice what is happening inside.

Reconnecting with yourself can be simple. It might look like pausing for a few deep breaths before moving to the next task. It might mean stepping outside for a few minutes, noticing where your body feels tense, or asking yourself what you need instead of pushing through automatically. Small moments of attention can help you come back to yourself in ways that feel steady and manageable.

It can also help to return to things that make you feel more like you. That could be rest, movement, music, journaling, quiet, creativity, or reaching out to someone who feels safe. There is no perfect way to reconnect. The goal is not to do it all at once, but to gently rebuild a sense of connection to your body, your emotions, and your needs.

If you have been feeling far from yourself lately, you are not alone. Sometimes healing starts with very small acts of care. By listening inward with a little more compassion, you can begin to find your way back to a greater sense of balance.

What If Spring Energy Hasn’t Hit Yet?
What If Spring Energy Hasn’t Hit Yet?

There is a lot of messaging this time of year about fresh starts, new energy, and finally feeling motivated again. As the days get longer and the weather begins to shift, it can seem like everyone is supposed to feel lighter, more productive, and ready to begin again. But if that is not how you feel, there is nothing wrong with you.

Seasonal change does not affect everyone in the same way. For some people, spring brings relief and momentum. For others, it can feel surprisingly underwhelming. You may still feel tired. You may still be carrying stress from the winter. You may want to feel better, but not have the energy to fully get there yet. That does not mean you are behind. It means you are human.

Our minds and bodies do not always respond instantly to what is happening around us. Even when the world begins to brighten, your nervous system may still need time to catch up. If you have been under stress, feeling emotionally heavy, or moving through a difficult season, it makes sense that your energy may return slowly.

Instead of pressuring yourself to feel renewed, try meeting yourself where you are. Maybe this season is not about a dramatic reset. Maybe it is about small steps, gentle routines, more sunlight, more rest, and a little more compassion for yourself along the way. You do not have to bloom on anyone else’s timeline.

You Don’t Need a Full Reset
You Don’t Need a Full Reset

There is a quiet kind of pressure that can show up when life feels off. You may start telling yourself that you need to get everything together, start over, or become a new version of yourself in order to feel better. When you are feeling overwhelmed, anxious, burned out, or emotionally stretched thin, the idea of a full reset can sound appealing at first. It promises relief. But often, that kind of pressure becomes one more thing your nervous system has to carry. Instead of helping, it can leave you feeling even more exhausted and behind.

The truth is that most people do not need to rebuild their lives from the ground up. They need support, rest, and a gentler way of beginning again. We live in a culture that often celebrates dramatic change and quick transformation, but healing usually does not happen that way. Real growth is often much quieter. It looks like noticing what you need, slowing down enough to listen, and choosing small acts of care that help you feel more steady. It may not look impressive from the outside, but it is often what creates the strongest foundation for lasting change.

Sometimes the urge for a full reset is really a sign that you have been carrying too much for too long. When that happens, it can be more helpful to ask, “What would support me right now?” instead of, “How do I fix everything?” That shift can change the whole tone of your healing. It moves you away from pressure and toward care. It helps you respond to yourself with more honesty and less judgment. Often, the things that truly help are simple, gentle, and easy to overlook, but that does not make them any less meaningful.

You are allowed to begin where you are. You do not have to earn rest, force a breakthrough, or reinvent yourself overnight in order to move forward. Lasting change is usually built through consistency, safety, and self-trust, not pressure. If you have been feeling stuck, consider this your reminder that you do not need a full reset to start feeling better. You may just need one small moment of support, one gentler thought, or one next step that feels possible today.

Joy Is Regulating, Even in Small Doses
Joy Is Regulating, Even in Small Doses

When we think about improving our mood, most of us go straight to effort.

We tell ourselves we need to be more disciplined. More productive. More positive. We try to think our way out of heaviness. We look for the right mindset shift. The better routine. The perfect morning plan. We get it. That makes sense. When you don’t feel great, your brain wants to fix it.

But here’s something we don’t talk about enough:
Joy — even in very small doses — is biologically regulating. It’s medicine for your nervous system. Pleasure releases dopamine — the chemical that helps us feel motivated and engaged. Connection releases oxytocin, which softens stress and helps us feel safe. Laughter lowers stress hormones and relaxes the body.

In other words, joy isn’t just a nice idea. It actually helps your system settle. And when your system settles, everything feels a little more manageable. The problem is that when we’re stressed, burned out, or low, joy can feel out of reach. We think it has to be big to matter. A vacation. A life overhaul. A major breakthrough. But regulation doesn’t require a grand gesture.

It might look like:
• Playing one favorite song and letting yourself really listen
• Stepping outside for five minutes of fresh air
• Lighting a candle at dinner just because it feels cozy
• Watching something that reliably makes you laugh
• Texting someone who feels safe
• Creating something — a doodle, a recipe, a playlist — just because you want to

These moments may seem small. But small doesn’t mean insignificant. In fact, when your nervous system is overwhelmed, small is exactly the right size. We often push joy to the bottom of the list. We treat it like dessert — optional, unnecessary, maybe even a little irresponsible when there’s so much to do.

But here’s the truth: joy is fuel. It restores energy. It widens perspective. It reminds your body that not everything is a threat or pressure. And sometimes, that tiny reminder is what allows you to keep going. If you’ve been feeling heavy lately, we want you to know: you’re not doing it wrong. Your system might just need nourishment — not more pressure.

This month, instead of asking, “How can I be more productive?”
What if we gently ask, “What would feel just a little bit good?”

Not life-changing. Not dramatic. Just slightly lighter. Give yourself permission to add one small thing that feels good — without justifying it, without earning it, without turning it into another task to optimize. Joy isn’t frivolous. It’s regulating. It’s restorative. And it belongs in your life — even now.

Regulating Before Ruminating
Regulating Before Ruminating

When we feel low, it’s natural for our minds to try to “fix” the feeling by thinking harder. We replay conversations, analyze every possible outcome, or worry about what might happen next. But here’s the thing—rumination often does the opposite of what we hope. Instead of relief, it can deepen that heaviness, leaving us even more stuck in our thoughts.

Before diving into problem-solving mode, try pausing and caring for your body first. Our nervous system and our mind are deeply connected. When your body is tense or overwhelmed, your mind tends to spiral. By regulating your body, you actually create the conditions for your mind to find clarity more easily.

It can be as simple as a few small, grounding actions:

  • Stand up. Feel your weight shifting through your feet.
  • Take three slow breaths. Let them be intentional, letting your chest and belly rise and fall.
  • Press your feet into the floor. Notice the solidity beneath you.
  • Step outside if you can. Let light and fresh air touch your skin, even for a minute.

These steps aren’t about “fixing” anything immediately—they’re about giving your nervous system a chance to settle. And when your body feels more regulated, your thoughts often follow. Perspective, insight, and even creative solutions can appear more easily than when you’re stuck in a loop of worry.

Remember: you don’t have to solve your life before supporting your body. Often, clarity comes after calm, not before it. By giving yourself permission to pause, breathe, and ground, you’re doing the most important work: caring for yourself in the present moment.

5 Mood-Lifting Practices to Brighten Your Winter
5 Mood-Lifting Practices to Brighten Your Winter

Winter has a way of slowing things down. Energy dips. Motivation shifts. The days feel shorter — sometimes emotionally and mentally, too.

If you’ve been feeling a little flatter than usual, you’re not alone.

The good news? Mood doesn’t require a full overhaul to improve. Often, small, consistent shifts can gently support your brain and nervous system in feeling lighter.

Here are five simple, research-supported ways to lift your mood this season.

1. Start Your Day With Light (and Movement)

Morning light helps regulate your circadian rhythm and supports serotonin production — a key mood chemical.

Even 5–10 minutes outside within an hour of waking can make a difference. Pair it with gentle movement — stretching, a short walk, or even standing near a bright window.

You don’t need a full workout. Just a signal to your body: We’re starting.

2. Do One “Completion Task.”

Low mood often makes everything feel unfinished or overwhelming.

Instead of tackling your entire to-do list, choose one small task you can fully complete — making your bed, sending one email, clearing one surface.

Completion builds momentum. Momentum builds energy.

Start small on purpose.

3. Shift Your State Through Your Body

Your mood isn’t just in your thoughts — it lives in your nervous system.

Try:

  • Standing up and rolling your shoulders back
  • Taking 3 slow, longer exhales
  • Playing one song and moving your body to it

Sometimes a 90-second state shift can interrupt hours of heaviness.

4. Add, Don’t Just Remove

When we feel low, we often focus on what to eliminate (less scrolling, less sugar, less procrastination).

Instead, try adding one nourishing input:

  • A warm drink you truly enjoy
  • A 10-minute creative break
  • A call with someone safe
  • Sitting in natural light with no phone

Mood improves when your nervous system experiences small moments of safety and pleasure.

5. Lower the Pressure

One of the fastest ways to lift mood is reducing self-criticism.

If your inner voice has been saying:
“I should be doing more”
“I shouldn’t feel this way”
“Everyone else is fine”

Try gently replacing it with:
“This season may require a different pace.”
“I’m allowed to move slowly.”
“I can support myself here.”

Compassion isn’t indulgent — it’s regulating.

A Gentle Reminder

You don’t need to feel joyful every day for something to be working.

Mood shifts happen gradually. Often quietly.

If you try one small practice this week, let that be enough.

And if you’re noticing your mood feels persistently heavy, therapy can offer a space to explore what’s underneath and build sustainable, supportive change.

At Living Well Psychotherapy, we believe healing doesn’t require force. It begins with understanding — and small, steady care.