Just Breathe: Kiesha Yokers and the Importance of Breathwork
It's our first thought when we're stressed and overwhelmed, the first step we're taught to take when a moment is in danger of spinning out of control. Just breathe, and it will all come back into focus. But what about the rest of the time? Do we need to focus on our breathing even when things aren't terrible? And what if the anxiety lasts for more than a moment? What if it's rooted somewhere deep in our pasts or — just as likely — the present strain of making worldwide sickness and economic uncertainty, together with political, social, and environmental upheaval all seem like business as usual? Can just breathing help for more than a moment? Can it work to regulate our bodies as well as our minds to create the kind of wellness we need to survive the world we find ourselves in? According to wellness guru and breathwork specialist Kiesha Yokers, the answer to all of these questions is yes. We sat down with the Seattle-based Breathwork Facilitator & Somatic Life Coach to talk about her own journey to breathwork, the power of daily practice, and the potential she believes it holds for us all.
AC: 2020 was a turning point for the world in a number of ways. For you, it was the beginning of your journey into breathwork. What prompted your transition from conventional therapy into breathwork and how did it lead to your transition into a somatic coach and breathwork facilitator?
KY: I had a long career in education. But 2020 changed the field so much. I was home with my children, a military spouse in a new duty station, and a Black woman in a community that was hostile toward me. 2020 felt unsafe in so many ways. But the straw was watching George Floyd take his last breath. It hit me hard that the Black breath is short. By December of that year, I realized I was struggling with my mental health. I Googled how to breathe and discovered breathwork. Within 10 minutes, something in me had broken in the most beautiful way. The simple act of slowing my body down, inviting rest, and breathing felt like the most radical act I’d ever taken.
My breathwork journey started there, and I knew that breathing was the key to unlocking something that needed to be freed inside of me. It allowed me to take the next step in my mental health journey.
I am a big believer in therapy. I worked with a therapist who used somatics (a body-centered approach that emphasizes internal physical perception. It teaches you to pay attention to sensation and helps you release stored emotions that weigh you down). I continued breathwork and was so transformed by this work that I decided to start my somatic training to teach others this work. Somatic work has made such an impact, and I wanted to make this work accessible for everyone to learn from.
AC: Modern breathwork seems to have strong roots in Pranayama, one of the eight limbs of traditional yoga. How would you compare/contrast the practices?
KY: There are many different lineages in both somatics and breathwork (one somatic tool). Breathwork comes out of Southeast Asia and has roots in Africa as well as other parts of the world. Many of my teachers are working tirelessly to trace the roots of modern breathwork.
People may be familiar with Pranayama, an ancient and beautiful lineage known as one of the eight limbs of yoga. Psychiatrist Stanislov Grof developed Holotropic breathwork in the '70s as a drug-free method to change a person's state of consciousness. It seems like an old trend made new, but it demands more respect than that. Thousands of years old, breathwork is a practice that has been used therapeutically and for spiritual awakening by the ancestors.
At Lindywell, I use many lineages, including Pranayama. Wim Hof has also grown quite popular recently. If someone has tried breathwork and it “didn’t work for them,” I remind them that there are many different styles and teachers. Breathwork, first and foremost, is for everybody. Which type you use and the teacher you learn from is based on your specific needs. If one style doesn’t work for you, try another because breathwork is unlike anything you will do. It can radically free you in so many ways.
AC: Do you have experience with or incorporate any aspect of the remaining seven such as ethical and spiritual disciplines, posture, or cultivating greater levels of concentration?
KY: I love yoga. Yoga is very popular where I am from, but you won’t see many folks who look like me in the studios. Yoga has been so horribly appropriated that it makes sense why many of us don’t want anything to do with it.
It wasn’t until I read the work of Susana Barkataki and Jessamyn Stanley that I began to see myself in the work. Susana first taught me about Ahimsa (non-violence) and how I can apply that to my mind and thoughts. It is from Ahimsa that I have learned to love myself truly. Bringing yoga back to its roots has taught me to respect and honor the culture it came from. I work to do that in my breathwork and somatic classes.
AC: America has not typically been concerned with the wellness of Black people, and the realities of Black life in this country have usually left us with little time to emphasize it for ourselves. Yet as we consider more and more the unique pressures and stresses of being Black in America, we are finding a need for strategies that enable us to do more than continue shouldering the burden. How can breathwork fit specifically into that space?
KY: Amen to that! Our hustle-and-grind culture has left us bone-weary, and the beautiful but misunderstood concept of Black excellence has our spirits depleted from the constant pursuit of absolute, always-on excellence.
What time do we have to care for our hearts and get a workout in? But the time is now. We must reclaim our peace through peaceful practices addressing the root cause (our disregulated nervous systems and dissociated bodies). We have escaped our bodies for far too long, and it's time to come home to ourselves. Many of us have never felt safe in our bodies, which is why this work is even more impactful in Black and Brown spaces and why I created a live BIPOC breath- work class. There is no other way to heal than to nourish our souls. There is so much power and healing in reclaiming our breath. I remind my classes that we are worthy of countless breaths. Take every one of them in as your divine right and exhale into your peace and freedom.
There is enough room for us all to thrive, and we need us to be leaders in this space so that it is truly accessible to all. Hire black women for leadership roles. When black women are at the helm, there is a different perspective at the table.
AC: As wellness becomes more of a watchword for our community, do you feel there is a need for approaches to the work that are specifically rooted in or focused on our cultural perspectives/realities? What would that entail and what might some of the benefits be?
KY: Without a doubt! Wellness is not created equal. Wellness looks different depending on your vantage point, access, and opportunities. This is why I love somatic work. Breathing is free, and the breath is a clear roadmap to the nervous system. How we breathe tells us how we are doing — short, shallow breathing may indicate stress or anxiety, a sympathetic fight or flight state. Whereas long, slow breaths move us into our parasympathetic nervous system. A few breaths that are low in the belly and slow can get us back to a regulated state quickly.
We all know what it feels like to walk into spaces made for us, by us, and by folks who un- derstand our unique perspectives and realities. Finding and creating more Black and Brown trauma-trained instructors is essential. We deserve to have spaces where we can truly breathe. This is one of the reasons I created a BIPOC breathwork class at Lindywell. Addi- tionally, we have financial assistance so that many people can attend the class and begin their somatic healing journey using breathwork.
AC: What is your personal breathwork practice like? What are some of the ways you incorporate it into daily life?
KY: Because breathwork is so simple, I wake up and do energizing breathwork for a few minutes before I get out of bed, which gives me a jolt of energy. I check in with my breath throughout the day because I have made this a habit. I use various techniques throughout the day when I feel stressed, particularly when my kids come home from school.
Breathing is huge in our house. My partner and I practice breathing with and in front of our children so they see us calming down when we get overwhelmed. By showing up as emotionally regulated parents, we can co-regulate our children and soften their outbursts so we can connect before we ever launch into correcting. Our goal as parents is to raise emotionally intelligent children who are aware of their nervous system and become adults skilled at regulating their emotions. Can you imagine if we started learning this young? I’m on a mission to do that for us! I invite you to join me!