Hannah Breithaupt

Hannah Breithaupt
Hannah Breithaupt is a music therapist, practitioner of holistic voice and singing work, and alternative practitioner of psychotherapy.
She has been intensively involved in bodywork and voice work for many years. This includes 10 years of individual voice and singing lessons, training in ‘Holistic Voice and Singing Work according to Carien Wijnen’ and further training in ‘Somatic Voice’, as well as involvement in ‘Roy Hart Work’ in a year-long group and individual seminars.
She also has training in ‘MOSH Vibe’: group work with physical methods according to Ilan Stephanie. The training was preceded by years of participation and assistance in annual groups and individual courses on topics such as: individual and collective trauma work, research on life energy and somatic experience, and the energetic potential of the female reproductive organs.
Self-study of literature on trauma and somatics, polyvagal theory (Peter Levine, Stephen Porges, Laurence Heller, etc.) and energetic work with female organs (Tami Lynn Kent).
Her passion lies in the connection between body and voice work and research on the nervous system for (self-)healing processes, self-empowerment, the development of one's own expression and the inner experience of connectedness and vitality.
She has been intensively involved in bodywork and voice work for many years. This includes 10 years of individual voice and singing lessons, training in ‘Holistic Voice and Singing Work according to Carien Wijnen’ and further training in ‘Somatic Voice’, as well as involvement in ‘Roy Hart Work’ in a year-long group and individual seminars.
She also has training in ‘MOSH Vibe’: group work with physical methods according to Ilan Stephanie. The training was preceded by years of participation and assistance in annual groups and individual courses on topics such as: individual and collective trauma work, research on life energy and somatic experience, and the energetic potential of the female reproductive organs.
Self-study of literature on trauma and somatics, polyvagal theory (Peter Levine, Stephen Porges, Laurence Heller, etc.) and energetic work with female organs (Tami Lynn Kent).
Her passion lies in the connection between body and voice work and research on the nervous system for (self-)healing processes, self-empowerment, the development of one's own expression and the inner experience of connectedness and vitality.