BREATH AWARENESS

Guided meditation with

audio · 13 min

Hanneli undervisning Garrison

The Breath as a Pathway to Presence

Our breath, on the one hand, is a biological automatism. We take our first breath as we are born and our last as we die. In this way, breathing is a thread that quietly connects all the events of our lives—a rhythm unfolding without our conscious effort.

On the other hand, the breath is sensitive and finely tuned to our inner states. It shifts with our emotions, thoughts, and bodily sensations. In this sense, it forms a bridge between body and mind.

Inhalation and exhalation are also intimately linked to our sense of vitality—to the subtle movement of energy throughout the body.

To become aware of our breath, then, is to turn our attention toward one of the deepest expressions of our being: how it feels to be alive.

In this meditation, we explore the breath in three steps:

Step One: Awareness of the Breath
We begin by simply noticing the breath as it comes and goes, without trying to change or shape it. Breathing in, breathing out. Letting it be. We gently bring our awareness to this natural rhythm, allowing it to become the center of our attention.

Step Two: Sensing the Breath in the Body
Next, we tune into the movement of the breath within the body. We feel how each breath involves not only the lungs but also the subtle expansion and release throughout the chest, the abdomen, even into the back and pelvis.

As we stay with this, we may notice how breath and aliveness are deeply connected. Each inhalation brings energy and freshness; each exhalation offers a chance to let go and settle. We can begin to sense how this wave-like rhythm supports both vitality and rest—two qualities rooted in our nervous system.

Step Three: Following the Full Cycle of Breath
In the final step, we allow ourselves to follow the breath a little deeper. We track the full length of the in-breath, noticing its natural expansion—and then follow the out-breath all the way to its end, sensing how the body softens and releases.

Without forcing, we invite a slightly fuller, more present breath—one that includes more of the body, more space, more awareness.

And gradually, we allow the quality of presence cultivated in this practice to accompany us into our daily lives—into our movements, conversations, and interactions with others.

 

This practice is created as a part of the Certification Program at the Center for Systems Awareness.

 

Hanneli Ågotsdatter

Founder, Kontemplation

M.A., Meditation Teacher, Psychotherapist and Architect

Hanneli Ågotsdatter is a lifelong student, teacher of yoga and meditation, and founder of Kontemplation—a community-based laboratory for exploring meditation, somatic awareness, compassion, and creativity. She actively investigates how contemplative practice evolves in contemporary life, offering accessible, non-dogmatic training rooted in everyday experience.

She has studied yoga and meditation for four decades, exploring compassion, heart-based practices, and somatic awareness under various teachers. She lives at Vækstcenteret, a lay monastery in Denmark, where she studies under philosopher and Dzogchen practitioner Jes Bertelsen.

She has engaged with the Center for System Awareness in Boston and facilitates annual immersions for emerging scholars at Mind & Life Europe.

Hanneli serves on the team for the Danish Society for the Promotion of Life Wisdom in Children and leads Kontemplation’s “Inner Practice & Working Life” program. She balances teaching and counseling with yoga, time with loved ones, community work, quiet time in nature, and regular long-term meditation retreats. She writes at the intersection of practice and daily life on the Kontemplation blog.

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