Why Becoming a GFP Practitioner
Practitioners learn to discern the language of gravity expressed through posture, muscular tone, and gesture—not intellectually, but through direct somatic experience. This training sharpens the capacity to detect dysfunctional patterns created by chronic gravitational resistance. As these implicit tensions are recognized and released, the nervous system begins a process of reorganization.
From a therapeutic perspective, GFP offers tools to support others in this reorganization process.

Practitioners learn to guide individuals through experiential processes that restore the natural dialogue between the body and the field, allowing the gravitational intelligence to once again do its work — integrating, stabilizing, rejuvenating.

The healing that emerges is never imposed; it unfolds as the body remembers its own capacity to trust gravity.
From a therapeutic perspective, GFP offers tools to support others in this reorganization process.

Practitioners learn to guide individuals through experiential processes that restore the natural dialogue between the body and the field, allowing the gravitational intelligence to once again do its work — integrating, stabilizing, rejuvenating.
Practitioners learn to guide individuals through experiential processes that restore the natural dialogue between the body and the field, allowing the gravitational intelligence to once again do its work — integrating, stabilizing, rejuvenating.
From a therapeutic perspective, GFP offers tools to support others in this reorganization process.
The healing that emerges is never imposed; it unfolds as the body remembers its own capacity to trust gravity.
To become a GFP Practitioner is to embark on a path of deep embodiment and rigorous study.
What follows is often experienced as an inner relief — a quiet healing that arises not from effort but from the cessation of internal battles.
Three Perspectives
Completing the GFP Training is not about acquiring techniques or accumulating roles. It is about allowing three distinct perspectives to take root—three ways of perceiving and participating in life—each grounded in the gravitational principle at the heart of the work.

These perspectives arise organically, one nourishing the next.
Graduates leave with an embodied principle that can be carried and implemented into any discipline—movement, artistry, sport, therapy, pedagogy, or the choreography of everyday life.

GFP becomes a perceptual compass:
a way of sensing effort, direction, weight, relationship, and possibility that often produces a radical refinement in one’s original field of interest.

Instead of adding new layers of technique, the practitioner learns how to recognize what is already happening beneath all action— the silent gravitational conversation that shapes every gesture, every fall, every touch, every choice.

This foundational shift is the ground from which the next perspectives naturally emerge.
Three Perspectives That Emerge Through GFP Training
A Principle That Reorients Everything
From this somatic understanding grows the ability to facilitate GFP group work.
Practitioners learn how to create conditions where participants can encounter the principle — not as a concept, but as an immediate embodied experience.

They become fluent in:
  • setting up core frames and exercises
  • structuring sessions with clarity and spaciousness
  • transmitting the ethics of non-interference and responsible witnessing
  • guiding individuals while respecting the autonomy of their process

Rather than teaching people what to do, they learn to reveal a quality of attention that allows participants to discover for themselves, with compassionate and attentive guidance

This is the essence of GFP pedagogy.
The Capacity to Facilitate Others Into the Principle
The deepest layer is the ability to apply GFP in one-to-one settings, where the relational and therapeutic potential of the principle becomes most intimate.

Here the practitioner cultivates:

  • a finely-tuned sensitivity to gravitational dialogue
  • the capacity to map the territory of inner blockages and resistances
  • a touch that orients, listens, clarifies, and reorganizes without agenda

GFP-based therapeutic work is non-directive by nature.
It does not attempt to fix or correct, but instead creates the conditions for a person’s system to perceive itself more clearly.

Through attuned presence, principle-based touch, and a deep respect for the intelligence of the organism, the practitioner supports reorganizations that arise from within — subtle, precise, and often profoundly liberating.
The Subtle Art of One-to-One Therapeutic Application
CERTIFIED TEACHERS
Marko Zelenovic Switzerland
Bernadette Schnabel Brussels
Marina Sekacheva Russia/Brussels
Louis Loprinzi Kammerer Spain
Marta Orewczyk France
Jeanine Ebnöther Trott Switzerland
Jaynelle Tirocchi California
Elodie Dayer Switzerland
Those who guide the work through experience and presence:
APPLY HERE FOR THE PROGRAM 2026