Qigong Teacher Training
Embody. Deepen. Share.
If you feel called to share Qigong, not just as movement but as something you live and practise, it asks more of you than learning forms.
Teaching Qigong isn’t something you move through quickly. It takes consistency, honesty in your practice and a willingness to keep meeting yourself over time. You can only guide others as far as you’ve gone yourself.
All training begins with establishing your own practice through self-study. From there, it deepens through mentorship with someone who has walked the path before, and over time, your ability to teach and facilitate develops.
Begin with your own practice
Begin with your own practice
The Pathway
STEP 1
Establish Your Practice
This is where you begin. Before stepping into mentorship or training to teach, your practice needs to become consistent, grounded and lived.
This stage is a self-paced, online program that builds the foundation — developing awareness, stability and a direct relationship with your Qi. From here, as your practice becomes consistent and more direct, you move into mentorship.
STEP 2
Mentorship
This is where your training deepens and where certification is completed. Through mentorship, your practice is refined and your understanding becomes embodied. Your capacity to guide others develops through direct experience.
This stage is guided and ongoing, taking place over 9 months, either 1:1 or within a small group. It includes ongoing support, feedback and assessment, and continues to develop your practice over time.
A Contemporary Approach to Practice and Teaching Qigong
Qigong has never been something fixed. It evolves and expands through those who practise it.
This approach stays grounded in the principles of the tradition, while bringing the practice into everyday life. Not by simplifying it, but by actually living it — through how you move, breathe and relate to your own energy.
The focus isn’t on holding onto forms for the sake of it, but on developing a practice that is steady, consistent and real.
That’s what allows the depth to remain, without it becoming separate from how you live. This isn’t about completing a course or collecting techniques. It’s about developing a practice you live, and from that, learning to guide others with clarity and integrity.
If you’re ready to begin, start with establishing your own practice.
From there, mentorship becomes the space where this deepens and takes shape.
Recognised by the International Institute of Complementary Therapists