Discover Brazil
Where nature restores vitality
Vitality and connection with deep nature and Amazonian traditions

Culture & tradition
In Brazil, the body is at the forefront, always. Not in an aesthetic sense: in a practical sense. People occupy physical space naturally, they speak with gestures, they touch when they greet each other, they laugh loudly. The rhythms of the day follow the light and the heat, not the clock. You start early, work in the cool hours, and stop in the middle of the day when the sun beats down. Then you resume, and in the evening you stay out as long as you want. Indigenous and Afro-Brazilian traditions survive in small daily gestures: an herbal infusion in the morning, the way of cooking with cassava, music played on a drum in the courtyard. For us, this means something concrete: you live in a place where slowness is not idleness and energy is not agitation. They are two things that coexist, and you find it in front of you without having to look for it.
Why this country for the Method
Brazil is the right place for the Method for three precise reasons. First: the climate brings you back to your body. You cannot ignore a temperature that makes you sweat while walking slowly. The humid heat is a constant reminder of physical presence: breath, skin, posture, hydration. All concrete data, every day. Second: nature is invasive. The forest, the ocean, and the insects continuously fill the sensory space. This natural saturation turns off the appetite for artificial stimuli. The phone loses relevance without the need for rules. Third: the culture of movement. Here the body moves fluidly even outside of practice — people dance, walk barefoot, swim. The program relies on a context that already thinks of the body as a tool for presence, not performance.
Landscape & geography
The landscape is green and water. Dense forests that reach the coast, tea-colored rivers due to the tannin of the plants, long beaches with light sand and waves that can be heard even from afar. The air is dense, humid, smelling of wet vegetation and salt. Rains arrive almost every afternoon: ten or fifteen intense minutes, then the sun returns and everything dries quickly. After the rain, colors become saturated and the horizon becomes crystal clear. There is never zero noise: cicadas by day, frogs and insects at night, the constant rustle of palm trees. You get used to it in two or three days, and then it becomes the background that accompanies you while you practice, eat, sleep. The light is vertical, raw, and changes the way you see colors and distances.
What stays with you
What remains of Brazil is not euphoria, it is a calmer vitality. What remains is a body that moves with less rigidity: lower shoulders, a jaw that has loosened, a step that rests better on the ground. A fuller breath remains, one that doesn't stop at the chest. And a different idea of energy remains: no longer something to be squeezed to the last drop, but a resource that grows and wanes with the light, the heat, and rest. It is not a revolution, it is a rebalancing. Concrete, and lasting.