You’re in masterful hands!
Together, Jules, Vance, and Eben share over 30 years of teaching experience. Skip the decades and learn the key points of yoga, breathwork, meditation, and self-exploration!
At Inirly we like to call our retreats “wisdom-seeking experiences.” Life is inundated with lessons and, more often than not, we learn them, eventually. But, these life lessons tend to be after-thoughts. Our work, hobbies, and vacations all have their own primary reasons. Work is done to earn income. Hobbies are done because they’re enjoyed. Vacations are taken to escape the routine and adventure into the unknown.
This type of vacation’s primary reason is to gain personal wisdom of ourselves. It will be enjoyed, of course, and is certainly an adventure into the unknown, but first and foremost, it’s about cultivating the space for personal knowledge.
That sort of intention, on this sort of journey, demands a special type of guide; kind, powerful, truthful, experienced, strong, and peaceful….
Julianne Byun
Movement, compassionate self-inquiry, and meditation facilitator
“ So instead of asking when the intensity will end… I will ask, when will I begin to meet the intensity differently? I welcome your arrival with open hands and greet you with softer skin than those that have come before you.
I thank your predecessors for having given me the time and space to feel life through the body, to slowly let light and warmth seep into the root of my mind, inviting me to relax into this grand dance.
I listen for the rhythm of the now and allow it to take the lead. I know I will undoubtedly step on your toes here and there but I will work on remembering to gift myself Grace when I do. I carry hope in my heart, courage in my feet and ease in my breath as we step into creation together.”
Vance Vlasek
Movement and advanced vinyasa facilitator
“It gives me great joy to help you feel your own power (which is love 💗).”
Eben Oroz
Breathwork, meditation, and chanting facilitator
“If there were a place where positivity and negativity became one, would you be interested? Or maybe, you enjoy maintaining that they are different; good and bad?
The slow decay of labeling and the judgement that comes with it can be a disorienting progression. But when good becomes both good and bad, and bad becomes both bad and good, the moment being experienced and no other moment (it’s that specific) opens up into something beyond both.
That vast, borderless vista is the yogic perspective. Easy enough to entertain. More difficult to firmly grasp. Terrifically challenging to embody.Slow work, but one spring the sprouts of consequence will be there, and someone will smile.”