Train live in London and become a certified Nervous-System-Led Breathwork Facilitator — or choose the premium bundle to continue into the 16-week Mastery program with live calls, feedback, and deeper practitioner support.
Live call options: Tuesdays at 13:00 UTC or Thursdays at 20:00 UTC
Complete your booking below to secure your place.
50+ real participants recorded unedited video testimonials after recent Phoenix Breathwork trainings.
A METHOD LIKE NO OTHER




FROM TRAINING TO REAL FACILITAION
The day after the training, you’ll have the opportunity to facilitate a Fire Night for 80+ participants at a secret, central Singapore location.
This is where:
theory becomes lived experience
observation becomes participation
and confidence is built through action
This is embodied learning.
This is the Phoenix way of leading.
Understand your regulation baseline
See how you respond under pressure
Identify your current facilitation strengths
Know what to develop before holding space

James McCauley is an international breathwork facilitator, NLP practitioner,
and the creator of the Phoenix Breathwork Method.
Between 2025–2026, James has delivered 15 in-person Phoenix Breathwork trainings worldwideacross Europe, the Middle East, and Asia, and has led 10+ large-scale Phoenix Fire Night events,
each with 100+ participants.
His work bridges:
functional breathwork
nervous system science
NLP & hypnotic language
somatic release & group facilitation
James is known for creating containers that are deep, grounded, and practical —
where transformation is supported, not forced.
His trainings attract coaches, therapists, yoga teachers, corporate professionals,
and complete beginners who want real-world facilitation skill, not just theory.


You want to facilitate breathwork safely and confidently
You value presence, nervous-system awareness, and real experience
You want to learn by doing, not just watching or reading
You’re ready to step into facilitation in a grounded way
You’re looking for a quick online certificate
You want scripts instead of embodied practice