Drop into your

innate wholeness

asian girl feeling and sensing, Vancouver forest, The Felt Sense mindfulness

My intention is to create spaces for people to explore mindfulness, creativity and well-being through a somatic, embodied and sensory approach — informed by mindfulness, psychology, philosophy, spirituality, science, and social justice.

Our experiences will tap into unique combinations of sound, art, food, movement and more. Coaching experiences are centred around your needs and intentions — whether you want to deepen your mindfulness practice beyond apps, tap into your full creative potential or you want to get practical tools and strategies to improve your unique emotional well-being.

The Felt Sense is a series of multi-sensory experiences, as well as one-on-one and group coaching and experiences.


The Felt Sense offers

All offeringS are custom, connect to learn more

MULTI SENSORY EXPERIENCES

MINDFULNESS COACHING

MINDFUL PORTRAITS

AND MORE


Juno Kim, chef turned mindfulness teacher, emotional well being coach photographer Vancouver

JUNO

KIM

  • CMT-P — IMTA-Certified Mindfulness Teacher

  • The Lab of Meditation Certificate

  • ESJC — Embodied Social Justice Certificate

  • Wave Life Emotional Well-Being Coach

  • Certified Breathwork Facilitator

  • Vice Chair of BC Insight Meditation Society, Chair of DEI

  • UBC BA Psychology

BEHIND THE FELT SENSE

My name’s Juno (he/they). In the 2010s, I made a name for myself as a chef — it was a wonderful journey in so many ways, and it was one full of burnout, stress, hustle culture and ego.

In 2018, I embarked on a healing journey, which deepened once I retired as a chef to centre my health and well-being. It wasn’t until I learned to drop into my felt sense that my healing went from surface level to transformative.

Being a generalist and an ultra-learner allows me to harmonize my incredibly diverse life experiences into how I approach all things. My greatest purpose is to continually explore and create the conditions for all beings to be their whole selves. In this moment, that is to help others connect to their felt sense, so they can make the most out of inner work, creativity, movement, love, joy, and life.

The Felt Sense is the culmination of my experiences into a focused, intentional and purpose-driven offering to the world. My approach is compassionate, emergent, embodied and human-centric. I look forward to connecting with you.


What people

are saying…

“Juno's soft-spoken, gentle approach, combined with skill and kindness, makes space for what's emergent. I always leave interactions with Juno feeling charmed and refreshed.”

“Juno’s guidance helped me look inward and listen to my body, understand what it needs and explore and challenge the balance between striving and pausing. This was instrumental on my journey to becoming the youngest person in the world to complete an Ironman on 6 continents and is a practice I will uphold for the rest of my life.“

~ connor emmeny, world record holder

“Juno’s present and consistent nature makes it a pleasure to work with him through any practice. He creates a safe container conducive to self-exploration and expression.”

~ Lorri rae clark, lite readings 

FAQ'S

FAQ'S


Juno Kim photography of a window in Dr Sun Yat Sen garden in Vancouver for The Felt Sense mindfulness and well being coaching and multi sensory experiences and events

  • There’s a lot of scientific evidence, eastern and Indigenous spiritual histories and traditions, along with first-person experience that makes the centre of our offerings.

    Klein et al in a 1970 University of Wisconsin paper determined that people who could tap into deeper levels of their felt sense had a better chance of benefitting from talk-based therapy.

    New research by Vanhooren et al in 2022 found that people who practiced touching their felt sense regularly had greater life satisfaction, less existential anxiety, less psychological distress, and a greater sense of meaning in life.

    Psychology’s study of somatics and embodiment has shown not only incredible evidence of its significance, but that it can be learned.

    I’ll only speak for spiritual traditions that come from my own lineage — in multiple forms of Buddhism, the practice usually unfolds to a point where people get into their felt sense in deeper and deeper ways.

    For me, my healing journey — both physical and mental health — went from surface level to transformative once I tapped back into my own felt sense.

    I truly believe it is completely innate and fundamental to our being — and my intention is to offer evidence-based, unique, inspiring, creative and enjoyable experiences that are thoughtfully and intentionally designed for others to find and practice touching their own felt sense.

  • The felt sense is an internal sensory feeling that gets underneath language and concepts. A direct experience of an embodied feeling. Sometimes, it can be like a cloud of sensation that communicates everything your conscious and subconscious knows about a subject, a time, a place. A rich set of sensory data that holds so much information.

  • Yes, most definitely! When we’re in a flow state, we tap into a wide awareness, a space where your thinking mind is free to let your body and spirit create.

    For most people, that only happens either by random chance or when they’re in an activity that they’re fluent in. My exploration is how we can tap into that at will, in increasing depths, on a moment-to-moment basis. To tap into more of our innateness, more of what makes you, you.

  • I like the metaphor of tasting wine. When you first taste wine, for most, they all just taste like “wine”. But the more you drink it, you notice an increasing amount of subtlety and nuance.

    You might first distinguish the flavours of red and white wines. Then, you might start to distinguish the flavours of a Sauvignon Blanc from a Chardonnay. Then, you might notice a difference in Sauvignon Blancs produced from different regions, different harvesting practices, etc. Eventually, you might even be able to distinguish between years or specific producers, and begin to notice how it harmonizes with other flavour profiles, seasons, and moods.

    Similarly, our felt sense becomes increasingly sensitized to a wide array of sensations and feeling notes in the body. And they carry so much valuable information, guidance, and knowings. And the way to reconnect to this depth of sensing is to practice being in it, in various situations. Quiet enough to hear yourself, still enough to feel yourself. Eventually, you can learn to use this sense to start shifting things at will, like your nervous system, muscle tension, stuck emotions, making space, for example.

  • As I studied general sciences and psychology at UBC, being evidence-based is very important to me. And there is so much scientific research that backs mindfulness, embodiment, and somatics. Science has also confirmed a lot about what Buddhists have figured out spending generations paying attention to our body-minds.

    That being said, science is based on empiricism — the objective observable universe. Much of this practice drops into a space where others can’t readily observe — your thinking mind, your felt body, your attention-awareness. While our practices are rooted in scientific evidence, we leave room to explore subjectivity and first-person experience, which I believe to be key in exploring one’s own well-being and wholeness.

  • Only you can know whether you’re in your felt sense. As rev angel’s profound instructions go, are you “quiet enough to hear yourself, and still enough to feel yourself”?

    Perhaps you can hit a flow state when you’re jogging, for example, where there’s enough of a quiet and stillness in your experience that you’re being aware from a felt sense. For many others, jogging would not be an activity in which they can get anywhere near their felt sense. Even avid or pro runners sometimes actively distract from the painful moments with thoughts that pull them out of their bodies and their felt sense.

    One thing I noticed once I established an intentional connection with my felt sense was that some forms of yoga with certain styles of teachers didn’t bring me to my felt sense at all, while others did. “Quiet enough, still enough” became a barometer for me to notice.

    Again, only you can know if you’re really in your felt sense :)

    This isn’t meant to gate keep — it’s to create discernment to allow us to explore our body-minds with more nuance. There’s no right or wrong and it’s a practice, not a perfect.

  • I believe the felt sense is an ever-enriching depth of our being that deepens with consistent and rhythmic practice. I don’t believe there’s a finish line to this way of being — there are always new emotions, subjects, situations that you can embody on a deeper level as you continually unfold throughout your life.

    I don’t see this as an acquisition or even a tool. I see this as our innate way of being that many of us, myself included, have been disconnected from at some point in our lives.

  • I’m not a licensed clinical psychologist, and so I do not provide any sort of clinical therapies.

    My focus is on creating space for someone who wants to practice touching into their felt sense, whether it’s to tap deeper into one’s own innate mindfulness, their authentic creativity with an iterative and emergent process, or to find alignment and a greater sense of meaning in life.

  • Wholeness is something we all deserve and should have equal access to. The world isn’t an equitable place in this moment, and so offering a sliding scale gives people with a lot of resources a chance to help others access opportunities for wholeness as well.

    If you really want to participate in any offering and you don’t have the financial means to do so, don’t hesitate to reach out. While I need to also pay rent, these offerings are for everyone, no matter your financial situation.

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