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A. ÇöÀåÀÇ ¾ð¾î¿Í Çй®ÀÇ ¾ð¾î°¡ ¸¸³ª¾ß ¸í»óÀÌ »çȸÀû Ä¡À¯ ÀÚ¿øÀÌ µÉ ¼ö ÀÖ´Ù°í ¹Ï½À´Ï´Ù. ±×·¡¼­ ´Ã 10ºÐ ³»¿Ü ·çƾÀ¸·Î ±Í°áµÇ°Ô ¼³°èÇÕ´Ï´Ù. óÀ½ ½ÃÀÛÇÑ´Ù¸é ¿Ïº®À» ³»·Á³õ°í, ±äÀåÀ» Á¶±Ý Ç®°í, ¼û°ú °¨°¢À» ¸î Â÷·Ê ¹Ù¶óº» µÚ Àá½Ã¸¸ µ¹¾Æ¿À¼¼¿ä. ±× ¡®µ¹¾Æ¿È¡¯ÀÌ ½×À̸é, ¸í»óÀº °á±¹ ÀÏ»óÀÌ µË´Ï´Ù.


[2026 ¡°100 Therapists¡± Interview] Ham Kyung-in, Director of mita.Lab
¡°When the nervous system settles, meditation becomes a daily habit—¡±


Meditation is shifting—from ¡°special-day healing¡± to a repeatable daily practice. Ham Kyung-in, selected as a 2026 ¡°100 Therapist¡± by the International Association of Integrative Therapy (IAIT), has been designing this transition at the forefront. As the Chair of the Yoga Meditation Academy of the Korea Therapy Yoga Association (KTYA), the founding President of the Korea Yoga Meditation Association (KYMA) under KTYA, and the director of mita.Lab, he oversees the educational philosophy and curriculum for Yoga Meditation Trainer, Yoga Nidra, and Breath Trainer programs. He presents a growth roadmap—¡°basic certification ¡æ advanced certification ¡æ respected meditation instructor ¡æ expansion into research and lecturing¡±—with the goal of standardizing meditation as a ¡°reproducible recovery skill.¡± Through the ¡°100 Nights Online Meditation¡± program and rotating regional leader sessions, he continues an ongoing experiment: transforming meditation from a one-time event into a habit-based recovery practice.


After graduating from Yonsei University College of Music (Piano), he pursued the path of a performer—until fascial pain led him to relearn the ¡°language of the body.¡± His journey includes Radha Swami light-and-sound meditation, Viniyoga, Gentle Somatic Yoga and Iyengar Yoga practice, and contemplative training such as MBSR, HEARTSMILE, and HEARTFULNESS. More recently, he has been refining the precision of ¡°posture–sensation–attention¡± through tea-walking practice and training as an Alexander Technique teacher.


Q. Congratulations on being selected as one of the ¡°100 Therapists.¡± How do you feel?
A. It feels less like a personal achievement and more like confirmation of what this era truly needs. In consultations and classes, I keep hearing the same things: ¡°My mind wants to do it, but my body tightens first,¡± or ¡°I don¡¯t have much time, but even five minutes changes my recovery speed.¡± I¡¯ve been working to close that gap—guiding people to meditation not as a skill to ¡°master,¡± but as a place they can always return to. I hope this selection helps spread the message that ¡°healing isn¡¯t for special days—it¡¯s a daily rhythm.¡±


Q. What was the decisive turning point that moved you from music to meditation?
A. Pain. Before my body hurt, I believed concentration was everything. But pain asked a different question: ¡°What is my body trying to say right now?¡± That question led me into meditation and somatic movement. As I trained my senses, I realized what looked like a ¡°mind problem¡± was often connected to nervous-system hyperarousal, shallow breathing, and scattered attention.


Q. How do you define ¡°meditation as healing¡±?
A. I often say, ¡°Meditation is not a mental technique—it¡¯s a structure the body remembers, and an attitude toward life.¡± If the body doesn¡¯t feel safe, breathing becomes shallow, and even simply sitting still can feel unbearable. That¡¯s why I begin by helping the nervous system settle. The moment you notice and soften tiny contractions in the shoulders, jaw, or abdomen, meditation shifts—from ¡°difficult¡± to ¡°possible.¡± The core isn¡¯t ¡°going deeper,¡± but ¡°returning to center more often.¡±


Q. Who benefits most from mita.Lab¡¯s Five-Senses Meditation?
A. Especially those who burn out easily in a busy life. Five-Senses Meditation awakens ¡°this moment as it is¡± through sound, scent, somatic movement, and tea meditation. That¡¯s also why we ran a 180-minute Five-Senses Meditation simultaneously across centers nationwide for World Meditation Day. I want meditation to become a living culture—not something reserved for a small group of practitioners.


Q. How do scientific approaches and somatic ¡°neurofeedback¡± connect in your work?
A. I view neurofeedback as ¡°a structure where the nervous system learns through feedback.¡± When you use indicators such as EEG or HRV to guide breath and attention, resilience and recovery capacity grow. Somatics adds interoception (internal sensing) and proprioception (posture–movement sensing), helping people notice subtle signals—jaw tension, shallow breathing—and adjust intensity, speed, and breath to shift the nervous system toward safety.


Q. How are the KTYA Meditation Trainer programs (Level 3 and Level 2) operated?
A. The key is standardized, practicable implementation. Through Aromatherapy Meditation, Singing Bowl Meditation, Breath Trainer, Yoga Nidra, and Meditation Trainer pedagogy, we build both theory and practice, and we assess real-world competency through mentoring, leader evaluations, and teaching practicums. We integrate neuroscience and the physiology of recovery so participants develop a clear ¡°teacher¡¯s language.¡± For outstanding graduates, we also open pathways to practical experience, such as leading sessions in the ¡°100 Nights Online Meditation¡± program.


Q. What is your future vision, and what would you say to someone just starting meditation?
A. I believe meditation can become a social resource for healing only when the language of the field meets the language of scholarship. That¡¯s why I always design practices that converge into a ¡°10-minute routine.¡± If you¡¯re just starting, let go of perfection. Soften tension a little, watch the breath and sensations a few times, and simply return—just for a moment. When that ¡°returning¡± accumulates, meditation inevitably becomes daily life.


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