Chapter 3 — The Inner Call
There are moments in life when something begins to vibrate inside you for no apparent reason. A subtle movement. An intuition. A call.
For me, that call appeared early, long before I knew how to name it.
The first inner openings
When I was fourteen or fifteen, I started watching videos about science, philosophy, spirituality, and personal development. They explored consciousness, subtle perceptions, inner states, the mysteries of the human mind.
I didn’t talk about it to anyone. Not out of shame, but because I already knew that what I felt didn’t resemble what others expressed. I felt different. So I kept it inside.
Those videos put words on intuitions I had carried for years. They opened a door to an inner world I recognized without having explored it yet.
The blurry years
When I think back to middle and high school, everything is foggy. Like watching my life through a steamed window.
I remember video games. I remember being good at school without effort. I remember being surrounded, yet rarely present. I was floating. Surviving more than living.
Physiotherapy: a path chosen for me
Since childhood, I naturally massaged people around me. My parents kept saying: “You should become a physiotherapist. It pays well. You’re made for it.”
And because I didn’t yet know how to choose myself, I followed that path without questioning it. I never considered anything else.
Three years of failure
Medicine. Physio prep school. Sports science.
Three attempts. Three failures.
Each failure sent me back to an inner emptiness I couldn’t explain. As if life was saying: “This is not your path.”
The drift: drugs and escape
Then came the period where I lost myself.
The first joints. The raves every weekend. A world without limits.
Alcohol, weed, ketamine, LSD, MDMA, mushrooms, DMT, opium… We mixed everything. It was pure escape.
Until the first bad trip. A crack. A brutal realization: I was playing with something I didn’t understand.
The need to leave
After years of confusion, something inside me said stop. A silent but definitive stop.
In 2018, I found a volunteer program in Cambodia. Seven months. A humanitarian project. A way out. Or maybe a way in.
I said yes without hesitation.
Cambodia: the turning point
Living alone abroad was a liberating shock.
A new culture. A new rhythm. A new way of being. I felt alive.
I traveled through Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand. I met simple, luminous people. I discovered silence, slowness, presence.
And then came Natacha. A yoga teacher. A luminous woman. She saw in me what I couldn’t yet see.
With her, I discovered yoga, meditation, energy work, subtle sensations.
Vipassana: the culmination
Before returning to France, I did my first Vipassana retreat in Thailand. Ten days of silence. Ten days facing myself.
Vipassana was a turning point. A mirror. A purification. A revelation.
I understood that everything I had lived until then wasn’t an ending, but a beginning.
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