A studio that grew out of a question:
what if healing felt like coming home?
Sōra means “sky” in Japanese. We chose it because the sky belongs to everyone — quiet adults, restless kids, exhausted parents, anyone in transition. This studio is our small offering of sky.
Five principles, written on the wall.
Listen
before we look. Always.
Soft
is not the same as weak.
Children
are tiny grown-ups, not small problems.
Plain
language, no jargon ever.
Slow
is a clinical decision.
<– ТАМ фото practice built around listening first.
Sōra started in a 200-square-foot room above a flower shop. One practitioner, one curtain, one teapot. A decade later we still believe the most powerful diagnostic tool is unhurried attention.
When parents began bringing in their children — first one, then ten, then a waitlist — we built a wing just for tiny humans. We trained in pediatric techniques abroad, hand-painted the walls, and replaced the magazine pile with picture books.
ТАМ фото ——>
Sōra started in a 200-square-foot room above a flower shop. One practitioner, one curtain, one teapot. A decade later we still believe the most powerful diagnostic tool is unhurried attention.
When parents began bringing in their children — first one, then ten, then a waitlist — we built a wing just for tiny humans. We trained in pediatric techniques abroad, hand-painted the walls, and replaced the magazine pile with picture books.
A short history of Sōra.
Trained in shoun-ishin. The first pediatric session — and the first sticker chart.
Added an in-house herbal pharmacy. Anouk joined.
Built the “Sprouts wing” — soft floor, story corner, a beanbag-frog named Frank.
Today: ~40 families a week, three practitioners, one Miso the cat.
Come visit. Tea is on us.
Stop by for a 15-minute meet & greet — see the space, meet the practitioners, sniff the herbs. No pressure to book.