Yasser

Success is a hollow victory if you have to leave yourself behind to achieve it.

For a long time, I was a master of the outer game.

On paper, every box was ticked. I had co-founded and scaled a marketing agency to a team of thirty, navigating the high-velocity world of growth, clients, and constant momentum. I had the network, the reputation, and the drive. Yet inside, there was a relentless, low-grade hum. It was a restlessness I mislabelled as ambition. I thought I was being chased by the expectations of the world, only to realise I was being hunted by my own inner critic.

The breaking point did not happen in a boardroom. It happened in the quiet collapse of a long-term relationship.

That experience of being unseen and rejected was the first time I could not use strategy to solve a problem. It was a sharp, physical awakening to a truth I had been avoiding. I had built a massive life, but I was living it entirely from the neck up. My performance was still high, but something essential—my capacity to actually feel my own life—had gone offline.

I did not find my way back through more mindset hacks or productivity tools. I found it in my body.

Through breathwork and nervous system regulation, I moved past the concept of presence and into the actual experience of it. I discovered how to balance masculine drive with feminine receptivity, learning that true power does not require force and that stillness is actually a competitive advantage.

I did not get softer. I got clearer.

Since closing my agency chapter two years ago, my mission has shifted from scaling companies to scaling human capacity. At The Breathwork Club, I work with the highly capable: the entrepreneurs, directors, and visionaries who are internally stretched thin. These are people who do not need more motivation. They need the internal space to handle the weight of their own ambition.

I bridge the gap between high-level success and inner stability. I help leaders stop outsourcing their well-being and start leading from a place of regulated, embodied power.

The most important relationship you will ever lead is the one you have with yourself.

I am here to meet you.

Contact