

BEATE SCHWENZITZKI
From her life
Growing up in rural East Germany in the 1970s, Beate experienced security within her family and neighborhood. At the same time, she repeatedly experienced abandonment, violence, and insecurity: Who am I? What am I worth?
Her abilities of special vision, special hearing and deep feeling, which she experienced as a child, remained unrecognized.
Even as a primary school child, she was naturally involved in the daily demands of her parents' farm: helping out and supporting her parents instead of being guided through life with closeness and understanding. This led to overwhelm and a feeling of separation and alienation.
She lacks love and affection when she needs them most. Despair and disorientation dominate her life.


But her openness and a small spark of vitality, above all her insatiable longing for acceptance and security, keep her going.
In phases of despair and loneliness, her connection to nature, her animals, and the entire cosmos give her strength and confidence. At sixteen, she leaves the village and becomes a pediatric nurse in the nearby small town, moving to Berlin during the period of political change.
Shortly thereafter, she becomes a mother and decides to raise her son alone. On the one hand, this decision pushes her to the limits of exhaustion, pain, and helplessness, but at the same time, she feels happiness and contentment and experiences support from her family.
In the years that followed, she steered her small family through everyday life as a working single mother, constantly balancing it all. Through mountain biking in Scandinavia and skydiving, she experienced grounding and freedom for body and soul. She opened herself up to other forces and found spiritual connection in contact with her deceased grandmother.
In the midst of a fulfilling and exciting life, Beate is forced by a long illness to withdraw from everything and reflect on her life—and its shadows. Reaching the deepest point of her wound in solitude, she begins to explore herself.
After the hectic pace and pressure of her previous life, she now experiences exhaustion and stagnation, and recognizes her neediness and her lack.


Mindfully and sensitively, she explores her inner, silent space. She begins to remember, recognizes her wounds and her abilities for intuitive seeing, hearing, and deep feeling, and understands tenderness as a spiritually feeling attitude.
For her, silence is the essence of healing. She is sensitive, honest, and direct. Through encounters and work with Beate, people experience clarity, serenity, and the joy of life, in deep connection and vibrant touch.
She lives and works in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and Switzerland. In her wilderness camps, she provides a space for sensitive children, women, and men to recognize, experience, and strengthen their potential.
Beate also works via Zoom and accompanies sensitive people 1:1 in places of silence.