Respect Love Feel was founded by Neil Wormsley.
This project grew from lived experience ā learning to slow down, soften the body, calm the mind, and reconnect through movement.
Iām not here as an authority.
Iām on the path too.
The aim is simple:
to reduce stress, deepen connection, and help people return to themselves ā one small reset at a time.
Sometimes that begins with a short reflection.
Sometimes it begins with a simple practice.
Often, it begins with the body.
Slow and steady. š£
You can read more about Neil here.
The Wider Practice
Respect Love Feel brings reflection and movement back together.
Mind and body are not separate.
When the body softens, the mind often settles.
When the mind slows, the body often releases.
At the heart of this work is reconnection through movement ā restoring natural range, easing tension, and learning to feel the body again without force.
This site is a place for both:
Movement ā gentle realignment, natural patterns, and reconnection through the body.
Reflection ā presence, honesty, and a calmer way of seeing.
Each supports the other.
You can explore the body side of this work through Movement.
A Personal Note About Our Logo
I wanted the symbol for Respect Love Feel to hold the three core values at the heart of the site:
Respect. Love. Feel.
The interwoven form felt right because these are not separate ideas to me. They belong together.
The shape is simple, balanced, and flowing ā reflecting the kind of space I want this to be:
calm, human, grounded, and honest.
Not about perfection.
Not about performance.
But about coming back into a more real and connected way of being.
Nostr
I share daily reflections and short notes on Nostr, a decentralised network.
Follow here:
These short notes often develop into longer articles on this site.
Explore next
Begin
Start with the simple Respect Love Feel practice.
Movement
Explore the core body-based practice of reconnection through movement.
Simple Reset
Try a short reset to soften the body and calm the mind.
Thoughts
Read short reflections and articles from the wider practice.
