Plan Your Pesach
Daily tools to help you navigate this season
Pesach can hold a lot at once.
- Joy, pressure, memory, expectation, stress, connection, and overwhelm can all show up at the same time.
- For many people, this season brings up a lot internally, even when things may look fine from the outside.
- That does not mean anything is wrong with you. It means you are human, and this time of year can carry a lot.
In this guided session, Gitty Greenwald, LCSW, shares a gentle approach to using the breath as a way back to presence, steadiness, and inner space.
- Supported by Myriam Lankry, LCSW, Clinical Director of Amudim, this session explores how conscious breathing can help us stay grounded.
- The session makes room for what is coming up, without asking us to force it away.
- It offers a softer way to move into Yom Tov with more compassion and calm.
What you’ll experience in this replay
- A calming conversation about breath, presence, and Pesach.
- A practical grounding tool called “The Reset.”
- A guided breathing practice you can return to anytime.
- A reflective meditation on memory, healing, and the kind of Yom Tov you want to create.
- A gentle space to slow down and reconnect.
A gentle note before you begin
- This session is not intense breathwork.
- It is a soft, accessible guided breath awareness experience created to support calm, connection, and reflection.
- Some parts of the meditation may bring up memories, emotions, or other inner experiences connected to Pesach.
- You are welcome to pause, step away, or return to the session in parts.
- Whatever feels right for you is enough.
Featuring
- Gitty Greenwald, LCSW
Founder of Psychosomatic Breathwork for Clinical Practice
Supported by
- Myriam Lankry, LCSW
Clinical Director, Amudim
A simple takeaway to bring into Yom Tov
- Gitty shares a grounding tool called The Reset.
- Pause – stop for a moment and notice what is happening inside.
- Name – gently name the feeling.
- Breathe – stay with the breath for 60 to 90 seconds, without judgment or force.
- A small moment of awareness can create more space, more calm, and more choice.
You can come back to this before April 12th.
- Before Yom Tov.
- In the middle of a full day.
- When things feel heavy.
- When you need a reset.
- Or simply when you want a few quiet minutes to reconnect.

