The Evolution Of My Work
- Nathan Marcuzzi

- Mar 13
- 3 min read
Over the past year, something has been shifting in the way I work. It began as a subtle feeling and slowly became clearer and harder to ignore. The structure I had built, the language I had used, and even the identity of my work itself no longer felt fully aligned with where life was leading me.
This post is about the evolution of my work, and the decision to let Somagetic dissolve.
Before Somagetic, my work was actually called Dearmour Me, and my website was dearmour.me. In the early years I was focused primarily on de-armouring processes and somatic release work. The name reflected the essence of what I was exploring at the time, meeting the protective layers held in the body and allowing them to unwind.
In 2018, during meditation, the name Somagetic came to me. It was a merging of somatic and energetic, which at the time felt like the most accurate way to describe what I was experiencing in sessions. The body and the energetic field were not separate. They were part of the same intelligence moving through the system.
For the next years, Somagetic became the container through which I shared my work with the world. From 2015 to 2025, I guided breathwork journeys, de-armouring processes, and something that I called the Ecstatic Experience. And although I guided them, they were actually guiding and teaching me. They shaped my understanding of the body, the nervous system, and the intelligence that lives within us.
Somagetic brought incredible experiences, powerful transformations, and many meaningful connections with people from around the world.
But something deeper was emerging.
Over time, I began to notice that the work itself was moving in a different direction. Sessions became less about applying modalities and more about listening... less about guiding processes and more about sensing what was already present in the field.
The evolution of my work was not something I planned. In many ways was happening beneath the surface, long before I was ready to name it.
And I'll be honest, letting Somagetic dissolve has not been easy.
When you create something and carry it for years, it becomes familiar. It becomes a language people recognize and an identity that others associate with you. Letting that go can feel uncomfortable. Questions arise naturally. How will the work be received now? Will people understand it? What will it look like without the container that once defined it?
But I realize these questions are part of the process, and, part of the ego.
Allowing the evolution of my work required something simple but not always easy: the willingness to step out of what was known and allow something new to take shape.
In many ways, this mirrors the work itself. The body reorganizes when it receives new information. The system evolves when it is no longer forced to remain inside the structures that once held it.
Our lives are no different.
We often hold tightly to identities, careers, relationships, and ways of being because they are familiar. Even when something inside us senses that life is asking for more, we resist the movement. We stay with what we know because stepping into the unknown can feel unsettling.
But evolution rarely happens in comfort. Interestingly, this is a photo I would often share with my groups...

Sometimes life calls us to soften our grip on what we've built so that something more aligned can show itself. This is what the evolution of my work has asked of me.
Today, my work centers more clearly around biological reconfiguration, shadow integration, and constellation processes that unfold through deep listening and sensitivity to the field itself. The focus is on perceiving what is already present and allowing the system to reorganize from within.
It's undoubtedly a quieter approach, but in many ways a deeper one.
This transition is still unfolding, and I suspect it will continue to evolve. The work itself is alive, and like any living system it changes as new information becomes available.
If there is anything I hope this reflection offers, it is an invitation.
Where in your own life might something be evolving?
What are you holding onto simply because it feels familiar? Where might life be asking you to listen more deeply and allow something new to emerge?
The evolution of my work is ultimately a reminder that transformation does not only happen in sessions, workshops, or trainings. It happens in the choices we make when we allow ourselves to follow the deeper movement of life.
Sometimes that movement asks us to begin again.
















