top of page
FabiolaEinhornProfile.jpg

Meet Fabiola Einhorn – an artist, certified facilitator and voice activator, speaker, UX consultant and creator of the Somacymatica. Her unique approach and expertise at the intersection of art, technology and wellness is informed by her 10 years immersed in ancient yogic practice and career in healthcare serving 150 million people with her designs and research. She was an early adopter of the biohacking movement and blends IFS and ancient yogic arts like toning/sounding/chakra attunement to facilitate harmonic states in the body-mind, and penetrate to our deepest layers. Where bliss, psychedelic states, creativity and love resonates from our simple being. She's also a professional Gong Fu Cha style tea server, and uses tea as one of her many tools to connect deeper with you in her every offering. â€‹

In 2018 she had a near-death experience and luckily she was already on a yogic path that worked for her. She found sound baths & spiritual communities often to be too dogmatic and ungrounded when approaching healing, with corruption and spiritual bypassing at the core. This lead her to continue shaping and offering what she couldn't find, and the result is remarkably inspiring. 

She has spoken at SXSW and other world stages about the power of sensory expansion, and is an up-and-coming leader at the intersection of art and wellness. She has seen hundreds of people experience her immersive art as a "technodelic", developed designs that 150 million people use on the daily to access their healthcare, and gone knee deep in research at Parson's for her Master's degree. 


Today she is happy to serve you in facilitation of workshops at retreats, or as a public speaker at the cutting edge of wellness technology, art and biohacking. She offers custom online or in person sessions with the Somacymatica to guide and offer you expertise in cultivating a healthy, shameless relationship to your truth and all states of emotion.

And in case you wondered, yes her real birth name is Einhorn! 🦄

what people say

bottom of page