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Giulia Tizzano of Salt Lake City on Life, Lessons & Legacy

Giulia Tizzano shared their story and experiences with us recently and you can find our conversation below.

Good morning Giulia, it’s such a great way to kick off the day – I think our readers will love hearing your stories, experiences and about how you think about life and work. Let’s jump right in? What do you think is misunderstood about your business? 
A lot of people still misunderstand my work as being “just spiritual” or purely intuitive. I think they imagine crystals, rituals, or inspirational quotes when in reality, my business is deeply rooted in psychology, nervous system regulation, and subconscious reprogramming.
What I do is help people break real patterns that are running their lives, not just temporarily feel better. It’s structured, it’s evidence-informed, and it requires real commitment. The spiritual aspect is important, but it’s not escapism. It’s actually about learning how to stay present in your life, your relationships, your body, your responsibilities… and not bypass them.
And I think another thing that’s often misunderstood is that healing is “soft.” What I do is gentle in approach, but very confronting in impact. It asks for personal responsibility, consistency, and a willingness to look at uncomfortable things. Most people don’t expect that part.

Can you briefly introduce yourself and share what makes you or your brand unique?
I’m the founder of Soul Alignment Path, a transformational healing and coaching space for women who feel stuck, disconnected, or caught in repeating patterns, even after trying therapy, self-help, or spiritual work. My background blends physiotherapy, yoga therapy, energy healing, hypnotherapy, and shamanic practice. What makes my approach unique is that I don’t compartmentalize healing, I work with the psyche, the nervous system, and the spiritual body as one ecosystem.
My work focuses on subconscious reprogramming, nervous system regulation, and deep inner child healing. I help people understand why they’re stuck instead of just motivating them to do better. Many of my clients are high-functioning women who look like they have it together on the outside, but feel blocked or disconnected internally and we address that at the root.
My story is closely tied to my work. I’ve moved countries, rebuilt my life from scratch, navigated burnout, trauma, spiritual awakening, and reinvention multiple times. So my brand isn’t just theory, it’s lived experience, grounded in years of client work around the world.
Right now I’m focused on expanding my online programs, mentorship spaces, and leading international retreats that support deep, embodied transformation rather than surface-level change. My mission is to help people stop surviving and start living from a place of inner safety, clarity, and purpose.

Great, so let’s dive into your journey a bit more. Who taught you the most about work?
Honestly, my clients.
They taught me that real work isn’t about being perfect, having all the tools, or always feeling inspired. It’s about presence, consistency, and humility. Sitting with people in their most vulnerable moments, watching them break patterns they’ve lived inside for years, and witnessing how slow and nonlinear healing actually is… that reshaped my entire idea of what “work” means.
And I’ve also been incredibly lucky to sit with teachers from different lineages around the world, carriers of ancient wisdom and lived knowledge. Each one became a thread in the tapestry of my work and the woman I’ve become.
On a more personal level, life itself has been my greatest teacher. Moving countries, starting over, becoming a mother, rebuilding from scratch more than once, that showed me work isn’t just about building something external, it’s about who you become while you’re building it.

What did suffering teach you that success never could?
Suffering taught me humility, compassion, and patience in a way success never could. Success can make you feel validated, but suffering strips you of everything that isn’t real. It forces you to face your patterns, your ego, your attachments, and your blind spots. There’s no hiding in it.
It also taught me that strength isn’t about pushing through but it’s about learning how to stay present when you want to disappear. How to soften when you want to harden. How to keep choosing love, clarity, and responsibility even when no one is clapping for you.
And maybe most importantly, suffering taught me that healing isn’t about avoiding pain, it’s about learning how to be with yourself inside of it. That lesson became the foundation of my work, not just my life.

Alright, so if you are open to it, let’s explore some philosophical questions that touch on your values and worldview. How do you differentiate between fads and real foundational shifts?
I look at what changes under pressure.
Fads usually sound good, look good, and spread fast but they collapse the moment life gets uncomfortable. They’re built to feel inspiring, not to hold someone when they’re dysregulated, triggered, grieving, or confronted with their own patterns.
Real foundational shifts are quieter and slower. They don’t just change your mindset, they change your nervous system, your relationships, your boundaries, your self-respect, your capacity to stay with discomfort without acting out or shutting down. You see them in how a person responds to conflict, how they treat themselves when no one is watching, how they move when things don’t go their way.
Trends try to make you better. Foundational work makes you more you.

Thank you so much for all of your openness so far. Maybe we can close with a future oriented question. What is the story you hope people tell about you when you’re gone?
I hope they say that I made them feel safe enough to tell the truth to themselves and to others.
Not safe as in comfortable, but safe enough to be real.
That I didn’t try to save them, fix them, or make them dependent on me… but that I helped them remember who they already were beneath the survival patterns, the fear, the conditioning.
I’d want them to say that my presence made things clearer. That I walked with integrity. That I didn’t romanticize healing, but also didn’t take the magic out of life. And that the work I did wasn’t about me, it was about helping them step back into themselves with more courage, sovereignty, and softness.
That feels like a legacy worth leaving.

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