The (non-exclusively) Breslov
Hasid practice (pronounced
hiss-BO-de-duss) of free-flowing
personal prayer practiced by the individual Hasid alone on top of daily services in the synagogue.
Breslover Hasidim try to spend an hour alone with God each day (of course, with God you're never alone, but nonetheless the literal translation of this rite is to make oneself be in solitude), sharing their thoughts and concerns out loud in whatever language they happen to speak, as if talking to a close personal friend. Because this could be seen as distinctly wacky by non-adherents, it is generally done in privacy, and the Bresolver Rebbe Nachman said that the best place to do this is alone in a field or a forest.
In Israeli Hebrew, this practice is called hitbadedut.