February 5th, 2020: Aishah Shahidah Simmons
Subscriber Archive • 1h 16m
Survivors of child sexual abuse and adult rape, especially women and femmes, are taught that rage is an unhealthy response to the unspeakable forms of violence committed against the child and adult bodies we inhabit in this lifetime. Instead, for the sake of our well-being, we are regularly encouraged to deny, silence, medicate, and/or institutionalize the rage without addressing its root causes. In mainstream society, rage and meditation aren't usually associated with one another. For some, rage is the antithesis of meditation. Yet, meditation can serve as an anchor and compass that leads to action and healing that emerges from deep within.
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January 22nd, 2020: Leslie Booker
As we begin this new decade, many of us are exploring this moment through the lens of the Greek God Janus, the God of beginnings and transitions. We are looking back and taking note of the causes and conditions of the past year that have brought us to the current state of our lives, and making re...
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January 15th, 2020: Rashid Hughes
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January 8th, 2020: Shanté Paradigm Sm...
"How can our connections to our ancestors, kin, and lineage assist us in our practice and our lives? Why are these connections so important? This dharma gathering includes meditation practices that help us work with the power of ancestry, decolonization, and the union of body and mind."