Embodiment & Culture Making

 

 

Hi friend,
Thanks so much for taking the time to open this newsletter.
We always aim to share inspiring, soulful, and useful content with you. For the next several weeks, I’ll be sharing writings and reflections as I lead up to the start of my once-a-year Women Embodied group. If you’d like to stay on our mailing list but don’t want to hear about this upcoming offering, no problem. Just click here. 
Decades ago, I took a college class called “At Home in Your Body.”
We began the semester by pulling our uncomfortable folding chairs into a large circle. The instructors asked us to introduce ourselves by responding to this question: “How at home are you in your body?”
I was in my early 20s, a few years older than many of the 18 and 19-year-olds in my class, as I had taken a few years off school to travel to Nepal, to deepen my studies of Tibetan Buddhism, yoga, tai chi, and healing.
I believe my jaw must have been hanging open that evening as I heard the responses that emerged from those lovely young people. All around the circle, one by one, these beautiful and vibrant human beings listed the many reasons they were not and could not be at home in their body.
Their this was too big, their that was too small, they never liked their body because this, and thus they did not feel at home in themselves or in the world.
I sat there dumbstruck. I don’t remember how I answered that question. But I do remember feeling as if I was witnessing a great tragedy, like watching an oil spill in a pristine Alaskan bay, or a fire in a great forest.
What a profound waste of life-force! Of youth and energy and intelligence! Of potential for beauty-making and life-enjoying and creativity!
I still wonder who, and how, and what might those people be if their life force were not so profoundly drained by the toxic conditioning from the overculture that encouraged them to hate their bodies. It’s invisible until we see it. Then perhaps, we see it everywhere.
 We are encouraged to spend most of our time, attention, money, and energy trying to fix ourselves and become the impossible-to-arrive-at version of perfection. Lives are spent in this tragic and empty pursuit every single day.
Without this internalized self-rejection, what might you have been delighted by? What art might you have made? What books or letters might you have written? What experiences might you have dared and fully enjoyed? The conditioning from the overculture goes deep, and so do its harms. Trying to get out of it often keeps us on the treadmill of self-fixing. As Zen teacher Cheri Huber wrote, “Self-hatred uses self-improvement as self-maintenance.” Oof. Thus goes a life…  Unless we do something radically different.
When we liberate ourselves from the harmful and life-sucking conditioning so many of us have been raised with toward this amazing gift of being embodied, we begin to shift not only our own lives, but the culture as well. As a friend wrote during the pandemic, “We are all vectors of contagion. Be mindful of what you spread.” Are we silently spreading the message that we and those around us get to be at home in these precious, temporary bodies, and that this life is a miracle? Are we spreading the vibes of connection, presence, and at-homeness?  Or are we spreading “there is something wrong with me” and of course that implies “there is something wrong with you too.” That might be the shape of your eyebrows, or how you wear your pants, or… fill in the blank. The consumer overculture never stops filling in the blank.
Here is a quote I’ve long loved from Clarissa Pinkola Estès:
A woman cannot make the culture more aware by saying ‘Change.’ But she can change her own attitude toward herself, thereby causing devaluing projections to glance off. She does this by taking back her body. By not forsaking the joy of her natural body, by not purchasing the popular illusion that happiness is only bestowed on those of a certain configuration or age, by not waiting or holding back to do anything, and by taking back her real life, and living it full bore, all stops out. This dynamic self-acceptance and self-esteem are what begins to change attitudes in the culture.
Taking back our body, not forsaking the joy of our natural body, not ignoring the messages, resonances, and dissonances always being transmitted by our wise body – this is important personal and culture-changing work. I hope more of us become contagious with that kind of freedom and dignity, at home in our own skin.
I wish the reclamation of inner authority, the deep knowing of one’s inner guidance, and the profound sense of being at home in oneself, not only for every young person who sat in that circle with me years ago, and not only for every woman in the circle of Women Embodied, but every person, everywhere.
I always say that we do this work not only for ourselves, but with the aspiration that our practices may ripple benefits far beyond ourselves.
Investing in deepening our intimacy and grounded sensitivity to the world of knowing in our sentient bodies and thus the world, reclaiming the wild self (not wild as in out of control, but wild as in the beauty, sanity, and lack of contrivance that we find in nature), helps create ripples of possibility in this world where the toxic patriarchy is running amok. (Perhaps you have noticed?) It’s a quiet and radical kind of activism.  The ripples that radiate from our reclamation and remembering, in our own lives, in our families and communities, and the future generations, cannot be underestimated.
Your soul came here for full participation. Dive in.
Here are some desires I’ve heard spoken by women in my circles lately:
I want to find calm in the storms of these times without putting my head in the sand
I want to stop living in my head
I want to stop being so oriented toward what other people expect of me
I want to slow down and really live my life
I want to stop feeling bad about myself when I make mistakes
I want to tame my inner critic and be more kind and friendly with myself
I want more confidence in finding my own way in life
I want to be engaged with the world without sacrificing my well-being
I want to increase my capacity and grow my compassion
I want to find a sense of belonging in community
I want to be more gentle and kind with my body and I want to feel better
I want to learn how to be truly helpful to others
I want to know that my gifts are valuable to the world
Do you relate to any of these longings? 
They are beautiful. They are also lamps of longing we can lift to light our way on this path of reclamation.
These are capacities we specifically grow during our time together in Women Embodied. They are seeds we plant that will keep sprouting and growing possibilities over many years throughout our lives.
In Women Embodied, we approach these cultivations somatically.
Somatic may sound like a fancy word, but it simply means the living body as experienced from the inside.
This is not about the body as an object – a thing that we do things to – though many people slap the word somatic on anything having to do with the body. That’s not it. Many body-based practices are profoundly objectifying. I know – I used to teach and practice them.
Somatic practice is about returning again and again with curiosity, reverence, respect, and wonder to the intelligence that reveals itself when we are present through our living experience of aliveness, as felt from the inside.
Just as you can’t step in the same river twice, you don’t ever return to the same body twice either. We are alive, changing, evolving, aging, and we are so much more verb than noun.
The practices we engage in regularly in Women Embodied are so much more potent than having the information or the books on the shelf.
 We return again and again to drink from the life-giving waters of our unique somatic experience. And while this group is trauma-informed, it does not center our trauma. We are so much more than that.
 It is a homecoming. A rooting into our deep selves and deep connections. This kind of homecoming takes repeated practice in a world that encourages us to be ever more speedy, in our heads, distracted and distressed, or chasing happiness in all the least helpful directions. We get good at what we practice.
Join me in practicing coming home to ourselves, reclaiming our lives, and shifting the culture in a liberatory and life-giving direction.
Join us!
We start in just over 5 weeks.
Making this investment of time in your own well-being and in shifting the culture is a gift that keeps on giving.
I could say so much about the profound importance of this kind of somatic learning.
Below is a simple list of just some of the fruits of this kind of embodied cultivation:
  • Age gracefully
  • Feel more
  • Update your habits
  • Learn to slow down
  • Embody sustainability
  • Become authentically intelligent
  • Improve your brain’s map of your body
  • Discover the gifts inside pain
  • Grow your attentional flexibility
  • Be mindful and spontaneous
  • Become yourself
  • Embody mindfulness
  • Cultivate less effort and more pleasure
  • Decolonize your bodymind
  • Remove outer authority from your inner life
  • Do what you want
  • Learn to trust something other than your thinking mind
  • End the culture of domination
  • Befriend yourself and embody lovingkindness
This reclaiming of one’s wild self, one’s embodied experience, one’s inner authority, one’s curiosity and capacity to learn again and again, one’s very presence and aliveness, is deep and profound work. And it is so worth doing. Again and again. For ourselves, for the culture at large, and for future generations.
Here are a few more seeds of inspiration from Clarissa Pinkola Estès that I’ll scatter, hoping they find fertile soil in which to grow:
“If you have yet to be called an incorrigible, defiant woman,
don’t worry, there is still time.”
“The things that women reclaim are often their own voice, their own values, their imagination, their clairvoyance, their stories, their ancient memories. If we go for the deeper, and the darker, and the less known, we will touch the bones.”
“Home is a sustained mood or sense that allows us to experience feelings not necessarily sustained in the mundane world: wonder, vision, peace, freedom from worry, freedom from demands, freedom from constant clacking. All these treasures from home are meant to be cached in the psyche for later use in the topside world.”
“The doors to the world of the Wild Self are few but precious. If you have a deep scar, that is a door, if you have an old, old story, that is a door. If you love the sky and the water so much you almost cannot bear it, that is a door. If you yearn for a deeper life, a full life, a sane life, that is a door.”
“It makes utter sense to stay healthy and strong, to be as nourishing to the body as possible. Yet I would have to agree, there is in many women a ‘hungry’ one inside. But rather than hungry to be a certain size, shape, or height, rather than hungry to fit the stereotype; women are hungry for basic regard from the culture surrounding them. The ‘hungry’ one inside is longing to be treated respectfully, to be accepted, and in the very least, to be met without stereotyping.”
Please join me for 9 months in a nourishing weekly circle where you’ll always be treated respectfully and accepted just as you are. We’ll dive into gentle movement, quiet inquiry, embodied listening, and sharing (because wow – the wisdom in the group is profound!) We’ll ask deep questions, revel in beautiful poetry, and step through many doorways to the wild self, the natural unconditioned self, as we keep slipping out of the tight constraints of hyperindividualism, judgment, competition, and the kind of self-hatred and endless striving so often encouraged by the overculture.
Whether you join me in Women Embodied or not, may you feel fully at home in your body, and may your wild soul be free.
From my heart,
Erin
You get good at what you practice.
I would say that it is the most soul-stretching, soul-satisfying group work I have ever been engaged in. Through somatic practice, conversation, holding space for my own vulnerability- and for others’, I have reclaimed parts of me that have needed space for a long while. I began this trail with trepidation, wondering if I would really fit in, would it be right for me, am I too awkward or needy, was it worth trying out? I can say without hesitation that I would pay for this course a million times over. – M.R.
I struggle to express my awe and respect for Erin’s essence as a human being and what she brought to every single gathering. Her language is clear and transparent, and she communicates meaningful ideas with nuance, depth and always a big heart. Her spiritual life is deep and it informed her every utterance with knowledge, insight and practical context for living in the modern world. And, living in it with expanded authenticity.
I loved every minute of this course, the community that was created. I am experiencing more than a tad of grief over its conclusion.
WW, Florida
Thank you so much for creating such a beautiful and safe space for growth and exploration— even virtually! I am positively amazed by not only how much I learned, but also how connected I feel to everyone in the group. You have some magical superpowers for creating such an intimate virtual space. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Thank you again — I really didn’t know what to expect, but this blew me out of the water!
A.W., New York
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Erin

By training and profession, I am a somatic educator. Over the past 25+ years I have trained in and taught modern dance, tai chi, Indian and Tibetan yoga, yoga therapy (specializing in back pain). I completed a 4-year professional Feldenkrais training in 2007 and a 3-year Embodied Life training in 2014. I also study and work with somatic meditation and the profound practice of embodied inner listening known as Focusing.