Shiné: mind/body/spirit

Shiné: mind/body/spirit Yoga & somatic practices for centering, with Katy Hawkins at Chestnut Hill Friends Meeting Live classes: katyhawkins.com
Recorded classes: movingpoetics.com

A supportive collective space to practice somatic techniques that can facilitate the healing potential of journeys into ...
04/17/2026

A supportive collective space to practice somatic techniques that can facilitate the healing potential of journeys into expanded states of consciousness.

The experiment in May will incorporate the outdoors, exploring practices for honing the sacred compass within, via meditative circling and wayfinding in the natural world.

Registration info here: https://www.katyhawkins.com/upcoming-workshops.html

A supportive collective space to practice somatic techniques that can facilitate the healing potential of journeys into ...
04/05/2026

A supportive collective space to practice somatic techniques that can facilitate the healing potential of journeys into expanded states of consciousness.

The experiment in May will incorporate the outdoors, exploring practices for honing the sacred compass within, via meditative circling and wayfinding in the natural world.

More info here:
https://www.katyhawkins.com/upcoming-workshops.html

Restorative yoga with massage, live sound bath, & skyspace opening MAY 10, 7-9pm Umm... methinks you need this. so does ...
04/04/2026

Restorative yoga with massage, live sound bath, & skyspace opening

MAY 10, 7-9pm

Umm... methinks you need this. so does your mom.

-60 minutes of restorative yoga (read: lying around on squishy bolsters receiving hands-on healing touch with essential oils)

-James Turrell sunset skyspace opening (read: lying on your back on said squishy bolster looking up at an open portal to the sky, with lights choreographed to imprint the colors of the sunset into your whole being)

-accompanied by a live crystal bowl sound bath (to weave together light vibration with sound vibration so the true magic of the natural world reaches you at the deepest cellular level)

This special offering is designed to feed all your senses

Spots are limited, so save yours early!

https://www.katyhawkins.com/upcoming-workshops.html

This image is of CHFM Friends gathering under the trees to explore a beautiful landscape idea that would transform the s...
03/31/2026

This image is of CHFM Friends gathering under the trees to explore a beautiful landscape idea that would transform the space we look out on, in gorgeously resonant ways. A circle of large stones would echo our circle of embodied practice. So much gratitude to Shiné member Cyane Gresham, who works so hard to bring the sacred into the natural surround we enjoy while we practice.

In a related vein, here’s a wonderful tree poem, written by Amanda Hall after a Shiné workshop last week:

“The Meeting”

I work with trees
A voice from the next-door mat
our legs splayed apart and hands in prayer position.
I imagine their meetings
chaired by the oak whose bark is worse than his bite, minutes for now taken by ash someone missing - the sycamore plans dismissed as 'that old chestnut.
Union reps wanting to talk plane a thorn in everyone's side they've never been poplar.
Holly's in a mood, prickly as ever Willow weeps into her handkerchief whilst others search for comfort in pears.
No one leaves; they are rooted to the ground no canopy for protection.
"I plant trees, whispers the voice
I am relieved.

Amanda Hall
31.3.26

Sad to be leaving Pisces season. Thx for practicing whale song vocalizations and Mary Oliver “Humpbacks” leap-&-dive som...
03/31/2026

Sad to be leaving Pisces season. Thx for practicing whale song vocalizations and Mary Oliver “Humpbacks” leap-&-dive somatic practices with me this past month.
Sorry this Insta format couldn’t accommodate the line breaks for this gorgeous poem - here they are:

“On Baby Whales Being Held Into the Air”
- Matthew King

You’re falling and you’ve got no way to tell
you can’t just settle down and live like this.
You’re falling like you have been since you fell
into a world that isn’t an abyss
unless you let it be one, which you do.
You’re falling and that’s all you know to be
since all you know is what you’re falling through.
There’s someplace far above you you can see
but what it looks like is the limit of
existence, not your only chance to blow.
I’m negatively buoyant too: my love
will hold you up as long as from below
there’s something pushing me toward the air
I need and don’t know what it is or where.

Last chance to join us today! Registration info here: https://www.katyhawkins.com/upcoming-workshops.htmlFrom this week’...
03/29/2026

Last chance to join us today! Registration info here: https://www.katyhawkins.com/upcoming-workshops.html

From this week’s newsletter on paradox prayers, and ritual as liberation & solidarity

This week we played with embodied practices for holding complexity. We explored how a commitment to regular practice inside the collective offers mooring, using Cole Arthur Riley's amazing book, Black Liturgies: Prayers, Poems, and Meditations for Staying Human. The contradictory demands and expectations of this craaazy moment can send us out to sea without a paddle. Check out this super relatable passage (I'm replacing the word 'liturgy' with 'practice', because we did a lot of work in class that I can't do here to avoid triggering religious trauma):

My ritual practice in no way saved me, nor was it even a remedy to my depression. But it was an anchor, something that kept me from drifting helplessly into my own interior current. Ritual, when coupled with beauty, makes for a very adequate mooring. It won't carry you to shore, but it will keep you close enough that hope can swim out to visit you regularly.

SWOON!

Circling up to practice together anchors us in our humanity, and that mooring keeps up close enough to shore for hope to visit us. Instead of rigid spiritual practices, Riley advocates for fluid, q***r forms of ritual that "tether incomprehensible mystery to the beauty and pain of the human heart." We are part of a long history, across space and time, of humans who have imagined and reimagined forms for communing with or revering the sacred, practiced in community and habitually. We are honoring and resourcing from all that is beyond what we can know or understand. Turning our attention back to the sacred each week, in movement, in breath, in reaching and bowing and bending, is about wonder. Riley quotes Lucille Clifton: "You come to poetry not out of what you know but out of what you wonder." At Shiné you can feel this profound reorientation that takes place in us, away from certainty and towards wonder.

To remember older operating systems for centering wonder, is to reorient our attention towards receptivity! Becoming open and receptive to the guidance from what I call, for lack of a better term, the mysterium. We find ways to become intimate with it so we can hear its messages. As Riley puts it, in this guidebook for staying human:

I want a mystery that contracts so I can dare approach, that I can turn over in the palm of my hand but then watch pass through my fingers and become the air I breathe.

So we practiced this, with our actual hands, with movements I picked up at the Shaker exhibit at Penn. In this exhibit at ICA, there's a film by Reggie Wilson of a 2025 dance called "POWER - Every Movement is Sacred" that combines Shaker dance with African-rooted movement. I stood mesmerized for I don't know how long in front of this dance, which explodes conventional oppositions and instead searches for relationality in unlikely combinations of repeated, ritualized but free, transportive movement as devotional practice. Hands up hearts up palms down drop low... over and over in so many variations. I learned about the black Shakers in Philadelphia, drank in art inspired by the writing of its founder, Rebecca Cox Jackson: "And at the time I was told to gather home." Then I went home and fell down the google rabbit hole. I'm trying (believe it or not) to be sparse in my words here. This exhibit that exploded so many of the black/white dark/light oppositions we've been trying to bust open in classes! (If you haven't been to class in a minute, we investigated the theme of light with choreography from Alvin Ailey two weeks ago, and practiced opening to darkness in embryological movement with eyes closed last week.) I didn't feel ready or qualified to teach Reggie Wilson's choreography, instead I offered movement from Martha Graham that also brings together darkness and light. "No mud no lotus," as the saying goes - Graham's lotus choreography centers on the up/down of the hands in lotus mudra, actually bringing this truth into our embodied knowing. It brings nondual awareness of the interplay of darkness and light, the celestial and the absolutely earth-plane manifest reality, into one movement pattern. Its central contraction brings the mystery into our hands and also honors how it passes through our fingers. Touchable but not graspable.

There's so much else in the quotes we explored, but here are just a couple:
-why practicing in community is a way of practicing solidarity, especially when something we're practicing doesn't resonate with us. Recentering our own opinions and preferences and honoring the needs of others is such an important vitamin in a world that constantly reinforces separation. She named 3 stages, in her relatable account of her 20-something reaction to collective practice:
1. individualist indignation (what am I, some mindless zombie!) to
2. justified chills (what cult is this, and how do I know it's safe, especially if my people have known mob chants out for our destruction?) to
3. RELIEF from the constant demand to plunder our imaginations to access beauty and hope and lament. Instead we can let our exhausted bodyminds rest in a spiritual space that creates a field for accessing the sacred for us.

And finally, the crystalline direct address: "Maybe you'd known what it is to leave your body to survive. And maybe when the threat has subsided, you've been unable to find your way back." The systems of this world don't want us whole, this book reminds us. They benefit from bodies emptied of protector parts. Black Liturgies insists that liberation practice must be tied - MUST be tied - to a reclamation of our embodied self: "a map back home to our bodies." Holy mother of YES and AMEN, y'all!!! So I'll end with a poem from the chapter of the book with prayers for the body, entitled "Resurrection" that reconfigures the Christian concept of rebirth, of transcending this realm to ascend to the next:

"Resurrection"
Climb back inside
your body
No more split
Selves
Minds without
Skulls
Thirst without
Tongues -- flail and
shake like a haunting
You are alive

Embodying Equinox Paradox:The theme for today (Thursday at 9:40 and 11) will be paradox prayers - a way to hold complexi...
03/26/2026

Embodying Equinox Paradox:
The theme for today (Thursday at 9:40 and 11) will be paradox prayers - a way to hold complexity in our bodyminds. This is the convergence of the themes of the prior 2 weeks: embodied expressions of light (borrowing from choreo by Alvin Ailey) and then dark, described in the newsletter like this:

This week we explored practices for a somatics of darkness. Our primary reference was Zenshu Earthlyn Manuel, who reminds us "when you turn away from darkness you turn away from life." An ordained Zen Buddhist priest who grew up Christian, Osho Zenshu's work reflects her background as an older, African-American le***an with a working class background. She talks about darkness as both physical (related to blackness) and metaphysical (related to the darkness of the womb, the grave, the earth, night, ocean, and what she calls "dark experiences" that can heal us if we can "learn how to dwell in the darkness."

Like the pandemic, for example. In a dharma talk she said her response to pandemic was a kind of "FINALLY! finally we're going to STOP. We're going to see who we are as a human species." This hope for the powerful potential in darkness to differently - and more clearly? - illuminate reality led her to write a book called Opening to Darkness: Eight Gateways for Being with the Absence of Light in Unsettling Times. The book is full of beautifully complex poems and puzzles that never dare to define darkness, in a refreshing refusal to collapse s**t into dualistic categories of good/bad; right/wrong. To approach darkness as medicine and heal the socialized fear of darkness and blackness, rendered inferior to lightness and whiteness, she offers eight gateways for entering, surrendering to, and expressing from darkness. Darkness isn't a stage we pass through before we graduate to light. Seeing in the dark is its own form of knowing - a cosmic, sacred form of perception that is, in fact, our home in the womb and our destination in the grave. It is a space of truth and depth and integration rather than fragmentation. The vastness of darkness isn't devoid of meaning, but we need to get to know it to learn the wisdom of what she calls "presence without pressure" (SWOON!) to counter the striving in this culture of overexertion. The dark body is the body of the unknown. Its domain is silence. Stillness. Feeling our way. Embodiment. Paradox, Differently-attuned sense awareness. So to reclaim the sacredness of darkness we have to go back to the darkness that birthed us and get to know it, ourselves in it, the world through it.

Part of seeing the world darkly, Osho Renzu teaches, is letting go of the thrall to the visual plane, our preoccupations with appearances. What if, to perceive, explore, and express who and what we are and all that surrounds us, the visual plane is the least sensitive instrument? What if we let go of the need to perceive and represent truth through the lens of visuality? To rest the eyes and come to our senses is to rediscover a generative, intelligent field that restores the body to itself. Reinvigorates spiritual and ancestral wisdom we can't seek with our eyes. The home of what's hidden - grief, memory, intuition, spirit - all that we can't see. And we move beyond this obsession with identifying our identity to simply ALLOW Self to emerge. To stop fu***ng performing and just let reality suffuse our being, letting ourselves to feel without worrying about how we're seen. To find the unseen body of truth and hold it up over external image. The constant light, the reaching for it, in this friggin internet culture of hyper-visibility and productivity and constant relentless blinding light. And when we enter the darkness, not with our limited limited intellect but with the brilliance of our bodies, we heal.

And THEN Osho Zenshu gives us another, crucial next step! It's not just about experiencing these things for ourselves, it's about becoming, in her amazing turn of phrase, "messengers of darkness." How can we bring who we are and what we learn and the modality of being in our practice out into the rest of our day? Always the pickle. Always the move that determines whether this is spiritual bypass or a fractal, ever-widening ripple of transformation. So that was a query offered in classes this week: in what way are you serving as a messenger of darkness?

But you know maybe it's never worth describing our practices here, since it's really about the experience - eyes closed, those Bartenieff/Bonnie Bainbridge womb movements, or feeling our way fingers and toes up and down and around the mat, or risking a subtraction of all the habits of aesthetic prettiness we've learned in a balancing pose, and replacing them with raw, authentic movement... THANK you for your courage to be vulnerable - your willingness to go there together. Among many very cool moments this week, one stands out: in the Wednesday night class, Somatic Resourcing for the Givers, where we close our practice with connection, I offered two prompts for authentic relating. The first was, essentially, "how was this experience for you?" and I heard a cacophony of voices talking about how to work with a hurt shoulder, the crazy angle on the mat or feeling around for props, the challenge of the eye mask falling off... And then the second prompt was something like, "choose an image, memory, or a few words that describe your intimacy with darkness." And the tone in the room completely changed. The voices were hushed, halting. Musical, searching. Reverential, uncertain. People actually shifted languages, and started speaking darkness. THIS is what it means to be "messengers of darkness," to bring our practice out into the world. To gain fluency with unknowing, with a faltering, flawed yearning to convey what is beyond words, a worshipful approach to broader forces that resist our easy definitions, working on voicing the truths that lie ready to be discovered beyond our opinions. To give a feel for what it sounds like, here are two poems by Osho Zenshu, which say more than all the well-constructed sentences I can architect here. I read them aloud in a kind of rhythmed flow, without line breaks or a feeling of punctuation (to see them with their original line breaks, you should get the book)! The first poem arrived as a gift in her bowing 108 times for 3 weeks in her dharma transmission, long before the book was even an idea:

"In the beginning the dark water of the womb was home without ears eyes a nose a tongue and without light there was still sight smell sound taste touch we descended in birth from the great mystery of the dark making us rich and full with the forever unknown in the darkness and in the dark waters of our beginnings we did not know light so there was no fear of darkness life was dark and we rested in it in this place of origin we still live massive blackness surrounding us not good or bad itself unattached to light yet related upon our birth light was as unknown as the darkness from which we came radiance bright to our new eyes and body, was undefinable and we were left to explore this light forever in the same way we explored our home of darkness we were without words uncertain of the light or the dark we speak of the light that can and cannot be seen with these eyes is as unknown as the dark the world lit up upon our birth and still we do not know the light that is beyond the sun and the moon we can only know a kind of light with these eyes that were formed in darkness a kind of light we could never create or conjure eyes closed we remember the stillness of our beginnings filled with sound without speech movement and without a destination the smell and feel of flesh bone and muscle gave texture to blackness by which we could touch life we still can see into darkness not with the eyes that are closed or open but with the sight given in the darkness of our birth"

And another, written at the assassination of George Floyd:
"darkness is asking to be loved our composure is long gone come down on all fours and greet the darkness that reeks of death reaches out its desperate hand and asks to be loved as much as we love the light it gives come down on this earth each scream a bell that never stops ringing if you have nothing to say now is the time for the deeper silence it whispers in the dark and wakes you from the nightmare come down here and be still on the earth and when it hurts from being down here so long roll over and see what you couldn't see from the other side come down here where the only lullaby tonight will be your heart drumming the songs you were born with"

Drumming the songs, y'all. Rich and full with the forever unknown. See you on your mat - mwah.

Art: Skye Peterson

This Sunday’s experiment will work with the theme of animal familiars and talismanic supports. We'll be approaching anim...
03/24/2026

This Sunday’s experiment will work with the theme of animal familiars and talismanic supports. We'll be approaching animist practices as modes of relationship and consent: animal allies as teachers rather than symbols to control, and talismans as attentional anchors to keep us centered. We'll be returning to last year's theme of the sacred yes and the sacred no, and refining our skill at meeting moments of symbolic meaning on their own terms without forcing interpretation.

More info: https://www.katyhawkins.com/upcoming-workshops.html

The other half of Equinox: This wild darkness. It’s not in contrast to light, Zenju Earthlyn Manuel reminds us. It is it...
03/18/2026

The other half of Equinox:
This wild darkness. It’s not in contrast to light, Zenju Earthlyn Manuel reminds us. It is its own form of illumination.
See you at 5pm today (Wednesday) for Somatic Resourcing for the Givers.
We’ve been conditioned to fear and avoid darkness and blackness, but Opening to Darkness challenges us to consider: “What if we chose to go deeper into darkness instead of running from it? What might we find there beyond our longing for light?”

Drop-ins welcome ($25) - includes a complementary eye mask, with advance notice

Check-ins this week: disoriented. fuzzy. unmoored.No wonder! We have no idea what the hell time or season it is (except ...
03/15/2026

Check-ins this week: disoriented. fuzzy. unmoored.
No wonder! We have no idea what the hell time or season it is (except for the dead give-away of entering the annual mania to complete our taxes), as we sink deeper into the quagmire of war and exploitation. Good times. So this week in classes we basically kinda prayed. An embodied prayer, using a snippet of choreography from Alvin Ailey's "Revelations," a beautiful moving supplication set to African American spirituals that many folks in class agreed might be the most famous piece in all of modern dance. I'll include a link to the awesome instagram post where the dancers scoop up bend towards turn their faces to reaches skyward for the light, at the center of Broad Street. Bill Penn chillin' in the background. I offered a poem by Jan Richardson to rhyme with the movement sequence, one that counters any cerebral, disembodied abstraction configuring of light in favor of describing the way light craves the fleshly contours of actual bodies. It reminds us that light calls to us for the very gestures we see in "Revelations"--relational movements of bowing, bending, turning towards. The light wants us in relationship with it, Richardson reminds us. Light loves it when we stop talking and actually make the bodies that we have been given into an offering. We give back to the mystery that gave us our carnal form, our incarnation, by carving the contours of our flesh into those shapes.
Then we felt into how these private gestures might relate to our place in a collective. I overheard a fascinating conversation in the shoe hallway between David Bradley and Ellen Skilton, about a theater game called "Flocking." Inspired by the natural, synchronized movement of bird murmurations, this exercise is designed to develop an awareness of our somatic response to being leaders, followers, and... um... alongsiders? In classes this week we played with Flocking, and linked it to a somatic exercise from the Strozzi Institute called "Embodied Allyship." We engaged this work back on our solitary mats in stillness, in a guided visualization on how we, individually, would architect the actual physical shape of the collective, in order to feel in our Right Place in it. Meaning: to bring forth the gifts we are meant to bring to this world, to bravely find and follow our purpose, are we meant to be behind a group of people, bringing up the rear in a powerful, grounding way? Alongside a phalanx of people looking in the same direction and moving as one? Out in front of people leading? Encircled by others looking out for what's coming in? And what feeling state do we look for, in discerning where we are meant to be in a collective? A feeling of safety? Power? Freedom? Service?
It was a cool week and if you missed out, get your ass back and circle up with us. Nicole Bindler is coming tomorrow to lead us in an exploration of how the skeletal system actually thinks. The mind of our muscles. What our fascia knows. If you've never experienced teaching from Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen's school of BodyMind Centering, get thee to it. Today we explore how the basic somatic patterns of domination culture are undercut by a mystical approach to the world - one based on following, devotion of attention, honing intuition, bowing to broader forces, listening for cues from the mysterium. Wednesday's Somatics for the Givers makes space for connection and resourcing among activists, healers, teachers, and caretakers - so you can keep doing what you do. Somatics for Expanded States this month is themed around talismans and animal familiars. And the 25% special on May retreat ends at the end of March - are you joining us?
Check out all these offerings here:
https://www.katyhawkins.com/upcoming-workshops.html

Heres' the poem and the Revelations Insta link:

I cannot tell you
how the light comes.
What I know
is that it is more ancient
than imagining.
That it travels
across an astounding expanse
to reach us.
That it loves
searching out
what is hidden
what is lost
what is forgotten
or in peril
or in pain.
That it has a fondness
for the body
for finding its way
toward flesh
for tracing the edges
of form
for shining forth
through the eye,
the hand,
the heart.
I cannot tell you
how the light comes,
but that it does.
That it will.
That it works its way
into the deepest dark
that enfolds you,
though it may seem
long ages in coming
or arrive in a shape
you did not foresee.
And so
may we this day
turn ourselves toward it.
May we lift our faces
to let it find us.
May we bend our bodies
to follow the arc it makes.
May we open
and open more
and open still
to the blessed light
that comes.

Alvin Alley's Broad Street Revelations: https://www.instagram.com/reels/DVlwj1siIAU/

Hope to see you today at 5 - drop-ins welcome!
03/11/2026

Hope to see you today at 5 - drop-ins welcome!

5PM WEDNESDAY CLASSES START THIS WEEK - DROP-INS WELCOME!

5-6:30pm March 11 - April 15

Calling all teachers, activists, and caretakers to circle up and synchronize our movements and our hearts, to replenish our energy for the work at hand.

75 minutes of Shiné somatics (yoga, polyvagal techniques, and other embodied strategies for soul-spelunking) will be followed by an activity for connection.

Those of us who are socialized to overgive need to resist the flooding that can happen when we put out more than we take in. We’re besieged every day by fear tactics and social media distraction, and the overwhelm makes it easier to hole up and shut down. Come resource from the strength of the collective, and remember what it feels like to be held inside it.

We are “phase locking” our neural patterning with one another, to remember the feeling state of belonging. To keep committing to the things we care about, we need to resist the pressure to fall into fear, dissociation, and shut-down. If we can resist being bamboozled out of trusting our senses - eyes and guts - we can tap into a deep way of knowing that restores our resilience.

Come circle up and attune to the heart of the whole, remembering how to receive.

Info here: https://www.katyhawkins.com/upcoming-workshops.html

5PM WEDNESDAY CLASSES START THIS WEEK - DROP-INS WELCOME!5-6:30pm March 11 - April 15Calling all teachers, activists, an...
03/10/2026

5PM WEDNESDAY CLASSES START THIS WEEK - DROP-INS WELCOME!

5-6:30pm March 11 - April 15

Calling all teachers, activists, and caretakers to circle up and synchronize our movements and our hearts, to replenish our energy for the work at hand.

75 minutes of Shiné somatics (yoga, polyvagal techniques, and other embodied strategies for soul-spelunking) will be followed by an activity for connection.

Those of us who are socialized to overgive need to resist the flooding that can happen when we put out more than we take in. We’re besieged every day by fear tactics and social media distraction, and the overwhelm makes it easier to hole up and shut down. Come resource from the strength of the collective, and remember what it feels like to be held inside it.

We are “phase locking” our neural patterning with one another, to remember the feeling state of belonging. To keep committing to the things we care about, we need to resist the pressure to fall into fear, dissociation, and shut-down. If we can resist being bamboozled out of trusting our senses - eyes and guts - we can tap into a deep way of knowing that restores our resilience.

Come circle up and attune to the heart of the whole, remembering how to receive.

Info here: https://www.katyhawkins.com/upcoming-workshops.html

Address

20 East Mermaid Lane
Philadelphia, PA
19118

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Shiné: mind/body/spirit posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Shiné: mind/body/spirit:

Featured

Share

Category

Our Story

Monday 9:30-10:45 energizing; 11-12 gentle Wednesday 11-12 chair yoga; 7-8:15pm all levels Thursday 9:30-10:45 energizing; 11-12 gentle

$16, drop-ins welcome!