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

01/26/2026

Different traditions have nuanced associations for the qualities of sun and moon (which for me, don’t benefit from being correlated with oversimplified gender stereotypes), attributes that ask to be balanced in us. This technique, the only one ever to arrive whole and complete in one meditation sit, helps me balance them in myself. I should add that this “download” is of course impacted by acculturation - influenced by Buddhist and Hindu iconography I’ve seen, yogic practices I’ve had the privilege of studying, and very cursory learning about Egyptian and Sufi maps of the body, just for starters - and all the problems of appropriative reclamation of indigenous practices by people from privileged social locations inhere in me sharing it. AND practices for working with solar and lunar energies are also part of the indigenous European cultural heritage erased by Christianity, and if we're not open to how they might be re-membered in our bodyminds we'll only ever be plundering other cultures for them. It’s been a true gift, and has proved over the last 3 or 4 years of practice to be super useful in centering me, recalibrating my own imbalances, and helping me become a clearer channel for Spirit, Quaker-style. So I’m taking the risk of sharing it.

01/26/2026

No classes Monday!

01/25/2026

Snow date: somatics for psychedelics postponed till 2/15
Expanded states of consciousness aren’t an escape from reality.
They bring us more deeply into relationship with the world around us.
Psychedelics aren’t required, they are just one of many access points for remembering older operating systems - ones that were experienced as perfectly normal forms of perception for most of human history.
More in newsletter: https://us12.campaign-archive.com/?e=__test_email__&u=e2c17b1425a8cb6ac4566a750&id=e51ab116ea

Tomorrow’s workshop, somatics for psychedelics, has been rescheduled for February 15. Check out the newsletter for why t...
01/24/2026

Tomorrow’s workshop, somatics for psychedelics, has been rescheduled for February 15. Check out the newsletter for why this container really isn’t about psychedelics at all.
And y’all, it’s unlikely we will be able to have classes Monday morning - I’ll make the announcement here and on the website on Sunday night.
Check out the thoughts & offerings in this week’s newsletter:

https://us12.campaign-archive.com/?e=__test_email__&u=e2c17b1425a8cb6ac4566a750&id=e51ab116ea

MLK DAY SHINÉ CLASSES ARE ON! 9:30 & 11amI love Mindy Nettifee's spin on the most recent episode of The Emerald, "Carry ...
01/18/2026

MLK DAY SHINÉ CLASSES ARE ON!
9:30 & 11am
I love Mindy Nettifee's spin on the most recent episode of The Emerald, "Carry that Weight." Josh Schrei describes a slow, alchemical process of learning what responsibilities are ours to carry, and developing the supportive structure within our being and our communities to properly carry it. The Quaker expression for experiencing a call to action, a recognition of purpose, is to be "under the weight of a leading." The leading correlates to our unique gifts, and the weight of it partly relates to our very human limitations. Josh tells the story from the Chinese traditions of a young acolyte, who is hungry for all the big revelations and insights, and the master says, “why don’t you carry a single grain of rice for a hundred days." AKA what if we tried to carry a very small thing a very long way. I think of the Quaker metaphor of the seed, the pearl.

St Therese of Lisieux talked about the "Little way." Bayo Akomolafe refers to "the minor gesture." If we follow the call of love, maybe we can find the specific thing that is ours to do, that it is our nature to do, our small, precious burden to carry, and then do it. Heart like a flashlight in the dark. When me and my brother were about 5 and 7 years old, we were fairies in a production of The Tempest where our dad was playing Prospero. Our job was to bring the bridal veil down the aisle to Miranda and Ferdinand, in matching gauzy rainbow capes, and just before launching my brother said to me, "Let's give this one all we've got."

Nettifee asks how we can approach what's ours to carry, and enter willingly and whole-heartedly into commitment to it, so that we can then discover and surrender into the territory of devotion: "Devotion plugs us in to a larger, loving purpose, and especially to the drives of the soul. When it does, greater forces can move us and move through us. They can even move us out of our own way, and into transcendent states." So going back to Josh Schrei's description of the somatically-grounded process of building the support structures to carry the load: hope y'all can resource from the offerings at Shiné: mind/body/spirit:

2/8 - Fireside Restorative & Hands-on Healing
1/25 - Somatics for Psychedelic Journeys
$45 unlimited morning yoga in January

Here's this week's newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/ca7b3f9b8d0a/winter-17993843

Art by Karol Nienartowicz

Eudaimonia, a term that comes from Aristotle’s Nichomachean Ethics, refers to living in accordance with one’s daimon—one...
01/17/2026

Eudaimonia, a term that comes from Aristotle’s Nichomachean Ethics, refers to living in accordance with one’s daimon—one’s full potential or true self. The eudemonic approach views well-being in terms of self-actualization and fulfilling one’s potential, in contrast to the hedonic approach, which considers well-being to be the presence of positive affect and the absence of negative affect.

So whereas hedonic well-being is concerned with the outcomes of actions, eudemonic well-being is concerned with the processes; the question becomes “are we living well?” rather than “are we feeling in each and every moment hunky dory perfectly fine and dandy?”

AND, we can lose ourselves in striving. We can give off this bloodless judgy perfectionism in our politics that operates like a disturbance in the force, because we’ve lost our heart in the process.

We know we’re in the sweet spot of any practice when there’s a balance of effort and ease that creates more goodness, in widening circles. That balance is different for each of us and I feel like it’s an indispensable part of living well - hovering in that sweet spot is what makes us good for the world.

2 spots left for tomorrow’s Fireside Restorative & Hands-on Healing, 4:30-6:30.
Deets: https://www.katyhawkins.com/upcoming-workshops.html

WHAT'S "SHINÉ" ANYWAY???I chose this as the name of our collective because the word itself reflects the meeting ground (...
01/14/2026

WHAT'S "SHINÉ" ANYWAY???
I chose this as the name of our collective because the word itself reflects the meeting ground (so to speak) between my interest in Eastern ways of knowing and my lifelong Quakerism, with its emphasis on inner light.

As a meditation technique, Shiné (or shi ne) shares the spaciousness I cherish in Quaker worship.

If you're curious, here's some writing about it, pulled together from a couple articles by meditation teacher Rin'dzin Pamo:

Shi-ne, pronounced “shi-nay” is a meditation designed to produce a clear state of mind, without thought or other mental phenomena like visual images or ideation. Shi-ne is the Tibetan translation of the Sanskrit “shamatha” - meaning “calm abiding.” Shi-ne/shamatha may have distinct characteristics according to tradition and teacher. When it’s called shamatha, the meditation tends towards deep focused, breath-centered concentration. When it’s called shi-ne, it’s more usually taught as an expansive practice. But there are exceptions. Some teachers suggest finding a continuum between focused concentration and expansive awareness. I don’t: I think concentration and expansive awareness result in distinct and qualitatively different capacities and that it’s interestingly useful not to attempt to merge the outcomes.
In practice, the style of shi-ne in which I’ve been trained is not the same as concentration practice. It leads to an experience of effortless, clear awareness. Concentrative meditation techniques focus the attention. Focused concentration is a kind of skilled, mental manipulation. That’s natural. There’s a tendency in silent sitting practice to want to manipulate, because that’s what we do all the time. Our mental activity is habitually manipulative – it’s similar to how molding a piece of clay in our hands is manipulative. We manipulate thought, automatically, even without thinking about our thinking. Also we develop the capacity to go one or more levels meta to that automatic process and consciously manipulate our thoughts. Concentration practices make good use of this manipulative skill, putting it in service of a conscious intent. Focusing on an object for extended periods of time has fairly definable results: improved capacity for concentration, fully involved absorption, more awareness of the minute detail and variation of the object of attention.
Shi-ne practice without an object refrains from mental manipulation. The principle of this kind of "focus-free" practice is to “remain uninvolved” with the content of mind. The method is to find awareness without manipulation of mental, sensory or emotional content. Focused concentration is a particular kind of involvement – it is consciously directed, exclusive. Expansive shi-ne is the practice of finding awareness without specific, exclusive focus. It is unnatural, in that it is not habitual for us. It’s not a variation or an intensification of what we do normally. This kind of shi-ne is useful because of its non-ordinary nature. Remaining uninvolved with the content of being, maintaining clear expansive presence at the same time, can be shockingly, humorously, poignantly revealing.
The simple instruction for shi-ne is to maintain presence of awareness without focusing on anything, that is, remain uninvolved with whatever arises in mind. This is not easy, particularly if you have not meditated much, or if you have become used to meditating on the breath, or use focused concentration as a method to maintain awareness. For that reason, there are ways to approach shi-ne meditation which gradually move towards it. These supportive methods are not shi-ne proper: they are preliminaries, involving concentrative methods like those in shamatha practice.
Most meditations and secular mindfulness are dissimilar to shi-ne as I am describing it here, so it is helpful, particularly for practitioners who have meditated in different contexts, to define this style of shi-ne by what it is not. The method is to remain uninvolved with whatever phenomenon arise in mind, in the body, in the environment.
This is not:
Focused concentration
Meditation on an object, including the breath
Ignoring or repressing thoughts, feelings or sensations
Noting or labeling
Contemplation
Intentionally slowing down, or slowing the breath
Going inward
Body scanning

Approaching shi-ne:
Less stimulation from outside the body encourages thoughts to settle. Close your eyelids most of the way, letting in only a little light to maintain alertness. There’s a spot at which this feels comfortable but it can take a while to find. Rest palms faced downwards on the thighs or cupped in your lap. Tilt your head slightly downwards. The purpose of the posture is to remain relaxed and still, without tension. Some meditation instructions emphasize rigid stillness. This is not necessary in this style of shi-ne meditation. There will always be some discipline and some movement – the point is to remain present yet uninvolved with what arises, not to ignore it. It can be interesting to practice not responding habitually to stimuli such as itches and tickles, but do not sit through pain. Adjust your position, maintaining presence.
The primary preparatory practice for shi-ne does use the breath, but does not regard the breath as object. Ngakchang Rinpoche coined the phrase “find presence of awareness in the dimension of the breath.” The attitude is always one of finding, not of observing. In practice, the difference may seem subtle and small. Over years, the difference is profound. Watching through the “witness mind” creates the experience of an observer, separate to that which is observed. In concentrative practice this is intentional and necessary: the end point is sometimes described as the experience of no-self, or as the nonduality of subject and object. The method works with the duality of self and other in order to expose its inaccuracy. In expansive shi-ne, when the method is remaining uninvolved, this is not necessary: subject and object are irrelevant. The method creates space not between an observer and the breath, but in and around the breath as experience.
If you have practiced concentration intensively, moving to an expansive style of shi-ne can be frustrating. The difference I describe here may be difficult to find. It may seem insignificant, or another way of describing the same experience. But it might also be helpfully revealing, or even liberating, to re-frame your practice in this way.
Shi-ne is designed to lead to an effortless, spacious experience: expansive non-conceptual clarity. Many meditative practices rely on having at least some familiarity with this state of mind. Without it, other practices are liable to seem pointlessly dull or overwhelmingly intense. If you practice shi-ne consistently there’s a high probability that you’ll experience glimpses of this state of mind within a year. Stabilizing the experience usually takes at least three years, but can take many more.
If you've read all the way to here, you just might be nerdy enough to want to read the full articles, so here are links:
https://vajrayananow.com/shi-ne-meditation
https://vajrayananow.com/faq

ONE SPOT TODAY, 4:30-6:30Fireside Restorative Yoga & Hands-on HealingSomeone dear to the Shiné family was hospitalized t...
01/11/2026

ONE SPOT TODAY, 4:30-6:30
Fireside Restorative Yoga & Hands-on Healing

Someone dear to the Shiné family was hospitalized today, so a spot has opened up.

From this weeks’s newsletter, on doing & non-doing:

In classes last week we practiced non-doing, the theme of the entry in my book for January Week 1. (If you’re new, Thinking Feelingly: Somatic Approaches to Poetry is an anthology of poems selected for each week of the calendar year, with essays & somatic practices for experiencing them through the body). We explored Louise Erdrich’s “Advice to Myself” like a sutra, where the first line says it all - “leave the dishes” - and the rest is elaboration. It’s a fun poem composed as a to-not-do list: “Let the celery rot... leave the black crumbs... don’t patch anything... don’t worry if we’re all eating cereal for dinner again” etc. The originator of the poetic list, at least in American poetry, was Walt Whitman. And for those of you who were in class on New Year’s Day with Raji on guitar, Erdrich’s poem will sound forth as a strong reversal of Whitman’s “This is what you shall do,” the piece of writing we moved to in our speed-skating “horse stance” to build fire for the Ha-Kriya release. This is not the moment to abandon doing. Yes to Walt’s injunction to hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, give alms, despise riches, devote your income & labor to others. But after we stoked the flames, we placed that hot coal where we needed it in our bodies & let Ruth Forman cool us down, wishing us moonlight and real eyes and abalone dreams and angels all around. This is the time for both action and rest, for self-compassion and for bringing the heat. Both/and. GO to the rally at the ICE building (I’ll be there tomorrow) AND REST afterwards. I’ve written about it too much here, so check out the Nap Ministry if you want to read more on rest as countercultural resistance. Non-doing is so very much what our bodies need in this January down-time - and stillness and allowing the channel to open. The Roman calendar had 10 months. January & February were a long slog of non-society-ing, just for caring for horses & spinning etc. before the uptick in March. We need time to let the inner world be, to allow the proverbial field to go fallow. huzzah for all hygge-like practices. Come gather by the fireside.
Registration info: https://www.katyhawkins.com/upcoming-workshops.html

Interfaith Prayer Vigils at ICE Office are held for an hour Mondays at 11 AM and Wednesdays at noon at the ICE offices a...
01/06/2026

Interfaith Prayer Vigils at ICE Office are held for an hour Mondays at 11 AM and Wednesdays at noon at the ICE offices at 8th and Cherry Streets. Join Friends and members of Christian, Jewish, and Muslim congregations to pray for courage for the immigrants arriving for their required check-ins, and for compassion for the ICE officers reviewing their cases.

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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!