We believe that cultivating an embodied (or somatic) awareness of ourselves, our relationships with others, and our environment opens up diverse and profound ways of knowing and experiencing the world.
We emphasize the significance of learning to "see" our core perspectives and worldviews in an embodied manner, understanding their origins. These perspectives shape our priorities and actions, often at an unconscious level. The more aware we become of our own perspectives and worldviews, including both their healthy and unhealthy manifestations, the more likely we are to exercise patience with other people's worldviews (at least some of them!) and have more agency to engage with them constructively.
Few complex situations or problems possess simple, linear solutions. Humanity is compelled to adapt and learn to navigate uncertainty. Strengthening our embodied awareness and enhancing our ability to comprehend worldviews in a nuanced manner equips us to respond more creatively—particularly collectively—leveraging our existing strengths and areas of expertise in real-time to address pressing issues. We refer to this as emergent praxis.
We emphasize the significance of learning to "see" our core perspectives and worldviews in an embodied manner, understanding their origins. These perspectives shape our priorities and actions, often at an unconscious level. The more aware we become of our own perspectives and worldviews, including both their healthy and unhealthy manifestations, the more likely we are to exercise patience with other people's worldviews (at least some of them!) and have more agency to engage with them constructively.
Few complex situations or problems possess simple, linear solutions. Humanity is compelled to adapt and learn to navigate uncertainty. Strengthening our embodied awareness and enhancing our ability to comprehend worldviews in a nuanced manner equips us to respond more creatively—particularly collectively—leveraging our existing strengths and areas of expertise in real-time to address pressing issues. We refer to this as emergent praxis.