Sorry, “Somatics”?

Somatics refers to body-based practices used to explore feeling as a way of knowing, but there’s a lot to unpack around its lineage:

Somatics was coined by Thomas Hanna in the 1970s as a catch-all for practices of “working with the body”, most of which had their roots in indigenous practices and a diversity of cultures throughout the world.

Some of these practices were acknowledged. Others were not — and this is unsurprising.

A core purpose of these practices was to facilitate a reconnection between mind and body, which emerged from a disconnection that resulted from colonization —

— something that those such as Prentis Hemphill, Resmaa Menakem, and many other my teachers-that-don’t-know-they’re-my-teachers speak to.

All’s to say, somatics is a history that carries a lot of sh*t — most of which is intimately interconnected with colonization and white-body supremacy.

It’s important for practitioners, like myself, that facilitate somatic practices from white-bodies to acknowledge this and commit to deepening our understanding of the ways in which white-body supremacy continues to be perpetuated.

And…

As long as disconnection between the mind and body exists, we’re cut off from feeling our fullness — and I’m curious about what gets missed in that.

The good news, is that (re)connection in all of its forms can be a cure and that somatics is simply one way we might be able to support that.

Feel It For Yourself

Feel It For Yourself