Anti-Racism Healing Circles

Anti-Racism Healing Circles for Everyone (Online)

Circle with folks of various ancestry and backgrounds. Together at these Anti-Racism Healing Circles we will reflect and share about our experiences and feelings about racism, particularly Anti-Indigeneity, Anti-Blackness and Anti-Asian racism in our families, work and communities via somatic mindfulness and presencing. Co-Facilitated by Bee Uytiepo, Liza Njuguna, Carissa Singh and Anasuya Isaacs.

When: Third Tuesdays
12pm-1:15pm PT / 2pm-3:15pm CT / 3pm-4:15pm ET

Where: Online

Energy Exchange: Optional. Donation based. No amount is too small.
Venmo @bee-uytiepo or similar apps (see below)

Co-Facilitants

inabel uytiepo (ee-NAH-bell WEE-tie-poh) (they/isuna/siya) is a queer vegan of Ilocanx-Chinese ancestry, raised by the lands of Tongva, Coast Miwok and the Kingdom of Hawaii. Raised in an Italian immigrant working class East Los Angeles neighborhood by immigrant parents in a lower middle income family. inabel grew up engaging in visual and performing arts which led to a lifelong exploration into healing arts as a Buddhist meditation student/teacher, aura, energy, neuromuscular and visceral bodyworker. As a somatic forgiveness practitioner and spiritual certified clinical hypnotherapist, inabel currently holds space for individual sessions and communal circles. inabel is presently offering circles and careshops for anti-racist healing, normalizing grief, anger, forgiveness and ancestral communication and wayfinding, often with Asian, Pilipinx, femme, gender queer and LGBTQIA+ community. Follow inabel on IG @healingisgiving or visit healingisgiving.com inabel’s most recent endeavor is sharing their life’s explorative work in a co-creative journey called the Wayfinding Collective. Follow inabel on IG @healingisgiving  

Carissa Singh (she/her) is a queer multiracial woman, residing on occupied Duwamish land that is currently known as Seattle, WA. Growing up in the Bay Area and studying psychology, sociology and medical anthropology while working in crisis care and with under-resourced youth nourished her curiosity of the interconnection between individual healing and collective liberation. Carissa’s therapeutic background is in existential psychology and in the present she utilizes this is in collaboration with anti-oppressive frameworks to help individuals and groups move towards realization of their agency and empowerment. Her work also focuses on engendering vulnerability and intimacy in communal spaces. She is passionate about creating spaces where others can connect to their authentic selves, embodying their rage, grief or fear in space of resonance and mutual regard. Learn more and connect with her further at: https://www.mosaiccounselingcollective.com/carissa-singh-lmhca

 

Hallelujah Anasuya Isaacs (she/her) is “The Mystic Midwife” who provides a courageous space for individuals to Re:Birth themselves into sovereign wholeness and holiness. She devises experiential workshops that delve into the realm of Oneness across different cultures, races, and religions, facilitated through the mediums of painting, words, theater, and sacred rituals. Anasuya conducts her “Let Love Lead” experiential programs worldwide, harnessing the sacred alchemy of theater, poetry, song, and art to heal trauma and dismantle systemic oppression. She has developed unique “Healing the Sisterhood” processes anchored in the Black Madonna archetype of the Divine Feminine. Working across the globe, Anasuya, curates unique  “Healing the Sisterhood: Healing the Divide between Black and White Women” to address the first core wound by Patriarchy, aimed at reinstating women to their conscious embodied power. Anasuya, a published author and poet, earned her B.A. in Government, concentrating on International Relations and Creative Writing from Oberlin College. She also studied at the Sorbonne: Université de Paris, and is bilingual in French. Anasuya’s rich life experience includes residing in six countries and studying with mystics across 24 countries in her pursuit of understanding the Feminine Face of the Divine. She is a respected speaker and workshop leader on the subject of “The Black Madonna: The Mother Who Answers,” imparting wisdom and guiding others in this deep spiritual journey.

Liza Njuguna (lee-ZAH joe-GO-nah) (she/her/hers) is a black, cisgender, Kenyan-American immigrant woman who lives in Dallas, TX on Caddo land. The child of two spiritual leaders in the Christian tradition, community builders and educators, and the youngest of six children, Liza learned early to recognize and appreciate each person’s uniqueness and strength. This appreciation evolved into the understanding that the individual is strongest when all other parts are at their best. As a strategist, organizer, and writer, Liza works to deepen our understanding of what it means to be human and to be in relation. She leads individuals and organizations to nurture environments where individual contributors can perform at their best so that the whole can be at its best. Connect with Liza on LinkedIn 

 

 

 

1/ Register
For login link and updates, register here:
bit.ly/hig-arhc

2/ Energy Exchange No fee. Donations welcome. No amount is too small.
Venmo (or similar apps)