Kaleidoscope on Conflict (Rupture) Resolution (Repair) in Relationship
Kaleidoscope on Conflict (Rupture) Resolution (Repair) in RelationshipWhat culture around conflict do we wish to embody, and what could we imagine the fruits of this to be for the world? Into this exploration we’ll weave in wisdom and examples from indigenous communities as opportunities for self/communal reflection. We’re also asking, what are some examples of accountability processes that don't exclude people from the human family? This is part of our 'kaleidoscope sessions’ series which we hope will offer us the opportunity to engage with themes through multiple lenses. We’re in search of other suns in our kaleidoscope focus. How we do this is still being actively created, but what fuels us is the desire to offer this space as part of re-imagining how we could live in our bodies and with each other and the world. Our personal and collective liberation is central to this project. Journalling Questions: What is your cultural mooring around conflict?What is your definition of conflict? How have you experienced it in your family and culture of origin? Was it welcome? Was it a problem to be avoided? Was there a repair process?Music Shared During This Session: Zoë Keating - Into The Trees
Karine Bell makes her home with her two kids, her partner and a dog.
She’s a somatics teacher and abolitionist, dedicated to embodied trauma
alchemy. A bi-cultural black woman, she’s also a culturally reflexive anthropologist exploring the intersection of where our bodies/psyches/experiences meet our collective histories.
She believes in the healing made possible at the personal and collective level by the work we do through transforming experience in our bodies today. She combines continued study in somatics with studies in depth psychology with a focus on community, liberation, indigenous and eco-psychologies at Pacifica.