
Prior to the conference Mary sent we panelists an email with some questions. Read More
Sensory Awareness, Tai Chi Chuan, Pre- & Perinatal Somatic Process, and Body/Mind/Spirit Workshops

Prior to the conference Mary sent we panelists an email with some questions. Read More

The theme of “unraveling trauma” is a very important choice of words to describe the way we must work with trauma. Read More

Sensory Awareness, the practice of deeply exploring our sensations, our actions and interactions, can guide us back to our natural resources and lead us to more authenticity and vitality. In this workshop, participants will explore their sensations and responses internally and externally, in relationship with others, with nature and with our human nature. Read More
Open to all who know at least the first section of Cheng Man-Chings short yang form and who want to deepen their Tai Chi Chuan practice. Read More
We are naturally born as vital, fully sensory beings. Traumas, tensions, even some education can diminish our vitality, creating unrest and insecurity in our lives. Sensory Awareness – the practice of deeply exploring our sensations, our actions and interactions, through practical sensing experiments – can guide us back to our natural resources and lead us to more authenticity and vitality. Read More

The workshop offers the opportunity to uncover, explore and support healing, with understanding and compassion, our own prenatal and birth imprinting. By connecting to this early layer of physical and emotional experience, within a safe, sustaining environment, there is the potential to repattern our bonding and attachment, clarify, ease, and transform early trauma and current unsupportive reactions. Read More

The workshop setting offers the opportunity to uncover, explore and support healing, with understanding and compassion, our own prenatal and birth imprinting. By connecting to this early layer of physical and emotional experience, within a safe, sustaining environment, there is the potential to repattern our bonding and attachment, clarify, ease, and transform early trauma and current unsupportive reactions. Read More
The practice of deeply exploring our sensations, our actions and interactions, can guide us back to our natural resources and lead us to more authenticity and vitality. In this workshop, participants will explore their sensations and responses internally and externally, in relationship with others, with nature and with our human nature. These explorations can bring a trust and security that may assist us in finding the ability and pleasure of responding more sensitively and authentically in our lives. Read More
Often we find that the problems we encounter in life have their roots in the imprinting we experience before and during birth, and through early childhood. These issues that arise before we are verbal need to be met and repatterned at that same level. Working somatically and experientially can offer deep, profound, resolution to problems that influence our development, bonding, attachment and interpersonal relationships. Read More

How do we live? Are we awake and do we respond fully and appropriately or is our response to life … to anything … mechanical and perhaps not really our own? Are we creative and spontaneous or are we following perhaps some old rules we have been given? Can we be resilient and appropriate to what is asked of us? Sensory Awareness gives us chances to look at, feel and respond to our inner needs. Read More
With support from Sensory Awareness Foundation, we gladly announce the establishment of Sensory Awareness Japan in December 2011. Read More
Judyth O. Weaver is a multifaceted teacher and counselor, incorporating extensive training in diverse areas. She holds a Ph.D. in Reichian Psychology and is the creator and founding chair of the Santa Barbara Graduate Institute Ph.D. Program in Somatic Psychology. She taught at the California Institute of Integral Studies (San Francisco, CA) for 25 years and at other graduate schools in the S.F. Bay area as well as being founding faculty at Naropa Institute in the 1970's.
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