Embodied Practices For Tending Grief - Camille Sapara Barton
Jul 11th, 2024 | Episode 293
Camille Sapara Barton is a social imagineer who is reimagining how we define and relate to grief. As a writer, artist, and somatic practitioner, Camille is looking to create a new grief narrative expansive enough to include multiple forms of individual and collective grief, especially for queer, trans, and BIPOC communities. In Camille's book, Tending Grief, they offer rituals and embodied practices for feeling into and metabolizing grief.
- Camille's lived experience with grieving death & non-death losses
- Support for grief that falls outside the traditional box
- Grief as a generative process
- Camille's learning from Dagara spiritual traditions and Sobonfu Somé
- Collective grief that comes out of displacement, colonization, and threats to queer & trans people around the world
- How we numb our grief and the cost of doing so
- The narrative Camille is hoping to create around grief
- Examples of embodied practices to tend grief
Be sure to check out Camille's new book, Tending Grief - Embodied Rituals for Holding Our Sorrow and Growing Cultures of Care in Community.
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