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See pages 110-111 for reservations, fees, accommodations, scholarship information, and discounts.


Please note: There will be a property-wide celebra- tion on July 4th.


Pierre Grimes is founder and president of the Academy of Platonic Studies and the Noetic Society. He wrote Philosophical Midwifery: A New Paradigm for Understanding Human Problems. He has led workshops and meditation retreats for 30 years.


Soul Motion™: Taking Refuge Zuza Engler


Every heart to love will come–but like a refugee. —Leonard Cohen


“What would it be like to find a place of refuge in the midst of a busy, overwhelming life?” Asks Zuza Engler. “Soul Motion offers just that. More akin to meditation than to formal dance, this movement practice brings attention home to simple facts of aliveness: breath and heartbeat, space and ground, inviting a return to the felt


sense of kinesthetic intimacy with the body. Both in solo and in partner or ensemble dances, we are encouraged to investigate the shape and force of motion in space. We are less concerned with what the movement looks like and more with the movement of attention. We move in all directions at once, receiving and using inspira- tion from all around us. We pause in stillness to listen more deeply while remaining fully pre- sent to the dance within and without.


“To take refuge in Soul Motion means to engage wholeheartedly in a kinesthetic exploration of aliveness and to give oneself permission to be changed in the process. Ultimately, Soul Motion can be a path of liberation of the mind and expansion of the heart toward a life of inclusion, in service to the whole, where one can become a refuge to others.”


Please note: There will be a property-wide celebra- tion on July 4th.


CE credit for MFTs and LCSWs; see page 113.


Zuza Engler has been on the spiral path of kinesthet- ic investigation into consciousness for more than two decades, in motion, stillness, and process inquiry. She is a long-term practitioner of Buddhism, Soul Motion™, and Gestalt Awareness Practice.


Gestalt Awareness Practice Christine Price


The Way, when declared Seems thin and so flavorless. Nothing to look at, nothing to hear— And when used—is inexhaustible.


—Lao Tzu


Gestalt Awareness Practice is a form—nonanalyt- ic, noncoercive, nonjudgmental—derived from the work of Fritz Perls, influenced by Buddhist practice, and evolved by Richard and Christine Price. The work integrates ways of personal clearing and development that are both ancient and modern. To the extent that awareness is made primary relative to action, Gestalt Aware-


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