11/18/2025
As a Quaker teaching embodiment in my own place of worship, the role of spirituality in social justice somatics is sometimes too close to me to be able to see or name. Here’s how articulates it: “sometimes we are learning new skills or frameworks on top of a deeply defended self. So we may be able to pick up some skills or frameworks but it’s going to fall short in areas where we’re still really defended, because the threat to our sense of safety is going to supersede any new skill that we might have. …what’s really important for change is that we have a relationship with - a felt experience of - the part of us that is beyond defense. And this to me is a spiritual question. The part of you that is connected to all life, that can’t be shamed, that can’t be put into these hierarchies of who matters + who doesn’t matter, that even in some sense transcends our own body safety. There’s a part that I’ve felt access to, that I try to cultivate access to, that is a little bit beyond all that. And that part gives me the courage to change because I’m less identified with all the defenses that I have. …sometimes with embodiment practice + trying to learn new skills, we skip over the cultivation of that spiritual relationship and try to just force skills onto a defended + scared body. And think that has to shift. Or at least I see it shifting in my own practice. Talking more openly about spirit + embodiment also compels us to talk about how spirituality can be used by people to opt out of their human experience. Hot take: I think a lot of religions encourage + rely on spiritual bypass. The spiritual component of embodiment is not to absolve us of the implications of our involvement in or accountability to the things that are happening on this planet. I think of the spiritual dimension as a resource to me living in this human life. It’s not a place that I escape to. I am responsible to understand the things that I’ve internalized, the behaviors that I practice, the ways that certain systems or ways of being persist in my own behavior. I rely on that spiritual dimension to give me the courage to face the things I need to face in this very human experience.”