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Emotions have a natural cycle. When that cycle gets interrupted, the emotion lodges in the body. This is what you do about it.
Every emotion that didn’t get to complete its cycle is still there, shaping your posture, your breath, your perspective, your reactions. This practice creates the conditions for all of it to finally move without you needing to talk about it, remember it, or understand it first.
It could be a song that triggers you before you’ve even registered why. Maybe there’s an emotion that keeps visiting that you haven’t quite known what to do with. Or, you might have been carrying something for a long time and you sense it’s ready to move but you haven’t found the way in yet.
Wherever you are with this, Sah’s method meets you there. It doesn’t ask you to understand what you’re carrying. It simply creates the conditions for it to move.
Dance With Grief is a set of somatic movement practices using Sah’s Somatic Activated Healing Method, created specifically for this project. It moves through three phases; body keys to bring you back into your body, sensation dance to let the past move itself through and out, and trance dance to release the grip of identity entirely. You don’t need any dance experience. You don’t need to know what you’re grieving. You just need to show up and let the body lead.
Sah came to this work through his own lineage of addiction, mental illness, and the loss of his mother. He has stayed connected to that grief every day since, naming her, celebrating her, letting it visit. He understands what it actually feels like to carry something this heavy, and he has built a method from that understanding that has reached over 100,000 people and been taken into Columbia, Harvard, and Oxford’s trauma conference. I really respect his approach and I think you will too.
Sah D’Simone is a globally recognised spiritual teacher, somatic movement leader, author, and humanitarian whose Somatic Activated Healing Method has been brought to Columbia University, Harvard, and Oxford’s trauma conference. He has danced over 100,000 people through their past. His work weaves Buddhist contemplative practice, trauma-informed movement, and embodied liberation into something that people consistently describe as feeling like ten years of therapy in ninety minutes. He came to this work through his own lineage of addiction, mental illness, and the loss of his mother. He has lived every part of what he teaches. I really respect his approach and I think you will too.