In-Person and Online: This Is It – The Opportunity of This Moment

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In-Person and Online: This Is It – The Opportunity of This Moment

Part of The Body Remembers Freedom Series

with Kaira Jewel Lingo and Linds Roberts

Thursday, August 6th, 2026 | 6:30pm – 8:30pm ET

In-Person Location: New York Insight at 115 West 29th Street, 12th Floor

What if this moment—just as it is—is already enough? In this closing session of the Body Remembers Freedom series, we turn toward the immediacy of our lived experience, discovering that the freedom we’ve been exploring is not somewhere else, but right here in how we meet this moment. Through meditation, embodied practice, and shared inquiry, we integrate what has been touched throughout the series—allowing insight, presence, and compassion to settle into the body and take root in our daily lives. We also take time to reconnect with our deepest aspirations for how we want to live, sensing what feels most true and life-giving now. Whether you are returning or joining for the first time, this session offers a space to arrive fully, trust your inner knowing, and explore what it means to live what we remember—right here, in this moment.

This workshop is part of The Body Remembers Freedom, a monthly series that brings together meditation, dharma, and embodied practice in a way that is relational, grounded, and alive. Each session includes time for meditation and contemplation, a dharma talk or shared inquiry, and InterPlay, a playful and powerful practice using movement, voice, storytelling, and deep listening to access the wisdom of the body.

Participants are supported to be:

  • More grounded and connected to their bodies and to one another
  • More accountable to themselves and to community
  • Reconnected to joy, creativity, and inner resource
  • Better able to meet life, and themselves, with compassion and presence

In times that can feel scary, overwhelming, or isolating, these gatherings offer a place to put the phone down, release accumulated stress, and reconnect with what feels trustworthy and alive. We gather to remember the sacred in ordinary experience and to be held in the support of community.

No experience with meditation or movement is required. You are welcome exactly as you are, with curiosity and a willingness to be present.

The Body Remembers Freedom is offered one Thursday a month from 6:30 to 8:30 pm ET and is offered in a hybrid format. During the InterPlay portion of the evening, Linds Roberts guides participants joining on Zoom, while Kaira Jewel guides those attending in person. The full group then comes back together for the closing practice.

Sessions are recorded and shared with all registrants after the program, so you are welcome to sign up even if you cannot attend live.

In-Person Registration:

 

Online (Zoom) Registration:

 

Volunteering

All of our programs rely on volunteers to support our teachers and staff with various tasks and responsibilities. Volunteering allows you to participate in our programs at no cost. To inquire about volunteering opportunities, please fill out our inquiry form, and we will get back to you as soon as possible.

Teacher(s)

Kaira Jewel Lingo

Kaira Jewel Lingo is a Dharma teacher whose path is rooted in spirituality, social justice, and embodied wisdom. A lifelong lover of dance, singing, and the performing arts, Kaira Jewel integrates movement and creative expression into her teaching as a way to access joy, healing, and deep presence. Her early background in improvisational movement, dance, and capoeira, along with her long-standing practice of InterPlay—which she began in 2005 and now teaches and trains leaders in—shapes her commitment to liberation through the body as well as the mind.

She lived for 15 years as an ordained nun in Thich Nhat Hanh’s Plum Village community and was ordained as a Dharma teacher in 2007. Her teaching continues the work of Engaged Buddhism, drawing inspiration from her parents’ lives of service and her father’s work alongside Martin Luther King, Jr. She now teaches internationally in both the Zen and Vipassana traditions, as well as in secular mindfulness settings.

Kaira Jewel’s work bridges the inner path of awakening with the outer path of justice, focusing especially on Black, Indigenous, and People of Color communities, activists, artists, educators, families, and youth. She is dedicated to holding spaces that welcome the whole self — breath, voice, story, grief, joy, and movement.

She is the author of We Were Made for These Times: Ten Lessons in Moving through Change, Loss and Disruption and co-author of Healing Our Way Home: Black Buddhist Teachings on Ancestors, Joy and Liberation. She offers spiritual mentoring, teaches embodied dharma, and is co-creating a spiritual sanctuary in upstate New York — The Beloved Community of Engaged Spirituality — with her partner, Episcopal priest Adam Bucko.

Upcoming events and offerings can be found at www.kairajewel.com.

Linds West Roberts

Linds West Roberts (pronouns: they/them/theirs), Certified InterPlay Leader, loves to collaborate in offering customized InterPlay classes, workshops, and retreats for groups and individuals through their work with InterPlay Colorado / Gather The Wild Collective (https://gatherthewild.love). Gather weaves InterPlay forms together with mindfulness and nature-based practices. Linds’ work is an offering towards collective liberation and social change that brings joy together with grief. They bring their fourteen years as an educator, librarian, and facilitator together with their InterPlay and eco-chaplaincy training. Linds is currently an Order of Interbeing Aspirant studying with dharma teacher Vivianne Ephraimson-Abt and an eco-chaplaincy student with Upaya Zen Center in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Linds builds on their background in education as a professor and librarian engaging through storytelling and group facilitation. Community building and outreach in support of underrepresented communities has been a key part of their professional life. They explore and share the dharma through playful and artistic means, including InterPlay facilitation that brings mindfulness of our embodied experience to collective movement, storytelling, and play. Linds work creates space for individuals and groups to remember their own true nature, and connect with the dharma in ways that reduce suffering, benefit our precious planet, and all beings.

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