Meet the Team

  • Aishah Shahidah Simmons (she/her) is an award-winning cultural worker who, for 28 years, has examined the intersections of race, gender, sexuality, and sexual violence. Her lived experiences as a survivor of childhood and adult sexual violence, a Black feminist lesbian, a 20-year Theravadin Buddhist practitioner and a meditation teacher inform her commitment to healing, and love WITH accountability®️.

    Presently, she is writing "Love, Justice, and Dharma," a memoir that is the capstone of her trilogy of work centering on healing from and non-carceral accountability for childhood and adult sexual violence.

    Aishah is the organizer and editor of the 2020 Lambda Literary Award-winning anthology, "love WITH accountability: Digging Up the Roots of Child Sexual Abuse" (AK Press). The collection features transformative writings by 40 adult diasporic Black childhood sexual abuse survivors and advocates who share their testimonies and healing paths and envision how to humanely end the inhumane acts of sexual violence against children.

    She is the producer, director, and writer of the 2006 groundbreaking and internationally acclaimed film "NO! The Rape Documentary." Twelve years in the making and funded by the Ford Foundation and many other funding partners, the film visually unveils the impact of the intersections of white supremacy, rape culture, homophobia, and the taboos covering up sexual violence in Black communities. A precursor to the contemporary campus anti-sexual assault movements, NO! was ahead of its time. Its' 2006-world premiere at the Pan African Film Festival in Los Angeles, CA, occurred 18 months before Title IX was successfully applied to campus sexual assault cases. Subtitled in Spanish, French, Portuguese, and German, NO! amplifies the imperative need for healing from and survivor-centered, non-carceral accountability for sexual violence.

    Aishah is a recipient of numerous awards and fellowships, including the 2022-2023 Changemaker Authors Cohort Fellowship, a 2020 Soros Media Fellowship, a 2016-2019 Just Beginnings Collaborative Fellowship, and the 2019 Breakthrough U.S. Activist Impact Award.

    Her writings are anthologized, and her cultural work and activism have been published and documented extensively in various mainstream and independent media outlets. She has been an Artist-in-Residence and served on the faculties of the University of Chicago, Temple University, Scripps College, Williams College, the University of Pennsylvania, the Weekly Dharma Gathering, and Barre Center for Buddhist Studies. Aishah has screened her work, guest lectured, and facilitated workshops and dialogues across the United States, Canada, and countries in Europe, Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean.

  • Called “the most intriguing African-American Buddhist” by Library Journal, Rev. angel Kyodo Williams Sensei, is an author, maverick spiritual teacher, master trainer, and founder of Center for Transformative Change. She has been bridging the worlds of personal transformation and justice since the publication of her critically-acclaimed book, Being Black: Zen and the Art of Living With Fearlessness and Grace. Her book was hailed as “an act of love” by Pulitzer Prize winner Alice Walker and “a classic” by Buddhist teacher Jack Kornfield. Her new book, Radical Dharma, explores racial injustice as a barrier to collective awakening.

    Ordained as a Zen priest, she is a Sensei, the second black woman recognized as a teacher in her lineage. She is a social visionary that applies wisdom teachings and practice to social issues. She sees Transformative Social Change as America’s next great movement. She is an early shaper and leading voice in that work and coined the name for the field. In recognition of her work, Rev. angel received the first Creating Enlightened Society Award from Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche, the leader of the international Shambhala Community.

    For over 15 years, she has deeply invested her time and energy to put into practice her unwavering belief that the key to transforming society is transforming our inner lives. She has developed comprehensive systems for illuminating both practical personal change and the profoundly liberating potential of mindfulness, yoga, and somatic practices coupled with wisdom teachings. Calling for a paradigm shift that “changes the way change is done,” angel envisions the building of a presence-centered social justice movement as the foundation for personal freedom, a just society, and the healing of divisions of race, class, faith, and politic.

    Both fierce and grounded, she is known for her unflinching willingness to both sit with and speak uncomfortable truths with love. Her work has been widely covered by such publications as New York Times, Boston Globe, Ms., Essence, Buddhadharma, Village Voice, and on the Oxygen Channel. angel notes, “Love and justice are not two. Without inner change, there can be no outer change. Without collective change, no change matters.” Whether in writing, teaching, or speaking, her voice is unique.

  • Christiane is a bilingual, creative hybrid. Part art/creative director, part filmmaker, part writer, part producer. She has lived and worked in Hamburg, London, New York, Berlin, San Francisco, Thiruvananthapuram (capital of Kerala in the south of India that is) and travelled to many other cities on all continents.

    She shot her first documentary on Super-8 in the Great Indian Desert of Rajasthan. The film 'The Bishnois - Be Fruitful and Multiply' was screened at film festivals in Madrid, Teheran and Czechoslovakia. At the same time, Christiane studied graphic design and film at Central Saint Martins, College of Art and Design in London and freelanced in advertising agencies like Jung von Matt and Wieden&Kennedy. During her career, she has collaborated full-time and freelance at agencies like TBWA and Facebook's Creative Shop and enjoys projects outside her comfort zone.

  • Dan Harris is the former co-anchor for the weekend edition of Good Morning America on ABC News, as well as a former correspondent for such broadcasts as Nightline and World News Tonight. He is also the author of 10% Happier, a #1 New York Times best-selling book about a fidgety, skeptical news anchor who stumbles upon meditation. This ancient practice – too long associated exclusively with hippies and robed gurus – has been shown by modern science to boost resilience, focus, creativity, emotional intelligence, and overall mental and physical health. With meditation and mindfulness now being embraced by executives, athletes, educators and entertainers, Harris has become a leading voice for pushing for the practice into the mainstream, using plain English and dry humor. He has spoken in front of a variety of audiences—corporations, health and wellness organizations, and schools and universities.

    In 10% Happier, Harris tells his story as only a reporter can: through deep research, tough questions, and a healthy dose of irony. The book is part investigation and part immersive journalism: one man’s accidental quest to boost his happiness quotient without losing his professional drive. After learning about research that suggests meditation can do everything from lower blood pressure to essentially rewire the brain, Harris took a deep dive into the underreported world of CEOs, scientists, and even Marines who use the practice to be calmer, happier, and less yanked around by their emotions. The book takes readers on a ride from the outer reaches of neuroscience to the inner sanctum of network news to the bizarre fringes of America’s spiritual scene, leaving them with takeaways that could actually change their lives.

    The app Harris co-founded—called 10% Happier: Meditation for Fidgety Skeptics—mixes the irreverence of the book with simple, practical, down-to-earth instructions. Users receive short daily videos, in which Dan discusses the practice with some of the world’s greatest teachers. The app also comes with a personal coach, who can answer questions and keep users accountable.

    10% Happier is also available in podcast form, and features in-depth conversations about meditation and happiness with celebrities, doctors, scholars, and other icons, including the Dalai Lama.

    Harris’ new book, Meditation for Fidgety Skeptics, was released in December 2017 and quickly made its way onto the New York Time’s Best-seller list.

    Previously, Harris was the anchor of the Sunday edition of World News. He regularly contributed stories on ABC for such shows as 20/20, World News Tonight with David Muir, and the weekday edition of Good Morning America. Harris has reported from all over the world, covering wars in Afghanistan, Israel/Palestine, and Iraq, and producing investigative reports in Haiti, Cambodia, and the Congo. He has also spent many years covering America’s faith scene, with a focus on evangelicals — who have treated him kindly despite the fact that he is openly agnostic.

    Harris has been at ABC News for 16 years, receiving Murrow and Emmy awards for his reporting. Prior to joining ABC, he was in local news in Boston and Maine.

    Harris grew up outside of Boston and currently lives with his wife, Bianca, and their son, Alexander, in New York City.

  • Daniel J. Siegel received his medical degree from Harvard University and completed his postgraduate medical education at UCLA with training in pediatrics and child, adolescent and adult psychiatry. He served as a National Institute of Mental Health Research Fellow at UCLA, studying family interactions with an emphasis on how attachment experiences influence emotions, behavior, autobiographical memory and narrative.

    Dr. Siegel is a clinical professor of psychiatry at the UCLA School of Medicine and the founding co-director of the Mindful Awareness Research Center at UCLA. An award-winning educator, he is a Distinguished Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association and recipient of several honorary fellowships. Dr. Siegel is also the Executive Director of the Mindsight Institute, an educational organization, which offers online learning and in-person seminars that focus on how the development of mindsight in individuals, families and communities can be enhanced by examining the interface of human relationships and basic biological processes. His psychotherapy practice includes children, adolescents, adults, couples, and families. He serves as the Medical Director of the LifeSpan Learning Institute and on the Advisory Board of the Blue School in New York City, which has built its curriculum around Dr. Siegel’s Mindsight approach.

    Dr. Siegel has published extensively for the professional audience. He is the author of numerous articles, chapters, and the internationally acclaimed text, The Developing Mind: How Relationships and the Brain Interact to Shape Who We Are (3rd. Ed., Guilford, 2020). This book introduces the field of interpersonal neurobiology, and has been utilized by a number of clinical and research organizations worldwide. Dr. Siegel serves as the Founding Editor for the Norton Professional Series on Interpersonal Neurobiology which contains over seventy textbooks. The Mindful Brain: Reflection and Attunement in the Cultivation of Well-Being (Norton, 2007) explores the nature of mindful awareness as a process that harnesses the social circuitry of the brain as it promotes mental, physical, and relational health. The Mindful Therapist: A Clinician’s Guide to Mindsight and Neural Integration (Norton, 2010), explores the application of focusing techniques for the clinician’s own development, as well as their clients’ development of mindsight and neural integration. Pocket Guide to Interpersonal Neurobiology: An Integrative Handbook of the Mind (Norton, 2012), explores how to apply the interpersonal neurobiology approach to developing a healthy mind, an integrated brain, and empathic relationships. The New York Times bestseller, Mind: A Journey to the Heart of Being Human (Norton, 2017), offers a deep exploration of our mental lives as they emerge from the body and our relations to each other and the world around us. His New York Times bestseller Aware: The Science and Practice of Presence (Tarcher/Perigee, 2018) provides practical instruction for mastering the Wheel of Awareness, a life-changing tool for cultivating more focus, presence, and peace in one’s day-to-day life. Dr. Siegel’s publications for professionals and the public have been translated into over 40 forty languages.

    Dr. Siegel’s book, Mindsight: The New Science of Personal Transformation (Bantam, 2010), offers the general reader an in-depth exploration of the power of the mind to integrate the brain and promote well-being. He has written six parenting books, including the three New York Times bestsellers Brainstorm: The Power and Purpose of the Teenage Brain (Tarcher/Penguin, 2014); The Whole-Brain Child: 12 Revolutionary Strategies to Nurture Your Child’s Developing Mind (Random House, 2011) and No-Drama Discipline: The Whole-Brain Way to Calm the Chaos and Nurture Your Child’s Developing Mind (Bantam, 2014), both with Tina Payne Bryson, Ph.D., The Power of Showing Up: How Parental Presence Shapes Who Our Kids Become and How Their Brains Get Wired (Ballantine Books 2020), The Yes Brain: How to Cultivate Courage, Curiosity, and Resilience in Your Child (Bantam, 2018) also with Tina Payne Bryson, Ph.D., and Parenting from the Inside Out: How a Deeper Self-Understanding Can Help You Raise Children Who Thrive (Tarcher/Penguin, 2003) with Mary Hartzell, M.Ed.

    Dr. Siegel’s unique ability to make complicated scientific concepts exciting and accessible has led him to be invited to address diverse local, national and international groups including mental health professionals, neuroscientists, corporate leaders, educators, parents, public administrators, healthcare providers, policy-makers, mediators, judges, and clergy. He has lectured for the King of Thailand, Pope John Paul II, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Google University, and London’s Royal Society of Arts (RSA). He lives in Southern California with his family.

  • GANGAJI is a well-known American spiritual teacher and author. Gangaji was born Merle Antoinette Roberson (Toni) in Texas on June 11, 1942, and grew up in Mississippi. After graduating from the University of Mississippi, she and her young family moved to San Francisco. After a divorce, she sought to change her life via political activism and spiritual practice.

    She took Buddhist Bodhisattva vows, practiced Zen and Vipassana meditation, helped in a Tibetan-Buddhist-style meditation center, and began a career as an acupuncturist in the San Francisco Bay area. Unfulfilled by her seemingly successful life, in 1989 she and Eli Jaxon-Bear moved to Hawaii.

    Gangaji recently works to write and tour as a teacher. She also holds that the truth of who you are is already free and at peace, which can be realized simply by ending one’s search. Despite her successes, she continued to experience a deep and persistent longing for fulfillment. In her life, she pursued many paths to change her life, including motherhood, relationship, political activism, career, and spiritual practice, but even the greatest of her successes ultimately came up to short.

    Gangaji also teaches “direct experience,” or meeting whatever emotion is present for people facing strong emotions such as fear and anger, or in dealing with traumas which keep them locked in personal misery and unable to experience freedom. For example, Gangaji says, “Fear is about survival. When you drop under it and experience the fear without trying to change it, just letting it be, then it becomes unchanged.

  • Gulwinder “Gullu” Singh is a lead teacher in the Warrior One Mindfulness in Law Teacher Training program. Gullu also teaches Dharma and secular mindfulness, is a corporate real estate attorney, and is a dedicated Dharma practitioner with particular interest in integrating the insights and cultivation from retreat practice into daily life and work. While he learned to meditate as a child, he found his own practice in 1993 in Transcendental Meditation, which he used to navigate the intense work stress of being an attorney. In 2006, at his first retreat at Spirit Rock, Gullu found his spiritual home in Vipassana and Theravada Buddhism. Since then, he has cumulatively done over 200 days of silent meditation retreat including the Spirit Rock one and two month sits.

    Gullu completed InsightLA’s one-year Mindfulness Facilitator Training Group, Spirit Rock’s 2-year Dedicated Practitioner Program and the training to teach Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction. He regularly teaches both secular and Buddhist classes and groups at InsightLA, has taught mindfulness at the University of Southern California, has been a guest lecturer on mindfulness at UCLA Law School and has taught mindfulness in law firms and corporate settings. He was recently invited into the 4-year Spirit Rock Teacher Training Program which focuses on teaching in the silent retreat setting.

    Gullu graduated from Duke University in 1990 with a B.A in economics and a minor equivalent in psychology and got his J.D. from the University of Southern California Law Center in 1993 where he was on Law Review from 1991 to 1993. He then worked Paul Hastings Janofsky & Walker LLP and O’Melveny & Myers LLP before founding Landmark Law Group, Inc. in 1998. He was recognized as a California Super Lawyer in 2009.

    Gullu is deeply inspired to share meditation in the legal and corporate community as an antidote to stress, a way to cope more effectively with the challenges of work and live and to inject more sanity, compassion and wisdom into this world. He also aspires to lead residential and commuter retreats to serve his local community.

  • Co-founder

    Jack Kornfield trained as a Buddhist monk in the monasteries of Thailand, India and Burma. He has taught meditation internationally since 1974 and is one of the key teachers to introduce Buddhist mindfulness practice to the West.

    After graduating from Dartmouth College in Asian Studies in 1967 he joined the Peace Corps and worked on tropical medicine teams in the Mekong River valley. He met and studied as a monk under the Buddhist master Ven. Ajahn Chah, as well as the Ven. Mahasi Sayadaw of Burma.

    Returning to the United States, Jack co-founded the Insight Meditation Society in Barre, Massachusetts, with fellow meditation teachers Sharon Salzberg and Joseph Goldstein and the Spirit Rock Center in Woodacre, California.

    Over the years, Jack has taught in centers and universities worldwide, led International Buddhist Teacher meetings, and worked with many of the great teachers of our time. He holds a Ph.D. in clinical psychology and is a father, husband and activist.

    His books have been translated into 20 languages and sold more than a million copies. They include, A Wise Heart: A Guide to the Universal Teachings of Buddhist Psychology, A Path with Heart; After the Ecstasy, the Laundry; Teachings of the Buddha; Seeking the Heart of Wisdom; Living Dharma; A Still Forest Pool; Stories of the Spirit, Stories of the Heart; Buddha’s Little Instruction Book; The Art of Forgiveness, Lovingkindness and Peace, Bringing Home the Dharma: Awakening Right Where You Are, and his most recent book, No Time Like the Present: Finding Freedom, Love, and Joy Right Where You Are

  • James Baraz is a founding teacher of Spirit Rock Meditation Center. James started the Community Dharma Leader program, the Kalyana Mitta Network, the Spirit Rock Family Program and helped create the Heavenly Messengers Training Program. James has been leading the online course Awakening Joy since 2003. He serves as a guiding teacher to One Earth Sangha, a Virtual EcoDharma Center devoted to Buddhist responses to Climate Change. He co-authored Awakening Joy and Awakening Joy for Kids.

    His books include Awakening Joy with Shoshana Alexander and Awakening Joy for Kids with Michele Lilyanna. For more information, visit awakeningjoy.info.

  • Roshi Joan Halifax, Ph.D. is a Buddhist teacher, Founder and Head Teacher of Upaya Zen Center in Santa Fe, New Mexico, a social activist, author, and in her early years was an anthropologist at Columbia University (1964-68) and University of Miami School of Medicine (1970-72). She is a pioneer in the field of end-of-life care. She has lectured on the subject of death and dying at many academic institutions and medical centers around the world. She received a National Science Foundation Fellowship in Visual Anthropology, was an Honorary Research Fellow in Medical Ethnobotany at Harvard University, was a Distinguished Visiting Scholar at the Library of Congress, received the Pioneer Medal for Outstanding Leadership in Health Care by HealthCare Chaplaincy, the Sandy MacKinnon Award from Covenant Health in Canada, Pioneer Medal for Outstanding Leadership in Health Care, received an Honorary DSc from the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. She has received many other awards and honors from institutions around the world for her work as a social and environmental activist and in the end-of-life care field.

    From 1972-1975, she worked with psychiatrist Stanislav Grof at the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center with dying cancer patients. She has continued to work with dying people and their families, and to teach health care professionals and family caregivers the psycho-social, ethical and spiritual aspects of care of the dying. She is Director of the Project on Being with Dying, and Founder of the Upaya Prison Project that develops programs on meditation for prisoners. She is also founder of the Nomads Clinic in Nepal.

    Her books include: The Human Encounter with Death (with Stanislav Grof); The Fruitful Darkness, A Journey Through Buddhist Practice; Simplicity in the Complex: A Buddhist Life in America; Being with Dying: Cultivating Compassion and Wisdom in the Presence of Death; Standing at the Edge: Finding Freedom Where Fear and Courage Meet; Sophie Learns to Be Brave.

    She has been involved with the Mind and Life Institute since its inception and is founder of the Varela International Symposium.

  • From growing up with gunshot holes outside of his bedroom window, to sharing the stage with Deepak Chopra, JUSTIN MICHAEL WILLIAMS knows the power of healing to overcome. He is an author, top 20 recording artist, and transformational speaker who is using music and meditation to wake up the world.

    When he was younger, Justin always wanted to be a singer, but a lifetime of being bullied, teased, and abused, made him give up his dream. Then after a seminal moment with his dying grandmother, Justin woke up—and his debut album premiered in the top 20 of the iTunes charts next to Britney Spears and Taylor Swift. He has since been featured by Billboard, Grammy.com, SXSW®, and shared on stages alongside some of the most compelling leaders of our time, including Marianne Williamson, Deepak Chopra, and Chaka Khan.

    With over a decade of teaching experience, Justin has become a pioneering voice of color for the new healing movement—between his podcast, keynotes, and motivational online platforms, Justin’s teachings have now spread to more than 40 countries around the globe.

    Justin is dedicated to using his voice to serve. To being a beacon of hope for those who are lost, and to making sure all people, of all backgrounds, have access to the information they need to change their lives.

    “When people wake up to their own brilliance—it’s like magic,"says Williams. 'If my work and art can inspire people to do that, then I’ve fulfilled my mission.”

    His first book, Stay Woke: A Meditation Guide for the Rest of Us, was released nationwide February 11, 2020.

  • Kaira Jewel Lingo is a Dharma Teacher who began practicing mindfulness in 1997 and teaches Buddhist meditation, secular mindfulness, and compassion internationally. After living as an ordained nun for 15 years in Thich Nhat Hanh’s monastic community, Kaira Jewel now teaches in the Zen lineage and the Vipassana tradition, at the intersection of racial, climate and social justice with a focus on activists, Black, Indigenous, People of Color, artists, educators, families, and youth. Based in New York, she offers spiritual mentoring to groups and is author of We Were Made for These Times: Ten Lessons in Moving through Change, Loss and Disruption from Parallax Press.

  • Founder

    Konda Mason is a social entrepreneur, finance activist, earth and social justice activist and mindfulness teacher.

    She is the Co-founder and President of Jubilee Justice, Inc, a nonprofit working to bring climate resilient farming and economic equity to BIPOC farmers in the rural South in order to restore and accelerate Black land ownership and stewardship and create thriving Black farming communities. Jubilee Justice also convenes deep transformational learning journeys across race and class exploring conversations at the intersection of Land, Race, Money & Spirit.

    She is also the Co-founder and VP of Potlikker Capital a next economy loan fund specially designed to deploy integrated capital to Black American farmers.

    Konda is Co-Founder and founding CEO of Impact Hub Oakland (newly renamed Emerge Oakland), an award winning co-working space that supports socially engaged entrepreneurs and changemakers. She is the Strategic Director of RUNWAY, a micro-lending fund for African American entrepreneurs, and the co-founder of the annual COCAP (Community Capital) conference in Oakland, with a focus on closing the racial wealth gap, restorative economics and the next economy just transition.

    Along with her partner, actor Woody Harrelson, Konda opened the first home delivery service of organic food in the Los Angeles area and was responsible for negotiating the first organic food section in a major supermarket in the area. Ms. Mason holds a Permaculture Design Certificate from Commonweal Institute and has an honorary MBA from Presidio Graduate School of Business.

    She teaches mindfulness at retreat centers throughout the U.S.A. Konda is on the Board of Directors of The Historic Clayborn Temple in Memphis, TN, On Being with Krista Tippett, One Generation with Paul Hawken, Lion’s Roar Magazine, and One Step Closer (OSC).

    She is one of the co-founders and co-facilitator of The Well-Being In Business Lab - Oakland, a cross-sector initiative guiding prominent business owners, non-profit leaders and government officials to a deeper level of intention within themselves and their businesses.

  • Kristin Neff received her doctorate from the University of California at Berkeley, and is currently an Associate Professor of Educational Psychology at the University of Texas at Austin.

    During Kristin’s last year of graduate school she became interested in Buddhism and has been practicing meditation in the Insight Meditation tradition ever since. While doing her post-doctoral work she decided to conduct research on self-compassion – a central construct in Buddhist psychology and one that had not yet been examined empirically. Kristin is a pioneer in the field of self-compassion research, creating a scale to measure the construct almost 20 years ago. She has been recognized as one of the world’s most influential research psychologists. In addition to writing numerous academic articles and book chapters on the topic, she is author of the book Self-Compassion: The Proven Power of Being Kind to Yourself, and her latest Fierce Self-Compassion: How Women Can Harness Kindness to Speak Up, Claim Their Power and Thrive.

    In conjunction with her colleague Dr. Chris Germer, she has developed an empirically supported training program called Mindful Self-Compassion, which is taught by thousands of teachers worldwide. They co-authored The Mindful Self-Compassion Workbook as well as Teaching the Mindful Self-Compassion Program: A Guide for Professionals. She is also co-founder of the nonprofit Center for Mindful Self-Compassion.

  • Maya Breuer is the head of research and yoga advancement for Yoga Alliance, and is developing the first Yoga Alliance/Yoga Foundation think tank. In her first years at Yoga Alliance, Maya was the cocreator of the Teaching for Equity Program. She has authored several articles including features and cooperative articles for Yoga Journal, Citizen Truth, Shape magazine, Forbes, PopSugar, and more. Maya is also the cofounder and Emeritus president of the national Black Yoga Teachers Alliance and for many years served in the global yoga community as a preeminent yoga teacher, speaker, practitioner, author, and community activist.

    In 1998, Maya founded the Yoga Retreat for Women of Color™, offered biannually at the Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health, where she is an Emeritus Trustee. From 2001-2017, Maya trained and certified global yoga teachers through the Santosha School of Yoga. She has been a feature in Yoga Journal, Black Enterprise, Essence, Heart and Soul, Common Ground, Black Women’s Health, Upscale Magazine, and many Kripalu publications. She was a also featured coauthor on an NIH study—now included within the Annals of Internal Medicine—called Back to Health: Yoga vs. Physical Therapy for Minorities with Chronic Low Back Pain. For more than 30 years, Maya's mission and dharma has been to teach yoga to support everyone, with special focus and outreach to members of the BIPOC community. Through her efforts, she has encouraged her students to adopt the practices of yoga and its myriad philosophical tenets into their daily lives.

  • Born in 1954 and raised in rural Ohio, Mushim Ikeda (Patricia Y. Ikeda, Patricia Ikeda-Nash) remembers the gorgeous sunsets in the greater Akron area that were caused by pollution from the tire factories. Many of her public school classmates came from West Virginian families who had migrated north to find work. As heads of the only Japanese American family in the community, her Nisei parents altered the pronunciation of “Ikeda” to try to make it more palatable to others and to facilitate the assimilation of their three children into the dominant society. Later, in the seventies and eighties, as the Asian American movement gained momentum, two out of the three children in her family switched back to the Japanese pronunciation of “Ikeda.” Thus, threads of oppression, assimilation, and resistance were woven throughout Mushim’s childhood and youth, along with air raid drills in elementary school during the Cold War era in which the U.S. feared nuclear bombing by Russia; the civil rights era’s marches, protests, and assassinations; and, later, news of resistance to the war in Vietnam, the hippie movement, and the use of psychedelic drugs to expand consciousness.

    Under her secular name, Patricia Y. Ikeda, Mushim was among the first Asian American poets to publish, in a volume of poems published by Cleveland State University in 1978 and in the 1983 anthology Breaking Silence: An Anthology of Contemporary Asian American Poets. After receiving her MFA in English (poetry writing) from the University of Iowa Graduate Writers Workshop, she jumped the tracks of a potential career teaching creative writing and contemporary literature in colleges and universities, and an increasingly urgent spiritual quest led her to renounce what belongings she had and to move into the just-starting-up Zen Buddhist Temple-Ann Arbor, Michigan, as a full time resident under a vow of poverty, in May 1983. Designated the office manager, she began with a landline phone, a small wooden bench to write on, some pens, the temple checkbook, and a shoebox for petty cash and receipts, and over the next several years helped to build the temple along with a diverse Sangha (spiritual community) that included Zen practitioners from the U.S., Mexico, Canada, Korea and Japan.

    A period of Dharma bumming throughout the U.S. and to the monasteries of South Korea and back from 1986 through 1988 came to a close and a new chapter in Mushim’s life began with the birth of her son in 1989 in Northern California, and the instruction from several Asian Zen teachers to direct her spiritual practice toward raising her child. She also received encouragement to begin writing again, in whatever small periods of time that she could carve out from parenting, and slowly began to publish new work, including a quarterly column on Buddhist family practice published in the Buddhist Peace Fellowship’s magazine, Turning Wheel, over a period of ten years, and which chronicled her family life with the partner who became her son’s adoptive father, the child, and a Siamese cat who began visiting every day and then eventually moved in to their small apartment in Oakland.

    Since that time, Mushim has become widely known for her down-to-earth, humorous, and penetrating approach to Dharma and social transformation. Mushim is currently a socially-engaged Buddhist teacher, mindfulness meditation teacher, social justice activist, author, and diversity and inclusion facilitator based in Oakland, California. She teaches primarily at the East Bay Meditation Center in downtown Oakland, where she also served on the board of directors, known as the Leadership Sangha, for seven years. She now works part-time on EBMC’s staff as the community coordinator.

    Mushim has taught residential meditation retreats for people of color, social justice activists, and women nationally, and her work is based in values of cultural humility, acknowledging the wisdom that is ever-present in individuals and collectives, and the need for expression, empowerment, and co-creative self-determination in marginalized communities. Mushim has been featured in the award-winning documentary film Between the Lines: Asian American Women’s Poetry and as one of three subjects in the documentary Acting on Faith: Women’s New Religious Activism in America, distributed by the Pluralism Project at Harvard University.

    As a writer, Mushim is the recipient of the first Alice Hayes Fellowship from the Ragdale Foundation to support a one-month residency for a writer working on social justice and environmental issues. She has been named an expert panelist of the Global Diversity and Inclusion Benchmarks, an Open Source online resource available through the Diversity Collegium. Mushim is also the recipient of the 2014 Gil A. Lopez Peacemaker Award from the Association for Dispute Resolution of Northern California, recognizing her innovative one-year program, Practice in Transformative Action (PiTA), mindfulness training for social justice activists, at East Bay Meditation Center. In September 2015 she received an honorary Doctor of Sacred Theology (sacrae theologiae) degree from the Starr King School for the Ministry.

  • Reggie Hubbard is the founder/chief serving officer of Active Peace LLC. He began his contemplative practices under extreme professional distress, and now offers simple tools rooted in ancient wisdom to help others nurture peace of mind, creativity, equanimity in spirit, and physical health—helping nurture well-being as foundational, rather than as an afterthought.

    In addition to his yogic and meditative practices (teaching and personal), Reggie has held many senior strategic and logistical roles across a variety of fields, ranging from global marketing, digital and community organizing, government relations, international education to Presidential campaigning (John Kerry for President, Kerry/Edwards 2004 and Bernie Sanders 2016).

    Reggie has taught members of Congress, congressional staff, major labor unions, activists, and individuals from all walks of life. His life work bridges the intersection of bringing peace and balance to activists, guiding the spiritual community toward being more engaged citizens, and enhancing the well-being of everyone. Achieving this balance is how we catalyze transformative change in our society.

    He has been a featured speaker and thought leader on new consciousness, racial justice, and civic engagement for leading publications, podcasts and platforms including: Be Here Now Network, Mind and Life Institute, SoundsTrue Foundation, Upaya Zen Center, Wanderlust, Yoga Alliance, and Yoga Journal. activepeaceyoga.com

  • Rick Hanson, PhD is a psychologist, Senior Fellow at UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center, and New York Times best-selling author. His seven books have been published in 30 languages and include the forthcoming Making Great Relationships as well as Neurodharma, Resilient, Hardwiring Happiness, Just One Thing, Buddha’s Brain, and Mother Nurture - with over a million copies in English alone. His free newsletters have 250,000 subscribers, and his online programs have scholarships available for those with financial need.

    With his son Forrest, their Being Well podcast is downloaded about five million times a year. He’s lectured at NASA, Google, Oxford, and Harvard, and taught in meditation centers worldwide. An expert on positive neuroplasticity, his work has been featured on CBS, NPR, the BBC, and other major media; his paper, Learning to Learn from Positive Experiences, was recently published in the Journal of Positive Psychology. He began meditating in 1974 and is the founder of the Wellspring Institute for Neuroscience and Contemplative Wisdom. He and his wife live in northern California and have two adult children. He loves wilderness and taking a break from emails.

  • Ruth King is the Founder of Mindful of Race Institute, LLC, and is a celebrated author, educator, and meditation teacher.

    Formally an organizational development consultant to Intel and Levi Strauss corporations, King currently teaches the Mindful of Race Training Program to leaders, teams, and organizations, weaving mindfulness-based principles with an exploration of our racial conditioning, its impact, and our potential.

    King teaches mindfulness meditation retreats worldwide and develops meditation practitioners at Spirit Rock Meditation Center, Insight Meditation Society, and the Mindfulness Meditation Teacher Certification Program. She has a Masters Degree in Clinical Psychology from John F. Kennedy University, CA, and is the author of several publications including her most recent, Mindful of Race: Transforming Racism From The Inside Out.

    King's work is also featured in the 2021 publications of Chicken Soup for the Soul's I'm Speaking Now: Black women share their truth, and Nautilus Book Award Gold Recipient Black & Buddhist: What Buddhism can teach us about race, resilience, transformation, and freedom.

    King - Elder, Heart Activist, African American with Choctaw roots, and native Californian, currently reside on the unceded territory of the Catawba indigenous nations in Charlotte, NC, with wife, Dr. Barbara Riley.

    Both provocative and compassionate, King speaks to the heart of her audiences with audacity, authenticity and joy.

  • Seane Corn is an internationally acclaimed yoga teacher and public speaker known for her social activism, impassioned style of teaching, and raw, honest and inspired self-expression. Over her 25-year teaching career, Seane has created many instructional DVDs, including her groundbreaking series The Yoga of Awakening with Sounds True.

    Featured on over 40 magazine covers and countless media outlets, Seane has chosen to use her platform to bring awareness to global issues including social justice, sex trafficking, HIV/AIDS awareness, generational poverty, and animal rights. In 2005, she was named “National Yoga Ambassador” for YouthAIDS, and in 2013 received both the Global Green International Environmental Leadership Award and the Humanitarian Award by the Smithsonian Institute.

    Since 2007, she has been training leaders of activism through her co-founded organization Off the Mat, Into the World®. Seane also co-founded the Global Seva Challenge, which has raised over $3.5 million by activating communities of yoga and wellness in fund and awareness raising efforts. Her first book Revolution of the Soul was published in Fall 2019.

  • Sharon Salzberg is a meditation pioneer, world-renowned teacher, and New York Times bestselling author. She is one of the first to bring mindfulness and lovingkindness meditation to mainstream American culture over 45 years ago, inspiring generations of meditation teachers and wellness influencers. Sharon is co-founder of The Insight Meditation Society in Barre, MA, and the author of twelve books, including the New York Times bestseller, Real Happiness, now in its second edition, and her seminal work, Lovingkindness. Her forthcoming release, Real Life: The Journey from Isolation to Openness and Freedom, is set for release in April of 2023 from Flatiron Books. Her podcast, The Metta Hour, has amassed five million downloads and features interviews with thought leaders from the mindfulness movement and beyond. www.sharonsalzberg.com

  • Co-founder

    Tara Brach’s teachings blend Western psychology and Eastern spiritual practices, mindful attention to our inner life, and a full, compassionate engagement with our world. The result is a distinctive voice in Western Buddhism, one that offers a wise and caring approach to freeing ourselves and society from suffering.

    As an undergraduate at Clark University, Tara pursued a double major in psychology and political science. During this time, while working as a grassroots organizer for tenants’ rights, she also began attending yoga classes and exploring Eastern approaches to inner transformation.

    After college, she lived for ten years in an ashram—a spiritual community—where she practiced and taught both yoga and concentrative meditation. When she left the ashram and attended her first Buddhist Insight Meditation retreat, led by Joseph Goldstein, she realized she was home. “I had found wisdom teachings and practices that train the heart and mind in unconditional and loving presence,” she explains. “I knew that this was a path of true freedom.”

    Over the following years, Tara earned a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from the Fielding Institute, with a dissertation exploring meditation as a therapeutic modality in treating addiction. She went on to complete a five-year Buddhist teacher training program at the Spirit Rock Meditation Center.

    Working as both a psychotherapist and a meditation teacher, she found herself naturally blending these two powerful traditions—introducing meditation to her therapy clients and sharing western psychological insights with meditation students. This synthesis has evolved, in more recent years, into Tara’s groundbreaking work in training psychotherapists to integrate mindfulness strategies into their clinical work.

    In 1998, Tara founded the Insight Meditation Community of Washington, DC (IMCW), which is now one of the largest and most dynamic non-residential meditation centers in the United States. She gives presentations, teaches classes, offers workshops, and leads silent meditation retreats at IMCW and at conferences and retreat centers in the United States and Europe.

    Tara’s podcast is downloaded more than 3 million times each month. Her themes reveal the possibility of emotional healing and spiritual awakening through mindful, loving awareness as well as the alleviation of suffering in the larger world by practicing compassion in action.

    She has fostered efforts to bring principles and practices of mindfulness to issues of racial injustice, equity and inclusivity; peace; environmental sustainability, as well as to prisons and schools.

    She and Jack Kornfield lead the Awareness Training Institute (ATI) which offers online courses on mindfulness and compassion, as well as the Mindfulness Meditation Teacher Certification Program (MMTCP).

    In addition to numerous articles, videos, and hundreds of recorded talks, Tara is the author of the books: Radical Acceptance (Bantam, 2003), True Refuge (Bantam, 2013), Radical Compassion (Viking, 2019) and Trusting the Gold (SoundsTrue, 2021).

    She has a son, Narayan, and lives in Northern Virgina with her husband, Jonathan Foust and their dog, kd.

  • Co-founder

    Thanissara started Buddhist practice in the Burmese school in 1975. She was inspired to ordain after meeting Ajahn Chah and spent 12 years as a Buddhist nun. She was a founding member of Chithurst Monastery and Amaravati Buddhist Monastery in the UK.

    She has facilitated meditation retreats internationally for the last 35 years and has an MA in Mindfulness-Based Psychotherapy Practice from Middlesex University & the Karuna Institute in the UK.

    With Kittisaro, she co-founded Dharmagiri Sacred Mountain Retreat in 2000 and helped initiate and support several HIV/Aids response projects in South Africa. In 2016, they founded Sacred Mountain Sangha in California non-profit hosting retreats, trainings, classes, and events.

    Thanissara and Kittisaro recently launched PAEAN - Peoples Alliance for Earth Action Now, a part of Sacred Mountain Sangha. PAEAN is focused on climate justice and protecting against ecological collapse and securing a healthy and safe Earth for generations to come.

    Thanissara has written several books, two poetry books and Time To Stand Up, An Engaged Buddhist Manifesto for Our Earth. Thanissara is a member of the Spirit Rock Teacher Council.

  • Yong Oh’s initial doorway into the Dharma was through Soto Zen. His love for Vipassana began with his, then and now, primary teachers Kittisaro and Thanissara. He is a Dharma Council teacher at the Durango Dharma Center, teaches for the Chattanooga Insight Meditation group, and is currently on the Leadership Council for Thanissara and Kittisaro’s Sacred Mountain Sangha.

    Yong is a graduate of Spirit Rock’s Community Dharma Leaders program, the recent Insight Meditation Society Retreat Teacher Training and the Sacred Mountain Sangha Dharmapala training. Yong is also an acupuncturist, loves the outdoors and bringing the practice of meditation into nature, devotional practice, and aspires to support practitioners of color in the Dharma.

  • Diego Perez was born in Ecuador and immigrated to the United States as a child. He grew up in Boston and attended Wesleyan University. During a silent Vipassana meditation course in 2012, he saw that real healing and liberation were possible. He became more committed to his meditation practice while living in New York City. The results he witnessed firsthand moved him to describe his experiences in writing.

    The penname Yung Pueblo means “young people” and is meant to convey that humanity is entering an era of remarkable growth and healing, when many will expand their self-awareness and release old burdens.

    Diego’s online presence as Yung Pueblo, as well as his books, Inward and Clarity & Connection, are meant to serve those undertaking their own journey of personal transformation.

    Today, Diego resides in Western Massachusetts with his wife, where they live quietly and meditate daily.