Yuria Celidwen
SCHOLAR, RESEARCHER, TEACHER, INDIGENOUS NAHUA AND MAYA
When Yuria Celidwen talks about contemplative practice, she’s describing something much more expansive than solely what’s going on in the mind.
“From the Mesoamerican tradition specifically, but generally in many Indigenous practices, it’s also about the emotional state, the heart that is involved with the body that informs the mind processes that end up revealing…that animating principle of life.”
As a child, she already possessed this rich awareness of complexity. From her parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents, she says, “I learned a lot about how to really be with the landscape, be part of the landscape of a larger community.” Then, starting in elementary school, she faced racist discrimination. Inhabiting these conflicting worlds led her to the study of identity, consciousness, and…
