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Leslie Booker
Featured Speaker

Leslie Booker

Cultivating Compassion: Lessons from the Front Lines of Criminal Justice

June 13, 2020

“Caring for myself is not self indulgence.  It is self-preservation and that is an act of political warfare” -- Audre Lorde These words open Leslie Booker‘s website. Known as “Booker”, she brings her heart, wisdom and compassion to the intersection of social justice, yoga and mindfulness.  She is passionate about expanding our vision around culturally responsive yoga and mindfulness teaching, and about changing the paradigm of self and community care. An activist who spent more than a decade on the front lines ... Read full bio

Five Questions with Leslie

What makes you come alive?
I love seeing folks come alive: discovering their worth, their wisdom, their truth, and what they have to offer the world. In sharing practice with vulnerable people for many years, I witnessed a lot of lost hope; the by product of generations of enslavement, displacement, and legalized oppressions. Being in the presence of folks letting go of the narratives and the boxes that have placed upon them by society and the media...you can't feel more alive than that!
A pivotal turning point in your life?
My family and I lived in Japan when I was a kid. In my experience, it was an incredibly safe and protected place for children to grow up. When we moved back to the states I was 9, and the US was in the midst of the Regan - era. Due to his policies and tremendous budget cuts in Section 8, HUD and the closing of many institutions, there was a huge influx of folks experiencing homelessness.something I had never seen before. I remember riding through DC in the back seat of my parent's car and asking my parents to help me understand what I was seeing. I could tell that folks appeared to be sick and in need of support, but they were on the streets without familial or government assistance. I remember a felt sense in my body, perhaps a quivering in my heart. It was at that point that I realized that there were folks' whose humanity was not seen or honored in our country. This manifested as anger and rage for years, and thenI began to be with and ask the question "What's needed now?"
An act of kindness you'll never forget?
I've been blessed with many angels in my life. Folks that have seen that I needed a little space, a little guidance, to be introduced to that teacher, . Even being deported from London after a producer didn't get me the right paperwork, gave me the opportunity to learn to advocate for myself! One major act of kindness in my life was from sometime around 2003. I had been working in the fashion industry in NYC since the late 90's and had found myself in a really toxic work environment. The manager of the showroom next door was a refuge for me. He noticed that I was feeling stuck, and felt like I didn't have any options. After crying on his shoulders for a few months, he suggested that I leave and come work at his showroom for a month. He made himself scarce, I saw him just a few times. He knew that I needed some space, a moment to pause, and to reflect upon what was really important to me. That space and that silence allowed me to drop into my heart, and to remember that little 9 year old girl in the back of my parent's car. It gave me the capacity to catch my breath, and turn towards what allowed my heart to open.
One thing on your bucket list?
To learn how to swim!
One-line message for the world?
We really need to remember how to embody radical presence. To be fully awake, to know what's happening inside our own bodies: the clenching, the shutting down, the turning away from, so that we can acknowledge what's really here, and learn how to stay.
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About Awakin Calls

Awakin Calls is a weekly global series featuring intimate conversations with remarkable people – scientists, activists, artists, and everyday heroes – hosted by volunteers at ServiceSpace. Subscribe to join live.