Our next and final session in the ‘Our Eternal Song’ series with Kathleen Dameron takes place on 27th June at 12 noon (UK time).
Register in Advance Here for 27 June 2026
Kathleen draws on beautifully curated resources from ‘The Eternal Song’ film series by Science and Non-Duality (SAND), in which indigenous communities from around the world share their journeys of healing intergenerational trauma while preserving their culture, language, and ceremonies, all rooted in a profound relationship with the land and ancestral wisdom.
Their stories remind us that our collective future depends on remembering our kinship with Mother Earth and listening for the eternal song of existence that calls us back to our original sense of belonging.
Kathleen invites us into the experience and wisdom of a range of indigenous communities and gently guides us through a process that helps us hold what is difficult without becoming overwhelmed, using sound and somatic movement — an approach others have found both gentle and profound.
While attending each session can deepen the experience, each one is also complete in itself. So wherever you are in your journey, you are warmly invited to come just as you are.
Register in Advance Here for 27 June 2026
Our Eternal Song invites us to slow down, to listen more deeply, and to sense the timeless thread running beneath our experiences.
Why "The Eternal Song" is important
The Eternal Song documents how indigenous peoples worldwide have preserved ancestral wisdom through colonisation's ongoing impact.
The film addresses the urgent disconnection many feel in modern life—from nature, community, and ancestral wisdom. By centring indigenous voices and their lived experience of both trauma and healing.
What to Expect
In these four sessions, Kathleen Dameron will guide us through:
• Listening beneath thought and surface
• Meeting subtle intelligence with softness
• Reconnecting with presence in turbulent times
• Exploring relational field practices
• Remembering what is enduring, quiet, and real
We won't be having intellectual discussions about the film. Instead, Kathleen uses a practice-based approach that works through sound, gesture, and movement rather than analysis and debate.
We will watch the film in short segments. After each segment, you'll be asked: "What sound is in you right now?" Everyone offers their sound.
Then: "What gesture?" You'll have moments to notice what's present in your body. Later, in small groups, you'll create brief mimes—no words—expressing your collective experience of what you've witnessed.
This approach serves a purpose. When we engage difficult material—colonisation, trauma, healing—through verbal discussion alone, we often bypass the fullness of our response. We stay in our heads, arguing positions, analysing. The sound/gesture/mime practice keeps us connected to embodied experience. It creates a field of shared witness rather than a debate.
Kathleen Dameron
Kathleen is a facilitator, coach and cultural mediator dedicated to supporting individuals and communities to grow with openness, awareness and connection. With over 30 years of experience in intercultural leadership and human development, she helps people navigate complexity with clarity and presence. Find out more at www.KathleenDameron.com