
The Hidden Loom
weaving Winter into Spring
Yoga Series online
January 14 - March 20
Wednesdays & Fridays
45 mins
7am PST | 4pm CET
$108 total for 20 classes or $8 per class drop-in
Recordings are included if you miss the Live class.
To Register
“Devotion is the willingness to hold the thread.”
Across cultures, the loom belonged to women’s worlds—not as symbol, but as necessity. It was an instrument of survival and meaning, a place where sorrow, endurance, longing, and care were worked into form. When the outer world became unstable or cruel, one returned to the loom—not to escape life, but to translate it.
This winter yoga series takes the loom as both myth and method.
Each 45-minute class is a quiet ritual of alchemy, weaving breath, movement, and story into a practice of staying. Here, emotion is neither discharged nor transcended; it is given labor. Attention becomes the shuttle. Time becomes the ally. What arrives as pain is not denied, but worked—slowly, patiently—until it can warm rather than wound.
In the Odyssey, Penelope weaves by day and unweaves by night, holding the structure of her life without submitting to a false ending. Her loom is not nostalgia; it is intelligence. She practices devotion under uncertainty—maintaining tension without collapse, refusing completion before its time.
By day she wove.
By night, she unwove—
holding her course.
In the Tantric tradition, tantra comes from tan, to stretch or weave, and –tra, an instrument or framework. Tantra names the loom itself—the structure that holds life in tension so its energies can be woven into coherence rather than scattered or suppressed. Yoga, in this sense, is not escape but participation in the weave.
From a Dzogchen perspective, awareness is empty and luminous—the open ground from which all pattern arises. When we rest there, creation unfolds spontaneously, like a tapestry weaving itself. Practice is not effortful manipulation, but the capacity to remain present while the pattern takes form.
“The Tao does nothing,
and nothing is left undone.”
This series is for those retreating not away from life, but into the place where life is digested—where grief, devotion, fatigue, and desire are transformed through steady attention into something that can shelter, sustain, and endure.

“Penelope at her Loom,” Angelica Kauffmann, 1764 — public domain depiction of the mythic weaver from Homer’s Odyssey.