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  • Enjoy diversity-informed yoga, discussions on trauma and mental health with thought leaders and help us make yoga accessible to all. We warmly invite you to join our Taste of OG Yoga event where you can practice yoga with us, learn more about how trauma impacts us and why yoga allows us to heal, and explore how you can support our mission. Join us for 2 days of snack-sized, 30 minute classes designed for diversity including: OG Flow (our style of compassionate yoga), Yoga for Veterans, Chair Yoga, OG Ashtanga, Healing Yoga, Yoga Nidra, Gentle Hatha, Art Therapy, and more! The highlight of each day is a special discussion lead by thought leaders in the space of yoga, trauma, and mental health: • Trauma: What it is, how it affects us, and how we heal with JoAnn Jaffe • The Intersection of Yoga and Mental Health with Erika Faith Calig Date | Saturday 23 and Sunday 24 of October from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Location | OG Yoga or virtual Get tickets here! Full weekend pass (virtual or in-person): $80 Single Full Day pass (virtual or in-person): $50 Single 30-minute session: (virtual or in-person): $10 Qigong session with Jacalynn (virtual): $10 When you practice in our studio and attend this event, you are supporting our service work of making yoga accessible to all. If you are unable to attend the event but would like to support our mission of providing healing yoga to those who need it most, donate here. For more information, please visit ogyoga.org/taste-of-og-yoga.
  • It's not welcoming news to advocates who want to keep it as a space for people in the U.S and Mexico to reconnect.
  • Our weekend arts and culture picks include a new Digital WOW production, Amel Janae’s solo exhibition, a group show at Thumbprint, and Icelandic contemporary music paired with Ana de Alvear’s art.
  • School staff across San Diego county will participate in training sessions for student mental health awareness starting this week.
  • An academic consortium called PRISM wants to remove the data processing bottleneck that stands in the way of artificial intelligence and things like drug discovery.
  • Culinary Historians of San Diego will present “Modern Kosher; Global Flavors, New Traditions,” featuring author Michael Aaron Gardiner, at 10:30 am Oct. 16, at the San Diego Central Library’s 9th floor Shiley Suite, 330 Park Blvd. While most of us have a vague idea of kosher food, perhaps gleaned from a favorite Jewish deli, Michael Aaron Gardiner is here to flesh out the full picture. Rather than simply updating the story of those who “keep kosher,” he will guide us through this little understood cuisine from its early history to today’s varied and vibrant global practice. Michael Gardiner is a regular feature writer for the San Diego Union-Tribune, and the restaurant reviewer for San Diego CityBeat, and has won 2018 and 2019 San Diego Press Club awards for his contributions to both publications. Gardiner is also a freelance writer for Edible San Diego, Thrillist, and Fox News Latino, as well as the primary writer for the San Diego Food & Travel Blog, sdfoodtravel.com. In addition, he is the creator and co-host of the podcast Art of Spooning, on the Specialty Produce Network. Baja California is a big part of Gardiner’s life. He owns a family home in South Rosarito and spends every other weekend in Baja, covering the dining scene extensively for various publications. The event is free and open to the public. Date/Location Oct. 16, 2021 @10:30 am San Diego Central Library Darlene Shiley Event Suite Cost= Free For more information on this event please visit: https://chsandiego.org/events/modern-kosher-by-michael-gardiner/
  • This is the story of a young sailor, his best friend, and the girl he fell in love with just days before the Pearl Harbor attack that changed everything.
  • Researchers at UC San Diego estimate that the SARS-CoV-2 virus was likely circulating undetected for at most two months before the first human cases of COVID-19. Plus, distance learning during the pandemic has only worsened students' achievement gap from marginalized communities and those growing up in privilege. But could there be some long-term benefits to this experience? And this weekend in the arts: Cauleen Smith at the San Diego Museum of Art, outdoor Afro-Cuban jazz at Queen Bee’s, a year of virtual civic organ concerts and "There's Something About the Weather of This Place," at Best Practice gallery in Barrio Logan.
  • Artists: Edo de Waart, conductor Yao Zhao, cello San Diego Symphony Orchestra Program: Ludwig van BEETHOVEN: Coriolan Overture Dmitri KABALEVSKY: Cello Concerto No. 1 in G minor, Op. 49 Ludwig van BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92 From the Symphony: Ludwig van Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony fairly whirls with exuberance and wild abandon. Principal Guest Conductor Edo de Waart leads the Orchestra in one of Beethoven’s most optimistic and exuberant works. Opening the concert is Beethoven's brisk, energetic "Coriolan Overture" and a rare performance of Dmitri Kabalevsky's "Cello Concerto No. 1" by San Diego Symphony Principal Cello Yao Zhao. Related links: San Diego Symphony on Instagram San Diego Symphony on Facebook San Diego Symphony on Twitter
  • Neal Adams revolutionized the comic book industry with his hyper-realistic style for characters such as Batman, Superman, the Green Lantern and the X-Men.
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