In Remembrance of Our Dead

October 9, 2024

About This Event

To celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month in the tradition of Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead), we will respectfully build an ofrenda (offerings placed on an altar) and dedicate our sadhana to our beloved who are deceased.

Designed and led by Daniel Hickman (he/him), we'll intentionally use this time as an homage to our ancestors, dearly departed friends, and perished animal companions.

We welcome everyone to create their own ofrenda, or Día de los Muertos altar, to pay tribute to and celebrate the life of their loved ones who have departed. The altar serves as a celebration of life, honoring the joy, spirit, and cherished memories of those who have passed with love and remembrance.

Learn more here: Dia de los Muertos Symbols and Traditions

Class will begin and end with chanting. Asanas will include mobility, flexibility, core stabilization and static strength to move us through the six directions of the spine. We will then make use of pranayama to enter stillness in dhyana in remembrance of our dead.

Chants: rhythmic repetitions of a song, prayer, word, or sound. In yoga, sound is seen as healing and sacred.

  • Bija Mantras (short one syllable word chanted aloud or silently to cultivate concentration, mindfulness, and a state of meditation.)
  • Om Mani Padme Hum (mantra that encapsulates the core teachings of compassion and wisdom and is said to represent the path to enlightenment.)

Pranayamas: Ancient breathing techniques that involve controlling one’s breath using different styles and techniques

  • dirgha (known as “three-part” breath; this technique consists of slow and deep breathing, filling up the chest, abdomen, and clavicular regions. Its benefits include prolonged breathing, stress reduction, increased inner focus, and connection of the mind, body, and breath.)
  • surya bheda (known as right nostril breathing; a technique that consists of inhaling through the right nostril and exhaling through the left.)
  • chandra bheda (known as single nostril breath, or left nostril breathing; a technique which involves blocking the opposite nostril, typically done in a seated position at the end of a yoga practice to calm and cool the mind and body down.)

The class will end with a brief question and answer session led by Nana Amoako-Anin (she/her), Ghanian-American seasoned yoga teacher, E-RYT 500, YACEP, and owner of Bliss Yoga Accra.

Items to bring: yoga mat, blanket, blocks, meditation cushion and… items to decorate our ofrenda in a way that connects you to your dead loved ones. Be it flowers, food, pictures, clothes, textiles, even books, jewelry, flowers and candles.

Supporting Documents

Chat Notes (TXT)


About the Presenter

Daniel Hickman, is a native Washingtonian who was born to an immigrant mother and warrior father who both were US diplomats. He enjoys the DMV area where he is active in international culture with numerous communities. Athleticism, spirituality/psychology and nature have shaped how he lives in the world and shares his yoga.

He first came to yoga in martial arts, then in theatrical arts and again in traditional rock climbing. His various teachers would use asana and pranayama to ‘fine tune the human instrument.’ Daniel lives his yoga in all things be it cooking, gardening, fitness, taking the bus, writing or breaking bread.

He was very fortunate to receive an authentic yoga education from former brahmacharya (ascetics) Amba and Don (Bhramanand) Stapleton. After years of living in an ashram (monastic community), they left to develop their own contemporary mind-body school. This was the Nosara Yoga Institute in Guanacaste, Costa Rica where Daniel worked seasonally.

Daniel taught sitting meditation and adaptive yoga for over 15 years in the Military Advanced Training Center at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. There, military patients from all branches of the US armed forces went to his yoga classes. Many were combat veteran amputees, some with TBI, PTSD and/or comorbidities. He worked as a yoga therapist, for US military patients with chronic low back pain, with the Defense and Veterans Center of Integrative Pain Management. As well, he helped implement a restorative yoga intervention for survivors of breast cancer at the Howard University Hospital/Cancer Center.

Daniel has been involved with several dhamma communities, including the Washington Buddhist Vihara. He has studied with ARISE Sangha (East Bay & Baltimore), Insight Meditation Community of Washington, and Ruth King. To continue to walk his pathway, he finds there is no substitute for the Triple Gem (buddha, dhamma and sangha).


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