Loading Events

So many of us struggle directly and indirectly with addictions both benign and toxic. Can a yoga practice really help? Molly Lannon Kenny has been developing and teaching yoga classes for addiction for over a decade and is excited to share her resounding “yes!” Drawing from current research in movement and mindfulness, as well as from the scriptures describing yoga as a philosophical and spiritual practice, Molly will provide students with background, food for thought, and practical experience for developing practices to address addiction that can be used by individuals on their own, or yoga teachers wishing to create group classes. This workshop is appropriate for students, yoga teachers, clinicians and anyone suffering directly or indirectly from addiction of any kind. This workshop is eligible for Yoga Alliance Continuing Education credits.

Schedule:

  • Sunday, Oct. 8th, 2017
  • 2:00 pm – 4:30 pm

Cost:

  • $45
  • Early Bird Price available.

About the Teacher: Molly Lannon Kenny
Molly-Lannon-Kenny-Samarya-Center

Molly Lannon Kenny has been on the path to fulfilling her dharma since her earliest memories.  As a child, her parents would frequently take her and her brothers and sisters to the bookstore and let them wander for hours, lost in the magic of words and pictures.  Molly often found herself sitting cross legged, flipping through BKS Iyengar’s Light on Yoga, intrigued and entranced by the photos and the mystery behind them.  As a child, she was both physical and flexible, and often heard “you should do yoga!” from the adults around her, although it had very little meaning to her, but in fact, was most likely what sent her to the Yoga section of the bookstore in the seventies, long before Yoga was so widely accepted and practiced in the United States.

Life brought her many opportunities to share her fire and to realize her dream, but it was only when she discovered Yoga as a practice, rather than an odd set of circus tricks, did her specific path become clear to her.  Molly has been teaching Yoga to all levels of practitioners for over ten years, and has worked tirelessly to create outreach programs to people who would otherwise not have the opportunity to experience joy and contentment through the timeless teachings of Yoga.

In 2001, she founded The Samarya Center for Humankind (ness), a 501 c 3 non-profit organization dedicated to individual transformation and radical social change. She created, published and trademarked a unique therapy method, Integrated Movement Therapy, built on these same principles of acceptance and inclusion.  She has written and taught extensively on the topics of Yoga as Therapy and Yoga as a means to individual and social change, and is widely known as a vibrant, funny, accessible teacher, with a heart of gold and a spirit of fire.

Go to Top