Embodying the Sefirot

During the seven weeks between the 2nd day of Passover (leaving Egypt) and holiday of Shavuot (receiving Torah), we engage in a practice of Counting of the Omer, where we have an opportunity to create balance in our lives by studying and embodying the Sefirot (סְפִירוֹת), divine attributes described in the Kabbalistic Tree of Life. Each week, we study and purify one of the seven lower Sefirot, in the order that they appear on the map, beginning with Hesed on the 2nd day of Passover.

See below two images of the Sefirot. The Ten Sefirot map onto the body!

From Minding the Temple of the Soul by Tamar Frankiel and Judy Greenfeld. Minding the Temple of the Soul , p.102.

When we take the Sefirot into embodied practice, we can view the layout of the map as a guideline for balance. We balance the right and left sides, with the center pillar of Keter, Tiferet, Yesod and Malchut serving as the central line of balance in the body. The body map is a mirror as we look at it. When we look at the right side of the paper, this reflects back to us the right side of our bodies. The Sefirot on the right, Hesed and Netzach - are forward, expanding outward energies. The Sefirot on the left, Gevurah and Hod - are retreating, contracting energies. Tiferet is the balance point of Hesed and Gevurah. Yesod is the balance point of Netzach and Hod. 


Another way to view the map is a movement from top to bottom as we move from the world of complete Divinity (Keter) to the world of Divinity within Physicality (Malchut). The Upper triad of Keter, Chochmah and Binah, the first three Sefirot, are in the realm of unity and Ein Sof, and we do not include them in the counting practice. We begin with the triad of Hesed, Gevurah and Tiferet, where we tend to intrapersonal and interpersonal relations in the realm of the heart and the emotional body. With the triad of Netzach, Hod and Yesod we move into the world of action and physicality, landing us finally in Malchut where ultimately the ‘rubber hits the road’.

When we bring the study of the Sefirot into embodied practice, we can take two approaches. First, the qualities are located at certain parts of the body, so we can focus upon those areas of the body in our movement and stillness explorations. Second, we can take the quality of the Sefirot into the entire body. For example, we can bring an exploration of Hesed, associated with water, as a quality of ‘flow’ throughout the entire body as we move.

Embodiment practices that integrate mind, heart and spirit will ultimately bring us to a deeper level of wholeness. When we bring awareness to our bodies, we may experience difficult emotions -- this journey may be painful. But if we pay close attention and allow ourselves to stay with and feel the emotions that arise as we practice, we can access the deepest part of ourselves, our essence (etzem/the quality of matzah) that is timeless and unchangeable. As we practice embodying new qualities of the Sefirot each week, we strengthen our capacity for experiencing and expressing these qualities as we move our bodies in the world.

Please read below for inspiration for Embodying the Sefirot. Enjoy complimentary access to a carefully curated music playlist to accompany each Sefira, and find links to one-hour practices available for purchase.

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Hesed | Lovingkindness/Flow | חסד

Hesed (חסד), translated as ‘Lovingkindness’, is located at the right arm/shoulder. Hesed is the expansive, generous, benevolent quality of the universe. The universe is said to be created with Hesed - the world rests upon this foundation.

Olam Hesed Yibaneh
עוֹלָם חֶסֶד יִבָּנֶה
Psalms 89:2 

We may experience Hesed in the body by focusing upon the right arm, both shoulders and arms as we explore the balance of Hesed and Gevurah. Or we can explore Hesed as fluidity, flow and expansion, with opening gestures of the arms moving into the quality of flow throughout the entire body. Hesed is the generous, sustaining benevolence that is ever-present in the universe & always available to us. 

 

Gevurah | Boundaries/Strength | גבורה

Gevurah (גבורה), translated as ‘Boundary’, is located at the left arm/shoulder. Gevurah is the quality of restraint in the body, of limiting our movement or sharpening our movements. Gevurah is NO.

We may experience Gevurah as that which contains us (the skin, the rib basket that contains the heart and lungs), that which gives us structure (the skeletal body) or that which gives us strength (our muscles or Hiyyut/our life force, ).

 

Tiferet | Harmony/Beauty | תפארת

Tiferet (תפארת), translated as ‘Beauty’, is located at the heart center. When we engage in movement practices to open the upper body (shoulders, chest, rib basket), we may open ourselves to deeply held feelings of grief, sadness and anger. Tiferet is associated with compassion (Rachamim).

We may also experience Tiferet in the embodied practice by focusing upon balancing the right and left, front and back of the body, centering of the torso over the pelvic bowl, alignment of the thoracic, respiratory and pelvic diaphragms.

We may also engage an exploration of Tiferet by focusing a practice entirely upon center points in the torso - the heart area, the solar plexus, or the belly.

 

Netzach | Perseverance/Eternity | נצח

Netzach (נצח) translated as ‘Endurance/Patience’ is located at the right hip/leg. Netzach is also associated with eternity.

We may experience Netzach in the embodied practice as the part that stays steady when other body parts are moving, as the act of consciously creating space between certain joints or bones, or as the aspect of waiting when we are working with more subtle and sustained actions - such as breathing or stretching. 

See more writings about Netzach in the body here.

 

Hod | Surrender/Gratitude | הוד

Hod (הוד) translated as ‘Glory’, is located on the left hip/ leg. Hod shares the same Hebrew root as the word Todah or Thank you. The qualities of Hod as surrender, release, and gratitude can be experienced on all levels of being in any given movement and stillness practice, and also in our day-to-day lives.

We can experience Hod in the embodied practice as the aspect of effortlessness within effort or when we step back, release our striving and rest. Hod is Humility. There is an acknowlegment, with gratitude in our hearts, that we are not in control. Hod invites us to surrender.

Hod reminds us to simply BE with what is, to drop into the present moment. With Hod, we bring our conscious awareness to the physical sensations of the present moment - hearing the birds sing, smelling the blooming jasmine, or seeing the green grasses and trees.  With Hod, we can hold the pain, grief and difficulty, and know that we are held, within a greater field of Presence. 

See more writings about Hod in the body as it relates to the Middah/character trait of Anava/humility here.

 

Yesod | Foundation/Creative Life Force | יסוד

Yesod (יסוד) translated as ‘Foundation', is located at the pelvis. It is the Sefira that connects all of the upper Sefirot to the final Sefira of Malchut.

Yesod is located at the pelvis, which serves the anatomical function of transferring weight from the torso to the legs. Just as Yesod connects the upper and lower body, we can consider Yesod as connector of spirt and form, the place where the creation of the human being is sparked and nurtured.

We can also experience Yesod as joints, tendons and ligaments or as body elements that connect our whole being - such as our skin or fascia, a sheet of connective tissue that lies just below the skin.

Yesod is foundation.  Every move, every posture has a foundation, a physical resting place that connects us to the earth. Our feet when we stand, our legs and sitting bones when we sit, our whole back body when we lie down to rest. 

 

Malchut | Physical Divinity/Grounding Presence | מלכות

Malchut (מלכות) translated as 'Kingdom', Queenship', 'Sovereignty', or 'Majesty' is located at the feet. Onn some Sefirotic maps Malchut is both the end and the beginning, located on the feet and also the mouth.  Our speech and our actions are the ultimate manifestation and expression of divinity on the physical plane. Malchut is when we walk our talk.

This final Sefira is associated with Shechina (שכינה), the aspect of divinity which resides or dwells within us. Our bodies are temples for the divine. In a beautiful commentary on the Torah, the Mishkan we create in the desert is likened to our bodies: the beams are our ribs, and the holy of holies is our hearts. Read more at the EJL website about embodying divinity here.

We can experience Malchut in the embodied practice as the aspect of Grounded Presence or Embodied Divinity. And we can extend this awareness of Malchut - divinity in form - to the beauty of the natural world in plants and trees that emanate their Hiyyut (life force) from within.