This autoethnographic essay explores presence and beingness through Parikrama, a contemplative circling practice serving as both a method and metaphor. Drawing on Anzaldúa’s concept of reimagining realities, I present interconnected narratives that collapse boundaries between past, present, and future into a crystallized “now” where memories and dreams merge. Through absurdity as refusal and reimagination—from a horse’s wisdom to defiant linguistic translation—these narratives reveal how witnessing beingness transforms the present moment. The practice of Parikrama reframes resistance as creation, shaping a freedom-infused futurity rooted in presence. This contemplative inquiry reimagines autoethnographic writing as embodied dreaming, where the present becomes a sacred site for reshaping knowledge and possibility.
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Kakali Bhattacharya (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75ca1c6e9836116a25aaa — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/19408447261420857
Kakali Bhattacharya
International Review of Qualitative Research
University of Florida
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