Author Sonya Pritzker draws upon the core concepts of scalar intimacy--a participatory, discursive process in which people position themselves in relation to others as well as dominant ideologies, concepts, and ideals--and scalar inquiry--the process through which speakers interrogate these forms, their relationship with them, and their participation in reproducing them. In demonstrating the collaborative interrogation of culture, history, and memory, she examines how these exercises in physical, mental, and spiritual self-care allow participants to grapple with past social harms and forms of injustice, how historical systems of power--including both patriarchal and governance structures--continue in the present, and how they might be transformed in the future. By examining the interactions and relational experiences from New Life, Learning to Love offers a range of novel theoretical interventions into political subjectivity, temporality, and intergenerational trauma/healing.