My Body Feels with Me (2026)
My Body Feels with Me unfolds as a raw, broken crip meditation born from two months of workshops with six women in Hyderabad, India. Together, they traced how childhood violence lingers in the flesh—through the intersections of caste, class, gender, and disability. Refusing to turn trauma into spectacle or damage, the film reshapes private recollections into a shared visual record. Filmed on a mobile phone and guided by crip time, it questions how cinema can hold pain with tenderness.