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Four dancers reach their arms as they move in a sun-lit dance studio.
Two dancers reach across their bodies as they move in a sun-lit dance studio.

About MoveDaSoul

Dance is more than exercise—it is a pathway to healing, joy, and vision.

MoveDaSoul is a movement-based wellness company rooted in dance, embodiment, and collective care. We create intentional spaces where people can move with purpose, reconnect to their bodies, and remember their dreams.

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Through dance classes, retreats, workshops, and community experiences, MoveDaSoul offers accessible, soul-centered movement practices for all levels. Our work blends dance, somatics, ritual, and wellness education—treating movement as a tool for healing, rest, joy, and visioning, not just performance or exercise.

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While inclusive of all bodies, MoveDaSoul intentionally centers the lived experiences of Black and Brown women, honoring cultural memory, creativity, and rest as essential practices. At its core, MoveDaSoul is about reclamation—of breath, pleasure, time, and possibility.

About the Founder

Facilitating spaces where people can move, listen, and trust themselves again.
 

MoveDaSoul was founded by Cherie Hill, a choreographer, dance educator, and wellness facilitator with over two decades of experience in movement, performance, and community-based practice. She holds BA and MFA degrees in dance, choreography, performance, women and gender studies, and somatics.

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Cherie has presented work through choreographic residencies and performance platforms, including CounterPulse, The Milk Bar, ArtZmosphere, and the David Brower Center. Her creative practice explores ancestral movement, improvisation, and storytelling, focusing on how the body holds memory, joy, and imagination.

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As a facilitator, Cherie is known for creating warm, intentional spaces that blend guided movement, visualization, journaling, and ritual. MoveDaSoul serves as both a home and incubator for her ongoing artistic research—bridging dance, wellness, and social impact, and expanding access to embodied healing practices within Black, Brown, and historically under-resourced communities.

Multiple women lay on their yoga mats in constructive rest.
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