Meet the Weavers of Dimensions
We are a constellation of artists, facilitators, healers, cultural workers, and visionaries rooted in ancestral wisdom, collective care, and radical imagination. At Dimensions, we weave together threads of healing justice, liberatory practice, and sacred creativity to co-create spaces for transformation.
Each member brings lived experience, deep listening, and a commitment to dismantling oppressive systems while nurturing belonging, joy, and possibility. We move at the speed of trust, honor complexity, and hold space for wholeness—in ourselves, our communities, and the world we are reimagining together.
Shout out to the cultural workers, dream weavers, and freedom doulas who light our path and deepen our practice—adrienne maree brown, Prentis Hemphill, Mariame Kaba, Norma Ryuko Kawelokū Wong Roshi, Cara Page, Erica Woodland, Dr. Jennifer Mullen, Layla Saad, Waziyatawin, Pixie Lighthorse, Yung Pueblo, Ibram X. Kendi and all those tending the fire of collective liberation with wisdom, courage, and care.
He/They (Eng) | El/Elle (Esp)
Javi is a community builder, cultural steward, and mentor who moves with humility, heart, and deep care. Javi creates spaces for deep connection, healing, and equity-driven leadership. For over ten years, Javi has nurtured healing-centered spaces and cross-sector collaborations in Sonoma County. With experience in nonprofit leadership, youth advocacy, and organizational development, Javi supports individuals and teams in aligning purpose with impact through coaching, retreats, and consulting that cultivate sustainable, justice-centered practices.
Javi draws wisdom from his ancestral roots—deepened through travel, reflection, and relationship with land and community. Guided by reciprocity and belonging, Javi brings a grounded presence and liberatory vision to his work.
Javi Cabrera-Rosales
She/They (Eng) | Ella/Elle (Esp) | ʻO ia (ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi)
Malia is a multi-ethnic Indigiqueer of Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) and European ancestry. She carries the complexity of being born from lineages shaped by both oppression and domination—and walks with deep commitment to healing the wounds of both through understanding privilege, unlearning, repairing, and moving with care and accountability.
Malia is a healer, strategist, builder, and facilitator who nurtures relationships and designs purpose-led systems rooted in care, healing, and justice. Malia’s work supports purpose-driven teams and communities to create spaces where well-being, resilience, and belonging can thrive. De-centering whiteness and centering QTBIPOC folx, she explores how we decolonize, relate, repair, and grow together in community.
With a background spanning start-up and non-profit leadership, consulting, change management, and grassroots organizing, Malia brings a relational, values-rooted approach to strategy, systems, and collaborative transformation. She guides transitions with care, grounding change in right relationship—to self, community, land, and ancestors.
Malia believes that when we center community care, ancestral wisdom, and our Kuleana—our responsibility to be good ancestors—we begin to unbuild the systems that harm and reimagine what’s possible: cultures of right relationship, accountability, and collective liberation where voices that have been historically silenced are deeply honored, and the roots of lasting healing can deepen.
Malia Kā’opua-Farrell
They/Them (Eng) | Elle (Esp)
Kodak is a 2Spirit/queer Native American and Mexican photographer, born and raised on unceded Pomo land in Santa Rosa, California. For over a decade, their creative practice has grown under the name QT with a Camera—a name that reflects their commitment to uplifting and celebrating QTBIPOC (Queer, Trans, Black, Indigenous, People of Color) communities through intentional, affirming visual storytelling.
Their approach to photography is deeply rooted in care, connection, and cultural awareness. Kodak creates safe, patient, and collaborative environments where individuals are invited to show up fully and be seen as they are. They understand that being in front of a lens can feel vulnerable, and they center each person’s comfort, story, and self-expression in every session.
In addition to their work behind the camera, Kodak is a skilled facilitator and community builder. They are passionate about cultivating spaces for healing, joy, and creative exploration—whether that’s through workshops, collaborative art projects, or community events designed to foster connection and reflection.
To Kodak, photography is a form of memory work. It’s about preserving not just images, but emotions, relationships, and the essence of people and moments. Their work is a testament to resilience, identity, and the power of being witnessed.
Kodak Alcantra-Rodriguez
Any Pronouns
Sol is a Two-Spirit/Indigiqueer mixed Native leader, program director, and community builder dedicated to decolonization, cultural preservation, and collective healing. As Program Director at LGBTQ Connection, they lead transformative, equity-driven programming for LGBTQ+ and QTBIPOC youth, grounded in culturally rooted practices, strategic vision, and community care.
Drawing from personal and professional experience—including a reconnection to their Apache roots and a decade of leadership in nonprofit and grassroots spaces—Sol creates spaces where identity, ancestry, and purpose can thrive. Their work centers ancestral knowledge, land stewardship, and the restoration of cultural integrity as pathways toward self-sovereignty and collective thriving.
Through coaching, facilitation, and strategic partnerships, Sol supports teams and communities in cultivating just, inclusive, and sustainable systems. Whether directing statewide initiatives, building intergenerational coalitions, or mentoring youth, they hold space with compassion, curiosity, and deep commitment.
Solicia Aguilar
Guiding Principles
Move at the speed of trust
Make room for nonlinear healing
Remember: we are sacred, not scarce
Return to the body, land, and spirit for guidance
Practice principled struggle
Center voices and leadership of those most impacted
Create brave containers for grief and joy
Join the Collective
We are a growing collective of QTBIPOC artists, healers, organizers, and visionaries devoted to joy, justice, and liberation. If you’re longing for community, creative expression, and spaces that center healing and transformation—you're invited to join us. Come as you are. Let’s dream, dance, and decolonize together.