The other day, just before a gong-bath session co-hosted by Bergdorf Goodman in a sunlit loft in Chelsea, Sat Hari Khalsa, a Los Angeles-based holistic healer, greeted a small group of fashion-conscious New Yorkers seated on yoga mats. The room smelled pleasantly spa-like (cotton-poplin-scented candles); guests were offered macarons and cold-pressed vegetable juice. Sat Hari, who doesn’t use her surname, is fifty-four, with long blond hair and a no-nonsense demeanor.
She wore jeans, jewelry that she designed, and a blue shirt made by God’s True Cashmere, a line of unisex “quiet luxury” button-down cashmere shirts that she founded with her good friend Brad Pitt. “I grew up in India, and at a very young age I was attracted to softness,” Sat Hari told the group. “I was also attracted to gemstones and the healing properties of stones.
” She also had meaningful, sometimes prophetic dreams—What will be on the math test?—and still does, such as on a Tuesday night in 2018, when she dreamed about Brad Pitt standing before her in an outfit made entirely of green cashmere. “I looked at him and said, ‘What are you doing? Are you going golfing? You look like a leprechaun,’ ” she recalled. “And he said, ‘No, I just need more softness in my life.
’ ” Two days later, while awake, she told Pitt about the dream. “And he said, ‘That’s strange, because on Tuesday I told my stylist, “I need more green cashmere in my life. I need more softness.
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