Tuesday, November 23, 2010

November 23rd

I was working around the house, enjoying the last few hours of "alone time" before the troops were home for the Thanksgiving break.  Throughout the day, I stop and take a couple deep breaths.  Can you believe that some people go a whole day without taking a good, solid deep breath?
You're taking a big breath right now, aren't you.
Anyway, I was playing around with my camera, as I was finishing my hot tea, and took this picture.
Candid.  I didn't even clean the crap off my counter. 
That's big for me.





And this one, giving myself a nice abdominal stretch. 
The stretch through the quad is amazing too.
(I wish I moved that milk carton.)

This is my Thanksgiving smile.
I have SO much to be thankful for...
 

 And for my last photo...
This is the only turkey that I will prepare for Thanksgiving this year. 
He is my Turkey of Gratitude.
Isn't he as cute as can be?
(Don't worry, my family will eat turkey, at my mother-in-law's house.)
My kids will LOVE this because after talking about all the blessings we have in our lives,
they will each get to write what they are thankful for on a turkey feather.
I did the first feather, just... for this here bloggy blog.
I heart "The Turkey of Gratitude."
Happy Thanksgiving to you. 
May you remember and enjoy all of the blessings that enrich your life.
When you think about it, there are many more than you realize.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

November 3rd.

Today was a day, a day in the life, a typical ordinary day of motherhood. But what am I thankful for today?  My cat is licking my arm. My three beautiful children are all nestled in their beds, safe and warm.  My dinner meal was filled with steamed rice and asian vegetables.  I heated some hot tea in the evening to top it off.  I worked out today, which I hadn't done in a loooong time, felt good.  I also spent a few hours in the local fourth grade where my children attend, helping with odds and ends. Finally changed my cell phone number to that of my locality.  What am I thankful for??? Nothing epic today.  I'm just thankful for that, a simple, uneventful, ordinary, pleasant, average day.

Thanksgiving and Gratitude Day by Day

Here in the yoga world, November is the month of gratitude.
Okay, maybe I just made that up. 
 It is in my world anyway.
Here is my day-to-day gratitude journal.


Monday November 1st. 
I am thankful for my laptop computer.  It caught a nasty, nasty virus and needed in-patient, intensive care.  Poor Pretty Green Machine.  However, it was emptied, cleaned out, spit-n-shined, rebooted, and better protected than ever! She's even more spiffy, quick and witty now!  But, while she was gone, I missed having all access to the world right there at my kitchen desk.  Sure, I used the home office computer, but it is/was big and slow and seemed like a dinosaur compared to my little zippy gal.  So she is back, and I am happily tickling her keys and I say "cheers" for my Pretty, Green Machine laptop!

Tuesday November 2nd
I offered to teach yoga to my youngest daughter's Daisy girl scout troop.  Wow, twenty-seven, five-year-olds all in their adorable pink t-shirts sitting upon their sit-upons.  They were all so cute and all so well-behaved!  I taught two sessions and we did things like volcano breathing, down dog and wagged our tails, hopped like a frog and finished with half lotus, some breathing and a quick lesson on the word and meaning of namaste.  How could I NOT be thankful for the fact that I get the opportunity to teach such life long valuable breathing techniques and respect to twenty-seven beaming, bright-eyed little Daisy Scouts.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Tree Pose

Concentration.  Balance. Strength. Centering. Calming.  Peace.
 The wonderful beautiful tree pose.  It can bring about all of these qualities and more.
I could not have found a more amazing tree with which to practice this pose. 
Isn't it gorgeous?

Delve in and feel your roots in mountain pose. 
(It's even better if you are barefooted and outside in the grass.) 
Bring awareness to your feet and ground them to the earth feeling roots grow from your physical body joining the roots throughout the soil. 
Now bring awareness to your legs, your powerful strength, first show gratitude for all that you can do with use of your leg muscles, joints and bones.
Then find strength, move the strength up through your core, root lock, navel lock to harness the energy. Center the mind with the breath.
On the inhale, lengthen the spine creating more space and alignment. 
On the exhale root further into the earth. 
Lift one leg to the inner thigh of the other leg slowly, calmly, concentrating on the breath, not the imbalance.  Imbalance means deeper strengthening. 
This is good.
Find your stillness.
Find your steadiness in your body and in your mind.
Find your drista (gaze) and let yourself go into a meditation of the sensations in your body. 
Ahhh.
Be in the moment. 
Be in the stillness. 
Find your clarity, your power, your balance. 
When you find balance within the physical body then it can be easily transferred to balancing in your life, in your thoughts and in your actions. 
Practice this. 
Every day. 
Inhale.
Stretch your arms up as branches reaching for the energy of the sun, 
Asking for rays of light to penetrate your fingertips and travel through your body warming you to your toes. 
Ask that you be filled with this light as you inhale it with every breath. 
Take it with you, throughout the day. 
Find peace in it. 
Keep balance in it. 
Love it. 
Love yourself. 
Love others and share the light that so graciously has been given to you.
Today.
Namaste

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Words of Wisdom

These are some of my favorite words to read right now.  I find them so empowering.   ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~
~~~
~

Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. 

Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. 

It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. 

We ask ourselves, who am I to be brillant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? 

Actually, who are you not to be? 

You are a child of God. 

Your playing small does not serve the world. 

There is nothing enlightening about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. 

We are all meant to shine, as children do. 

We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. 

It's not just in some of us, it's in everyone

And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. 

As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.


                                                                                 ~Marianne Williamson


Friday, June 18, 2010

Gratitude




Yoga is about many things but gratitude seems to be on the forefront for me right now.  It is about taking the time to acknowledge and appreciate the wonderful abundance and blessings that fill our lives.  I've taken a moment to share some of which make me happy, for which makes me smile, for which I am thankful. 

But first of all, get a load of this sunset!  Only in Kansas baby!  I'm still obsessed with midwest sunsets.
They never get old, especially when they look like this.

Now, on to things that I love:



I think that everyone should be able to run through the house in his/her underwear at any time.  We practice this ritual whenever the urge strikes us.
Yeah, he's got a cape on...
he's Captain Underpants.











The simplicity and beauty of a spring flower, especially in buttercup yellow always reminds me that there is more beauty and warm sun upon us.













I love to watch someone...or...a...dog...Taking the time to spend with a sick friend and making that friend smile.











The creativeness that goes on in this house,  Eva paints so wonderfully even if it is on her little sister!








  Even while my husband is trying to enjoy a little evening espresso, he just can't help but be enveloped by all the silliness that is my children!  That, and the fact that they're all hopped up on chocolate!






There are several wonderful things going on here.  First, a happy child makes me happy.
This smile melts my heart.
And chocolate dipped strawberries, all hail to the heavens!







love love love that I can prepare foods like this...
that come from my windowsill garden.









I am thankful that I chose to spend my life with this man.  He is my rock, my friend, my confidante, my travel partner, my dinner date, my love.





 Through pranayama and meditation, I bow my head with hands to heart center and thank God, the greatest of all good for the wealth of wonder, sweet souls, nourishments, pets, loves, moments of silliness and so much more. 
For my life, for my yoga, for this earth and all it gives...
I am thankful.
Namaste

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Connectedness

I walked into a store to return something.  I shop at this store frequently.  There is always the same familiar face to greet me.  Nice lady.  She had been gone for awhile.  Today she was back.  I had to stop and check in with her because I was returning an item.  She was talking to another employee.
This is what I heard.

 Employee:  ...and you can't even sue them because of...( mumble, mumble) ?

Greeter:  (shaking her head no)

Employee:  Well, I hope you feel better.

Still shaking her head she looks up at me and smiles.

Me: Hello. (I hand her my item so that she can make her little sticker to put on it.)

Greeter:  Those doctors don't know what they are doing.  I went in for a ruptured disk in my spine and the worked on the wrong one.  I went home and had to go back that same day for another surgery.  I was on the ventilator for two days.

Me: (shaking my head more out of pity than anything)  That's not good.

Greeter: No.

Me: Feel better.

And I went about my way.

SIGH......

Now I try to be a positive person.  I really do.  And most of the time, I believe I do a good job of it.

But, what is wrong with this little interlude that I encountered?  Better yet, what is NOT wrong with this interlude.  It's all wrong.  Wrong, wrong, wrong!  I'm going to get high up on my soapbox right now because I was disturbed by this woman. 
.
I wonder how many people she has/will tell about her misfortune and how THEY (the doctors) don't know what THEY are doing?  Where is her responsibility for herself?  How did her spine get injured in the first place?  I doubt it was because she was sprinting in to save a baby from a burning house.  I don't think she fell out of a tree saving a cat.  I do believe that it has was due to YEARS of bodily neglect, YEARS of eating crap and YEARS of being sedentary, stressed and anxious to the very point that her poor body is so drained and worn out that she struggles to take every breath. (hence the oxygen tank by her side.)
How dare she say the doctors don't know what they are doing.  She hasn't a clue how to properly take care of the basic necessities of life that got her in this mess in the first place.  How dare she. 

Just a quick word on doctors.  Doctors go above and beyond, spending many years and thousands of dollars to become physicians.  It takes guts and courage, strength and will power to believe in yourself to that degree.  When they finish the rigerous training, they spend their entire careers in the grace of helping others.  Can you tell me what that greeter at Walmart has aspired to?  Not that I'm judging.  I believe it takes all kinds to make this world go around.  But I think it rude, distasteful and wrong to badmouth a doctor who was helping her, to some random stranger coming into the store, no less.

What is wrong with these people? 
What is wrong with me? 
Why the attitude? 
Why do I feel so strongly against her behavior/ ignorance?
 It really struck a cord with me. 
And as irritated as i am about the exchange this morning, I'm as ashamed by my anger.
 I'm ashamed that I allowed her vibration of negativity and ignorance permeate at a higher level than that of my peaceful vibration.  It was stronger.  It won.  My peaceful vibration should have been the higher charged, but it wasn't, and it affected my day.
What can I say?
I'm only human.
The kicker here?  The realization?
So is she.
We're both human.
I'm as human as that store greeter who is struggling each day to take a breath.
I'm as human as that store greeter who is suffering back pain. 
We are sharing this earth, this human experience, the pain, the irritation, frustration, as well as happiness, peace and fulfillment. 
We both feel all that and more, to greater and lesser extent, but none the less, we are one.
Maybe next time, I can take a minute to connect and allow peace to prevail and outweigh the frustration, pain, hurt she was feeling.  Maybe those negative words she spoke would have ended with me. 
And this was my yoga lesson for the day.
Thank you Walmart Greeter lady.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Yoga Flow

I decided to try a new class, emphasizing the flow of yoga linked with the breath.  Too often, I feel like my students are busy trying to follow along as I talk talk talk through the poses, directing the toes, breathing through the belly, lifting the spine, stretching this, move that, exhale here, inhale there, spread the fingers, strengthen the back...yada yada yada.  Not that those verbal cues aren't good, they are...but it seemed I was talking the WHOLE time for pete's sake.  And who's Pete anyway?

SO, I came up with a few positions that flowed well and that were easy to remember.  We did them five times through.  And then another flow of four or so positions, we did five times through,  and yet a third flow.  We then linked the three flows together.  I tried not to talk too much through it.  I wanted each individual to feel the yoga as if it were their own.  I threw in a couple, "breathe ins," and "exhales."  I also encouraged each one to close their eyes to keep the flowing energy within themselves.
It really turned out to be a lovely experience and a lovely class. 

Also, it was outside, on my back patio, which speaking of lovely, it is now with all the trees that have filled in and the flowers.  It really makes the perfect backdrop for finding the flow of peace and yoga.

May you find your flow of peace and yoga.

Lil Yoga Mama

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Happy Earth Day


Get out your patchouli and incense burners..
Put on your hemp clothing, love beads and birkenstocks.
It's time to gather round, hold hands and sing songs about birds and love and stuff.
 Let's dance, smile, and thank Mother Nature for her bounty.

I kid.
Not totally, because I think all of those things would be really fun.  Wouldn't they?  Just for an afternoon, go to the park? play some music? You don't have to go all out with the patchouli and hemp clothes...but....
sigh.
There I go again, as usual.
Anyway, in all seriousness...
Earth Day.
It's been a little more prevelent in my life with each year.  I have been striving to live a cleaner, healthier, more fulfilling life resulting in me seeing things differently.   I see things at a cellular level and how, at a cellular level, my body is affected by certain things of my choosing.   I am also seeing global impact which influences my behavior also.  In between, there is a huge expansion that remains a little muddy to me.  But each day I am learning more, growing more, and experiencing more. 

My latest kick is http://www.rawfoodrehab.com/  I cannot get enough of this website.  It is a wealth of information on health and wellness.  The webpage is super enticing.  There is a slideshow right up front, with the most delectable eye candy, the most tantalizing photos EVER!  A feast for the eyes, I just want to lick my computer screen.  Holy Mother Nature.  The food is fresh, raw, bright and full of happy little enzymes waiting to dance around your body.  It is so delicious and so balancing to the body.

Balance is key for me.  As a yoga teacher I strive not only for balance physically, but in all aspects of life.   I am finding that along with my yoga, I am moving to a higher level, this new balance with the food I am choosing to eat.  This way of eating has brought me to a new understanding about not only my body and how to fuel it, but the world around me.  It is life changing.

Stop and think about what you eat.  Is it serving you?  Is it nourishing your body?  giving you energy?  restoring balance?  protecting you from injury?  protecting you from illness? making you happy?

I invite you to take a look at the Raw Food Rehab.  If you do, look me up.  I have a suite there. I'm loving all the new knowledge.   I hope you will too.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Top Ten Reasons NOT to do Yoga

I found this little article so clever, I just had to post it.  Props to Sadie Nardini who wrote the article.

TOP 10 REASONS NOT TO DO YOGA
1) You enjoy looking 9 years older than you are. After all, Joan Crawford is super hot--so bring on the crow's feet!

Researchers have just found that people who do just three 60-minute sessions of semi-vigorous yoga per week, were 9 years younger on average than non-exercisers.

These results showed much more than just a glowing face; Yoga changes you down to your DNA. The study found that these exercisers had much longer telomeres, or the aspect of DNA that acts as a marker for aging than people who did not move as much.


These results held for any type of exercise, but yoga goes a step farther than most, by detoxifying the body more efficiently, and stimulating and balancing the endocrine system, which among other things regulates aging, healing, metabolism and immunity. So, you'll look younger on the outside, as well as inside!



2) You embrace those heavy metal toxins building up in your body as a badass homage to your Kiss concert days. Rock on!
When we walk, jog, Jazzercize, kickbox and whatnot, we gain the endorphin release and calorie burn. What we don't lose, however, are many of our toxins, which build up in our fatty tissues, blood and organs. From mercury to dioxins, free radicals and pesticides, though they might sound like up-and-coming indie bands, they just aren't cool.


The way to really cleanse your body, besides being careful of what you eat, drink and slather on your body, is to support your lymphatic system to do its work. In order to do this, it's helpful to breathe deeply, and be upside down. Many of the yoga poses are specifically designed to aid in detoxification of your body, even as they sculpt and stretch it.


What's more, yoga is one of the only exercise forms that usually includes an inversion (or more) in every class. This clears your legs and hips, areas that aren't usually elevated over the heart.
More Active
More Restorative


3) Your marathon time is just fine the way it is. No need for more speed.



When you stretch your body properly, and strengthen opposing muscle groups in balance, you increase your range of motion, and can move more quickly through space. For example, the space betwen the start and finish lines.


The yoga breath has been shown to increase endurance in marathoners by twice the distance in just one session!

For a cool case study I did with my brother, as I've done with hundreds of New York City Marathoners and casual runners alike, check out this article from Runner's World


In addition, when you add a holistic form of exercise like yoga, you get less stress and strain building up from the one-way, repetitive movements like running, cycling and walking. Adding in a counter-practice will keep you doing that other exercise or sport you love for longer.


4) You firmly believe that the junk in your trunk needs more company.


Alan Kristal, associate head of the Cancer Prevention Program in the Public Health Sciences Division at the Hutchinson Center says, "In our earlier study, we found that middle-aged people who practice yoga gained less weight over a 10-year period than those who did not. This was independent of physical activity and dietary patterns. We hypothesized that mindfulness - a skill learned either directly or indirectly through yoga - could affect eating behavior."
Her research found no correlation between mindful eating and other forms of exercise like cycling or running.


Not like I need a study to tell me this. I lost 40 pounds when I switched from the gym to yoga, and I've kept it off for over a decade. I see hundreds of clients transform from soft to svelte every year, and stay that way.


Unlike the tendency of other exercise to make you hungry so you tend to stabilize and plateau in your weight loss efforts, the brilliance of yoga is that it balances your hormones so you're less likely to suffer from uncontrollable cravings, and it teaches you mindful awareness, so you're more likely to choose that salad over the salami.



5) You hate yoga.
And I don't blame you.
There are so many teachers and styles out there, the odds of finding one that you like is greater than your next blind date turning out to be Brad Pitt.
The yogier-than-thou attitude of some studios, coupled with pretzel poses and tendency to quench the thirst you have from chanting for 20 minutes with all the twig tea you can drink, can create an off-putting, too-strange atmosphere for regular people just looking for a lot of workout and maybe a little Zen.
However, whether you love the classical vibe, or you want a straight sweat session, are seeking a gentle class or a boot camp, no Sanskrit involved...there is a style, and an instructor for you.
I promise, if you ask like-minded friends, read teachers' bios, try out a few classes, and remember that not all of us recoil from steak or glass of Pinot in horror, you will find that yoga is something you can deal with, and maybe even love.



6) You think of the hospital as a cleaner, more specialized Club Med, and don't mind staying there more often. The food isn't as good, but the staff sure is attentive!


In a study of health insurance statistics, yogis and meditators showed hospitalization rates that were 87% less than non-yogis for heart disease, 55% less for benign and malignant tumors, 30% less for infectious diseases, and 50% less for out-patient doctor visits.


Enough said.


7) There is no way you'd rather age than to experience a slow mental decline.


The practice of yoga often includes a meditation component, and if your teacher is aware, he or she will teach you how to transform your physical poses into a moving meditation.


As you become adept at turning your mind inward, being present and focused, you'll keep your mind toning up on the mat, along with your newly buff body--so both will function properly your whole life long.

The cerebral cortex of the brain is your friend as you age, since it powers thought, sensory perception, language, and emotion. It can begin to deteriorate as you get older, thought to be one cause of slowing down mentally as we age.


Researchers have found that cortical regions were thicker in meditators than in controls. In older participants (aged 40 to 50 years), only the meditators showed cortical thickness that corresponded to that of younger participants (aged 20 to 30 years) in a region that carries out higher mental, emotional, and behavioral functions.


I don't know about you, but if anything in my brain (besides my choice of men, or my nightly cravings for a Taco Bell fourth meal) can remain 20 instead of 50...I'll take it.




8) Your family loves you wound tighter than a ball of rubber bands. It's endearing when you slam the phone down, mutter and swear at your invisible boss.


Let's look to Harvard for help with your short fuse.

Preliminary research out of the Boston University School of Medicine and Harvard's McLean Hospital found that healthy subjects who practiced yoga for just one hour had a 27 percent increase in levels of GABA, a neurotransmitter that boosts mood and lessens anxiety compared with a control group that simply sat and read for an hour.

But you don't have to do an hour of yoga to gain instant benefits. Just a few minutes can turn your whole day around. Sometimes, instead of slamming that phone or reaching for a cigarette or Cosmo after a hard day, try busting out a few easy yoga moves, and unwind that stress ball a healthier way.





9) Chronic lower back pain isn't really that bad, when compared to other things...like Swine Flu.


That chair you're sitting on right now? Muchas crappy for your back.


Most likely, unless you're a yogi or a dancer, had a posture-obsessed mom, or, like me, have discovered the Balance Ball Chair, you are spending a lot of time flattening out your lumbar spine, (low back curve). And this will destroy your spine as surely as if you lifted refrigerators for a living.
There's a great article over at Men's Health that illuminates the seriousness of this habit most everyone has, and how we're all careening towards lower back tragedies sooner or later. Lest this all sound depressing, take heart:

Exercise, and yoga in particular, can not only erase back pain and lighten the stress on your spine, it can re-structure your body so your lower back curve is supported, healthy, and strong. What's more, since yoga lengthens your muscles as well as work them, you won't end up with a super strong, but too-tight back, another common cause of lumbar problems.


Sitting up a little straighter now?





10) Sleeping is for wussies.

I know you love nothing more than watching QVC at 4 am, actually considering the Obama commemorative dinner plate set because once again, you're wide awake.

But if you'd ever like to get in your bed at night and still be there, well-rested in the morning, naturally, and easily, then yoga is one of your best bets.


Yoga breathing, regular or fancy calms your brain waves down in about 30 seconds.


Many yoga poses are designed to reset and balance your adrenal system so you're instantly less anxious, focus your mind so your thoughts don't get the best of you and create a more balanced central nervous system, you stop fighting or flighting, and can drop off into slumber.

Monday, April 12, 2010

The Global Impact of Yoga

I read an article today called The Global Impact of Yoga by Max Strom.  If you don't know much about Max Strom, he is a very inspiring man in the yoga world.  He is a teacher, speaker, has a few DVD's out and specializes in self transformation.  Google him if you want to know more.  I recommend it.

This article spoke to me.  This is why I teach yoga.

It talks about how Americans are materially the richest, and 30 some million use antidepressants and anti anxiety medications.  The number of Americans using sleep aids reaches over 50 million.

...too many of us are also chronically living what Henry David Thoreau coined "a life of quiet desperation."  I love this quote.  While it is quite sad, it is true.

Americans are overstressed, extremely fatigued and in general, not happy.  All the iphones, flat screens,  expensive cars etc. DO NOT sustain a happiness and health.  People are finally asking, what is the meaning of life?

I just love this.


Because of this reawakening, yoga is sweeping across the globe at a dazzling speed, as millions are turning to yoga not only to exercise, but also as an alternative to the experience of a spiritual gathering they cannot find in a church, synagogue, mosque or Web site. Perhaps the reason for this lies in the chief difference between religion and Western-style yoga, and that is that Yoga is usually offered in a nondogmatic format, which makes it inclusive to many more people. Because of its message of healing, unity and a simpler life, yoga may be one of the great rays of hope for our future. 
.
Did you hear that?  Yoga may be one of the great rays of hope for our future.  I'm SO on board with that.  I believe that we, as a people, globally, are beginning to awaken to a higher consciousness.  Our reality is being shaken and our minds opening to the greater wisdom, and cosmic shift of the world.
(But that's for another blog.)
.
He goes on to talk about his view as a yoga instructor and watching how yoga transforms highly stressed, overworked people like no pharmaceutical and/or therapy can.
.
Here's more.
.
This wondrous heart-opening consciousness triggers the profound realization that a 90 minute, $20 yoga class fulfills many of their essential needs, more than any of their other possessions they have worked like dogs to obtain. This life-changing insight compels them to reassess the value of their priorities and their very purpose in life: Who am I? Why am I? Where am I going?
  .
To think that, as a yoga teacher, I have the power to help people make a conscious shift from materialism to the meaning of peace and happiness.  There are people stepping onto the mat looking for more than a way to stretch their bodies and get fit but also to find meaning, peace, calm, and a spiritual depth to their lives.  To know that I could be the vehicle in which they use to find these qualities gives me goosebumps, I mean, really, literally. 
.
How lucky and blessed am I to have found such a wonderful profession.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Yoga is Everything is Yoga

 The house was quiet and I was flipping through a magazine and realized that my poor yoga blog is being neglected.  What to do?   We had such a busy weekend out of town for the funeral of my husband's grandfather that I've been too busy to think about yoga much less to blog about it.  So I did what I always do when I'm in need of inspiration.  I went for a jog.  When I jog, my mind jogs too.  I teach yoga classes, have exchanges with my kids.  I plan fabulous dinners and Martha Stewart picnics.  I'm inspired to work in the yard as I jog past all the new flowerlings popping from the earth and  I whisper hello to all the baby buds making their way into the sunlight.  Weird, kinda, I know.  I'm a tree hugger hippie like that.  I conjure up colorful images to stroke onto stretched canvas.  I'd like a new spring painting over the fireplace.  Like I said, my mind goes seemlessly from one thought to the next, apparently, much like my writing!

But back to the subject matter, which is trying to find matter on which to elaborate-- and what I do to find inspiration, which is going for a jog.
There. 
Long sigh, even longer pause...
I've come to the conclusion that all things in my life can be brought back and connected to and with yoga. 
When I go jogging, that IS my yoga. 
That IS my meditation. 
When I am doing a task,
if I am doing it mindfully or
if I am doing it with intention,
if I am doing it with dreams of future experiences,
then I am doing my yoga. 
I may be cooking, driving, running, cleaning my bathtub, if the mindset is one of goodness,

It is THAT of yoga.

Bottom Line...
How do I feel after a meaningful practice?
I feel alive, centered, balanced, happy, refreshed, taller and bright and more.
How do I feel after a task in which I was actively "in the zone," or conjuring up images of roses and buttercups? ( I kid somewhat but you get the point.)
I feel alive, centered, balanced, thankful, accomplished and more.
All of these are good things. 
All of these feelings are worth the breath of life. 
All of these things are my yoga.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Chet Day

I receive an email periodically from Chet Day.  I don't really know much about him but I love his simple meditation techniques.  This is one that I was honored with today.  It is so fitting to speak of nature as spring is in the air.  I am compelled to spend quiet moments here and there just laying on my back deck and soaking up the sun while breathing in "I,"  and breathing out "am."

For today's meditation, as we did last week, we again turnto one of my favorite poets,
Rainer Maria Rilke, who writes...
And if the earth no longer knows your name,
Whisper to the silent earth:I'm flowing.
To the flashing water say: I am.
Breathe deeply several times and compose yourself.
Repeat and slow down, way down.
Become one with the flow of your breath.
As you inhale,think "I"
and as you exhale think "am."
Between breaths, flow with the silent earth,
with the silent universe,
with all that is.
Ah, there.
You are.
I am.
Until next time,
  Chet Day Editor,
EarthRain Meditations

Beautiful, huh?

Friday, March 12, 2010

Backbend into Greater Love

Oh the Backbend,
the beautiful backbend! 
I am most passionate about the backbend right now. 
It is my FAV of the day.
I was intrigued when I read an article about falling backwards into a backbend.  It takes great strength throughout the core to drop into a backbend  and I decided that I want to emphasize that in my practice. 
 So how do you go about it? 
 It takes time,
 it takes warming up,
 it takes building strength,
 it takes asana practice such as upward facing dog, fish pose, a standing back bend, bow pose and a wall to walk your hands carefully down.

You simply have to start where you are.  This is an acceptance of what is.  Accept where you are, today, right now, and just be.  When you resist "where you are," saying/thinking phrases that begin with "shoulda, woulda, coulda," you get tangled up in the chaos of the mind.  Simplify life.  Start where you are.

The backbend can do wonderous things, physically.
1.) It gives more flexibility to the spine.
2.) It gives strength to the muscles all along the spine and shoulders. 
3.) It allows that spinal fluid to lubricate the spinal disks.
4.) Backbends stretch the front of the body allowing more space for the digestive tract, liver, pancreas.
5.) The abdominal muscles stretch and lengthen. 
6.) The ribs expand and the chest opens allowing more space for the heart where the fourth chakra resides.
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The Heart Chakra

Now let me take a minute here and give the heart chakra the attention and love that it deserves.  For this is one of the main reasons I am so happily attuned to backbends right now.  This is where I am discovering the mental benefits.
The heart center is associated with love, trust, compassion and acceptance.  It is where we bring about healing.  When we open the chest and expand the heart, we create more room for the heart and the positive energy flow. This expansion also bleeds out the negative, the blockages, the distrust, unacceptance, doubt and fear.  When you open the chest and allow the heart to shine :)  through breath and intention, you are doing more than strengthening and stretching, you are opening to the greater gifts that you have.  You are cultivating the river of unconditional love, trust, forgiveness, letting go, inspiration, confidence and acceptance that the heart holds within.  These emotions are now more readily able to flow out into the world.

Bend the back and breathe into the heart opener.  Feel these emotions stirring.  Feel the heartache and negative melt and release into the atmosphere as it rises up and dissipates.  Allow all that is good to increase and spin and radiate outward. 

Backbends. 
Oh sweet backbends. 
Open heart.
Deeper love.
Greater acceptance
Of yourself,
Of the world.
Try one. 
You know you want to.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Just five minutes can change your day

I ran across this little Namaste yoga clip. 
 I love the background, I love her voice.  It is so soothing. 
Try this five minutes of yoga breath and stretch.
Take another five minutes in a meditative, quiet state to scan your body and be aware.
It will bring more peace and happiness into your day.
Seriously, try it. 
You've got ten minutes.
Smiles and hugs,
Namaste.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

From Within

“When you’re experiencing peace, it’s coming from within you, you’re ‘doing’ peace. And this is true of anything else you might be looking for. Love, happiness, contentment, well-being come from within. Nothing external needs to change for you to have what you want…..If you want to be happier – be happier. If you want to be more relaxed – relax. If you want more friends – be friendly. Sounds simple. It is.” Cheri Huber

Love this.
 So simple
Yet so powerful.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

The Blue Sky

I was teaching a class the other day.  My clients whom I was serving have been diagnosed with some pretty heavy stuff.  My goal was not a typical western mindset goal of burning calories and building muscles.
This class was more about calming the mind, turning negative into positive. 
It is about feeling the sensations in the body,
witnessing them without the emotion,
without frustration,
without pain. 
We are breathing and calming the senses to better handle the issues that come with dibilitating diagnosis.  Once we can calm the mind using the breath, then we can begin to change the body.  My hopes that these people will begin to change awareness from doubt and hopelessness to that of control and power over the body and the disease.
We go about the class with this intention.  We gently stretch. We deeply breath.  And we let go, into the realm.  We do this for a typical class length, that of about an hour.  And finally, we release into savasana so the body can absorb the benefits from the asanas.

I always love reawakening my clients after this final relaxation and looking into their faces.  There's a calmness, almost a sleepy look, a gratitude for that sacred hour of destressing and setting all the daily worries aside.  For this is a place of nurturing oneself.  People simply don't nurture themselves enough, if at all.  When they finally do, it shows on their faces.

These two clients, in particular, upon wakening, opened their eyes and noticed the blue sky.
(We had practiced outside on my back patio.) 
When my clients awaken and notice the blue sky?  Yep. I have helped shift their consciousness to that of a positive nature.
It's like the saying,  "You had better notice the flowers in the vase, not the dust on the table.
If only for the hour and a bit of afterglow time, maybe longer,
they feel at  peace. 
Hopefully the peace within will grow deeper and the pain will lessen. 
Hopefully each practice will bring about a deeper release and a wider opening to the greatness of the world. 
And if this is so,
 than my own world will shift, as well, to a deeper release, and a wider opening in which to serve the world,
up to the bluest skies,
 through my yoga students.

Monday, March 1, 2010

The Inspiring Words of Seane Corn

I love Seane Corn.  She is my favorite hero right now.  Her selfless dedication to the preservation of humanlife is inspiring.  Not to mention she is beautiful.  Those beautiful natural curls of hers are every straight haired woman's dream.  I digress.  I read her blog as she is making the world a better place in Africa right now and I took these few words from her blog.  She was addressing how she and her fellow friends are starting each day...

For this experience to be sustainable and deeply meaningful, it is essential that we spend time every day connecting to our bodies, breath, each other and God. By invoking the sacred, we can be reminded of what our purpose here is, beyond the obvious, which is the service work we'll do in the field. Through grace, we can remember that we are all connected, all one, and are here dignify the human experience, as it is, with love.
Seane Corn

For me, these are powerful and convincing words.  When I start my day with a beautiful intention and mindful connection to myself, others and God, my day has greater meaning.

When I dedicate some time, whether it be ten minutes or 90 minutes to asana, breathing, meditation with an intention such as love, patience, strength (or whatever I want to cultivate into the day)  I am reminded of what MY purpose is here.

My little world of doing laundry, packing lunches and planning the neighborhood easter party, all takes on such greater meaning.  From the phone call I make to reschedule my kids conference to making a boo boo better on my baby's knee,  I do with a deeper intention of love and gratitude. 

When I have taken that morning time of mindfulness, my daily interactions are charged with good intention and I hope that it shines through my skin and is heard through my words. 
Some people may be open to receive what I have to give, others may not. 

Regardless,
I know that I feel it. 
I know that my kids feel it. 
I see it in their faces. 
I see it in mine.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Dear Mr. Bikram

Dear Mr Bikram,

A poem for you.

Ninety minutes
in 110 degree heat,
asana and breath
it just can't be beat.

I detox my body as I twist my spine.
My determination is fierce as I destress my mind.

This class is so challenging,
this is why I love it so.
I stretch and strengthen
 to and fro.

The toxins I soak up,
throughout my days,
I have to get rid of,
through Bikram, I praise.

For the balance of body,
for the gain of calm,
for the release of the tension,
for my muscles feel strong.

Thank you Mr Bikram
for such a good type
of yoga for healing
and dealing with life.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

"There is a calmness to a life lived in gratitude, a quiet joy." ~Blum

Lately I have not been going to yoga "class."  I have been creating my own class.  It is within.  It's about dedicating time to be alone in my space and allowing my self to practice asanas without distraction   for a lift in spirit, in attitude and gratitude.  

This is how my practice starts, with the Sun Salutes.

I begin with four rounds of Sun Salutes.  In the morning I start facing east and work my way through each direction.

As I lift to Upward Salute I am thankful for the sun and all that the world has been offering me. 

Swan diving forward, exhaling, reaching chaturanga dandasana, I am grateful for the earth below me, that it grounds me and is full of much needed nourishment. 

I inhale into upward dog, thankful again, to the heavens but also feeling my self grounding through my hands and feet while lifting my heart and head to the sun, stretching and opening myself to the possibilities of the day.

And I fall and lift back to adho mukha svanasana.  (downward dog) Here I take five deep, long breaths.  I feel my breath radiate through each cell of my body, scanning my body for any areas that may need a little extra tender loving care.  I go to those areas and mentally dissolve the stress.  I have decided that I will not hold onto tension each day but that it will release through asana.  I am thankful that I have learned to use my mind to release bodily pain.

I lift, inhale, to tadasana.  My hands meet together in prayer position at my heart center.

 When I move through the Sun Salutations with an intention of gratitude, I am tuned in; from the tiniest cell in my body, to the sun and earth, I am thankful each morning through Sun Salutes.  It works for me.  It enlivens me.

“As each day comes to us refreshed and anew, so does my gratitude renew itself daily. The breaking of the sun over the horizon is my grateful heart dawning upon a blessed world. ” — Adabella Radici
 



Monday, February 15, 2010

Inspiration Alley

So I'm super excited.  After spending some leisure time yesterday surfing through some blogs of like minded people,  I've decided to try the Green Smoothie lifestyle for a bit of time.  http://www.greensmoothierevolution.com/   As soon as I finish this blog I'm happily skipping to Amazon to buy the book. 
On another note, today I will begin my 40 day journal as well.  This is not only for my yoga certification but also for my own personal gain.  I will follow requirements set for certification but will go one step further and record what I am eating and how I feel about it.  Last weekend we went to a vegan restaurant called Eden Alley.  Another great inspiration to tantalize my taste buds and send me on a trip to motivation island where I seek out new and delicious recipes to try, this time transferring from vegetarian to vegan.  This time the meals will be more fresh, more whole, more love!
So as a nice little detox and pick-me-up, I'm starting with a couple green smoothies of differing ingredients, followed by a dinner of fresh salad and maybe soup depending on what's going on around here.  And then hot tea and lotsah watah!
Wish me luck!

Sunday, February 14, 2010

My Yoga Journal

I had planned on writing each day during my yoga teacher training program.

Uh yeah. That didn't happen.



I was stressed out learning about the calming effects yoga has on the mind.

I was in turmoil over half a dozen pranayama techniques used to control energy.

I was exhausted from the rigamore of postures used to reduce stress.

I kid, I kid. Somewhat, but not really.


My head was so filled with joint actions, the 8 Limbs of Pantajali, and disecting downward dog and cow faced pose that I just didn't have it in me at the end of the day to record my glorious journey of becoming a yoga instructor. But fear not, my journey is not over! I still have part deux ahead of me. The "in house" intensive is now behind me and I can successfully repeat the 6 Components of Physical Fitness and tell you about the 12 Body systems and the wonderful effects yoga has on them. Incredible stuff, really.


Now begins the next phase, which will be taken at a much lighter, more graceful pace. I can , once again, see my childrens' smiling faces in the mornings as I pour milk over their cereal. I can tuck them lovingly into bed at night. Over the next few months, I will begin fulfilling my requirements to get my certification. That involves teaching some classes, CPR certification, journaling for 40 days, and some other life promoting experiences.



Now is the time I can write here, my continued journey, my experiences, the one I had this morning, Kundalini Yoga.
.
A M A Z I N G ! ! !

This woman, who taught the class, was so knowledgeable. She was...now, don't quote me, but I think a psychologist who worked for a medical school of some sort. I don't remember honestly but that's not where I'm going with this. She was so calm, so happy. You could see the peace radiating about her. The energy I felt upon walking into the center was so inviting, loving, accepting. The class, which was so gentle in nature, really gave quite a lifeforce jolt within, I felt dizzying goodness.

Let me back up here, the class was about an hour long, she talked a bit about the energy, love and made mention of the death experience. (fascinating) We did some gentle movement of the spine, in all directions. But the breath, the breath was were it was at! The breath in different postures created such an internal heat and ...it's really hard to describe, I'm new at Kundalini Yoga so I'm sure as with anything, the more you do it the better your understanding, but it felt like there was swirling white smoke inside my body. And it was okay, nice, really. I acknowledged it, accepted it and felt it. During this time the word that came to mind, with no prompting, was "heal." My intention was to heal everything in my body from the scrape on my hand from slipping on the ice a few days ago to any past regrets or childhood issues I may have suppressed, and then back to the superficial yet no less important in healing, that little stress knot in my upper rhomboid.

Using my breath and body to conjure up thoughts of self healing was refreshing and powerful in a passive observational way. It was different.  I've decided that this yoga is something that I need to do more often.  I have a feeling it may expedite an awakening for good things and a falling away of negative ones.

In life, I consider myself to be pretty lucky. I've got everything going for me. I'm healthy, I've got a great family, a home...but there's that something missing. I think I found it. Now I need to take the time to nurture it. It's inside of me. It's inside of you. It's about closing the eyes, and paying attention to the inside world. It's about figuring out what energy feels like to you and balancing it, opening it, experiencing it. Give it a try.

Namaste.