The season has begun. No, I'm not talking about the holidays. I'm thinking about the cold and flu season. I've already encountered several germ infested folks who've warned "Don't touch me! Don't hug or kiss me! I'm sick."
After the initial contraction, I always remind myself that I am not accepting illness. That helps a lot.
If we do manage to contract a cold or the flu this year, let's not succumb to the usual notion that the world cannot operate without our rushing back to life per usual. Intead, let's make a pact to
crawl into bed or cover up on the sofa and actually receive any offers for help. Heck, let's ask for help!
Drink lots of warm liquids and REST. Use the opportunity to listen to our bodies for messages about this particular downtime and why we need it.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Monday, October 27, 2008
The Value of Keeping A Journal
Check out what I wrote in my journal on 10/28/03 :
"It's imperative to tune in to the current of life - our "aliveness," as Eckhart Tolle terms it, to know and remember the True Nature and the connection with each other, with all that is, with God/Goddess. It's not about being "happy," which is elusive and impermanent. It's about joy, bliss, ananda, svaroopa - the eternal, unchanging, immortal being that is always present. In the most difficult, painful moment, you are still alive, present, joyful, but only if you choose to be. It's always a choice. So decide NOW to choose life and to notice it again and again."
So I'm making yet another intention to write in my journal on a regular basis. Actually, I've been
reading The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron and I've been faithfully writing "Morning Pages." The benefits of this practice are numerous and I highly recommend doing it!
"It's imperative to tune in to the current of life - our "aliveness," as Eckhart Tolle terms it, to know and remember the True Nature and the connection with each other, with all that is, with God/Goddess. It's not about being "happy," which is elusive and impermanent. It's about joy, bliss, ananda, svaroopa - the eternal, unchanging, immortal being that is always present. In the most difficult, painful moment, you are still alive, present, joyful, but only if you choose to be. It's always a choice. So decide NOW to choose life and to notice it again and again."
So I'm making yet another intention to write in my journal on a regular basis. Actually, I've been
reading The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron and I've been faithfully writing "Morning Pages." The benefits of this practice are numerous and I highly recommend doing it!
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
So You Think You Can't "Do" Yoga!
All you need to begin practicing Yoga is a sincere desire to improve your life. No new outfits or elaborate equipment are needed. Simply arrive in loose, comfortable clothes that allow you to move and stretch.
Finding a certified teacher who will assist you and offer variations for your body type is of prime importance. Practicing at a studio that provides props (Yoga mats, blocks, straps, bolsters, blankets, etc.) will teach you to modify postures so your body will open gently at its own pace. As your practice progresses, props eventually may not be needed but, in the beginning, they allow safer practice and lessen the chance of injury.
Regular yoga practice offers numerous benefits to body, mind, and spirit, including:
Tones and strengthens. As a form of isometric exercise, the prolonged holding of yoga postures tones the muscles as well as internal organs.
Increases flexibility. Gently holding yoga poses at the edge of comfort stretches and lengthens muscles, tendons, and ligaments allowing them to become more flexible.
Improves respiration. Deep breathing during yoga practice opens the chest and strengthens the diaphragm.
Improves concentration. Moving mindfully while maintaining awareness of the body and breath develops focus, attention, and concentration.
Promotes relaxation. The combination of gentle stretching, deep breathing, meditation, and guided relaxation releases body tension and calms the nervous system and emotions, giving a sense of renewal to the body, mind, and spirit. A serene studio setting with relaxing music creates an even safer atmosphere for letting go.
Builds internal and external awareness. As a focused practice, yoga builds awareness of the body and feelings, along with increasing awareness of the needs of others, our communities, and our world. Increased awareness also lends toward weight reduction where needed.
Facilitates improved health. In addition to exercising the mind and muscles, yoga exercises and massages the glands and organs and increases circulation throughout the body, resulting in improved digestion, elimination of toxins, and the promotion of overall health. Many students also find that Yoga regulates blood pressure when practiced over time.
Anyone can do Yoga! If you’re breathing, you can practice. Men, women, children, athletes, “couch potatoes,” young and old all practice and benefit from this 5,000 year old technology of self transformation. Yoga is really a science and people of various religious and philosophical beliefs find that practicing Yoga enriches their lives immensely.
Here's an easy practice to try right now ~Sit comfortably in a chair with your spine long and your legs at a right angle to the floor. Breathe through your nose and allow your in breath to expand the belly gently. Now allow the out breath to leave through the nose and to flatten the belly gently. Allow the breath to be long and slow. Try this for five breaths, feeling the body expand and contract and following the path of the breath into and out of the body. After the fifth out breath, pause and notice your body and your mind.
Do you feel more relaxed?
You’ve just begun practicing pranayama or breath control. You are becoming a yogi/ni!
Finding a certified teacher who will assist you and offer variations for your body type is of prime importance. Practicing at a studio that provides props (Yoga mats, blocks, straps, bolsters, blankets, etc.) will teach you to modify postures so your body will open gently at its own pace. As your practice progresses, props eventually may not be needed but, in the beginning, they allow safer practice and lessen the chance of injury.
Regular yoga practice offers numerous benefits to body, mind, and spirit, including:
Tones and strengthens. As a form of isometric exercise, the prolonged holding of yoga postures tones the muscles as well as internal organs.
Increases flexibility. Gently holding yoga poses at the edge of comfort stretches and lengthens muscles, tendons, and ligaments allowing them to become more flexible.
Improves respiration. Deep breathing during yoga practice opens the chest and strengthens the diaphragm.
Improves concentration. Moving mindfully while maintaining awareness of the body and breath develops focus, attention, and concentration.
Promotes relaxation. The combination of gentle stretching, deep breathing, meditation, and guided relaxation releases body tension and calms the nervous system and emotions, giving a sense of renewal to the body, mind, and spirit. A serene studio setting with relaxing music creates an even safer atmosphere for letting go.
Builds internal and external awareness. As a focused practice, yoga builds awareness of the body and feelings, along with increasing awareness of the needs of others, our communities, and our world. Increased awareness also lends toward weight reduction where needed.
Facilitates improved health. In addition to exercising the mind and muscles, yoga exercises and massages the glands and organs and increases circulation throughout the body, resulting in improved digestion, elimination of toxins, and the promotion of overall health. Many students also find that Yoga regulates blood pressure when practiced over time.
Anyone can do Yoga! If you’re breathing, you can practice. Men, women, children, athletes, “couch potatoes,” young and old all practice and benefit from this 5,000 year old technology of self transformation. Yoga is really a science and people of various religious and philosophical beliefs find that practicing Yoga enriches their lives immensely.
Here's an easy practice to try right now ~Sit comfortably in a chair with your spine long and your legs at a right angle to the floor. Breathe through your nose and allow your in breath to expand the belly gently. Now allow the out breath to leave through the nose and to flatten the belly gently. Allow the breath to be long and slow. Try this for five breaths, feeling the body expand and contract and following the path of the breath into and out of the body. After the fifth out breath, pause and notice your body and your mind.
Do you feel more relaxed?
You’ve just begun practicing pranayama or breath control. You are becoming a yogi/ni!
Thursday, August 7, 2008
Last week, at the end of each class and before Savasana, I invited students to practice seated forward bending with a partner. Many have previously practiced this way in my class but it was also a new experience for some. A pair of Yogis meet on one mat, sit back to back and one of each pair is led (by me) into breathing and forward bending while the partner merely supports with breath and body and actually comes into a backbend. Then they switch and explore the counterstretch.
Discussion following this practice is always interesting. Some yogis notice the deep intimacy created while breathing with another. Other yogis notice greater ease and that their forward bend is so much deeper with a partner at their back.
Since Yoga is always a metaphor for life, these awarenesses are always a brilliant reminder for us
that being in relationship is in contrast to solo experiences. Try breathing side by side or back to back with your significant other for 10 minutes. Notice your reaction when someone offers you help and you accept graciously. Notice the experience when you say "no thanks!"
Discussion following this practice is always interesting. Some yogis notice the deep intimacy created while breathing with another. Other yogis notice greater ease and that their forward bend is so much deeper with a partner at their back.
Since Yoga is always a metaphor for life, these awarenesses are always a brilliant reminder for us
that being in relationship is in contrast to solo experiences. Try breathing side by side or back to back with your significant other for 10 minutes. Notice your reaction when someone offers you help and you accept graciously. Notice the experience when you say "no thanks!"
Please share your insights and comments after practicing in your own life.
Ah, The Yoga of Relationship!
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
March Comes In
Here's a little something I wrote in March that still applies to April!
Powdered sugar sparkles on
the chocolate cake driveway.
Where is Spring?
Is she hiding behind the
hemlock tree,
fooling us with latent green?
Surprising birdsong entices us
to linger outdoors in the
still icy air.
She must be laughing at us
again this year.
"Oh, silly children!
Is memory so short that
you forget last March?"
Relish this moment
just before
the bride descends the stair,
the egg cracks open,
the sun pierces the darkness.
Don't miss it!
Powdered sugar sparkles on
the chocolate cake driveway.
Where is Spring?
Is she hiding behind the
hemlock tree,
fooling us with latent green?
Surprising birdsong entices us
to linger outdoors in the
still icy air.
She must be laughing at us
again this year.
"Oh, silly children!
Is memory so short that
you forget last March?"
Relish this moment
just before
the bride descends the stair,
the egg cracks open,
the sun pierces the darkness.
Don't miss it!
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Open Handed Giving
Recently, someone asked me about a gift they'd given me awhile ago. The reason I want to write about this is that the question and the gift had nothing, absolutely nothing to do with the subject we were actually discussing. As I scratched my head and wondered why the question about the gift would come up, I thought about how this might be mirroring something for me.
Open Handed Giving refers to offering up a gift with no thought of quid pro quo, "this for that." It can be difficult to achieve if we really search our hearts. A great exercise is to watch yourself and your reactions whenever you offer a gift. And, of course, I'm talking about gifts of any kind - material gifts as well as gifts of comfort and help. Notice if you're looking for a thank-you of any kind.If you are, it's not Open Handed Giving.
I caught myself in the quid pro quo trap recently. I felt very, very good about a gift of time and space that I'd offered up to a friend which resulted in substantial gain for him. When no thank-you came, my thoughts turned to "Well, that wasn't appreciated! How could he not thank me? How rude!"
The good news is that upon awareness of my thought pattern, I could see my lack of open handedness and shift my reaction. How many times do we miss that awareness, though?
Check it out in your own life. Open Handed Giving really supports the age old maxim that "It IS more blessed to give than to receive!"
Open Handed Giving refers to offering up a gift with no thought of quid pro quo, "this for that." It can be difficult to achieve if we really search our hearts. A great exercise is to watch yourself and your reactions whenever you offer a gift. And, of course, I'm talking about gifts of any kind - material gifts as well as gifts of comfort and help. Notice if you're looking for a thank-you of any kind.If you are, it's not Open Handed Giving.
I caught myself in the quid pro quo trap recently. I felt very, very good about a gift of time and space that I'd offered up to a friend which resulted in substantial gain for him. When no thank-you came, my thoughts turned to "Well, that wasn't appreciated! How could he not thank me? How rude!"
The good news is that upon awareness of my thought pattern, I could see my lack of open handedness and shift my reaction. How many times do we miss that awareness, though?
Check it out in your own life. Open Handed Giving really supports the age old maxim that "It IS more blessed to give than to receive!"
Monday, March 3, 2008
Oprah's Biggest Giveaway
Do you remember a few years back when Tuesdays used to be devoted to spiritual topics on "The Oprah Winfrey Show?" I do. It's the one day a week I would plan to watch. Until recently, when I did have time to tune in, I'd mostly be disappointed by yet another "celebrity" interview or silly fashion show. Supposedly, Oprah knuckled under to her producers' cries that the show was losing viewers and sponsor support for being too "religious." I must say that my opinion of Oprah dipped quite low, although I did hold out hope that she would bring back more important topics.
Well, by offering her free class with Eckhart Tolle, which begins tonight, she has redeemed herself big time in my eyes. Perhaps she needed to wait until there was a big enough groundswell of interest, a very possible tipping point, before she could really commit herself and her resources on a worldwide level, to something other than fiction.
I am halfway through A New Earth and have just re-read Chapter 1 in preparation for the first class tonight. I'm very, very excited about the possibility for mass transformation that this book and this class offer.
Well, by offering her free class with Eckhart Tolle, which begins tonight, she has redeemed herself big time in my eyes. Perhaps she needed to wait until there was a big enough groundswell of interest, a very possible tipping point, before she could really commit herself and her resources on a worldwide level, to something other than fiction.
I am halfway through A New Earth and have just re-read Chapter 1 in preparation for the first class tonight. I'm very, very excited about the possibility for mass transformation that this book and this class offer.
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