Powered By Blogger

Friday, 30 December 2011

Mantra for New Beginnings

"the core of a fulfilled life is knowing that every moment is a choice"
"As your desire is, so is your will. As your will is, so is your deed. As your deed is, so is your destiny"
Rod Stryker, The Four Desires

If you are someone who has made a New Year's Resolution, you will need to have an implementation plan in order to move from the wish for change to the desire for change to becoming one with the desire. This ultimate yoga (unity) with your goal may be a path laden with resistance. A stubbornness to change is an obstacle to growth.. You may wish you were healthier. You may desire to lose weight, but until you start making choices to lead you to the NEW IMPROVED YOU ( the old one is perfect but we can all move towards excellence ) there will be lots of space between the resolution and the accomplishment of it.  For example, eating healthier requires buying more natural produce and leaving the high fat snacks in the supermarket where they can continue to decorate the shelves.  After all, as my friend, Gita says: "a minute on the lips, a month on the hips!".  This being said, when you do that shopping, you may encounter resistance from the old you who is afraid of change, and so once again, those chocolate cookies end up in your cart, in your pantry, in your tummy...

This should tell you that we need to rewire our brains before any substantial change can be made.  When I first started Yoga, my teacher said: "intention, attention, and the details up to the universe". You do need to intend to create change, then focus attention on it in a sustained way (includes practise, patience, practise, self-discipline, harmonising actions with that magical intention, practise and patience) and as you shift into the head space of change and implementation in a focused way, to be able to let go into a knowingness that the universe will help you out.  Sometimes the universe will test you by sending you 50% off coupons for your favourite ice cream, which is a strengthening exercise to be grateful for, and you can pass with flying colours! Your inner attitude matters.  Your perceptions matter.

I once set my intention as peacefulness. I had very noisy neighbours, for which I had to go to court, I couldn't sleep and there was too much drama going on.  So I recited the mantra: "om shanty shanty shanty" and decided that whatever the next year brought, it was going to be peace and positivity.  I decided that even though a move wasn't the best financial decision, I would still investigate options.  I remember seeing one apartment that was really unaffordable for me.  The rental agent was so giving with her time that I apologised for wasting it afterwards in a thank you note.  She was so moved with this detail that she put me in touch with a concierge who had the perfect apartment for me and it was not yet on the rental market.  I was tenacious with him, and this is where I am writing from.  My sanctuary! The universe helped me, but I was not idle.  I visualised, took actions, stayed focused and also, decided that whatever happened I could make even small personal choices on a daily basis to invite that which I was seeking.

One practise that is very useful is mantra recitation.  It is a discipline that quiets the thinking brain and helps break emotional or thought patterns that are being held onto. As such, they can become obstacles on our path.  If your internal state is unified with your desire, you can achieve anything. The system of YOGA is a very powerful toolbox for transformation.

This being said, whatever you are desiring, the best place to start working on your endeavour is your brain. This mantra is traditionally chanted to begin new projects with positive energy and remove any obstacles in the way:

Get quiet, sit still, where the spine is straighter and tension is dislodged. Traditionally recited 108 times, and try a 21 day period where you add this to your routine for a few minutes each day:

OM GUM GANAPATEYEI NAMAHA
Om Guhm Guh-nuh-puh-tuh-yea
Nah-mah-hah
(Om and salutations to Ganapati - Ganesha: the remover of obstacles)

Namaste,
Rana

Wednesday, 28 December 2011

Benefits of Therapeutic Massage

Like YOGA, therapeutic massage is part of a healthy lifestyle
Benefits of Massage:
1*Maintaining the body’s homeostasis
2*Pain Relief
3*Improved circulation
4*Relief of muscular tension
5*Elimination of waste/toxins
6*Improved posture and range of motion
7*Strengthened immune system
8*Enhanced recovery
9*Relaxation, sense of well-being
10*Improve quality of Sleep

Conditions Benefited:
*Arthritis (rheumatoid and osteoarthritis)
*Asthma, Bronchitis
*Carpal tunnel syndrome
*Circulatory problems
*Migraines/headaches, especially those induced by muscular tension
*Gastrointestinal disorders (spastic colon,colic, constipation)
*Immune system disorders
*Insomnia
*Myofascial pain(a condition of the tissue connecting the muscles)
*Sports injuries
*Stress
*TMJ


to schedule:
Rana Waxman
514.407.1005

Monday, 26 December 2011

my top ten yoga tips for the day


1. understand that postures and breathing are part of a system designed to still the mind 
(read the YOGA SUTRAS by Patanjali)

2. the quieter your mind the better you can appreciate this moment as it is


3. it is called a practise therefore practise daily :-)


4. breathing calms the mind and can be done all day


5. find a peaceful corner (see my blog for tips on sanctuary)


6. close your eyes from time to time, feel, visualise


7. bring attention to the feet, there are over 7200 nerve receptors there (try acu-reflexology with me and you will see this too)


8. bring attention to your hands, they open into the arms, neck


9. visualise the asana first to focus your mind and then fill your body into it


10. add a dose of patience, surrender and try to bring the practise off the mat and into daily life



Om shanty shanty shanty, peace, peace, peace


Rana

Thursday, 22 December 2011

A New Year's Greeting

Happy Holidays
I wish you all a New Year filled with 
peace
positivity
contentment
I hope that joy touches your heart and melts any sorrow like warm sunshine
I know you are
strong
brave
resilient
beings
Thank you for your continued support and blessings 
blessings
blessings
OM shanty shanty shanty  OM peace peace peace


Monday, 19 December 2011

What Is Your Default Setting? A Little Blog About Contentment

When the mind constantly runs after the wandering senses, it drives away wisdom, like the wind, blowing a ship off course- Bhagavad Gita


Happiness cannot be found throught great effort and willpower, but is already present in open relaxation and letting go- Ven. Lama Gendun Rinpoche


The other day I blogged about contentment.  It is very easy to feel on top of the world when you are not being tested, but is this your default setting? If pressures build up do you breathe through them, find ways to diffuse tension or do you store it, let it build and then explode? I am not talking about the once in a while scenarios, but if things are not all peachy keen, what are your attitudes, perceptions, and coping strategies? Is it still contentment or is this a borrowed measure reserved for the one day all the bills are paid, you have slept great, you have eaten well...In other words, are you happy and smiling whatever happens?


You see, the reason I put forth these question is that seeking happiness is one thing. Yogis call it uncovering our true Nature, and will tell you we are born into happiness but the thinking mind gives us all kinds of trouble.  It starts us chasing after the senses, after material gain, accumulation, etc.  Nothing wrong with wanting the Iphone 4 -it looks super cool. But if you have the Iphone 3 do you then become less happy with what you do not yet possess? Or do you accept what you have with gratitude? This last approach is the fertile ground for lasting happiness.


Contentment, Patanjali says in Sutra 11.42 is dynamic, as opposed to complacency which is a bit stagnant. We should be able to look at our life, weed out the toxic relationships and situations to then re-balance on all levels. This requires changing what isn't working, therefore practising contentment is a call  to action sometimes.  It also asks us to want what we have.


Contentment brings us to a new perception of how things are, and so, calms the mind, fostering appreciation. It is an attitude that is independent of outside influences.  What you have or don't have does not change the essence of who you are.  You may be thinking, "uh, maybe in my next life, that sounds pretty hard to sustain!" Though it may be easier to be happy when there is some kind of "success" in our life, the truly positive person will smile and keep a good sense of humour throughout turmoil, will exhale and relax.  Will know that they are guided and protected, all-one, not alone.


I know virtues are hard to visualise and materialise and harmonise when things are tough, and disappointments abound.  These are the times though when adopting a mind-set that views adversity as opportunity is helpful. So instead of chasing, spend a few moments in Nature, or quietly observing your breath, do a little Yoga Flow, take a walk.  Allow this great and powerful and sustaining virtue to take root in your life so that your default setting is now rewired for peace and positivity in 2012...


Blessings,
Rana

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

the flexibility phenomenon

The other day on twitter (@yoginiqueen) I was posting relentlessly about flexibility. My brother called me and remarked "what's up with that?"  I was on a mission.  I know. Frequently I hear the words "I am not flexible.  My hamstrings are tight."  Beginners, new to Yoga, or people who just think it isn't for them, love this expression.  Understandable, since the Western culture, being so physically oriented, has scads of pictures of smiling long-limbed bodies doing all kinds of hamstring stretching movements.


So this flexibility phenomenon.  Well if you practise something you get results from it.  Sports, sitting at a desk, walking, getting stressed and holding that stress as muscular tension, and not doing yoga to keep the joints healthy, you are practising tightening up and being tight.  It is just common sense.  


Also, although your hamstrings may be the most obvious source of tightness, your hips might be tighter, thus preventing the hinging forward you seek in the quest to touch your toes.  You may be reciting the "what a pain in the neck mantra" so that your shoulders and neck are jammed, pulling up your hip to create a restriction in the....your body is a series of rubber bands and since this IS a mind-body-spirit blog, let me just say: your body is eavesdropping on all your thoughts.   "The issues are in the tissues!"


First you need to understand that flexibility is a side benefit but not the goal of yoga.  The goal is expressed in the Yoga Sutras, sutra 1.2, roughly translated as 'total mastery over the modifications of the mind is called yoga' and in sutra 1.13, the sage, Patanjali says that "persevering practise is the effort to attain and maintain the state of mental peace".  When you understand that it is a discipline of the mind, it changes the way you practise. You just use the physical practice to re-energize, re-balance, re-plenish, re-lax and counter balance the negatives of the modern day multi-tasking, very fast, often stressful lifestyle.


In terms of postures, yes some of them are quite stretchy, though as a student you need to perform an asana in the meditative frame of mind, following your breathing and at your own level.  A Teacher can be your GPS, but only you can determine how steady and comfortable you feel.  Sutra 11.46 has no picture attached, no ambition.  It is actually quite rich in meaning.  One can interpret posture as the basis for the meditative aspects of Yoga, or as the feeling of being at ease, present and fidget-less.  Not forced or strained.


There is a way out of the stiffness.  The thing you are holding onto as a reason for not starting Yoga is the best reason to start.  I am not saying jump into a highly strenuous class and pull your muscles so that you need to buy stock in Rub A535 and sit on the bench while everyone else skates, skis, plays hockey, jogs, lifts weights, walks and smiles.  NO. As humans though, there is a paradox going between resisting not only challenges, but also potentially rewarding situations. Our immune system is a healthy example of how we are built to resist toxins.  Psychologically, too, we create conditions that protect us from hurt.  Taken too far however, this resistance can become a wall or armour.  It can create an inflexible, rigid mind-set.


The most amazing side benefit of yoga, one that pervades my life, even when my body feels a bit stiff, is a flexible mind-set. This is a kind of creativity in the way the mind moves over and through challenges, seeking options and open points, like a flowing river. 


Maybe the next time you are reaching to pick something up off the floor, you will realise that the tightest area of the body, the one part that does all the straining, is the mind. Our biggest excuses for not doing something can be our best reasons to get moving on it.

Thursday, 8 December 2011

the middle is not mediocrity

Someone once said to me, "we are always in the middle, no matter where we are or what we do". If you think about it, there is always someone richer OR poorer, better at this OR worse at that, the list goes on.
I think this statement holds a lot of substance.


The yogic principle behind this is contentment, which is one of the eight limbs of Yoga, called a niyama, or "restraint". It reflects a non-covetous attitude.  In the Yoga Sutras, 11.42, contentment is cultivated through the practise of YOGA.  It is a positive mind-set which is much more than passive satisfaction, because it aims to balance the psyche, which is tested when circumstances are perceived as unfavourable(1). How things are is right.
I have what I need.  This fuels our spiritual momentum.  Joy is accessible. It isn't frivolous, or dependent on aquiring the newest device, and so is very life-changing! You may have all the latest things but still be devoid of the ability to appreciate, and so you continue to feel lack, instead of abundance...


Today I was speaking with a friend.  This person was expressing feelings about a bad mood, the rainy weather, a lack of motivation and too full a plate with family and preparing to go on a vacation.  In the middle of talking about all this, the friend stopped mid-sentence and said "I have no right to complain" there are so many people who have so many real problems.  I said, probably true, but it is healthy to express yourself.  The conversation was very healing. For both of us...details in another blog....ha ha ha....


Equally important to remember that being in the middle means you are here to take the uplifting hand of someone who is feeling better than you, or has a great perspective and handle on things.  The other hand, you can offer to someone who is suffering from a worse perspective, whose attitude and mood can benefit from you being the light in the room.  The middle is not mediocrity.  It requires awareness. It is a call to action, to cultivate an attitude of gratitude. Put aside stress for a moment.


I came home the other night after a long day.  I didn't feel like I had the best dinner waiting for me, it was leftovers - again ! but I saw this note under my door.  Another tenant in the building had left these notices to say he works at a food bank, they need food, if I had anything to offer.  Well, it took me right out of my mealtime funk.  I do not keep a very stocked pantry but I emptied what I could.  He appreciated it - a little was a lot - he conveyed. And I ate what I had with appreciation, really thinking I am so lucky to have work, to buy food, to have a functional stove and oven...


Gratitude is the option for an excellence-seeker.  This is the time of year when the duality of giving and receiving is heightened. You may find yourself in the middle of something, just bear in mind that while you have so much to receive, you also have so much to offer. Two hands...






(1) To read more try Bernard Bouanchaud: Reflections on the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali 

Saturday, 3 December 2011

Finding sanctuary

Years ago I did a YOGA workshop with an Indian Yoga Master. He said he once visited a student in North America who invited him into his "yoga room".  This Teacher just smiled and said YOGA is practised in every room...


I agree - philosophically, as it conveys the essence of the practise of YOGA, which is union, and not just of me to my(body/mind)self, also me to my(spirit)self and me to the (Creator)Self.  Being connected to every breathing being is eye and mind opening.


Nonetheless, I also feel that it is important to have a soft space to land at the end of the day.  Finding your sacred space within when you feel like life is crowding you out with pressures and stress requires a refuge, a place that elicits the the relaxation response for you.


I prefer clean and uncluttered as a theme everywhere in my apartment.  For me, home is a sanctuary altogether.  I like to look around and see plants and Buddhas meditating so they catch my glance and bring me calm energy.  I also have a favourite spot where I do meditate, and pull out my yoga mat.  I created a distinct area for settling down with a good book.   I can relax enough to be creative at my desk, but seeing it, I am not put in the "zone"... in these other areas, I synchronise and harmonise and tranquilise.


Where is your area?  Do you get home and wish you had a little corner for yourself?  One student of mine has a little quiet area with a picture of loved ones and an orchid near a window with a view. For another, this sacred area is a garden in summer and a favourite chair near a favourite potted plant in winter.  Yet another person I know sets up her side of the bed with a table on which she keeps a personal touchstone (and IPAD charger!)


If you do not have a spot yet, and feel space is a luxury - you are right.  Nonetheless, sometimes space takes on a new energy when you add a just a touch of something peaceful (a seashell or candle?), something personal (a photo or souvenir of a wonderful experience?) and positive (a plant, flower, little figurine of a meditating Buddha?)...or just a chair with your favourite colour cushion, and a diary so you can write down your thoughts.


However you create this peaceful, personal and positive space, I hope it makes you feel like you have a stress-free, safe, special sanctuary.  It does help to have a ritual and a designated place to encourage your inner life to regroup, recharge, refresh and renew. Your health depends on it.

Sunday, 27 November 2011

Sunday Blue Monday?

Last Monday I had a conversation with someone who said they HATED Mondays.  "I don't know why but I am exhausted, even though I did nothing", he complained.  I have heard many times from clients that their worst night sleep is Sunday night.  For many, it is restless, with the mind taking control and going over every detail for the next day's schedule. For others, there just hasn't been enough downtime to really feel like they had a break.


Realistically, most of us are happy with Sunday + Sunday + Sunday + Sunday + Sunday = Vacation.
But one day, what to do with that?  We are so revved up Monday through Friday.  Often, Saturday has housework, homework, yard work, or other duties in it, so even if it is a different pace from the other days, it is more like the orange light, we slow down, but don't always make a full stop.  By Sunday, we may be too exhausted to do anything, too busy doing what we did not have time for on Saturday, or we get out and do every single leisure thing possible and come home and feel unrested and gypped.


I think some of it has to do with structured and unstructured time, and how you satisfy your needs for both.
Some of us have schedules: here for 9 there for 10:30 and the other place for noon.....and others have a 9-5 in one place.  That is structure.  Maybe you like that on your weekends, maybe not.  Maybe you get unstructured time and can't change gears fast enough to figure out what to do with that time.  Maybe you feel unproductive when you do "nothing".  These are all questions to promote you finding good options and balance for yourself.


I don't think there is one answer for anybody all the time.  It is a little week by week.  If you have had a seriously overbooked week, it might balance you out to start your Suncation on Saturday afternoon. It is really good to touch base with yourself about these things on Friday night.  Set a kind of intention for your weekend.  
Naturally a "make the best out of it" kind of approach and honoring what comes up is helpful.


As for Sunday night restlessness, well, a little deep breathing or a soothing bath or something that breaks out of your usual Monday-Friday routine might work.  You can also join me in my Sunday night Yoga Classes in which you will give yourself the gift of feeling re-energized, re-balanced, and relaxed, hopefully encourage a healthy sleep and great transition into your next week.



Tuesday, 22 November 2011

The pause that refreshes

The title of this blog is inspired by an iced tea commercial that used to air in summer.  Visualize- HOT summer day, perspiration, a hand from off camera hands you the only thing that can save you - a cold glass of iced tea - which you gulp down and then splash into your swimming pool backwards.  You don't actually own a swimming pool, and there is no magical butler to prepare this drink for you but somehow, it works : you are saved from the heat, all your problems melt away and you are magically able to get over your fear of falling.

NICE ~ but that isn't exactly what I am suggesting.  What I am referring to is that life seems to have two speeds: Fast and Stop.  What happened to the pause that refreshes? On a computer, when you are running all your programs at once, the system can crash, from being overloaded.  It is running everything at once then you see that little bomb and you know, it isn't good.  It isn't iced tea on a hot day.

In non-cyberspace life, things are also full-throttle - work, family, social relationships, social media, duties, bills, schedules, staying healthy.  It's stressful.  You are going full out and then poof! sore throat, huge headache, burned-out, you become a 'groucho-couch-o' (can't get off the sofa or out of bed).

Now that you are identifying, let me make my point.  ADD THE PAUSE. You already know how - it's like the button on your DVD player.  You press it to stop the movie, go to the bathroom, the refrigerator, answer the phone.  On the computer it means, shut down a few programs that you aren't using at the moment.  So you have the ability and the technological savvy...why not do it with your brain?  I was so happy I paused before leaving my apartment today.  It allowed me to do my checklist before going on my walk: turn off the stove(check), take my phone(check), take my keys(ooooops).  In other words, the pause means turning from autopilot to mindful, from fast to relaxed and observant.  In relationships or at work, it means being able to respond versus reacting, which is empowering, to be on top of emotions rather than held captive.  The list goes on.

Ok, so how? you ask.  Well, I am not trying to convert you to try YOGA, learn how to relax, release muscle tension in one blog (well- ok, kind of, let's be honest).  What you can integrate in your day is the following breathing practice.  You put aside less than 60 seconds.  You close your eyes. You inhale. You pause for a nano second.  You exhale.  You pause for a nanosecond. You count: one. Repeat 5-10 consecutive times. You can put this pause in while you are waiting in line, at your desk.  Just practice.

In Yoga terms, the pause is a gateway or corridor to the soul, to the infinite, the creative force.  Try it at least once a day for a week.  See if it leads you to new discoveries and hidden energies that you were too busy or too burnt out for before you learned about the pause that refreshes!!!

Sunday, 20 November 2011

Off the Yoga mat, then what?

Many times after a therapeutic treatment or the final relaxation at the end of a yoga session, my students will say, "I don't want to leave, it feels so good".  True, the studio is cozy, and the massage table warm but that isn't it. Well, maybe a bit! (yoga humour)...

What they are expressing is a deep connection with comfort, peace and relaxation that comes when we feel connected to ourself and/or to nature.  The space, the smile in the mind.  So good, of course we want more of those endorphins!!


I think two things to internalize is that when you experience all those good feelings, really KNOW and FEEL and INTEGRATE how you are wired for bliss.  Too often we focus on the other half of the nervous system, the stressed out one! That way, you cultivate a well of positive and healthy energy for when times are not so easy.  Dishes, plumbing problems, power outages, laundry, job, family, schedules etc. When you feel overwhelmed, focus - just like biofeedback, on your magical umbilical cord into the bigger picture, and just a few moments of deep yogic breathing can do the trick.


The other thing to keep in the forefront of your consciousness is that the people and circumstances we encounter on a daily basis are our teachers in the school of life.  The days that everything is wired for crazy and crumby it may not look like it, but they actually embody great wisdom - maybe to find patiece, compassion, perseverence, honesty, letting go, generosity of spirit, unconditional love...it's all there in the classroom of day to day. 


I heard that! You want to graduate already!  Ha ha ha ! Well all I can say is that is why it is called "practicing" and learning and growing! So, keep practicing on your mat, or walking in nature, or connecting with yourself in a way that is meaningful to you. We need the practice to balance and center ourselves, to keep resilient, strong and open-hearted.  It keeps a compassionate understanding simmering like a great pot of soup.  Off the mat will start to make new sense to you...


As Jack Kornfield says in After the Ecstasy the Laundry,
"With spiritual maturity the basis for these practices shifts away from ambition, idealism, and desire for self-transformation.  It is as if the wind has changed, and a weather vane-still centered in the same spot- now points in a different direction: back to this moment.  We are no longer striving after a spiritual destination, grasping for another world different from the one we have.  We are home.  And being home, we sweep the floor, make nourishing meals, and care for our guests.  When we have realized the everlasting truths of life, what else is there to do but continue our practice?"

Friday, 18 November 2011

simply-imuni-tea

This is a magic potion :-)


Fresh ginger (about 1.5 or 2 inches)
Fresh lemon (1/2)
Honey or agave to taste
Water (about 2 cups)


Cut ginger in slices, add water .  You can play around with proportions.
Bring to a boil. 
Squeeze in lemon juice.
Strain (unless you like the crunch and bite of ginger slices)
Add sweeter.


*honey is known as a miracle food, containing anti-microbial properties that help heal the throat and sinuses, can help at bedtime to promote good sleep.


*ginger is a super food, known to calm the tummy, relieve gas and bloating, aid digestion and protect against ulcers


*lemon is rich in vitamin C and some reports are saying it has anti-cancer potential


*water is something every system of your body needs to carry out normal functions


so simple!

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Driving the Speed Limit

This is a subject that was on my mind for awhile, but more prominently so today.  I was crossing the street on a green light, when a car literally whizzed by -turning right, 10 seconds away from knocking me over like a bowling pin. It was obvious that they wanted to make the green light, but at what cost?  As it is, the street has 5 schools on it and so is a 30km/hr zone, not 50 or 60 which is what the average person does-unless the cops are out on a sting operation.  Then, it is slow and steady, well, slower and steadier, until one feels free from radar detection.

Most people hit the ground running in the morning.  The pace of today is speedy, crammed, and continuous.  In the yoga sutra 1.2 , Patanjali says: "yogascittavrttinirodhah" which is understood as "yoga is the ability to direct and focus mental activity".  In other words to tame the mind.  It needs taming because it is like a wild monkey!

So basically if this racing mind is what is driving you, you may tip the speed limit, and that has obvious repercussions.  Maybe you are also someone who grips the wheel, clenches your teeth, drops your head and shoulders forward...? At any rate, those are habits that wind up causing headaches, stiff necks, back pain and more! The issues are in the tissues!  Yes, the racing mind never drives the speed limit.

So what can you do?  Well, there are a few things you can try.  Try to wake up a few minutes earlier- not to loud music or CNN but something quieter and melodic.  Ease into a rhythm by taking a few centring breaths.  Set your coffee or tea up the night before so it is readier for enjoyment.  Make a to -do list so you are organised rather than frantic...Try a few yoga poses and a short meditation, a walk outdoors, read something uplifting, spend a few quiet moments alone and count your blessings,..

Learning how to tune in to your own inner rhythm and relax is a skill set that has side benefits throughout your day.  Having a more inspired mindset and feeling connected to yourself is really powerful awareness.  Maybe you will get into the car, use the headrest, relax your shoulders, turn the ignition, and be driven by an alert relaxation which is really preventive medicine, not only against speeding tickets, but other health concerns.







The Essence of Yoga, Bernard Bouanchaud

Monday, 14 November 2011

Are you in YOGA?

I know! Usually someone asks "do you DO yoga?" as if it were just another activity.  True enough, to most people, the word does connotate some kind of posture, or someone sitting cross-legged, meditating.  My friend used this expression the other day, and I just LOVED it!  It sounded like, "are you in Love?" so what is not to like?.  Anyway, I have since adopted it.  In fact, in order to get to know the expression a bit better, I took it on a walk with me the other day, to reflect and sort of dive into how I could blog about it.

Here's the thing; we all know people who are exceptional friends, devoted parents/spouses, compassionate listeners, light up a room with a joke, a smile, a good heart.  Have reflective souls, looking for ways to help you/me/humanity, they exude warmth, make you feel comfortable, are accepting...but are not card-carrying members of a yoga studio or may not own a mat.  They may even say "it's not for me!".

I hate to break it to you, but they are all yogi(ni)s.  Jnana yoga is the Yoga of study/wisdom, Karma yoga is the yoga of positive actions, Bhakti Yoga is the Yoga of devotion, Raja Yoga is the Yoga of kings- the eightfold path.  One of the eight steps is physical.

So for all you amazing people out there, do what you do, be how you are, many of you are more in-yoga than you are letting on!!

Friday, 11 November 2011

Are you YOGA'd-in

The modern yogi(ni) is Linked-in, Facebook, Twitter, Texting, Emails, Facebook connecting to twitter, the blog, Linkedin.  Joining groups (you know and don't knw), Liking and Un-liking pages, connections with people you know and their connections who you may not know...Comments from the groups you are connected to and know but not personally, connecting through cell phones and apps and sync-ing with your computer, your laptop, ipad...Sigh.  Incredible.  We have adapted to technology and it is unbelieveable how much we can connect just by learning what is available (I am still a novice).

The word YOGA is from the verb, yuj, meaning "to yoke, harness"(Feurstein). In the Upanishads, it also meant "spiritual endeavor" (Feurstein) and later, in the Bhagavad Gita - we are talking 3rd or 4th century BCE- it denoted "spiritual discipline" or methods of "self-realization (Feurstein).  Check out this beautiful verse from the Gita (Stephen Mitchell): "Strong in the practice of yoga,with a mind that is rooted in me and in nothing else, you will reach the Supreme Person that I am." We commonly say YOGA means union, connecting...mind+body+spirit, because in this fast-paced world, they don't always feel in the same place at the same time.

So I ask you, are you linked-in and plugged-in professionally and personally?  Or could you benefit from turning off cyberspace connections for a moment and tuning into the one link that unites body and mind=the Breath.  Go ahead, try.  Breathe in calm, breathe out tension...Feel YOGA'd-in....

Thursday, 10 November 2011

ONE THING

I like a word - OPTIONS - I find it a very spacious word, and a very empowering one too.
We do not always feel we have them, and so, start to feel a little smaller than necessary.
For the last few weeks I have been looking at this one unhappy plant in my bathroom. I thought I was giving it light, a perfect corner, plenty of water, but it would not cheer up.  It subconsciously played on me, every time I would see this one wilting plant, "why aren't you happy?" but I did nothing because it was the perfect decoration for that space...And then, the other day, I did one thing, moved the plant.  Immediate plant nirvana...Of course, that got me on a roll. I went through each rooom, moving one thing, here a desk, there something else.  You dont always know you have options until you try something, one little thing adjusted in a new way.  The side benefits to the mind are freeing too. So try it,  spread out, do one thing.

Wednesday, 9 November 2011

My guest blog

I was asked by a friend to write a guest blog, so technically I feel it can be considered mentionable :-)

Silence and the Modern Yogi

Your are saying to yourself "WHAT?" silence, what's that - it's for mystics and meditators not me, no time!
WRONG answer.  Here's the thing.  I spent 3 years living underneath Mr. Motorcycle Boots and his girlfriend (she did file a restraining order on him but that is another subject) and their older dog, a boxer (these dogs have scratchy nails I am told).  Please do not think I am not an animal lover but the intermittent sleep thing created much dis-ease for me.  My theme, with the courtcase was "peaceable enjoyment".  Now, out of that situation, new apartment, pretty quiet, sleeping well.  I can actually feel the benefits of quiet time.  And it got me thinking...so much more free energy, the ability to hear myself think, the ability to practice yoga and have an uninterupted meditation, what a luxury.  You are thinking "well she is lucky"...but again, here is the thing.  You can create more silence for yourself by turning off your cell for a minute (not vibrate-OFF) or opting to get into the car and not play music, or listen to a book on tape, or talk on the phone.  You can carve out 60 seconds, to hear not only yourself think, but take it a step further and listen to the "still voice within"- the wisdom voice that is the voice of instinct and intuition.  Try it. Disconnect. You will feel more plugged in.  I know it.

Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Time

Whatever happened to the actual minute? Everything is SO FAST these days, it takes a nano second to send a "tweet" or an email or a text message.  I used to teach the mastery of the one minute meditation.  Is even the present moment outdated? HMMMM.  This modern Yogini feels that INTEGRATION is the key.  BEING relaxed, we don't necessarily need to say "I will meditate on it" we just know what to say and how to say it or whatever we do is just fine OR we have the presence of mind to say, "you know, I am going to need more  time! I will get back to you!" and then we head off to our favorite peaceful place and take a TIME OUT...