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Once More Into The Breach, Dear Friends, It’s Day 8! January 18, 2011

Posted by ajoyfulpractice in 21-Day Challenge, Books, Changing Perspectives, Fitness, Health, Karma, Mantra, Meditation, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Philosophy, Science, Twin Cities, Yoga.
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In peace there’s nothing so becomes a man

As modest stillness and humility:”

– William Shakespeare’s Henry V (I:3)

For most of the first week of the Yoga Journal 21-Day Challenge, I was house sitting for a friend. I had tons of space, tons of quiet, and two computers in the room where I practiced the video sequences. didn’t have to worry about disturbing anyone, or about being disturbed. The cat and I did not compete for the shower. It was a peaceful way to practice. Yes, the volume was an issue, as was the height of the desk when I was lying on the floor, but I didn’t have any downloading issues and all was good. Despite the fact that I was a little off staying in a new place and working out the logistics of traveling to and from a different home base, it was pretty relaxing. It was almost like a retreat – a retreat with a great view and some really good yoga teachers.

Fast forward to Monday, Day 8 of the challenge. As much as I enjoyed practices led by teachers I had never met, I was itching for a real class with a real live, real time, teacher. Truth be told, I was also itching for something familiar. I got myself geared up to take a class from a teacher who has also been my student and whose class I had sorely missed because of my work schedule during the holidays. I walked into the studio and discovered there was a sub. Still, I was excited, because the sub was someone I’d met and from whom I had hoped to take a class. The schedule just hadn’t worked out.

As the class started, my body warmed up; my mind focused on the breath; and the movement; I smiled some and I was glad to be right there, right then. Suddenly, about midway through the Sun Salutations, I found myself in the middle of a “let go of what you know” moment. Or maybe, instead of calling it a moment, I should call it a battle. Or a war.

My breath stayed steady throughout the practice. However, as we proceeded my body felt more and more out of balance; my mind started to fluctuate; and I couldn’t let go of the sensation that things were going downhill fast. Watching me, the teacher probably had no idea I was fighting – and failing – to stay on my mat. As I made my way through some fairly challenging asanas, I doubt anyone in the room was aware that I just wanted to shout, “Are you kidding me?!?!” and then storm out of the room.

Contrary to what I wrote yesterday, I didn’t do what I knew would work for me and I didn’t go into an extended Child’s Pose. I wanted to move. I wanted to be open to the moment. So, I took the suggestions, as they were given, until we got to the final supine twist. Then, I just had to do what I had to do: I twisted to the left first, instead of the right. I settled into Savasana, feeling fairly confident that there was a method to the teacher’s “madness” – as well as a message I would have appreciated if it had come by way of a different method. I also realized I hadn’t done myself any favors by being resistant to what was being offered, as it was being offered.

Leaving the studio, my body felt a little cranky and I found myself staring into space. I joked to one of my students that all the “Shoveling Snow Pose” I had to do that afternoon wouldn’t leave me incapacitated, but that the class I took might. Two hours later, when every step felt like someone was poking a cattle prod in my right buttocks, I was no longer laughing. I was trying to figure out how I was going to restore myself.

Even though I didn’t preview any of the videos during Week 1, I was fairly certain the Week 2 videos were in the same order. I was looking forward to doing the Day 1 sequence again, just to see how it would feel after all the other sequences. At least, that’s how I felt before the cattle prod sensation. Afterward, I started reconsidering my options. Part of me really wanted to just flow on my own or stream a vinyasa practice from a teacher with whom I’m familiar. Another part of me really wanted to do the video sequence from Day 4, Day 5, or Day 6 of the challenge. I even considered Day 2, even though it was going to be evening before I could practice. Ultimately, however, I decided to give the sequence from Day 7 another shot. It had, after all, the elements I needed to fix what ailed me.

Unfortunately, I didn’t get to the practice until after I left the “retreat.” I had to make space to heal and restore. The tub was less than appealing. And, I hadn’t counted on having problems with the download. I decided it was all for the good. Repeating a section until the video unfroze worked until I realized I was cold – therefore not doing my stiff muscles any favors – and needed to do more. So, based on what I remembered about the video, I started throwing in restorative postures I knew would fit with the sequence and which would help my cranky low back and hips. Throw in a little Supine Pigeon here, a little Supta Padangusthasana there, some twisting and hip flexing, plus Ananstasana Thirty minutes later, the video had only progressed through 11 minutes of the recorded sequence and I was still cold. I did Legs-Up-The Wall, considered staying there for the 18-Minute So Hum meditation, and then decided to do shift into Savasana. There was just no way I could sit for that long and wasn’t sure it was a good time to do an inversion for that long, even a mild one. Once again, I set my alarm for the wrong time and went over.

Oh well, it’s just another day on the mat. In the end, I got through it and I feel peace.

~ Shanti, Shanti, Shanthi ~

On The 7th Day We Rest January 17, 2011

Posted by ajoyfulpractice in 21-Day Challenge, Changing Perspectives, Fitness, Health, Mantra, Meditation, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Philosophy, Twin Cities, Yoga.
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Day 7

“And God finished on the Seventh Day his work which He had made; and He rested on the Seventh Day from all the work which he had made.

And God blessed the Seventh Day, and sanctified it, because that on it he rested from all his work which God had created in making it.” – Genesis 2:2 – 3


Even people who don’t believe in the Genesis story, typically know the story: the world is created bit by bit, breath by breath, over 6 days and then, on the 7th day, God rested. Religious people in the Judeo-Christian parts of the world celebrate the sabbath, a day of rest, even though they don’t always agree on when the 7th day occurs. And that sacred day of rest has become a part of our profane modern world. At least once a week, it’s nice to rest.

Sunday is usually the end of my work week. I’m usually pretty happy to see the week end. Normally, if I felt the way I did at the end of this Sunday, I would go home, eat, and crash without setting an alarm. I’d bask in the fact that I didn’t have to be anywhere in the morning. Monday, my day of mostly rest, would start as soon as I got home. Today, however, was Day 7 of Yoga Journal’s 21-Day Yoga Challenge; and I still had stuff to do.

After taking care of some housekeeping chores in the morning, I sat for 5 minutes and then started preparing for my class. Ironically (after yesterday’s blog entry), I didn’t spend much of my class prep time doing asana. But I did do a lot more demonstrations during class than I might have done with a different sequence. I felt energized after class and yes – yes! – ready to meditate. Luckily there were no classes directly after my morning class so I plopped myself down on a block and proceeded to do my 18-Minute guided meditation.

I had a whole basketball court sized studio to myself, with morning light streaming through the windows, and it felt super good. So good, that when my alarm didn’t go off at the right time I just kept going. My 18 minutes started drifting towards 30 minutes. My body didn’t complain. Much.

I had two more classes to teach after my lunch break. Despite the fact that I didn’t do a full out asana practice in the morning, I felt focused and ready to go. Ready even, to deal with all that came my way. It was fun. Still, at the end of the day, I was ready to crash. Ready to rest. An evening practice should have felt perfect. Oddly enough, my body and mind did not cooperate.

I got home a little earlier than usual and decided to read for a few minutes. No problem there. I was relaxed, but not overly sleepy and had no problem focusing – or sitting still. However, when it came time to do the 20-Minute Evening Sequence with Kate Holcombe I felt like my skin was crawling. I was restless, cold, and had a hard time keeping still and steady enough to do the practice. Time and time again, I wanted to either move more – and do something a little more vigorous – or move less, and go directly into Savasana. I tried a little bit of both, but I had a hard time enjoying the practice.

Don’t get me wrong: the practice itself was fine. I’ve done different elements of this practice before and I really enjoy doing a little restorative yoga. The instruction was clear and precise. It should have been one of those sublime experiences. Especially since, here was the Savasana I’ve been begging for all week! Tonight, however, I needed a little something different. I stuck with it, because part of my commitment was to do the video sequences. If this had been a class in a studio, with a live teacher , however, I would have modified the practice. If I had just committed myself to being on the mat for 21 days, I also would have modified more or called it a day since I did the meditation early in the day. Either way, today became my own personal reminder of what I tell my students all the time: Sometimes practicing yoga is not about practicing asana. Sometimes union comes with rest.

~ Shanti, Shanti, Shanthi ~

Day 6, If Thinking Makes It So, So Be It January 16, 2011

Posted by ajoyfulpractice in 21-Day Challenge, Buddhism, Changing Perspectives, Donate, Fitness, Health, Karma Yoga, Mantra, Meditation, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Philosophy, Science, Twin Cities, Yoga.
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Day 6

All that we are is the result of what we have thought. The mind is everything. What we think we become. “ – Guatama Siddharta, Buddha

Our limitations and success will be based, most often, on your expectations for ourselves. What the mind dwells upon, the body acts upon.” – Denis Waitley

I am constantly amazed at how the mind works. The Yoga Sutra describes the 5 ways we think: correct perception, incorrect (or mistaken) perception, imagination, deep sleep, and memories. Patanjali explains in this same section that these thoughts, or perceptions, can be afflicted or free of affliction (YS I:5 – 6). It’s more than Cogito, Ergo Sum or even Dubito, Ergo Cogito, Ergo Sum. It’s Cogito Ergo Mundo Est: I think therefore the world (my version of reality) exists.

Sometimes we find out our perception of a situation is incorrect. It can be a devastating discover. No matter how much the realization shakes us, however, we ultimate fail or succeed based on our ability to accept the truth, recover from our mistake, and keep moving. Equally fascinating is what happens when we make a decision to do something, fully commit, and – in doing so – discover that everything around us seems to adjust to make space for our commitment. The world changes, reality shifts, all because we made up our mind.

Over the last 6 days, I have settled into a routine. I’m not sure how I feel about it; other than that I am astounded at how my schedule has shifted and coalesced around my commitment to Yoga Journal’s 21-Day Challenge. I drag myself out of bed every morning; mediate for 5 minutes (or not, depending on how many times I hit the snooze); prepare for my classes by practicing 30 – 90 minutes; rush off to teach my classes; and then round off my day with the video sequence, the 18-minute So Hum mediation, and a blog entry. In between, I deal with the rest of my life – which includes dealing with the snow. It hasn’t even been a full week yet (unless you count Day 0) and every day is different, but this is the schedule that seems to work. Sometimes I consider changing it. Other times I am content to let it evolve. At all times I am committed to the process, and the challenge.

Today, Day 6, is one of those days when I considered change and, in doing so, almost faltered. By the time I got home I was exhausted – and fighting it. At some point I recognized the pointlessness of not taking a nap. Still, because I hadn’t done the video sequence for the day or the mediation, I fought my body’s desire for sleep. Needless to say, I lost that fight. I woke up much later than I would have if I had set an alarm, but I was rested. Even though I woke up and accepted the need for a nap, Part of me dreaded pulling up the video. I wasn’t sure I could handle an intense practice and definitely didn’t need anything invigorating. Something restorative, I thought, would be nice right about now.

And this is when my thought manifested itself in the form of Rebecca Urban’s 30-Minute Tension Release Hip Openers. I couldn’t have asked for a better practice – oh, wait, I did ask for it! This was no slacker practice. It combined a sublime amount of surrender, hip flexion, and hip extension with just enough intensity and challenge. And even though I’d put my hips and hamstrings through the proverbial wringer for the last two days, my whole lower body felt nurtured and encouraged.

Towards the beginning of the sequence I wondered why this practice didn’t precede the one for Hanumanasana. By the end of the practice I realized it was a sequence that could be used to integrate the body for a peak pose like Hanumanasana; it could be expanded into a longer span of time; or it could be used as the surrender portion at the end of an intense vinyasa practice. It could also be practiced as it is; and what a wonderful thing it is.

My body felt ready for Savasana. It also felt ready for the seated meditation. My mind…well, that’s a story for another day.

~ NAMASTE ~

Day 5, One Giant Leap For Yogi-kind January 15, 2011

Posted by ajoyfulpractice in 21-Day Challenge, Changing Perspectives, Fitness, Health, Meditation, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Philosophy, Science, Texas, Twin Cities, Yoga.
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(or, How Small Steps Lead To A Giant Leap)

I was super excited to wake up Friday morning and discover the Day 5 video featured Elise Lorimer working towards Hanumanasana. The story of Hanuman is one of my favorites and I’ve told or referenced the story on more than one occasion while teaching the pose. But, as much as I love the story and the benefits of the pose, I suck at the full expression. I always have; even as a pre-teen gymnast I sucked at doing the splits. In fact, there’s a Junior High year book picture of me on a Maryland gymnastics team and to this day I cringe when I see it because I’m not the girl doing the splits. Still, I teach the pose because (a) even the modified version (or Hanuman prep, as I call it) can be incredibly beneficial; (b) I love the story; and (c) some of my students have incredible Hanumanasana practices.

Given my affinity for the story and my on-going struggle with the pose itself, I wanted to do the practice first thing in the morning. I was further inspired because I was already planning to include the pose in my Saturday morning class. But, I had early AM obligations – specifically, getting ready for my regular Friday classes. I spent the morning practicing a sequence inspired by the ruminations I had after finishing the Day 4 Standing Pose sequence. The irony of the way I work is that I was inspired by a 30-minute practice, but I wished I had more than 60 minutes to teach (and practice) the resulting class. This only makes sense when you know that sometimes I think like a Faulkner novel.

At the end of another snowy day I set up to practice the video. Keep in mind that my day included a little slipping and sliding, a little dancing, a practice set of Hanumanasana – just to give myself a base line, and another set of “Shoveling Snow Pose”. For whatever irrational reason, a part of my brain expected the sequence to be so overwhelmingly powerful that I would melt into the full expression like butter. Right. Keep dreaming.

The reality is that no one melts into the full expression of Hanumanasana. Even people who make it look effortless, do the work. They practice – if not every day, then every chance they get – and part of the practice is the process, the krama, those small sequential steps that lead to a giant leap.

True, there are some incredibly flexible people on the planet – and most of them are kids – but even Gumby Jr. has to practice the splits in order to do the splits. Choosing Hanumanasana as a peak pose for this challenge was brilliant, because it simultaneously reinforces the power of a sequence to open the body into a particular pose, as well as the need to dedicate one’s self to regular practice. Also, because it is such an extreme pose, it’s a great opportunity to tune into the body. Elise Lorimer’s practice highlighted all the muscle groups engaged in Hanumanasana. When I reached that peak pose, I didn’t melt into the full expression. I did, however, ease into my deepest expression at that moment. Ultimately, being where you are in the moment is what it’s all about.

Is it my imagination or are the Savasana moments getting longer? Even though I know the videos are pre-recorded, I feel like the universe is responding to my comments about the lack of Savasana. Tonight, I was more than ready for a little moment of reclined stillness. I stayed a few minutes past the end of the video and then sat for the 18-minute So Hum meditation I’ve been doing. My whole body felt prepared and, even though I was tired, I managed to finish the meditation in pretty good shape. Again, my legs felt divine and I’m looking forward to tomorrow.

~ NAMASTE ~

Day 4, Rooting Down January 14, 2011

Posted by ajoyfulpractice in 21-Day Challenge, Changing Perspectives, Fitness, Health, Mantra, Meditation, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Philosophy, Twin Cities, Yoga.
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Day 4, Rooting Down

Everybody has a day that reinforces the need for a day off. Sometimes it’s a Saturday. For most of my adult life it’s been Monday. This week it was also Thursday. I woke up early with what I consider a primal urge to cuddle…barring that, to huddle under the covers. (Maybe today some part of me knew it was going to snow and just wanted to hibernate.) Either way, once reality sets in and I realize I have to get up, I sit and breath.

Again, whether we realize it or not, I think that urge to pause, sit and breath is primal. Even my house-mate does it. Sometimes we don’t even realize we do it; which means we miss a significant moment to clear the fuzz from our brain, wake up (literally and figuratively), and start the day fresh.

Prior to starting Yoga Journal’s 21-Day Yoga Challenge, I started most days by formally sitting and breathing for at least 5 minutes. I say “formally,” but it wasn’t anything fancy. Sometimes I added a mantra, pranayama, or guided myself through a meditation. But, more often than not I just observed my breath, reminded myself I was not thinking. Since I planned on doing the 17-minute So Hum meditation during the challenge, I figured I would skip the 5 minutes at the beginning of my day.

Skipping my 5 minutes at the top of the morning worked OK for Days 1 – 3, but today I had to hit the floor running – that is, of course, after the cuddling and huddling. So, Day 4 started with 5 minutes of sitting and breathing. Once the fuzz cleared, I headed out to teach. While I demonstrated some of the poses during class, I really didn’t practice any asana until the end of the day. (Unless, of course, you count “Shoveling Snow Pose.”)

The 30-minute Standing Poses sequence with Jason Crandell was amazing. Just as advertised, the focus was on aligning and refining. I had several a-ha moments as a student, but even more as a teacher. (As in, “A-ha, that’s how I fix that sassy hip problem I see in class all the time.) Granted, there was at least one time when I thought, “Yeah, I get why he’s doing it that way, and I’ll try it, but I don’t see myself practicing that on a regular basis.” Of course, I’ve said that about certain alignment techniques before and then blissfully eaten my words. Since steady practice (abhyasa) and self-study (svadhyaya) are key elements of yoga, it’s not enough to just do it – you have to actually practice something to see if and how it works. Anyone interested in deepening an existing practice, reviving a practice, or starting brand new should consider the Day 4 sequence one of those “keepers” on which you can build a life’s worth of practice.

My legs felt phenomenal, and more than ready for 17-minutes of deep seated meditation. No fidgeting today! I’m use to a lot more upper body engagement during my daily yoga practice, so I found I had to be much more conscious about holding my arms and torso in the proper alignment. But, that’s not a bad thing. In fact, today’s practice reinforced the fact that the physical practice is intended to prepare the mind-body-spirit for deep seated meditation.

The fact that our physical practice should prepare us for deep seated meditation is something we hear (as students) and say (as teachers) all the time. Still, I always wonder how many people in the modern world – especially here in the Americas – are actually following their physical practice with an extended meditation. If we did, I wonder how our physical practice would change.

~ NAMASTE ~

Day 3 & Things Get Tricky January 13, 2011

Posted by ajoyfulpractice in 21-Day Challenge, Changing Perspectives, Fitness, Health, Mantra, Meditation, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Philosophy, Twin Cities, Yoga.
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Day 3 of the 21-Day Yoga Challenge

It’s Wednesday, Day 3 of Yoga Journal’s 21-Day Yoga Challenge, and this is when things get tricky.

For the past couple of months I have been subbing classes on Wednesday and Thursday mornings. Which means: for the last couple of months I’ve lost a day off; lost the majority of my Wednesday morning class prep/practice time; and I’ve had to run around Minneapolis like a chicken with it’s head cut off in order to teach 4 different classes in 4 different locations. Then you throw in the snow, and, well, let’s just say I’ve had to go out of my way to even pretend Wednesday is Zen-day.

Taking my mom’s advice (to just suck it up and take a taxi between the first two classes) definitely saved me from a couple of melt downs. However, the logistics have been taxing and I won’t miss them. What I will miss about these extra classes are the people who’ve taken the classes and the opportunity I’ve had to learn from their practices.

Even though the people have made this whole situation a treat and a gift, I was looking forward to getting back to my old routine this week. Only, it didn’t happen. This morning I was still subbing and still running around to various locations. To make things extra tricky, now I had to work in this yoga challenge. What’s a yogini to do?

Ultimately, I decided to break up the practice. I did the 45-minute sequence I was going to teach during my second class of the day before I left the house. I had time to also squeeze in the 20-minute video sequence or the 18-minute meditation, but then I would have been rushing to the first class. Very un-Zen-day-like. So, I thought I’d put it off and squeeze the other two portions of my daily practice into my afternoon breaks. Needless to say, that didn’t work out. All was not lost, however. My evening class was canceled so I went through the 20-minute Core Focus with Rebecca Urban while I cooked dinner. Then I finished the evening with the seated meditation.

Energetically, I didn’t have any problem practicing the video segment in the evening. I was a little worried about the level of the practice, because I consider abdominal work to be my weak spot (as a teacher and a practitioner).  Also, the classes I taught, and practiced, on Days 2 and 3 were fairly challenging – and yesterday I featured a particularly intense core workout. But, the video sequence wasn’t nearly as overwhelming as I expected. Don’t get me wrong. It was nice – in a hair of the dog kind of way – but I don’t anticipate feeling it in the morning. What I most appreciated about the core  sequence was that it was creative and accessible to almost anyone. Sure, there were some fairly standard yoga crunches, but there also some clever isometric moments and some ingenious isolation moves. I’m looking forward to doing this segment again.

On the flip side, I wish I’d done the seated meditation earlier, because I was just too tired to sit still. Part of my psyche was definitely chanting, “I am that Mexican Jumping Bean. That Mexican Jumping Bean I am.”

In the end, I could have easily inserted the core video into my previously outlined plan for the day. And tomorrow, I’ll plan on doing the meditation a lot earlier.

~ NAMASTE ~

2 Days of Yoga Down, 19 To Go January 12, 2011

Posted by ajoyfulpractice in 21-Day Challenge, Changing Perspectives, Fitness, Health, Mantra, Meditation, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Music, Philosophy, Science, Twin Cities, Yoga.
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21 Days of Yoga (& Other Stuff)

Day 2

When am I going to fit in my yoga practice?

What, exactly, am I going to practice?

And, where did all this snow come from?

Yes, after 40-plus years on this planet, over 10 years of yoga practice, and going on 4 years of Minnesota winters, these are still the questions I ask at the beginning of a January day. While the latter may be unique to me, anyone even contemplating a daily yoga practice in this day and age has to answer the first two questions again and again.

“When am I going to fit in my yoga practice?” translates to: How am I going to work in time for what I need/want to do given my obligation(s) to a significant other, children, pets, work, my commute, my friends, etc.? Also, in order to maintain the practice, the timing has to be convenient, a space has to be available, and you have to feel up to the challenge. All of this, before you ever even get to the question: what, exactly, am I going to practice?

I feel most myself in the late afternoon and evening. If I had a completely flexible schedule, I would almost always practice after 11 AM. That might not be traditional or ideal, but I’d be comfortable with such a schedule. In fact, when I first started practicing, the majority of the classes I attended were during a business/corporate lunch hour or in the evening. More often than not, however, my current work schedule dictates a morning practice. It’s how I begin my day. And, I’ll admit it: more often than not, it’s the way I love to start the day.

Waking up a little late on Day 2 of the Yoga Journal challenge, I was naturally concerned about how I was going to answer my first two questions of the day. Imagine my pleasure (and relief) to discover that the recommended video sequence was a 15-Minute Morning Sequence with Kate Holcombe. Boy, was this perfect – and refreshing! After a minor hiccup with the downloading, I was waking up with the flow. Again, the sequence was well thought out and, in this case, I felt like it was simple enough for anyone to follow along and get energized. I also felt like the fitness level was exactly where it needed to be to serve as positive reinforcement for someone new to the mat. Part of me wonders why this wasn’t the Day 1 sequence. In fact, as I continue to encourage people to take the challenge, I am recommending that my students start with Day 2 as their Day 1. I can only imagine how joyful it would feel to start with this simple 15-minute practice and then, 21 days later, find yourself flowing through the current Day 1 hip openers. (Maybe, at some point, even putting together the sequences from Day 1 and Day 2 – but in the opposite order.) Sublime.

The video sequence turned out to be a perfect integration sequence for what I was already planning to teach and practice on Day 2. While I did not teach this sequence to my students, I easily segued from the video into my own personal sequence. Best of all, I felt prepared for the challenging sequences I had outlined. With the dulcet sound of Sammy Davis Jr. singing I’ve Gotta Be Me playing in the background, I ended my practice and started my day on a high note. I felt balanced, focused, and ready to take on the world. Even now, going on 14 hours after the morning practice, I still feel that way.

After teaching my first class and having lunch with two of my favorite people, I sat in the back of a coffee shop and completed the So Hum meditation. The recording is fairly quiet and I was in a semi-private room, so I wasn’t worried about disturbing the other patrons. In hindsight, I should have used headphones to block out some of the ambient noise. However, I was amazed to observe how my mind and body tuned into the audio for the meditation and tuned out the competing elements. Yesterday, I counted 9 sets of 12 as I went through the mediation. Today I timed it. At some point I will use an actual mala, but right now I’m interested in noting how I tap into the practice without the beads.

As for that final question, the one about the snow….I’ve decided it’s part of that same storm front that moves through WordPress during the holidays. Smile.

~ NAMASTE ~

GRATITUDE & SPECIAL BLESSINGS (Thanksgiving Schedule and News) November 22, 2010

Posted by ajoyfulpractice in Fitness, Meditation, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Texas, Twin Cities, Yoga.
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I feel a very unusual sensation – if it is not indigestion, I think it must be gratitude. ~Benjamin Disraeli

Yep, that is definitely gratitude I am feeling as Thanksgiving week begins. (Hopefully, I will be just as certain of the distinction on Thursday.) I am grateful for the family and friends who have supported my yoga practice – as well as the family and friends who have become a part of my practice. Believe it or not, I am also very grateful that it snowed before my trip to Texas and (naturally) I am glad to be spending this week in Texas with my family and more friends.

While I am in Texas, some very special blessings (on and off the mat) have agreed to sub for me.

The Nokomis Yoga schedule will be as follows:

  • Tuesday, Nov. 23rd @ 12:00 PM (60 minutes with NANCY)
  • Tuesday, Nov. 24th @ 7:15 PM (75 minutes with ALEX)
  • Wednesday, Nov. 25th @ 4:30 PM (60 minutes – CANCELED)

MORE ON Alex Barrett: Alex’s interest in theater lead to the discovery of yoga while he was at college, where sun salutations were used as a centering exercise before rehearsals. After graduating, however, he and yoga took a hiatus. He rediscovered yoga years later at the advice of a friend who suggested it as an alternative to running. Since then, he has dived headfirst into practice. He is nearing completion of his 230 hour certification at the Yoga Center of Minneapolis and continues to learn something new every day.

Alex’s classes are a challenging blend of flowing and static poses, along with pranayama and meditation. He hopes to help you find more joy, balance, and flexibility on and off the mat.

MORE ON Nancy Poucher: Nancy Poucher is an Iyengar trained, flow influenced hatha yoga teacher. A student of yoga since 1992, Nancy studied with Kevin Durkin, receiving her RYT200 hours certificate from the wonderful Yandara Yoga Institute in Baja, Mexico. She has taught at Movement Arts studio and privately in Provincetown, Massachusetts. She continues her Iyengar training with Greg Anton, focusing on alignment in the summertime on Cape Cod. Winters incorporate a breath-oriented flow more suitable to the cold snowy months in Minnesota. Foremost, Nancy is a student of yoga and it is from her practice and experience that she teaches.

For information on YMCA classes, please contact the YMCA directly.


~ NAMASTE & HAVE A JOYFUL HOLIDAY SEASON! ~

Looking For Something To Do This Weekend? August 20, 2010

Posted by ajoyfulpractice in Donate, Fitness, Food, Health, Karma, Karma Yoga, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Philosophy, Science, Twin Cities, Volunteer, Yoga.
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Click on the “Karma Yoga” subpage and check out ways to dedicate your efforts to others.

The Art of Getting Unhooked July 29, 2010

Posted by ajoyfulpractice in Books, Buddhism, Changing Perspectives, Fitness, Food, Health, Meditation, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Movies, Music, Philosophy, Science, Texas, Twin Cities, Yoga.
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Before you can get unhooked, you have to recognize that you are hooked and recognize how you got hooked.

Pema Chödrön‘s birthday week (July 12 – 18, 2010) was a great opportunity to introduce my regular classes to the concept of shenpa and the practice of the 4 R’s (Recognize, Refrain, Relax, Resolve).

Check out the shenpa subpages (on the right side of the Newest Thoughts tab) to learn more.

~ Namaste ~