Slow way down.
Often when fewer students show up, Karen will ask if it's OK to do a gentle class, a class where poses are restorative rather than uber challenging. Rarely is there a protest or complaint in response to this suggestion. It's easy to understand why.
Our lives are chock full of "doing". We have homes, families, gardens, careers, volunteer commitments; we shop, we drive, we cook and clean up, we pay bills, and chauffeur children. We plan and organize and keep all the balls in the air every single day from the time we get out of bed in the morning until we fall back into it at night. I've found retirement makes some difference in the content of my schedule, but often the schedule is just as full.
A yoga class that allows us to put down the burden of doing and just "be" is a welcome respite. I find every yoga class, gentle or challenging, lets me quiet my mind as I focus on the poses and my breath, but a gentle, restorative class also lets me quiet my body.
Karen often admonishes us to "slow way down" in moving through our poses. This is good advice about life too. The rush of busyness becomes the norm and we forget how to relax. Going slowly feels antithetical to getting everything done we have to do! Hurry, hurry, hurry is usually our inner mantra.
My husband and I had a conversation just this week about the trickiness of finding balance in our lives -- time alone, time for fitness, time for family, time for meditation, yoga, for yard work and housework and friends and ... well, you know. I find most days fly by, whether they are "busy" or whether I've been able to take time for quiet. But I know that slowing down at least puts me in a place of mindfulness so that balance is easier to recognize.
Today I was up at 6:00 a.m. to greet my 18 month granddaughter who is spending the day with us. I went to Yoga and then to a strength training class while "grandpa" hung out with our girl. Then I was home to some housework, more childcare while my husband ran his errands, took a few moments for this blog post, and soon will gear up for our other granddaughter to arrive after school and both will spend the night. The balance between child-centered energy, sometimes joyful and sometimes chaotic, hopefully will be struck by my yoga and fitness classes and trying to keep a lid on the entropy all around us that little ones can create. Tomorrow afternoon I imagine more balance will come when I spend a quiet few hours reading! Through it all my goal is to slow way down, to stop anticipating what will come next and just be in the moment of what is.
Slowing down is a restorative practice no matter what's going on in our lives. And that's a good thing.
Namaste, donnajurene
Photo Credit: pixabay.com
My blissful experience with a Yoga practice…also falling down, crying, laughing, and sleeping in class.
Thursday, September 29, 2016
Wednesday, September 14, 2016
SICK BED YOGA
Unable to sleep a wink, up all night, I sat in the living room bundled in a blanket noticing in my best "mindfulness" manner my sore back, headache, chills, and cramps. I talked to my body and reassured it all was well; I breathed deeply; I closed my eyes; I opened my eyes; I took some medicine; I drank lots of water to stay hydrated. Nothing seemed to help. I was miserable and it seemed the whole ordeal would go on forever.
Desperate times call for desperate measures. I decided to do some yoga. Seriously. I Googled "Yoga for Diarrhea" and stunningly there are actually several sites that address this situation. Here's one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mV67aFURSxw&feature=youtu.be
I've never done a full headstand in my life, so the beginning of this video was of little use to me. I was able to do the shoulder stand for a bit and I'd already tried the pranayama breathing thing; it's my go-to for anxiety. None of this helped.
I decided to focus on my headache. But what I found were poses purported to work great for headache, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/15/yoga-for-headaches_n_3574848.html but were to be avoided if one had diarrhea. AND the site for what NOT to do if you have the tummy yuk https://www.yogajournal.com/poses/contraindications-modifications/diarrhea said NOT to do Shoulder Stand, which the other guy in the video recommend you DO do. This type of conflicting advice might be commonplace in western medicine, but in yoga? Oh no!
I felt Yoga was starting to fail me in my hour of need. But it did distract me and by dawn I was feeling a smidge better. I went to bed and slept most of the day, missing a lot of the socializing with our friends, but I was in no mood for that anyway. Not my best weekend, all in all, and it took several days for me to regain my usual vim and vigor.
I have not, however, completely lost faith in yoga as a curative because I also discovered this guy and have found laughter to be the very best medicine: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDtfHl1v9xI ("advocate yoga as a cure for everything"... LOL! That's me!) ©
Namaste, donnajurene
Photo Credit: pixabay.com
Saturday, September 10, 2016
I'M A STAR
OK. You may be wondering if I've totally gone bonkers. Maybe somehow you were so absorbed in your own pedestrian life that you missed my big videographic debut. Well, lookie here: http://www.yogacirclestudio.com (Who Does Yoga?)
Yes. That little ditty has been up on the Yoga Circle website for over a week now and I'm sure the post office is storing the fan mail until they can find a truck large enough to deliver it. I will, of course, answer each letter personally and include an autographed photo (framable).
When Karen asked if I'd be willing to be interviewed, I said yes, because promoting this blog and the studio are two things I love to do. Besides, it had been years and years since my glory days of being hounded by the press when I headed up a local activist group and found myself being interviewed on the TV news dozens of times. The issues were important; the TV stuff was fun! I am one of those introverts who can perform. Put a mic in my face and some "other" me jumps into action. You always hear about performers who say they are introverts and you want not to believe it, but it can be true. I've emceed, done performance poetry, led services at a church I used to attend, made speeches. Very little stage fright. It's weird.
The experience with this interview was fun too. The studio was empty. The director tested for where to set up, what the background would look like, got the shot framed, the sound checked and then "action!" He asked me a series of questions (none known to me previously) and I answered with animation and articulateness. I was in the flow! I could tell I was hitting it out of the park! When we finished I was sort of euphoric. Then he said, "I'd like to do it again while other students are coming in."
"WHAT? I nailed my first take! I can't duplicate that brilliant performance!", I thought. I might have mumbled a less startled protest that I thought maybe perhaps we had the footage we needed. But nope. A director has his vision. So I went all Meryl Streep inside and told myself, "You can do this. Multiple takes? Sure. Be a professional and do it again."
So we did. Some of the questions were the same. Some different. Editing cut the whole interview down to just over 3 minutes (the attention span of the average viewer, I guess) and I'm sure some of my best work ended up on the cutting room floor (or wherever digital editing goes), which is the lament of every performer. But I'm pleased with the end result, with one exception:
When I was asked what posts I like best, I went on and on about the ones where I am klutzy. I do like those, for the reasons stated, but I wish I'd also mentioned the ones where I get a big "a-ha" on the mat. Some learning happens that moves me emotionally. I've actually written about those moments far more often than the klutzy moves I do. And for me, they are the reason I want everyone to practice yoga. Yes, for all the physical benefits, but also (and perhaps more) for the benefit to our spirits.
Maybe I can work this teaching into my NEXT interview, because, "Mr. DeMille...I'm ready for my close-up."
Namaste, donnajurene
P.S. "I'd like to thank my producer, Karen Guzak, and my director, Warner Blake, without whom I never would have won this award. I'd also like to thank everyone who has ever read this blog. You are the wings beneath my Pigeon Pose." (Just practicing my speech.) ©
Photo Credit: pixabay.com
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