Get a peek at the scene over at the Hanuman Yoga Festival in Boulder, CO where I've been hanging out with Kelli Davis, of Crocus Pocus Designs. Many of you know her, and if you don't you'll know her soon - Kelli was recently featured in Yoga Journal for her work helping protect and rehabilitate rescued Elephants in Thailand through her Ganesh Project necklaces. Kelli is an artist and a healer who has made it her life passion to adorn seekers with the stones they need to help them transform their lives!
This past weekend I had the great honor of co-leading a retreat with my long-time friend and meditation teacher, Sharon Salzberg. The retreat group was mixed, ranging from those with advanced yoga asana practices and minor seated practices to strictly meditators who had dabbled in yoga before but did not make it regularly to the mat.
Several in the room had long abandoned their meditation cushions in favor of sitting in a chair to avoid the pain that flared up after only 5 minutes of sitting.
Worse yet, some reported that they had either sat through the pain or cut their practices short to get out of the discomfort in the past.
Has meditation become an occupational hazard of your spiritual practice much like sitting at a desk or commuting long hours?
Watch the video below to find out if you have been making any of the 5 most common alignment mistakes in your meditation posture! Then learn (through yoga alignment) how to sit in ways that make your seated practice more comfortable and last longer.
As always, please leave a comment at the bottom of the blog. I would love, love, love to hear how much more mileage you get on your cushion after watching this!
Want to read more on the topic of meditation and yoga? See my article written for Elephant Journal at the Press Page.
And join us for the month of June over at the 30 Day Yoga Challenge on Facebook, where we will be meditating for 10 minutes minimum a day with a group of 2000 other yogis!
My morning note from the Universe after teaching on same topic:
"The more responsible one becomes, the farther their wings reach. ~ Fly, The Universe"
There is a teaching in the Tantra that says we are born innately free. Rather than seeking freedom as a spiritual goal (i.e. as if you never had it to begin with), freedom is actually an inherent asset, lying there waiting to be accessed all along.
As we respect our own innate freedom, we come to a teaching in the Tantra called "Radical Affirmation" or in Sanskrit, "Shri". Radical Affirmation has many meanings, one of which is that we must also be receptive to others’ freedom.
Tantric scholar Douglas Brooks recently shared with me that "Radical Affirmation is how we get real about what the world is offering us." It is kind of like welcoming everything that comes your way with open arms and a big YES. And if you have not noticed, being alive in the 21st century, the world (out of its crazy freedom!) offers up some pretty weird sh*t!
In the toughest times of my life, I have held myself back from my innate freedom (and from everyone and everything else) when, rather than receive what the world was offering, I blamed someone or something else for what was going wrong. I was either going to say YES and figure out my part in the matter (Radical Affirmation) then move on, or I was going to cry "victim".
Being a victim is, let's just say it, not attractive.
Being a victim keeps us in a holding pattern that in yoga we call "Samsara", or as Douglas says, "a dis-empowering process where we say, "I know better but..."
When things go wrong, we are so afraid to be vulnerable, we often put the onus anywhere but on ourselves. We might feel better or righteous for a second or two, but we rarely expand or grow. Instead we stay stuck in the same ruts (Samskaras).
In almost all cases, the events of our lives and the results we are getting can be traced back to guess who? Ourselves.
- Sure, the traffic was heinous, but I was the one who cut it too close.
- Sure, he lied to me and promised the world, but I'm the one who trusted him.
- Sure, I never watched that crappy exercise video collecting dust on the shelf, but I'm the one who bought it.
- Sure, I took on too much in one day, but I'm the one who said YES and did not say NO.
- Sure, they stood me up and flaked, but I was the one who expected they could be accountable.
- Sure, they gave me the wrong directions, but it was me who did not listen to my intuition.
- Sure, I felt terrible and had no energy, but I was the one who ate poorly and did not get enough sleep.
Getting the picture?
"If you don't like your outcomes, change your responses." ~Jack Canfield
Jack Canfield, author of Chicken Soup for the Soul, has a principle of success that he teaches to thousands of students all over the world and that is to take 100% responsibility for your life in order to be truly empowered, fully free, and to succeed in creating a life of meaning.
In order to do this, he says, you have to completely give up:
- Blaming
- Complaining
- Justifying
- Making Excuses
So what do you do when you have a victim blaming you or giving you unsolicited negative feedback?
A victim typically wants vengeance. "Vengeance," Douglas Brooks says, "is a bit like watching the death penalty". The person getting the so-called vengeance is left in their same samsaric state as before the death, and any dysfunction on their part is enabled to continue on.
The best approach is to choose to be irenical (ie. aim toward peace), and let your opponent be right, give them "their little pound of flesh" as Douglas says. Then you can walk away empowered, having owned your part.
In addition you will have placed proper boundaries on any expectations of them to "get it" or take some of the responsibility them selves. Because when someone really wants to be the victim, they usually won't budge, so why should we expect otherwise? Just throw them the bone.
"Hanging onto resentment is letting someone you despise live rent-free in your head." ~ Esther Lederer
The key to “letting go”, that process so many yogi’s long to be able to do, is to take ownership first through radical affirmation of all that could possibly be true, take responsibility for your contribution, and then truly, the wings of your inherent freedom will soar.
Have you ever taken a yoga class and you could just tell that the teacher was not into it? Or were you that teacher standing in front of the class, looking out at the mats, passionless? Fortunately, there is a remedy...
And that is to...
Get down and get funky on your trusty yoga mat!
...And I don't mean go to a workshop or a retreat and come back inspired every now and then. I am talking about continual, non-stop re-fueling. Whether you teach yoga or not, this means getting on your yoga mat consistently, at your home, in a class, or at a practice for teachers and advanced students.
In 2001, I started teaching classes at Laughing Lotus Yoga Center in New York City, founded by NY yogini legend, Dana Trixie Flynn and star partner, Jasmine Tarkeshi.
What I loved about Dana's class was that even after so many years of teaching yoga, I never caught her standing in front of the room teaching un-inventively or leading a run of the mill sequence with a humdrum theme. Why?
Well, as I learned, Dana was on her mat every day, dancing, experimenting and creating magic. The juice around the practice was so compelling, it seeped into her teaching in ways that made her classes "events" you did not want to miss.
Dana and I started practicing together at Laughing Lotus weekly, inviting other teachers to join us.
I look back at those days fondly. It was a laboratory for yoga craziness...learning about our bodies and where we needed strength, where we needed opening, experimenting with zany postures, making up new ones, how to best get into advanced poses and more. We did timings, repetitions, played ridiculous music and laughed.
In that spirit of creativity and togetherness, I had some of the biggest breakthroughs in my yoga practice yet.
It was this memory that came with me to Colorado when I moved in 2004. So when I found a teacher's practice going on called "The Tigress", I knew I was home again.
With out touching regularly into your practice, the only thing to fuel your teaching is the stale memory of when you did have a regular practice.
Boring!
Like my days at Laughing Lotus, a tremendous way to advance your practice and get excited to get on the mat is to organize an informal practice in your area for teachers and advanced practioners.
"Those always fizzle out after a while" you say. Or, "No one ends up coming."
And that can be true. So...
Here is how to Organize a Practice Successfully:
- Pick a time based on the availability of the teachers in your area, either by creating a survey in Survey Monkey or doing some online research on teacher's schedules.
- Find a yoga studio that would be honored to host the practice during off hours, preferably as a community service to the local teachers.
- When you have established the above, send an email and FB invite to all the teachers!
- Start a group or create an event page in Facebook to advertise it where pictures and even videos can be posted to get people inspired.
- Be consistent and show up yourself. Repeat: Be consistent and show up yourself.
- Send out a reminder email the day before every practice and let them know what cool things might be occurring at the practice (holiday or b-day celebration, specific pose you will apex to, etc...). With out the reminders, that is when it can fizzle!
- Celebrate birthdays, holidays, milestones, and dedicate your practices often to students in the community and anyone in need.
- Either lead the practice yourself if you are the most experienced, take turns each week leading, or have all the teachers lead "round-robin" style.
This is a sure shot way to get fired up and if you teach, to set your yoga teaching on fire!
If this has worked for you, please leave a comment below - we'd love to hear it.
In my latest project, (an online teacher training called 90 Minutes to Change the World), part of the very first module addresses even more ideas like this one on cultivating your practice, plus exactly what needs to fall into place in order to get yourself on the mat so that you can teach from a place of deep inspiration.
To find out more about 90 Minutes to Change The World 101, starting this Tuesday April 5th, have fun browsing these links:
The 90 Minutes Vimeo Channel: http://vimeo.com/user4337915
Podcast Interview by Meredith Sasseen: http://bit.ly/fxAUBc
District Kula Blog: http://bit.ly/gEVHLW
She is a mom, a newlywed, she has the most amazing curls (one of her many signature features), and travels the world as a yogini superstar, inspiring yoga students everywhere with her sparkling zest for life. For the last 13 years, Desiree Rumbaugh and I have been part of this wild, expanding journey called yoga. She continues to be such a bright ball of love and enthusiasm, laughter and down-to-earth goodness, I just love the woman!
Desiree has a knack for seriously magnetizing people to yoga. As far as I'm concerned, the more peeps who do yoga, the more love there will be in the world!
The other day I did something really new and different - I had a video conversation on skype with Desiree. But it was not just a video chat, it was recorded split screen so we could share our convo with the world!
In the video below, you can see our chat and learn how Desiree started out as a local yoga teacher and the things she did to become the great "Yoga Magnet" that she is.
Besides how cool the technology we used is, can you feel the "Desiree sparkle", or what?
In April, Desiree will be joining the faculty (uh..me!) as a guest presenter for the next run of my online course. If you are a yoga teacher and want to get involved in the course, take a stroll over to the event page for 90 Minutes to Change the World 101 and learn more.
Be sure to leave a comment here for me and Desiree, we'd love to hear what you think about these ideas!
Ever had a CRAP day and feel like life is:
- not worth living
- is too hard, sucks
- you can't go on like this
- or just WTF?
But somewhere down there you know it will get better? Maybe in one breath things could change, but it might take until tomorrow...
THAT you know it will get better is a feature of YOGA or having a yoga practice. We just know that some days are bad and some are great, just as we know some practice days are awesome and some just fall flat.
I had a day like that on Sunday. I was full on with my cycle and had not slept well with the full moon, I was feeling heinous, and on top of it, despite uber hydration efforts here in Colorado, developed possibly the worst case of chapped lips in my entire life, (caused by natural lip balm of all things).
In that state I was unproductive and feeling anxious and....quite a bit sorry for myself.
On days like those, its almost like there is no other choice but to do something, anything to take care of myself. There is also no other choice but to let go of productivity and get on the couch with a movie and be the vegetable I so desperately need to be.
And so I did.
I took a hot bath, climbed in bed with a movie, cranked up the humidifier, loaded up my lips with goo, and called it a day.
The result?
Monday was damn good. I woke up on the right side of the bed, well rested, psyched for life, my lips are healed (thank you un-petroleum jelly!), I was down-right giddy, and my productivity is back!
Even though depressing days can be a drag - the revelation of my fab Monday was so much more enjoyable precisely because my day before was so lousy. I'm kind of glad I had a crappy day.
So if you happen to find yourself depressed or bumming about your day here is a little how-to to go get yourself a better tomorrow!
How to's for Creating a Funk Free Day:
- Stop trying to get things done
- Take a hot bath
- Put on comfy clothes
- Pop in a movie and vegetate
- Decide that tomorrow is going to be better
- Go to bed early and get a good night's sleep
Can you relate? Leave a comment with your ideas on the topic! And have yourself a wonderful day!
Self-esteem is a topic you hear about most often in self-help books, human potential seminars, and in reference to teenage girls. In yoga class, it arises in the context of "self-reverence", "acceptance of what is", and "self-love". Yoga takes self-esteem to its boundary....Yoga itself is the process of recognizing that you are nothing more than a total, utter miracle, one of a kind, remarkable human being full of mystery, individual charm, and distinct attributes, no matter what kind of package you arrived in. In 2001, back in New York City, I began hosting my teacher, Dr. Douglas Brooks, a Hindu Tantric scholar who comes from a long and obscure lineage of householders in South India. During his visits he would blow our minds, revealing the secrets of the Universe and connecting the yoga we were doing on the mats to a much large matrix of vibration and Divine play.
I wanted to entertain him during the off hours, and try to somehow match the magnitude of his teachings, so I had the brilliant idea to take him to the Hayden Planetarium. Off we went. Tom Hanks narrated the presentation, and as we panned away from Earth, he managed to drill home the fact that we really are just a speck in the grand scheme.
He wrapped up the show with displaying the birth of a star. The star, he said, has so much magnetism that it attracts all this power until it can't stand it anymore and it just bursts with a staggering blast, sending chunks of matter every which way. As these chunks meet up and take form, they become the "dust" which makes up the planets, the plants, and other lifeforms.
And so he concluded, "We too are made up of star dust."
Douglas, myself and the others yogis sat there as the sky faded to blue again - heads back, eyes bugged, and jaws on the floor as people began filing out of the hall. Mission accomplished I thought. We blew him away.
Just then a women in front of us turned to her boyfriend and said in a classic NY accent, "Well, that's just great! We're made up of DIRT!"
We looked at each other as though someone had taken a chainsaw to our hearts.
How typical of humans, to see only the ways in which having this body is a problem. How typical that we see ourselves as dirt, not made up of stardust.
Enter the dance of radical self-esteem through the vision of yoga.
There is a very precious teaching in yoga called The Three Malas. In this case mala being a "cloak" or a "veil" rather than mala like the bead. These veils are like coverings which conceal our true nature, like a film that settles on the mirror of our hearts, obscuring clarity. Like a floor which collects dust bunnies, or tarnish on silver that dulls its shine, the malas collect on our consciousness. Yet, the silver is still shiny underneath, the mirror at its essence is still reflective, and the floor can be "swiffered".
Yoga is the swiffer for your heart.
Dust bunnies are going to accumulate just by the very nature of you being alive. Every time we forget how miraculous we actually are, more dust bunnies arrive. Life is just that way, we forget. And shit happens. We get hurt.
We say that the Malas are God-given, for every time we forget our greatness, we get to delight in re-remembering again. You are supposed to forget. And each time you remember, you grow, you expand, you become even more of yourself.
The three Malas are:
Anava Mala This is the cloak of uber low self-esteem, insecurity, a deep feeling of separateness, and a complete pre-occupation with self. Too much subject. This is the person who looks in the mirror, sees the zit on her face and assumes that everyone must be disgusted by it too. This is the anorexic who looks in the mirror, and thinks she is fat, when she actually is emaciated.
When this mala has gone really bad we become so pre-occupied with ourselves that we rarely consider the consequences of our actions and how those might affect others. So we end up doing bad things like cheating, lying, betraying and withholding. By the time we come out of our bubble it is only because we have completely trashed our life and the lives of those closest to us and are forced to wake up.
The good news about this Mala is that when you wake up, you get to look at the root of the problem which is your insecurity and low self worth, and then....remember that you are a good person at heart. Being transparent about feeling unworthy is the ONLY way to accept our insecurities and then release them so we can grow.
Maiya Mala This is the cloak of worrying what everyone else thinks of you. Too much object. It's how when we date someone new, for the first few months, we are really dating their "representative", and they are dating ours. To show our real self would be to reveal the one who burps, farts, has melt downs, gets stressed out, and has a dark side.
When this mala has gone bad, we see the guy with the suit and tie who everyone respects and praises in the neighborhood doing the pedophile thing undergound. It's the cheating spouse who can't seem to make it to therapy to work out their issues but really wants you to know what a good person they actually are.
The good news about this Mala is that when you "snap out of it", you realize once again that being vulnerable, and sharing the authentic version of yourself, may repel some, but it usually will attract many more. Most people want to hang out with someone who is genuine and comfortable in their own skin - foibles and all.
Karma Mala This is the cloak of helplessness - when we feel we have no agency or power to act. Typically I have seen this come about as a result of the other two malas operating. It's how we go into denial as the world is falling apart around us, and do not step up to deal with the consequences or circumstances in front of us. It is the head-in-the-sand approach to life.
The good news about this mala is that when we finally lift our weary heads out of the ditch, and allow ourselves (and the mess all around us) to be seen, accepted as normal, and forgiven, we can rebuild with baby steps.
Yoga is ultimately about expanding the person we already are. To do this, we have to look at the veils that hold us back from this expansion. So you'll often hear me asking my closest friends and students to please tell me if they see me going down the "mala rabbit hole". In turn, when I see a friend (one who is open to feedback) going down, I will often just make a joke of it and say, "Do we need to do a de-malafication here?" The Malas, though usually painful, are really gifts that allow us to re-frame our experience and beliefs about ourselves, so having a sense of humor, and "normalizing" these cloaks is the best strategy.
The result? Radical Self-Esteem.
As many of you know I have been immersing myself in my newest project, 90 Minutes to Change the World. Since last year I have been searching for a way to respond to a trend I was noticing in the yoga community. As yoga's popularity continues to expand, we have seen an increase of international yoga workshops, festivals, and conferences featuring big names in the yoga world. As this expansion is occurring, there is a subsequent contraction in the quality of public yoga classes, and an attitude among teachers that the local public teacher is somehow "less than", since the real goal is to hit the road to glory as a national teacher and leave the yoga studio behind.
No More Chopped Liver!
Since when did the public yoga class teacher become such chopped liver? And when did the visiting international teacher become such a rock star? In my day as a yoga student in NYC, it was the local public teachers who were the rock stars.
This paradigm of becoming a traveling yoga rock star is not unique to any particular form of yoga. Many teachers studying with the founders of various methods feel they must become the key teacher or "who's who" of their given school of yoga, in order to hit the road and reach "yoga career nirvana". Is this the path all yoga teachers are meant to take ? And is this particular path for everyone? I don't think it has to be.
It has been 8 years since I ran the first ever Anusara yoga Immersion in response to a paradigm I thought could serve the yoga community better. Maybe it is the rule of the seven year cycle, but about a year ago I found myself itching again to respond to attitudes or paradigms that have come into being and now need to be shaken up once again...
I think I figured out the next move...and that is to breathe new life into the beauty and momentousness of the local public yoga class, so that it can once again return to its former glory.
This new project launches February 1st, and with it I am hoping to start a movement that will help, through a collective of powerful yoga teachers, to reinvigorate and inspire those who choose to make teaching public classes their passion!
Be sure to visit the event page for 90 Minutes to Change the World, to learn all about the virtual and live teacher trainings that will take public yoga class teaching to new heights!
Presuming this thing flies strong and I am on the right track here, you will make history by being a pioneer and joining this journey for its maiden voyage.
Please leave a comment below and I'll see you at the webinars for some world changin'!
This September, I flew to San Francisco for a 24-hour trip to shoot the cover of Yoga Journal's first issue of 2011. It is a complete honor to have been asked to model, mainly because of the opportunity to put my whole spirit into a picture that could potentially introduce someone to yoga for the very first time. For this reason, I felt really blessed and hopeful during the photo shoot. I am totally grateful to everyone at Yoga Journal for their professionalism, talent and skills in orchestrating the shoot. Stacey Rosenburg, Laura Christensen and Yoga Journal, Editor-in-Chief, Kaitlin Quitsgaard were so sweet to hang out at the shoot and even be in some of the pictures just to make the day so much more fun. Kaitlin also grows a mean heirloom tomato!
I hope the cover serves to inspire, uplift and help attract lots of newbies to the amazing art form of practicing yoga. Please share it with a friend!
2010 seemed like a powerful year to name my tour "The Powerhouse of Love Tour". Being the first year in a new decade, it made me want to look back at how much I had shifted in the ten years prior and get stoked for how I wanted to shape the next ten year chapter. I realized, this year, I wanted to be the biggest love muffin I could be, spread more love, give more love and be more love. Being a Powerhouse of Love means not settling for mediocrity in our relationships, physical environments, careers, or what we do with our time.
The 2011 tour is still yet un-named, but I can assure you it will be more of more of this kind of theme.
Here are some of the highlights of The Powerhouse of Love Tour:
- Finishing the first ever Immersion cycle in Seoul, Korea
- Partying with the Kula in Costa Rica with Douglas Brooks, Sianna Sherman, BJ Galvan, Jaye Martin and Shantala
- Level 1 TT in Denver, CO - best ever!
- The summertime hooping, Advanced Therapy Training in Golden, CO
- The Yoga Grand Gathering at Estes Park, CO
- Advanced TT in NJ with me and Ross Rayburn and a tremendous group of teachers!
- Completing another Immersion cycle in Boulder, CO
- Thanksgiving weekend with Shantala at Kripalu
- The Teachings of the Courageous Warrior at DIG Yoga with Douglas, Sue and Naime, Crocus Pocus and Mykal Aubrey
Thanks to everyone who helped make this year and this tour so spectacular!