Saturday, May 26, 2018

Clutter


So there I was, standing in REI (an outdoor adventure store) during their end-of-season sale, holding up two long-sleeve, lightweight, cycling jerseys. With REI being a favorite place of mine to shop and having a huge sale, I set an intention prior to going into the store that what I needed was a long-sleeve jersey...and there they were! An entire rack with different colors in my size; it was like hitting the jackpot. As I contemplated which ones to purchase, I also remembered a larger intention of bringing only what I love and need into my life. I considered buying two, justifying why it was a great idea: on sale, "just what I was looking for", "likely to wear them both over time"...and in that moment I caught myself in the same loop of inner-dialogue and having the awareness to say, "I only need one". I grit my teeth and returned one onto the rack and headed straight for the check-out line. Phew...that was truly a challenge!

My draw toward simplifying and downsizing all started in earnest about three years ago having read Marie Kondo's book (The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of De-Cluttering and Organizing). It was a required reading as part of some advanced studies I was undertaking, and it opened the door to a deeper knowing that, for years, I wanted to have less stuff in my life. Over time, I have been led to undertaking a course called, "Simple Year" offered by Courtney Carver which focuses on 12 months of guided simplicity. I have also been inspired by the "Slow Living" approach to life and enjoy the Slow Home Podcast by Brooke and Ben McAlaray. 

Why the attraction to this slower and "with less" way of being? 

One of the life-intentions I have is to live in a compassionate and open-hearted way, part of which is reflected in the dedication I have to live life from a yogic perspective. An overarching tenet is conscious living, which includes conscious consumerism. I want to live a life of meaning and connection, one that has a focus more on having experiences rather than having stuff. As I explore ways to live this intention, part of the process takes a hard look at my relationship to the physical and mental clutter residing in my life. It's a common thought that having more than we need can feel heavy and block the flow of energy. We can be consumed by our consumerism and overwhelmed by all that surrounds us. It's an ongoing cycle of working hard to look after all the stuff we've accumulated and think we desire. We earn money to maintain our lifestyle, keeping up with social norms and striving for more and more. We are indoctrinated that who we are and what we have isn't enough and in order to make ourselves complete, we are encouraged and praised for more striving and acquisition of possessions, knowledge, and status. 

Having been raised by a pack-rat, the behavior that was modeled was frugality and not throwing things away. We were raised without extravagance, with new clothes and toys reserved for special occasions. It was a practical approach that you wore something until either it wore out or you outgrew it. And what we did have we held onto, so I was never shown what a clutter-free environment looked like as we were taught to not throw things away. Once I found some financial independence later in life, it felt like I had been liberated from frugality and I could buy pretty much whatever I wanted. Mind you, I am still not an extravagant person but have not felt limited in what I can say "yes" to. The downside of that has been an over-compensation of too much stuff and has ultimately led me to this current attempt at living with less.

My thought this week is that I could have a part two about the topic of clutter but I will offer this for the time being: Where in your life do you notice stagnant energy? Where do you feel overwhelmed? Is it in the physical presence of things (you walk into a room and feel consumed by too much to organize), is it the amount of electronic clutter that comes to your daily inbox, or is it releasing mental or emotional clutter? This week we have been trying to open up the sense of spaciousness within our own beings and noticing what it feels like to be open and empty. We so often feel as though something is missing and attempt to fill it up but is it possible to simply be at ease with what is?

Hmmmm...like I said, this is very much a challenge for me. With my efforts, I'm beginning to feel lighter, more focused, optimistic, and connected to that part of me that has been dormant. The part that knows that I am enough and have enough. So be it.

Saturday, May 19, 2018

The Well


A place dwells deep within us which houses our energetic supply, not necessarily just physical or emotional energy, but the energy that we call upon to serve others-The Well. This has been the theme of this past week inspired by my weekend spent at ShaktiFest, a yoga-music festival held in Joshua Tree, California. I've been attending this event as well as BhaktiFest (held in September) for the past several years and each time I have new experiences. One such experience was finding myself sitting alone at a table having a bite to eat. It was a rare moment as I'm often hanging out with various parts of the yoga tribe, so sitting alone chomping on a big bowl of goodness felt like a nice and quiet respite. It didn't take long before I was joined by two different women, one after the other, with whom I shared two different, yet linked, conversations.

The first, a photographer who was shooting the festival, told me she had just returned from two months of travel/work creating documentary films and doing photography. I had a brief encounter with her the previous BhaktiFest as we both attended a session by Krishna Das. I said to her that it was inspiring to see how much she was enjoying and engaged during the session, not just acting as a photographer at work. When I reminded her of this brief encounter she said that she only says "yes" to work and projects that keep her connected to her spiritual practice. I silently thought to myself, "wow...that's cool. She feeds her soul as she's creatively engaged in her profession".

As the photographer left, another woman sat in the open chair. We engaged in a conversation that moved quickly from, "Hi, how are you?" to a much more open one. She was from Colorado and when I asked how her ShaktiFest was going, she said she didn't realize how stressed out and tired she was until she arrived. She shared with me that she had become involved in social activism concerning the fracking in her home state. She had a young daughter and had health concerns as some wells were opening closer to schools and hospitals and many people were worried about an increase in blood cancers and other health issues seemingly related to an increase in the number of wells drilling for natural gas. I said, "It must be difficult to balance the energy of your voice and those on the other side who want to capitalize on the "gas-gold rush" happening right below them. She replied, "Yes, it's exhausting." I suggested that perhaps her time at ShaktiFest was about filling up her own inner well so as to return to her activism with renewed energy and compassion. She paused a moment and looked at me saying, "What do you do?".

My question to people this week has been, "How dry will you let your own inner well get until you're willing to act on it?" 

I've asked myself that question more times than I care to admit and am trying to learn my lesson. Last summer I spent an amazing time in Australia--- time with friends, time in my favorite places, teaching two retreats and one workshop. In between, we had a few days on the beach and when I returned to the States I thought to myself, "Now I need a vacation." I didn't allow time and space to fully refill my well and launched straight back into a full and abundant season of teaching and running a business. I've spent the past several months moderating my energy and perhaps saying "no" to things I could have said "yes" to had I had more reserve. So this summer, I decided to take a longer break...somewhat reluctantly, but it feels necessary. I'm still doing some work, but once that's complete, I'm taking "we" time...just me and my husband. I'm an introvert so what fills up my well is spending time away from people in quiet and restoring situations.

I am truly honoring my choice to be away and recharge as I want to return to what I do with my well overflowing in order to teach from a place of full-hearted compassion and intent. So, what are you doing today to fill up your well? The more we keep that part of us topped up, the more we are able to serve. Perhaps you can take a page out of my book and not let your well run dry. Fill it up!

Thursday, May 10, 2018

Residue



How many times can you recall where you've sat reveling in good vibrations following a big event? Perhaps it was that first moment after leaving the reception on your wedding day. Or maybe, it took you three years of study in your graduate program and you've just heard that your dissertation has been accepted. Or more relevant to the inspiration behind this weeks theme, you've just graduated from a 200-hour Yoga Teacher Training. This past weekend another six students completed their 200-hour program and were welcomed into the DYT teaching community by previous graduates, totaling 55 grads over the past five years that the program has been offered.

The ceremony was held at our local park and as I sat on the grass looking around at the people who had gathered, I felt a deep sense of gratification for how this particular community has come into existence. I remember sitting on a bus in India in 2013 and having a conversation with a fellow Off The Mat Seva participant (we raised money and awareness around the issue of sex trafficking in India and were on a tour), and she was telling me about how she had created a Yoga Teacher Training program. The conversation gave me confidence that I too could manifest such a program and so I  proceeded to undertake the process of becoming a registered yoga school. Six months later we had our first class of students and have continued on ever since.

It's a somewhat difficult experience to encapsulate in a few words-transforming, challenging, fun, inspiring, confronting, hard, delightful, or rigorous are just a few that come to mind. I've had many people say that it truly changed their life as it did mine when I stepped onto the formal path of becoming a yoga teacher. And although it's an individual exploration, we journey with everyone else who has undergone or is undergoing the process. During the final weekend, each trainee teaches a class as their final exam and we invite graduates of the program to be the students in those classes as they understand this moment better than anyone else.

The day after graduation, two grads came to class at the studio and were both flying high, still enjoying the afterglow of the weekend. They were basking in the residue of having accomplished a challenging task. And this residue is an actual physical sensation that emphasizes the positive and uplifting moments that we create in our lives. It's as though the residue is the current to something bigger and connected, a place where we experience joy and ease. It can feel like a touch of magic has just happened and is to be savored. Post-savasana bliss is something I witness at the end of every yoga class I teach. Having had the experience of the class, which at times may be physically challenging, we absorb our practice by being fully supported with blankets and bolsters as we lay on our back and completely surrender to the moment. If we are gifted sufficient time, our return to a seated position feels like a delicious respite from the busyness of everyday life.

This positive feeling can be created in different ways. Going on a yoga retreat, particularly if it's for more than a couple of days can have a huge effect, often leaving us in a calmer state than when we arrived. Spending time in nature tops up the residue bucket simply by feeling the wind on our face. As we get toward the last few days of a vacation, we often don't want to return to ordinary life as the present moment and feelings of release are so powerful. 

Reading the final page of a great book often creates a moment of simply soaking in the story. It's not as though as soon as we close the chapter on the book that we grab another and begin reading straight away...we savor! The first few bites of a favorite dish can also bring us to a previously established residue of flavors. Sensations on the taste buds can create lifelong memories emblazoned upon our brains. I dream of the ambrosia that was fresh peach cobbler with vanilla ice cream made by a cousin in one Michigan summer. Just writing that makes me salivate!

Part of connecting to the residue is noticing it's an actual physical experience. We may be bone-tired but have no agitation. We are able to marinate in the deep satisfaction of having come through something that's often much larger than our individual selves. My thought of the week is to encourage us to truly embrace the sweetest moments of our lives, particularly the ones where we've had to apply ourselves. Breathe it all in and enjoy the full moment!

Saturday, May 5, 2018

Winds of Change


Unpredictable, soothing, life-giving, invisible, and disrupting are some of the words connected to the element of wind and air. This past month, our focus has not only been on the elements but on what they represent. Adaptability was the theme around the element of water, encouraging us to soften our rigidity and go with the flow. The earth symbolized stability, remembering to get grounded in the energy of Mother Earth especially when approaching difficulties or significant life shifts. The powerful element of fire is the escort of transformation, and although potentially destructive, it clears away old debris to allow fertile soil for rebirth. All of these elements we can see and sense and represent the first three physically based chakras.

Wind brings with it a different sensibility in that we know it's presence by how it acts on other things. We see the palm fronds waving in the wind, our hair getting blown about as we step out the front door, the leaves being lifted into magical formations, and the dust rising off the desert floor into dust devilish swirls. It represents that part of us that is unseen, our spirit, our soul, our heart energy. We know it's there even though we can't see it, capture it, or act upon it. 

I have this almost love/hate relationship with the wind. On a hot day, a welcome breeze feels heaven-sent. It's perfect for drying clothes quickly, for putting a kite high into the sky, catching a a wave on a surfboard or with a wind-sail. When I'm out on the road cycling, I love a tail-wind as I feel faster than I am on a still day, but turn around into a headwind and my quads begin to moan. Lip balm and a windy day...love to have it for dryness, but if the sand blows grit becomes a passenger on the lips.

With all of that, ultimately perhaps wind is the element that brings us to acceptance and equanimity. No matter which way the wind is or isn't blowing, we have no control of it. Unable to control or change it, it teaches us to surrender. When we wish for things to be different than they actually are, we can create our own kind of suffering. The air element reminds us to trust the unseen. We have no control over it...it simply is. 

It is also the element of the fourth chakra, the energetic center of the heart. The fourth chakra sits in the middle between the physical lower three chakras (earth, water, and fire) and the upper three, more ethereal centers (ether, intuition and higher consciousness). It's not only a gathering point of energy but a place of pivoting us in the direction of the highest states of awareness, the connection to the grid of Universal energy that's bigger than us although we can't see or touch it.

My thought of the week is to accept and embrace the unpredictability of life. When we practice coming into the essence of our hearts energy, we are reminded that we are part of something much bigger, something that we don't have an ability to control and in that recognition, we surrender and let ourselves be carried by the energy of the wind.

Feel the wind act upon you, caressing your skin and carrying with it the scents of the natural world. Let it blow through the energy of your heart just as Tibetan prayer flags release their prayers and good wishes every time the wind passes through.