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Beautiful Places

“No Mud No Lotus” @ Vancouver

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Lotus covering the mud but …no flowers? In time, in time – it’s not the season. Lots of mud; Lots of roots, green lotus – but no flowers? Wrong season – the right season will come. Lotus will blossom again.

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Native American beauty at the botanical garden… carved out of wood. So woodsy here in Vancouver. This land is rich with Native American peoples – many tribes represented at First Nations in British Columbia. A reminder of what true beauty means…

Gratitude for the miracles taking place all around us.

Don’t ask me what’s next ? It’s all about what’s now. This is that very precious moment – Seize the day; this hour, this minute, this second, this …moment.  Now is the time.

Namaste.

 

Categories
Beautiful Places Healthy Living

“Keep Tahoe Blue”

Lake Tahoe beyond the trees …

Harvested some sage and used for Lemon Sage Cream sauce… they just grow wildly around the cabin.  Walked around to harvest some edible herbs that gets overlooked as just shrubs … Sage is a find:)

A nice cove … crystal clear water … hope that stays.  It’s beautiful. My photo taking does not do justice but far yonder, you see the snow capped Sierra mountains in the backdrop which seems to surround the lake and the clear blue waters shimmering …

The Independence Day fireworks at Incline – hard to capture the sights and sound with this phone camera but here it is… an attempt … a bit hidden by the tress as we could not get to the waterfront with all the people.

*** SO ***

Yoga after a 5 hour drive is so very helpful.  (usually about 3.5 hours? but quite the traffic, taking 5-7 hours due to the holiday).

Introducing “Yoga after a Long Drive”, lol:)

Actually – One of my former teachers from my SRI Yoga School, Jean Mezzei (gone on to even bigger things – teaching to reach wider audience – churning out online teaching with Yoga International is a … wow, impressive … proud that she was my 200 hrs. teacher when she was not so famous, lol:) has a good one on Yoga International.  Please look up her “Yoga for Travelers”.  Let’s share this in a class – in a community.  Practicing solo is nice but … a group vibe is another kind of nice.  We need both.

Categories
Beautiful Places Beautiful Rituals Yoga

Reflections at the surf

Having taught yin yoga and gentle flow and hatha/vinyasa or some hybrid for over 7 years, the practice keeps unfolding to become more and more interesting for me.  More I learn, more I realize that it’s not about picking out couple of yoga poses you’d like and holding them for 2-5 minutes with a soundless timer on your waist (though a helpful tool!):

Anyone can teach Yin Yoga

but TO TEACH IT WELL is very very difficult.

-Norman Blair

apparently this London based teacher said something to that affect & that it is, I’d have to agree.   It’s a bit challenging to teach a class that’s not muscle strengthening based (although I put them in to feel the contrasting effect to sharpen one’s awareness) as I love movements such as dance. Yes, rather ironically, yin for some, can get quite … intense and thus, challenging.  It’s calibrating movement vs. stillness and … we can’t let the movement lead.  It’s almost about getting out of the patterns and habits. It’s yoga for flexibility – flexibility for the body for sure and for the mind too – to be truly flexible is to be less dogmatic, less stubborn, less stuck.  The practice is nuanced.  What begins to really matter is our language and the subtle honing in that energy we try to release, loosen and ripple into one’s own flow.  Then, like a chemical reaction, this nuanced ripple affect from one to another may yield what you call a vibe.

Then … we hold that space of safety and non-judgement.  It’s not even about empathy and compassion – all those good things we want to cultivate but first – it’s that white canvass, the blank vision board to start off. Each time.

When we slow down to sharpen our awareness and proprioception, it’s quite … challenging.  Case in point, have your broken out in sweat, where beads of perspiration form on your forehead and …  then, feel the heart rate race when you approach a certain movement with SLOOOOW methodical yet, dynamic movements?  We are not exercising in cardio-mode, but the pulse starts racing and the heart starts pounding in slow motion… really feeling the resistance or the gradual burn ….the controlled power exertion can be quite taxing.  It’s … intense.

Then, there’s the slow pace of the progression of the class … where we can’t really “wing” it or “fake” it because we can’t ignore the diverse needs of each unique student. Whereas with the vinyasa flow class, it’s easier to just go with the thrust of what’s already scripted and insist on that practice.  There’s a blueprint and it’s a lovely dance.

In a corporate lunchtime vinyasa flow class, I was a little surprised to get the comment from a student that my yoga reminded him of martial arts !!????  And had I done any in the past.  Honestly, not really although maybe it’s the Samurai blood line in me that manifests in the warrior series. Haha –  Or the fact that I have been wanting to study with the founder of yin yoga who … actually is a martial arts master.  I did train in Shao-Lin Kung Ku (for fun) awhile back and so maybe that’s coming back … there’s a sequence that’s quite vinyasa – those fluid movements and holds that are quite challenging. Beads of perspiration will foam on our foreheads and nose-tops – that kind of intensity.

I draw a hypothesis that yoga traveled from India, Eastward and the “physical” aspect of the practice merged or blended with various forms of martial arts already practiced by the spiritual class (monks or village elders) of wherever region.   I then hypothesize that the “spiritual” teachings of yoga that traveled Eastward to rest of Asia became the various sects of religion (namely, Buddhism) and the physical aspects most mainstream is familiar with, branched to martial arts.  Maybe. Today’s Modern yoga that traveled to the West was much later with artists, thinkers, Bohemians and hippies visiting India OR learned from the Indian sages on a missionary tours to the West.  Then that fitness model of “yoga” gets re-exported to the places like Japan.  Even back to India the Motherland itself – so ironic.  What a broad brushstroke of a hypothesis, right?

Probably should read the actual history from the real scholars like Georg Feuerstein and Mark Singleton and …

It’s interesting to see the threads and webs and the whole fabric of this practice all connected over time and space and places.  It’s a wholesome practice if we learn to integrate and balance the yin and the yang:)

Requests for LONGER HOLDS?  Fearful of those beginners who turn deaf ears to their own internal voices all jumbled in that busy monkey mind … I speak not from a perspective of someone above or better or superior, but as a humble wanderlust who has traveled the same path.  You kind of want it longer … but how is that good for us?  Mindful that everyone’s bone structure – the joints, and the angular curves may be different, taking care – but going longer …

As Bernie Clark mentions his version of Yin is a “PG” rated as in Paul Grilley, lol, its noted there are so many different styles within the so called Yin yoga.  I am not a believer of staying in the pose for way too long unless I really know the quirks and needs of your body at a deeper level.  For some, deep forward fold is to be feared if there’s something weird going on with your lower back …or if you are emotionally depleted, etc. –  so let’s get to know your own body and mind first with series of explorations – do some yang – before intensifying while really “enjoying” the process to get there there.  Whatever the billing may be to market this practice, it’s not … a spa.

It’s a beautiful self-care protocol with beads of meditation threaded in on the strand of pearls likened gems.  Namaste.

Mossbrae Waterfall … Mt. Shasta … visited some years ago. When I awakened.