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Beautiful Rituals Healthy Activities Healthy Living Yoga

In case you were wondering…

chakra

The chakras do not exist in the physical body. They exist in the psychic body, which cannot be experienced by the senses. This requires an altered state to be perceived through the mind. In yoga nidra we induce this state of perception by gradually withdrawing the senses during the rotation of consciousness throughout the body and by practicing breath awareness. This induces both pratyahara and deep relaxation. In fact, deep relaxation has been shown to be an altered state of perception…

– Swami Satyananda
ringonokiaomoriThen he goes on to say:

Many, if not all, of the truly creative discoveries in life, such as those of science, art, music and religion, were made during creative “flashes” of intuition which we understand as occurring when the inherent knowledge of the unconscious surfaces into consciousness. There are many documented examples. Newton’s revelations about gravity occurred while he was relaxing under an apple tree. Van Gough said that “pictures come to be as in a dream”. Mozart once composed an entirely new musical composition while dozing in the back of a carriage. Einstein increased his perception of relatively while visualizing himself walking along a sunbeam.

All these people allowed themselves to relax deeply enough, for the images and forms of their unconscious mind to manifest as solutions to their particular problems or quest. It has even been reported that through the use of deep relaxation and visualization, people have been able to diagnose their own particular disease before confirmation by medial examination. These deeper layers of the mind contain the solutions to all our problems, but we have to be able to allow them to manifest while maintaining complete detachment. One of the hallmarks of a genius is the ability to produce imagery in great abundance. Children also possess this ability, which usually becomes repressed as they are conditioned by worldly experience.

… fascinating.

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Anything Cute Healthy Living Yoga

The “S” word … ouch.

Golden Retriever puppy(photograph credit to http://en.paperblog.com/sick-leave)

When I thought myself to be a hot shot, in a rat race, rising on the corporate ladder kind of a gal( way way too slow and a long climb in my opinion especially back then), I recall missing out on a wedding I had so painstakingly prepared to go to. A friend was getting married in … Hawaii and of course, I would not miss this dream-come-true wedding. Got the plane ticket – check; got the dress to wear for the EVENT – check; Packed – check; and … then there’s … WORK to finish before I can leave. Oh that? WORK? un…checked…Ahhg! OMG! Threw both hands up to my head …cradled it…oh, dear. Deadlines were more rushed due to the impending departure – staying late to finish, many loose ends to tie, arranging for a dog-sitter, making zillions of phone calls, talking miles a minute, dizzying speed to maybe feel … more important, etc.

Well… I never made it… to … the wedding that was to take place in… Hawaii. I had so looked forward to going to this wedding in paradise – starting from rehearsal dinner on Friday… & that’s the time when I had to call from bed…too TOO sick … Sadly … I was diagnosed with … Shingles? It’s not life-threatening so initially I was not phased – just a mere “rash”, I still intended to jump on the plane and go until the doctor advises absolutely no travel – what?! In fact, I did not even know what “shingles” was but came to find out …dreadfully PAINFUL and UGLY. Ignoring symptoms (too busy!) I went to the doctor’s office so late in the progression of the disease that it was too late to take anti-viral medication… and given another delicate condition I was in, I refused to take any pain medication so I chose to suffer… I felt like a hammer was repeatedly being pounded into my head as the shingles spread to my left eye and I was referred to an eye specialist. The pounding pain was excruciating. I cannot remember clearly but my mother even flew from Japan and (this is in LA) she accompanied me to Ophthalmologist and there the doctor said that I am likely to lose my eye sight on my left if the viral infection did not let up. I remember crying in my mother’s arms thinking I will go blind. Later I come to find out about 10 to 25 percent of people who get shingles will have it in the face and eye. Nerve pathway under attack… I had never experienced physical pain that … painful (so my heart goes out to anyone with any kind of chronic pain).

Luckily, I was spared – without any medication, I got well and my vision was not impaired. I attribute it to my mother’s love and care for me – being nursed with good Japanese food always cures:) According to the doctor, the attack on my nervous system missed the retina by few millimeters. So here’s a published factors that increase risk for shingles which I had mentally gone over back then as don’t we all do this? Whenever we get sick we back trace our steps to review what we had done wrong…what caused that illness to strike in the first place – sometimes there are no answers but in this case, I looked over the list line by line carefully – “why me?””I work-out” “I’m at my perfect B/M ratio” – why?:

Checked off – Nope – Being older than 50.
Hope – Having a weakened immune system due to another disease, such as diabetes or HIV infection.
Nope – Having cancer or receiving treatment for cancer.
Nope – Taking medicines that affect your immune system, such as steroids or medicines that are taken after having an organ transplant.

And then I let out a deep sigh when I read the last risk factor on that list that can cause shingles. It read: “Experiencing stress or trauma.” THAT, weakens the immune system…

I would not qualify my hard work to get to Hawaii for a friend’s wedding as “trauma” – rather to the contrary, it was something I really looked forward to being part of. I was FIT – I went to the gym regularly and maintained body weight probably 10lb.lighter than today’s. I had trim waistline and muscles were more toned. But was I really healthy and living a balanced life?

And stress? I justified my level of “stress” was no more than anybody else’s who wanted to achieve and be successful – after all that’s what we were taught: “Rest” = “lazy” is evil – Work hard, harder than anybody else and succeed. Really, it did not seem like an inordinate level of stress – not any more than usual – but Downtown LA was very HOT, SMOGGY that summer and I was working, working, working and of course to look perfect? in that special dress for the wedding, I was watchful of what I put in my mouth -thinking of myself as so health-conscious. I was clueless – working so hard and long hours (probably inefficiently too) in order that I can take a break – this dream vacation in paradise to celebrate an auspicious occasion.

Many people live in the extremes, thinking going from one extreme (hard work, no rest) to another extreme (vacation, dazed and passing out on the beach) is the “balance” we seek.

Maintaining balance is not about going from one precipice to another. Especially not on a tight rope.

IF you cannot afford that everyday 20 min. Savasana (remember, this is not the same as “sleep”) Judith Hanson Lasater, PhD/PT/Yoga Instructor, recommends – at least on weekly basis, find your solace. Your peace. You will ward off many malaise that you didn’t even know you were susceptible to.

TLC your nervous system …

Categories
Beautiful Places Beautiful Rituals Healthy Living Yoga

I & The Village by Marc Chagall

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Just wanted to thank you for caring for yourself enough by choosing to show up to my class this year – I know that sometimes you don’t always get that Ahhhhh-moment throughout due to my penchant for trying out new music or changing or not changing something, or maybe not enough props or volume not being quite right or being too cold or hot (let me know) … any hosts of reasons BUT please know that consistent practice in a group setting complements all other styles of yoga and exercise to enhance our mind-body wellness. With that faith, allowing me to be your guide this year – it’s been an honor. Any loyal student who has come to my class more than just few times – thank you for going with the flow of perfect imperfections – a true teachings of Zen, I say with sense of humor intact – Arigato:)

Oh, by the way,I want to appeal to you that my classes are weekly “regular” classes; NOT a workshop. Thus, please do not compare my classes to a special 2-3 hours long workshops. Still hoping it serves as a mini-retreat and a respite. While some things are permanent and stays the same, more “regular” students may prefer an occasional change in the playlist offering or the sequence reflecting the season or the natural cycles. Otherwise, let’s be honest, it can get boring or stale and more unconscious auto-pilot. True, in Bikram or in Ashtanga, there’s no sounds/music and it’s the same blueprint repeatedly – but YOU are different each time you are on the mat – you are the unique one, noticing your own differences relative to the sameness of the practice – So if you come once then come again, the first class may seem a little different the second time or it may be virtually identical – so kindly keep those things in mind. Again – It’s not a workshop and … I am trying to work with the Feng Shui of the particular place (including the speaker system).
Irritations may come up; annoyance and anxieties may come up:

breath in – ” …you…”:
Breath out – “…decide… ”

to have an

Open-mind,
Open-heart,
Open – expansive – spacious … serenity does not come because there’s no noise – because it’s so quiet. Inner calm is not derived because there’s no distractions or disturbances. In fact, there may be toxins brewing and chaos erupting in the most silent monastic retreat – if your innermost is not at peace. On the contrary, a real sense of serenity and peace may overtake you even if you were in the noisiest, loudest, even a scariest place – You are empowered to change your internal landscape – that’s the practice. That’s the intention.