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Beautiful Rituals Healthy Living

Circle your calender – Sunday, March 15th is special because…

It’s full moon that night.  Notice how it feels to be placed between the moon and sun. What it feels to be part of this universe… to be connected to this natural world.  Tune into your inner orbit, tune into your own natural rhythm… Allow your rhythm to harmonize with everything around you.

In our solar system, moon orbits around the earth, earth orbits around the sun… moon, earth and the sun is in near approximate alignment (off by about 5 degrees on the earth-sun orbital plane) at full moon… As we approach the Spring equinox we follow the flow of nature, stretching our limbs and come out of hibernation mode, unfurling new life as blossoms around us flower.

We direct our attention to the moon and the sun for a renewed source of energy …Many of us may feel a bit like a yawning child roused from delicious slumber, losing one hour over the last weekend when the daylight savings time went into effect.  It’s harder to rise in the morning and it’s easier to stay awake later into the night…or disturbed sleep at wee hours of the morning for no apparent reason…  March is a month of transition. May your practice provide stability through the change in season as Spring Equinox nears. Spring Equinox is on the 20th this month.  I love March – it’s my birthday month:) Yeay!

The night is still young at 4:15 but if you want to feel restored, stop by the studio – the studio is ECO-GREEN and so CLEAN and most importantly relative to our practice… enough props for support:) to share… it’s a lovely space to take a deep breath … and let go. Let all the cares of the world you are carrying on your shoulders just melt away.

 

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Healthy Activities Healthy Living Yoga

Work, Play and … Rest

We are so accustomed to stress that stress is just a part of our everyday life.  In fact, for many of us, it’s unthinkable to be stress-free.  We may even be brainwashed in thinking that, if we are not highly or chronically stressed, then there’s something amiss and that we are not doing enough. We may even interpret being stress-free as being a lazy under-achiever… somehow inadequate.  Being stressed is wrongly defined as being productive. Or some people are very stressed and overwhelmed but they will not know it as such state of high alert and pressure.  To them, that’s the norm. And some take pride to say that they relish stress as though it’s a mark of true success and courage… a purple heart in this daily grind called … life.  Stress may be something they dismiss or for some, they may be in a state of total denial.

Ask one of those people who appear to be  carrying a huge load and you ask them, How are you?  They reply – oh, fine. Oh, it’s nothing. Oh, it’s a breeze.  It’s absolutely NO problem what-so-evvverrrr, Really!  What? Is it your pride and ego responding? What’s wrong with acceptance and admission that this load is an overload?   And that you are over-extended and over-taxed perhaps. Do those people go on muttering some mantra that goes, stress is good; it allows me to get things done.. repeat over and over, stress is good for me, stress is good for me… it makes me more productive… stress is needed…Really?  There’s nothing wrong with our coping skills if we admit things are not looking all that perfect as we juggle.  Also, know that getting help is not an admission of defeat AND you are still needed and loved if you are not doing all those things that garner admiration and awe and comments such as – “I don’t know how he/she does it? ”  To admit that maybe it’s okay to not do so much – That reality does not make you a loser.  No, not at all.  You are just human not super-human. You are of great value and service without having to do so much.  Just being, instead of constantly doing… is … okay.  Judith brings that message to all egocentric over-achievers that the world is not going to come apart or to an end if you “relax and renew”; in fact, it may become a better place.

If we do not manage this stress level  properly, then the body’s defenses break down, making us vulnerable to illness. And that’s just the physical toll we are referring to, not even touching on the emotional toll it might take –  It’s been said that up to 80% of ailments are attributed to stress.  Restorative yoga induces a state of deep relaxation and tranquility… The alpha… some even theta and delta state of relaxation is generated which leads to a special consciousness at which natural healing can take place…  Who wouldn’t want to feel refreshed and restored with a pure sense of well-being and inner harmony.

It’s hard to fully relax if various parts of your body is bothering you – whether it be aches and pains or tension and kinks… or… that dull blocked up stuck feeling, that hard to explain feeling of fatigue…so that’s why the help from our little friends for support (read “props”:) plus some … magic…at rescue:)

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If it’s something you LOVE.  If it’s your passion that you are DOING, then, it’s not stressful. It’s JOY.  Doing = Being when it’s your passion, isn’t it?  No sleep, no food… even then to me, it’s okay…that’s not stress.  You are doing what you love to do and that allows you to be present.

 

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Beautiful Rituals Healthy Activities Healthy Living Yoga

Benefits of Restorative Yoga

The following is straight from International Restorative Yoga Day’s HP.  I didn’t make it up (lol) …If you click on the pink texts, related study details are found, compiled by Lindsay Sisti.  In my mind, it’s a meditation practice and an effective preventative medicine and… so much more.  I had known all these years there’s something precious that’s been neglected and amiss in our lives – this practice represents exactly what I had missed all these years.  We need to make it a ritual.  In parenting, parent education class often stress the importance of setting a “routine” – and I hated that word, routine – ugh – so boring. I  say – make it a “ritual”.  a Ritual for adults… Make it a sacred ritual in which you honor yourself by being kind to yourself. It’s not merely a 5 minutes for the exhausted, an after-thought post sweaty practice (which is very good for you BTW!).  It’s for everybody. It’s mindful not mindless.

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Benefits Of Restorative Yoga

Restorative yoga actives the parasympathetic nervous system, which balances out the over-charged sympathetic nervous system, bringing about overall balance, wholeness, in a natural yin-yang way. The practice, if well designed, allows the body to reap the benefits dwelling in its restorative ‘rest and digest’ mode that yields the body’s natural functions to enliven you at top efficiency:)

This style of yoga can be beneficial for people struggling with a variety of conditions such as insomnia, asthma, migraine headaches, and chronic pain.

These are some of the benefits of restorative yoga:

  • reduces cortisol, the stress hormone
  • lowers blood pressure and heart rate
  • reduces muscle tension, insomnia, and generalized fatigue
  • boosts immunity
  • reduces serum triglycerides and blood sugar levels
  • increases “good” cholesterol,
  • improves digestion and elimination
  • greater capacity to regulate blood glucose levels
  • lessens or alleviates chronic, severe pain
  • enhances fertility
  • increases blood flow to the heart
  • stimulates flow of the lymphatic system
  • increases oxygen levels in the blood
  • greater flexibility
  • reduces brain arousal
  • feeling balanced and grounded
  • increases mental acuity
  • increases ‘vividness’ in daily sensory life
  • cultivates greater patience with yourself and others

Researchers have been investigating the benefits of restorative yoga. Here is a sampling of the findings:

Restorative yoga for women with breast cancer: findings from a randomized pilot study.
These pilot data suggest potential benefit of restorative yoga on emotional outcomes and fatigue in cancer patients. This study demonstrates that a restorative yoga intervention is feasible for women with breast cancer.

Restorative yoga for women with ovarian or breast cancer: findings from a pilot study.
Significant improvements were seen for depression, negative affect, state anxiety, mental health, and overall quality of life. Fatigue decreased between baseline and post-intervention follow-up. Health-related quality of life improved between baseline and the 2-month follow-up.

Feasibility and acceptability of restorative yoga for treatment of hot flushes: a pilot trial.
This pilot trial demonstrates that it is feasible to teach restorative yoga to middle-aged women without prior yoga experience. Mean number of hot flushes per week decreased by 30.8% and mean hot flush score decreased 34.2% from baseline

Restorative yoga in adults with metabolic syndrome: a randomized, controlled pilot trial.
Restorative yoga was found to be a feasible and acceptable intervention in overweight adults with metabolic syndrome.