You Are Here! Mapping the Energy Body

I am excited and thrilled to be presenting my very first workshop next month!   Have you ever wondered if there was more to yoga than laying down a sticky mat and moving through a series of poses?  In this workshop we will learn about and explore the Koshas–an ancient system for mapping the energy body.  And, how we can use the Koshas to deepen and transform our yoga practice.

When & Where:  October 11, 2015, 1:30-4:30 pm, $55, Breathe Los Gatos, Los Gatos, CA

For more information:  Kosha Workshophttp://breathelosgatos.com

Buddhism & Paradigm Shifts

I am deeply immersed in Buddhism at the moment, working on a writing project.  I find the concepts and philosophy of Buddhism to be both very calming, and frustrating, at times.  One moment I am gratified with some understanding, and at another moment completely frustrated by my seeming inability to understand.  At times, it feels as if there is an ebb and a flow to “getting it” or not.  This will then amuse me as I ponder it all.

Enlightenment, in any form whether tiny or mind-blowing, is either as close as flipping a switch, or as far away as trying to fill a sieve with water.   It is said you cannot think your way to enlightenment, you have to experience it.  One moment it will simply happen.  But, only after you have let go of every concept you have ever had of your self, or your perception of the way things are.

What I am thinking or feeling about most things is always changing in some way or another, particularly as I learn more.  What I know about anything is simply a pattern, a paradigm.  And, patterns can always be shifted.  The Four Noble Truths are considered the central concepts of Buddhism, and teach us that shifting from suffering to peace is possible.  Every day, every experience, every moment is an opportunity for us to “flip the switch” and experience peace.

I have found the following description of the Four Noble Truths by Sylvia Boorstein to be useful:

  1. Life is continually challenging because circumstances keep changing.
  2. Suffering is the inability of the mind to accommodate these changing circumstances.
  3. Peace is possible.
  4. It is possible to systematically cultivate, through lifestyle practices and mental training exercises, a mind that accommodates changing circumstances wisely, avoids confusion, and does not suffer.

Yoga for Nepal Fundraiser

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Join us Sunday, JUNE 28th at Mind, Body, Zone, Fremont, for a benefit yoga event to raise support for earthquake victims in Nepal.  All proceeds will go to the Yeti Foundation (www.yetifoundation.org).  Sunday, the 28th is also Global Give Love Day.  Simultaneous events around the bay area (https://www.facebook.com/MCYogi108) are joining together to raise funds and good vibes for Nepal.  Come get your yoga groove on and send some love to Nepal!

Yoga For Nepal Fundraiser

In April-May of last year I was journeying through Nepal with my teacher and a really amazing group of yoginis.  I returned from that trip with a deep respect for how my fellow human beings on this Earth, half-way around the world, live with so little.  I fell in love with the people, the culture, and their deep, spiritual history.  The recent devastating earthquake in Nepal broke my heart.  The Nepalese have a very long road to recovery in front of them.  In service to that hopeful recovery, I will be co-hosting (with Su Wong) a yoga fundraiser later this month.  All proceeds will go to the Yeti Foundation and their recovery and relief efforts.  Please mark your calendars, and join us for two hours of yoga, meditation, and chanting.  Minimum requested donation: $30.

Sunday, June 28th, 1:00-3:00 pm, at Mind Body Zone, Fremont, CA
For more information on the Yeti Foundation: http://www.yetifoundation.org

  

Yoga of Action

Some of you may know that I spent last week in service to my mother.  She had very successful outpatient surgery to repair a fractured vertebra.  What I loved about last week (besides being there for my mother) was the deepening of my personal yoga practice–in particular, my practice OFF the mat.

In the Western world, yoga has come to be defined as a physical practice, a series of poses or postures we perform in a class, on a sticky mat.  But, yoga is so much more than that!  In the world of Yoga, there are five main paths.  Asana, the physical practice of postures, falls under Hatha Yoga (the way of union).  Raja Yoga (the science of physical and mental control) and Hatha Yoga can be combined.  Swami Rama, a great twentieth century yogi, said this about Raja Yoga:  “Hatha Yoga without meditation is blind, and meditation without Hatha Yoga is lame.  Unless they are united, they will reach nowhere.  The combination of the two is called Raja Yoga.”  Jnana Yoga (the yoga of knowledge or wisdom), Bhakti Yoga (the path of devotion or divine love), and Karma Yoga (the yoga of action) round it out.

Karma Yoga, in a sense, is the yoga of self-less service, action out in the world, for others.   This is what I was practicing in a very real-time way with my mother.  We can practice this in small or big ways.  What ever it is you have to do, do your best.  Listen, deeply, to another human being.  Practice the Golden Rule, and treat others as you would wish to be treated.  Where in your life might you bring more yoga of action?

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