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Thursday, 9 December 2010

The sheer sound of bliss

Here is a selection of tracks of Lorin Roche reading from his book, The Radiance Sutras, which I often use in class (sheer beauty). Thought many of you would appreciate hearing it from the source (so to speak)...the brilliance of these sutras simply shines through.

Thursday, 2 December 2010

Chakra Art

I completed the 10-week journey through the chakras last night with my class. Both classes who have been taking the journey have been so generous in spirit with being able to go with the flow; trying different things to understand energy flows and how we can understand these vital centres a little deeper. This week the term was completed by creating some chakra art.

Everyone embraced the concept willingly and the creations were amazing, colourful and alive. It was something of an emotional journey too for some, which has made it all the more special.

Some pics below of what was created...



























Friday, 12 November 2010

I Am by Donna Lynne Seamone

I am
I am no one special.
I am the Buddha
the enlightened one
sitting
curved blelly
spine straight
folded
empty in
the fullest sense
knowing all
holding nothing

I am Jesus
saviour of the world
hanging here
sagged bones
bowed flesh
dying for anyone
nailed to wood
for lack of care
emptying my breath
in surrender

I am Durga
deliverer of the confused and discouraged
riding tigers
drinking in bloody indecision
gulping demon dry doubts
spitting them out
slaying buffalo and rapists
mother of all
purist rage suckling courage
nourishing fearlessness into herbs

I am Pele
spring of volcanic majesty and power
erupting seething fury
terrible violence
dancing molten darkness
pouring
ashen tenderness
mosssy gentlesness
into earth
growing serenity into ferns

I am Sophia
Wisdom of God
dancing before the dawn of time
seeing all
for what is is, could be
passion of life
loving and wooing
purple and play
into labour and creation

I am
no one special

I am
just another woman
like all the rest

I am
writing this
stone cold sober

I am no one special
Another woman
like all the rest

Look in my eyes
Watery green ferns
Yellow specked fear
Black recessed fire
Desolate domain of longing
Shimmering spheres of delight
Crease of laughter and agony

Meet me as you would another woman
The one who tends cash in the cafeteria
for dive dollars an hour smiling for no tip
Cream in your coffee?
Look in her eyes the next time you say,
Sure, thanks.
See me in her eyes
She and I, we are in each other.
She is Buddha, holding nothing.

Meet me as you would another woman
The one who begs coins from your pockets
for a fifth, a burrito, a little time.
She wants all your money, but she asks for change.
Look in her eyes the next time you say,
Sorry.
See me in her eyes
She and I, we are each other.
She is Jesus hanging there.

Look in my eyes
I am weeping for your fears.
See the water well and drop.
Do you hear me?
I am screaming Durga,
See me
See my eyes flashing, raging
Ride the tiger of your fears.
Decide, act, be.
Durga is in their eyes too.

Look in my eyes
See Pele's erupting fury
Levelling cruelty
with a single glancing blow.
Throwing embers that purify.
Pele, dancing in ashes
Pele look out from other eyes.
Watch for her fire and heat.

Look in my eyes
Sophia is laughing there
Glinting and sparkling light
Warming and dancing in clay
Look in our eyes
We are in each other
We do not have the same eyes --
We look out through different windows.
Look in through the windows.
Look in the eyes
Of the one you call
virgin, witch, lover, whore, mother
If you cannot see
Me in her
Her in me,
You cannot see
any of us.
And we are
just another woman
like all the rest.

Do not look in my eyes
If you want
To see
A reflection
of
you.

Monday, 20 September 2010

Yogi Bear


Click on the following link for some pictures that will make you smile!

Yogi Bear

Saturday, 18 September 2010

Stone Balancing - Meditation in action


A couple of years ago (if my memory serves me correctly), I read in a copy of Yoga Journal of a man that spent his time balancing rocks and considered it meditation (quite true).

In this week's Daily Mail, the paper ran an article on a man here in the UK balancing stones. The pictures are stunning and I urge you to just take a look at the article.

Should you find yourself at a beach sometime soon, give it a try!

Click here to be taken to the article.

Wednesday, 8 September 2010

Happiness

I've just started reading Gretchen Rubin's 'The Happiness Project'. It's an easy read and by that I mean it's got a really relaxed feel to it and is not too demanding on the grey mattter! Some of the elements that she suggests I've found an immediate affinity with...for example - Secrets of Adulthood - these are my favourites at the moment...

* People don't notice your mistakes as much as you think
* You don't have to be good at everything
* Most decisions don't require extensive research
* Bring a sweater! (my fave!)

I think the reason that this book was a #1 Bestseller is the appeal for the everyday person. It's easy for the reader to relate to Gretchen's endeavours - decluttering the closet (as an example) and how that leads to de-cluttering everything else in the process.

Relating this to a meditative perspective, we need to be able to take time each day to be able to sit, allow the events of the day to wash over us and then the internal de-cluttering takes place.

I've posted a link on the page so that you can start your own Happiness Project today.

Monday, 6 September 2010

Great way to start the day

I'm in the process of finalising my meditation user-guide for students and was seeking permission from an author to use an extract. The book in question, Open Body, which I have had since it was first published in 1998. I have used this book extensively over the years and it has been a joy.

I dropped an email to the author yesterday (Todd Walton) who replied with a resounding yes to using whatever I want from the book with his blessings!

In addition, he sent me a link to a You Tube video which features music he has just released.

It was a joyous way to start the day and I share it with you now...

Saturday, 4 September 2010

Autumn term begins...

The autumn term of yoga teaching kicked off to a great start this week. I started a new Saturday morning class at Femme Fitness in Watford. I'd originally taught at this women-only gym some 9-10 years ago, so was very much a home-coming in a couple of ways.

1) The same old stereo inhabits a corner of the studio space - only now we have i-Pods and the system doesn't support this new technology!

2) Reunions with students I haven't seen for some time, and even one from my original time at the gym all those years ago - magic!

Great start to the weekend!

Sunday, 18 July 2010

Inspirational...

I may have some way to go (!) but this is certainly the inspiration I need to keep up with my yoga practice...















http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1172810/The-yoga-supergran-bend-backwards-age-83.html

Monday, 21 June 2010

Simple but profound...

A beautiful book and very thought provoking...highly recommended!

Click this link to find out more...http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HeZgoQeebv4

Friday, 18 June 2010

Saturday, 12 June 2010

BBC turns yoga patent facts "on their head"

BBC turns yoga patent facts "on their head"

The above link shows the 'twist' (pun intended), that the BBC applied to it's recent report on the Indian Government applying a patent to yoga postures.

Wednesday, 9 June 2010

Copyright Yoga?

Image copyright (c) Esprit Yoga 1993

I nearly choked this morning on the school run. There I was happily driving to the school, Radio 4's Today programme in the background. Only I nearly crashed the car with the news that the Indian Government is looking to patent nearly a thousand yoga postures.

The fact that Radio 4 also used this as their closing article of the programme was doubly shocking!

To find out more and to also hear the broadcast, click below...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_8730000/8730058.stm

Saturday, 5 June 2010

Beginnings & Endings

Today marks the end of a 3-month training in teaching meditation. When I first enrolled, I had this fanciful idea that I would be given the perfect excuse to just 'sit' for the sheer pleasure of it.

This was my downfall.

The journey through the course has had many twists and turns. Late night angst of whether or not to give it all up. Questions asked of myself and my abilities. Giving up sugar for a week and then finding I don't 'need' the substance in my life (quite a revelation).

You guessed it reader, it's not been an easy path. But sitting here now, on the final, final day of it all, I'm in this wonderful place of ease. Maybe some of that sukha (ease) can be attributed to the fact that I know I haven't got any more coursework to do(!) However, some of it is recognising the journey and the many places I've been taken to in my internal world whilst struggling to really work through the yamas and the niyamas. The pages in my journal being testament to the inner rage when faced with aspects of the self which aren't always pretty.

Meditation is a wonderful tool for life. In between the difficulties, there have been wonderful glimpses of being one with everything - however fleeting the moment.

I have also come to truly understand the power of pranayama on the mind.

So whilst today marks the ending, I am very excited at the beginnings that will follow.

Wednesday, 12 May 2010

The Shack

http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/mpd/permalink/m1G8IYVZU17QPL

The Shack is a book that has been taking America by storm. The book apparently reads like a prayer, the best kind of prayer. I've just ordered it and will let you know my thoughts very soon.

Click on the above link to see a short interview with the author and to find out a little more.

Friday, 30 April 2010

Yoga Unveiled by Gita Desai





Harnessing the colorful commentary of the most prominent yoga scholars, teachers, and medical experts, Yoga Unveiled reveals how yoga began, tells the story of yoga's passage to the West, describes its numerous branches, recounts the fascinating biographies of the foremost yoga masters, and explores yoga's astonishing medical potential.
Stunning cinematography, ornate visual displays, and stirring music create a truly enchanting viewing experience. The great devotees of yoga grace the screen with their profound wisdom and delightful manner.
Yoga Unveiled also features commentary by Krishna Das, Dr. Herbert Benson, Edwin Bryant, Subhash Kak, Vasant Lad, Dr. Timothy McCall, Larry Payne, Pandit Rajmani Tigunait, Father Joe Pereira, Swami Sivananda, Dr. Martina Ziska, and Dharma Mittra.


Extract from The Radiance Sutras


vyoma akaram svam atmanam
dhyayet digbhih anavritam
nirashraya chitih shaktih
sva rupam darsayet tada


Meditate on the Self as being
Vast as the sky,
A body of energy
Extending forever in all directions -
Above, below, all around
In the embrance of infinite space,
Awaken to your true form,
Divine creative energy
Revealing Herself as you.

Lorin Roche - The Radiance Sutras [69] http://www.lorinroche.com/



Saturday, 10 April 2010

Radiance Yoga



Had a wonderful evening last night at Triyoga in Soho. A wonderful 'jam session' provided by Claire Missingham, who took us through a slow, sensual flow accompanied by Lorin Roche fresh from California. Lorin read from his book 'The Radiance Sutras' - it was a divine evening, that helped to clear the stress of the week (meditation course / homework being somewhat challenging plus making a start on my tax return).

Working on the idea that meditation does not mean sitting bolt upright and unmoving, instead it was truly understanding spanda - the spontaneous expression of movement and inner vibration = sheer bliss.

Naturally, what made it even more special was that fact that Lorin has the most wonderful voice which meant as he read the sutras, I just melted into the flow.

Sunday, 4 April 2010

Eat, Pray, Love

One of my most favourite books has been turned into a movie. Eat, Pray and Love is due for release in the USA this summer. Julia Roberts has the starring role. Keeping my fingers crossed that it reflects the magnificence of the book itself.

For those uninitiated into the story, it's like this...

Liz Gilbert (Roberts) had everything a modern woman is supposed to dream of having - a husband, a house, a successful career - yet like so many others, she found herself lost, confused, and searching for what she really wanted in life. Newly divorced and at a crossroads, Gilbert steps out of her comfort zone, risking everything to change her life, embarking on a journey around the world that becomes a quest for self-discovery. In her travels, she discovers the true pleasure of nourishment by eating in Italy; the power of prayer in India, and, finally and unexpectedly, the inner peace and balance of true love in Bali. Based upon the bestselling memoir by Elizabeth Gilbert.


Mindfulness

When we mindfully watch both body and mind, we can see how many wonderful things they do together. (Bhante Henepola Gunaratana)


The 'art' of meditation

I came across this video some time ago and have always found it embodies the art of meditation on so many levels. Once you look beyond the initial distaste regarding the fly, it unfolds into something very beautiful.


Surya Namaskar with Bija Mantras

This is a fab video showing the classical Surya Namaskar using Bija (seed) mantras for each move. Considering getting my students to do this next term as it can be so powerful with each movement.