I’m posting this article by Valerie Reiss, published in the Huffington Post, so I can find it again when I need it!
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/valerie-reiss/10-things-i-learned-at-yo_b_716619.html?igoogle=1
I’m posting this article by Valerie Reiss, published in the Huffington Post, so I can find it again when I need it!
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/valerie-reiss/10-things-i-learned-at-yo_b_716619.html?igoogle=1
Judith Hanson Lasater wrote this for Yoga Journal, and I think she did a great job of demystifying the last three limbs of Patanjali’s yoga.
I particularly like her contrast of the filter or grid that we ordinarily perceive reality through and the direct experience of reality — which no matter how it happens, through lovemaking or being alone in the woods or sitting on a zafu — always wakes us up to being more alive.
I just read this article in Yoga Journal and wanted to share it here, because the writer shows the kind of body awareness that one can develop from making yoga and meditation regular practices. He sensed an area in his body where his energy felt blocked and noticed other areas affected by that blockage. He followed his intuition that he needed to find a good bodyworker to open his energy up.
He notices what actually happens in a session, and this is true for me too: As much as I adore chitchatting with my bodyworkers, they actually work better (that is, my body heals and aligns more) when I am silent, deeply relaxed, open, and energetically supporting their work.
As with yoga itself, the real proof of bodywork is in the direct experience. And the more yoga you do—especially if you complement it with various forms of bodywork—the deeper your ability to sense your inner experience becomes. Yoga practitioners frequently discover that they develop finer and finer perception in areas of the body where they previously felt little. B.K.S. Iyengar calls this phenomenon awakening intelligence in the body.
Came across this yesterday and thought I’d share Suzuki Roshi’s response to the questions, “Can you put Buddhism in a nutshell? Can you reduce Buddhism to one phrase?”
Thanks to my fellow yogi Clare Townes for sending me this link. It just made my day. Click the link and read about chair yoga at senior centers, even savasana for the bedridden.
Yoga, which is mostly about breath and awareness as the article states, is for everyone.
http://newoldage.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/08/05/yogas-newest-fans/?src=me&ref=health
Nice, lengthy NY Times Magazine article about John Friend, founder of Anusara Yoga, written by Mimi Swartz, long-time Texas Monthly writer. It provides a good overview of contemporary American yoga – practiced by 16 million people, often creating community in the way that churches once did, and having a $5.7 billion per year economy.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/25/magazine/25Yoga-t.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&src=ig
I like this post on Elephant Journal from a fellow meditation blogger about setting up your home meditation practice when you have a family, not much of a sangha, and other obstacles. Early in the morning is my best time too.
http://www.elephantjournal.com/2010/07/meditation-for-the-working-class-family-folks/John Pappas’ blog, where the post originally appeared, is located here, and it’s worth a look-see. He’s located in South Dakota and has a photo of Mount Rushmore that includes the Buddha among the dead presidents! Check it out here:
http://zendirtzendust.com/Confession: I am a brain geek. I’ve been lucky enough in this lifetime to have worked for 3 years with Nina Davis, craniosacral therapist extraordinaire, and I can’t thank her enough for sharing her work with me.
CST is usually subtle. The one time it wasn’t subtle was when she worked on my locus ceruleus, a “blue spot” in the brain stem that is affected by trauma. When it opened up or unfroze or however it changed, I experienced profound, deep relaxation with no internal images or dialog. Just deep black restful awareness. It was like bliss.
I recommend CST for all trauma survivors. Trauma rewires the brain in a dysfunctional way, and your full recovery depends on you (with whatever help you can get) rewiring it back to a healthy state.
(Besides this, Nina has shown me how acutely a person can develop her sensory acuity, to the point where she’s aware of tiny structures and processes inside her own brain and body and in mine as well, using her fingertips and awareness. She’s just brilliant, like a Bene Gesserit from Dune. I have some perception of my energy body and can feel shifts, but she’s got the detailed inner anatomy down.)
I’ve read articles about scientific studies of long-time meditators that concluded that meditation affects your brain waves in a positive way. I believe it, based on 6 months of daily meditation. I experience my energy field differently, although my physical body is feeling pretty good too these days. It’s as if my brain waves are oscillating in more synchrony than before, which is pleasant and self-reinforcing.
I am very curious about brain waves. They are bioelectricity, and there are machines that give you visual feedback of your brain activity. Here’s what I know (from reading A Symphony in the Brain and Wikipedia):
I would love to have a portable EEG machine and electrodes like Ken Wilber uses in the YouTube video where he shuts down his brain waves. It would be fun to play with and learn from. One researcher claims that each hertz is associated with specific mental activity. That would be fun to experiment with!
I wonder what we would see if both Nina and I were hooked up to EEG machines when we were doing craniosacral therapy. What happens when I’m doing yoga, meditating, drawing, petting my cat — what states occur?
I’ve also learned that you can get a “brain tune-up”. A company called Brain States Technology (with three affiliates in Austin at present) uses a new strategy for working with EEG readouts and improving brain functioning. Rather than using a medical model (specifically retraining the brain not to have epileptic seizures or ADHD), they simply show you how to optimize your brain waves, right to left and front to back. So, for instance, you might have less delta and theta when awake, and more beta in the left hemisphere and more alpha in the right.
I’m gathering information and considering doing it.
I’m interested in increasing my gamma waves, which may signify a mental state called “unity of consciousness.” The jury is still out on this (and scientific juries take a notoriously long time to agree on things).
In the meantime, the man who brought us the Delta Sleep System CD has now created one to optimize gamma waves, Gamma Meditation System. I’m ordering it.
Click here to read this article, originally posted in elephantjournal.com. Boulder yoga teacher Tiffany Hutchings lists what she’s like her beginner students to know.
I agree.
http://www.elephantjournal.com/2010/06/seven-things-i-want-to-tell-my-beginner-yoga-students/Intensive mental training has a measurable effect on visual perception, according to a new study from the Center for Mind and Brain at the University of California, Davis. People undergoing intensive training in meditation became better at making fine visual distinctions and sustaining attention during a 30-minute test.
I read about this and wondered if that was what was going on with my experience of strange left eye energy in May. Even though my eyes were closed, I somehow had an impression that my visual acuity had increased.
Imagine getting to meditate for 6 hours a day for 3 months in the Rockies! I’d like to volunteer for more experiments like this.
http://www.news.ucdavis.edu/search/news_detail.lasso?id=9487