Tag Archives: Yoga

Through the Eyes of the Divine

eye of suaron nebula

Between the chaos of three kids and teaching yoga, expanding my healing practices, trying (and failing) to squeeze in quality time with my husband, I find myself losing my mind (and my temper) at times (ok, maybe a lot of times), and I feel like I’m failing at it all. I practice self-love and forgiveness and talk about emotions with my children a whole lot, and we get by, and as chaotic as life can be, I mostly feel pretty satisfied with my place in life. I find that I’m less hard on myself now than I was when I was young and kid-less because I don’t want my girls to think I need to be perfect, which means they need to be perfect, because if we really get deep into it, we’re perfect in all our imperfections.

I had a brief moment of clarity recently while pumping gas. (I have to take those moments to pause when I can!) I found myself gazing at my daughter, amused by her quirky style. It filled me with joy, and I silently acknowledged how much I loved her for her sense of style and her spunky personality. I thought about how much she reminded me of myself as a girl, and I felt a twinge of guilt because I didn’t always like my quirkiness. A strong wave of emotion washed over me, and I realized this brief moment was an opportunity to connect with myself as a young girl and to acknowledge that it was OK to love myself and all my imperfections along my journey of self-discovery. I experienced both sadness and healing simultaneously – I was sad that I didn’t have the ability to fully love myself before, but I had this opportunity to recognize that and send love into the past to heal that part of my soul. Motherhood has given me the opportunity to see myself in my children and learn to love all the things I didn’t really like about myself in the past.

I also realized that seeing ourselves in others can have a profound effect, even beyond the eyes of a parent. I recalled a practice in a yoga training where we gazed upon a partner through the eyes of the divine: God, Jesus, Allah, Buddha, Mother Nature, the Universe, whatever your source may be. And then we gazed upon ourselves, gazing at our partners through the eyes of the divine. It was so easy that I felt silly doing it, like I wasn’t really DOING anything, but both times, my partner was moved almost to tears. I wasn’t really sure what happened in those moments, but in recent days, I find myself practicing this often when I hold the space of a yoga class or when I practice healing. I gaze upon my students and clients as if I were their mother. I picture them as they were as a baby, and I feel so much incredible selfless love for them. And I see myself and my imperfections in them, and I learn to love that about myself also.

The challenge for me is viewing myself through the eyes of the divine, but this is where profound shifts occur. It happens unexpectedly when I see myself in my children, but I can also get there by practicing on people who are different from me and who think differently than me. It isn’t always easy, but I find the more I practice, the more effortless it gets, and the more love I feel for myself and those parts of myself that I struggle with. So I challenge you to practice this. View your opponents, your neighbors, your colleagues, those who are different than you, through the eyes of a parent, of the divine. They are worthy of love. You are worthy of love.

Can we begin a collective healing there?

Changing Perspective

college IDsHere’s another attempt at getting this blog going. I can’t promise I’ll keep it regular, but I’ll try.

I recently found an old wallet, and I’ve been letting my daughter play with it since she is obsessed with my current one. It had a couple of old student IDs in it. I found my husband looking at them one evening. I casually asked, “Did I look a lot younger?” He looked for a long, hard minute, and said, “You just look . . . less stressed . . . ” Awesome.

These are IDs from grad school, not my first round through college, so they’re only 6 or 7 years old. Not really that long ago, right? Yes, I’ve been married and had a child since then. I haven’t really slept a lot in the last 17 months. Not complaining. Kids are awesome. My life has changed in ways I never imagined in the last year and half. Not only do I have a child, but my career has shifted dramatically. I’m cool with it all. I’m happy. I’m more satisfied than I ever imagined. But yeah, I guess that lack of sleep is showing on my face. Sigh.

I start thinking, hmm, what can I do to help look less aged, less stressed, other than plastic surgery? This is why people look for the fountain of youth. Water? Drink more water? I can work on that. Oh yeah, I teach yoga, yoga can help, right? Oh, right, inversions! Inversions help reverse and stop aging, right? That’s what they say. I realize I’ve been thinking a lot about how I don’t teach inversions in my classes very often, and I really don’t practice them as often as I should unless they’re thrown in a class I’m taking. I love inversions and all. I really like headstand because I can do it (yoga humor). Handstand is cool at the wall every now and then. Shoulderstand? The mother of age reversal, right? Eh, shoulderstand always feels kind of awkward to me. I’ve been practicing letting go of the ego in my practice for a few years, so I don’t normally make an effort to find myself in an inversion unless a teacher introduces the opportunity.  I probably don’t teach them because I don’t practice them, and since I mainly teach beginners, I don’t want to do it without a wall, and it takes time to get everyone set up on the wall, and I usually forget until there’s not enough time . . . excuses, excuses.

Back to the point, I decided right then to practice some type of inversion for 40 days. It may be as simple as legs up the wall, which is probably one of my favorites. Sure, it might not REALLY reverse the stress on my face, but inversions are good for you! They are balancing and good for the immune system. They’re invigorating and great core work. They leave your cheeks rosy, which probably does make you look younger for a little bit. I also remembered what one of my teachers, Kewal, told me recently. Headstand will change your perspective. Huh. I never knew that, but it kind of makes sense. It literally changes your perspective, but it can also change your perspective on a particular situation. So I figure it will be fun to see where this gets me.

I’m 11 days in so far and already starting to feel a shift. Maybe not so much in my face, but I’m feeling a little bit more space in my cluttered life.

Daddy/daughter legs up the wall

My family is practicing with me. If you just do one pose a day, try this pose for 10 to 15 minutes, morning and/or night. It is luxurious. It will help wake you up or calm you down. It stimulates both the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems.

 

I have a blog about yoga, and today it is for Boston.

Soon I will blog about yoga and stuff, and probably a lot about yoga off the mat and being a mom. Today, though, my heart is in Boston. I have been a spectator and cheerleader at a few marathons, one in which my brother ran. If you ever want to see true human emotion and spirit and hope and goodwill, take part as a spectator during a marathon. It exposes the most raw and beautiful of emotions, tears of pain, tears of joy, and pure, exuberant happiness. So yeah . . . these bombs, at a marathon – the finish line of the Boston Marathon – what a shitty, terrible disruption of a joyous event. It hurts in so many ways. It is unfair in so many ways.

But you know, the human body is amazing. We have room for pain in our bodies. We have room for pain in our minds. Events like this don’t test our limits; they reveal how capable we are of loving beyond our expectations, beyond the pain and beyond the sadness. These people just ran 26.2 miles. If you’ve ever been a spectator at a marathon – or run a marathon, for that matter – you know people are capable of moving beyond pain. They find beauty and inspiration in their fellow runners, in the spectators, in the earth, in the clouds, in their body, in their mind, in God, and they get through it. They help each other. They cheer each other on. That’s what happened today. People processed the pain and helped each other, and all of our hearts have grown because of it. We will become better because of this. With pain comes an equal and even greater amount of love.

For now, my thoughts and prayers are with those who are hurting. My heart is with you, and I hurt for you.