Travel . Fitness . Yoga


Travel . Fitness . Yoga

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Healthier, happier, more resiliant children (Flynn, 2013)...

A beautiful friend of mine asked me to help his child build the child's core strength as per recommendations from an Occupational Therapist. I was more than happy to say "absolutely" and very honored. I can't share yoga enough!! It's my love and passion and to be able to help people is a true blessing.

I purchased a book about a month ago titled Yoga for Children by Lisa Flynn, E-RYT, RCYT. The book is beautifully written and has a wealth of knowledge. The thing I like best is the constant reminder that parents can do yoga with their children and they don't have to be yoga teachers and that doing yoga together as parent and child or as a family strengthens the power of the family unit (p. 27).

I wanted to share some key things from the book that illustrate the importance yoga and how it plays a role in our child's health, happiness and resilience in this crazy busy world:
  1. Research on the neuroscience of child development from the National Scientific Council of the Developing Child highlights how excessive stress damages children's developing brain architecture. It leaves them vulnerable to lifelong problems in learning, behavior, and overall health. Evidence is accumulating that yoga and mindfulness practice is one effective way to promote healthy brain development and function, and to foster stress resilience (visit www.yoga4classrooms.com to learn more) (p. 23).
  2. Yoga facilitates all kinds of movement, including cross-lateral movement, which is crucial for learning. Cross-lateral movements are those in which arms and legs cross over the midline of the body. The left side of the brain controls the right side and the right side controls the left side. When arms and legs cross the body's midline, both sides are forced to communicate. This integration of both sides of the brain enhances learning. (p. 25).
  3. Modern Children -- and adults -- face daily stresses on the mind and body. Problems include an inability to regulate emotions, overeating or mindless eating, decreased ability to use one's imagination, negative body image, lack of compassion, empathy, and respect for the self and others. If you and your child feel overwhelmed, engaging in a yoga routine is a great way to combat the detrimental effects of overscheduling and disconnection (p. 21).
The book provides many breathing exercises and yoga poses that are easy and fun (a must read).

It's wonderful to see (in words) how yoga can be so beneficial. I feel it everyday and see it's affect on my students (especially right after a practice -- one of my favorite moments in teaching). I am blessed and honored to share such an amazing tool and looking forward to sharing it with one more child (and hopefully you can to)!

Below a pic of Hannah when we were doing yoga together in Indonesia  

Travel . Fitness . Yoga -- enjoy yours!

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Thailand: Cleansing, the man and his mat and Big Buddha...

After a missed chopper, long bus ride, three uneventful flights and a one hour van ride later we arrived in Phuket, Thailand. What an amazing and beautiful place!! Of all the countries, cities and towns that we have experienced, Phuket, Thailand has the sweetest and most welcoming people. When we landed I immediately felt its positive and lively essence. I knew right away this was going to be an amazing adventure.

The religion of Thailand brings out much of its character -- Buddhism. Buddhism is the prevailing religion of Thailand.  Buddhism is a way of finding peace within oneself. It is a religion that helps us to find the happiness and contentment we seek. Buddhists develop inner peace, kindness and wisdom through their daily practice; and then share their experience with others bringing real benefit to this world. They try not to harm others and to live peacefully and gently, working towards the ultimate goal of pure and lasting happiness for all living beings (http://www.aboutbuddhism.org/). About 95 percent of all Thais are Buddhist, and the country has approximately 18,000 Buddhist temples and 140,000 Buddhist priests. Nearly all Buddhist men in Thailand enter a Wat (monastery) for at least a few days or months. Muslims, the majority of whom live in the area just north of Malaysia, constitute approximately 4 percent of the population, and the country also has some small Christian and Hindu communities (http://www.phuket.com/island/populat.htm). With all that being said I was in a place of peace, love, beauty and acceptance!

We spent the first day acclimating from or long travels and relaxed but the next day was the Thai New Year, where the Thai people celebrate the Songkran Festival (aka the water festival). The Songkran Festival is about cleaning, purification, and fresh starts. Houses are cleaned, Buddha statues are gently washed with scented water, and elders are honored by pouring water respectfully over their hands. Although the origins of Songkran are far more religious, splashing complete strangers with water has become the main attraction of the festival. Dousing or sprinkling people with water signifies the washing away of bad thoughts and actions, and brings them good luck in the new year (http://goasia.about.com/od/Events-and-Holidays/a/Thailand-Water-Festival.htm). We were armed with water guns, buckets, friends and new acquaintances. I have never had so much fun in my entire life. Witnessing the smiles on my hubby's, kiddos' and friend's faces was fabulous! They were having a blast. The energy was remarkable! Never have I felt so free, accepted and unrestrained. The water festival is known to be the largest water fight in the world and yes, we were right in the thick of it!!

Over the days we got to experience more sights and sounds of Phuket -- the ocean, the beautiful sunsets, beaches, people, nightclubs, elephants and boat rides but there were three experiences that resonated loudly with me as a yogini: getting back on the mat as a student, the man and his mat and Big Buddha.

Getting back on the mat as a student is very, very important. One cannot grow without learning! So back on the mat I was, learning in Thailand. The best part was that the class was small, simple and comprised of the Sun Salutation with additional basic deepening poses (some of which I have never done before) and it was just what I needed to get back to being grounded, aligned, educated and rejuvenated.

On our way to town one day we walked along the beach and there I spied a man on his mat (see below). He was quietly meditating amongst the busyness of the locals, tourists and the crashing ocean. He sat there settled in his breath and was uninterrupted by the happenings around him. He was there; just him and his mat. It was such a moment of revelation for me! This man, just like many of us, was surrounded by noise, chaos, strangers and crashing waves but yet he was calm. It was a humbling moment. He represented so much with such a little gesture. I yearn to represent such collectiveness in a world of such disarray.

The last experience was getting to see Big Buddha (see below). About 10 years ago a group of friends were walking through the forest in the Nakkerd Hills between Chalong and Kata when they stumbled upon a place with stunning vistas of both sides of the island – Chalong Bay lay in one direction while on the other they looked down over Kata and the Andaman Sea. It would, they thought, make a perfect place for a viewpoint – something that could become as well known as Phuket’s favourite sunset viewpoint, at Laem Phromthep. As time went on, and as the friends discussed it again and again, the idea evolved. The place in the hills, they soon agreed, would be perfect not just as a viewpoint, but as the site for something much more ambitious and, to Buddhists at least, much more significant: a giant image of the Lord Buddha (http://www.phuket.com/magazine/big-buddha.htm). The Big Budda is built from white tiles that are hand inscribed with prayers, beliefs and hopes from donors. It is massive. However, it is the prayer bells (see below) that chime all throughout the walk up and around Big Buddha that were most memorable and powerful. They too are hand inscribed and were everywhere! Their life and aspirations spoke with each chime bringing me to tears! So we inscribed our own and there it chimes in the winds of Phuket! Such a blessing and a trip of a lifetime for this yogini!

Travel . Fitness . Yoga -- enjoy yours!




 

  

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

To be a child again...

In this crazy, fast-paced world it's hard to catch up or even catch your breath. Oh to be a child again without stress, worry or pressure! That's why I am a huge fan of Child's Pose (Balasana).


(picture taken during my evening class- Indonesia)
 
It's my go-to pose! It brings me close to the earth away from the busy, away from stress and allows me to realign and center myself. I really use and express this pose with my young students from the international school. I think teaching them to have a go-to pose or place that is safe and calming is an important tool to have. I also stress that it can be done pretty much anytime or place and is a handy tool to utilize throughout all of life. It's not complicated and very easy to accomplish. (Some people with knee injuries can tuck a towel between their knees and thighs or kneel on a towel for added cushion.)
 
It is also a restorative pose:
 
re·stor·a·tive
riˈstôrətiv/
adjective
adjective: restorative
1.
having the ability to restore health, strength, or a feeling of well-being.

"the restorative power of long walks" (google.com)

 
A tool that restores health, strength or a feeling of well-being, heck ya, I am totally in!! It's a great go-to! I also use this pose to aid tummy aches, backaches and stress (obviously) but the biggest one for me is inner-reflection. While in this pose I imagine myself giving into me -- acknowledging and appreciating my own power, uniqueness, strength and humility! Sometimes we don't get enough appreciation and/or forgiveness. With eyes closed, arms up cuddling my ears all I can hear is my own breath. It is very powerful!
 
From Yoga Journal (http://www.yogajournal.com/poses/475), here is a step-by-step on how to execute this fabulous restorative pose:
 
(bah-LAHS-anna)
bala = child
Step by Step
Kneel on the floor. Touch your big toes together and sit on your heels, then separate your knees about as wide as your hips.
Exhale and lay your torso down between your thighs. Broaden your sacrum across the back of your pelvis and narrow your hip points toward the navel, so that they nestle down onto the inner thighs. Lengthen your tailbone away from the back of the pelvis while you lift the base of your skull away from the back of your neck.
Lay your hands on the floor alongside your torso, palms up, and release the fronts of your shoulders toward the floor. Feel how the weight of the front shoulders pulls the shoulder blades wide across your back. (In the beginning of my yoga flow class we start with our arms reaching forward, palms down on the mat and shoulders reaching back)
Balasana is a resting pose. Stay anywhere from 30 seconds to a few minutes. Beginners can also use Balasana to get a taste of a deep forward bend, where the torso rests on the thighs. Stay in the pose from 1 to 3 minutes. To come up, first lengthen the front torso, and then with an inhalation lift from the tailbone as it presses down and into the pelvis.

I hope you find this amazing tool useful and enjoy the power in its restoration of health, strength and well-being!

 
 
Travel . Fitness . Yoga -- enjoy yours!