Blog

Lead The Change

If you don’t believe that one person with a vision can change the world, you have not met Paige Elenson. A senior Baptiste Power Vinyasa Yoga teacher, Paige is the founder of Africa Yoga Project. She embodies the concept of selfless service in action. Paige is the proof that one young woman with an idea can change the planet.

In 2006, Paige was on safari in Kenya with her family when she saw a group of young Kenyan men doing handstands in the middle of the bush. Though she had been warned to stay in the vehicle, Paige jumped out and began doing handstands with these young acrobats. Through this new relationship a bold idea was forming.

When Paige returned to New York, the acrobats contacted her and asked her to come back to Kenya to teach them yoga. What she did not know was that she would be staying in the slums of Nairobi, and what she saw when she arrived set an idea in motion.

The Africa Yoga Project was born. With the help of Baron Baptiste and the Baptiste Power Vinyasa Yoga Institute, Paige founded AYP and began not only teaching yoga to young Kenyans, but training them to be teachers.

AYP uses the transformational power of yoga to foster unity, possibility and non-violence, and has reached thousands of young men, women and children in Kenya. Because I know from personal experience that yoga can change lives, I have been inspired by the amazing work AYP has done.

Today, AYP offers free Baptiste yoga classes to over 4000 students every week, while simultaneously building schools, funding education, health services, and training young Kenyans to teach yoga – thus creating jobs for people with no other outlets for employment. Now, kids from the slums are being trained as yoga teachers, and find jobs teaching middle and upper-class Kenyans as well as jobs in corporate settings. Kenyan youth previously without hope have job prospects and a way to feed their families.

I had the pleasure to personally meet Margaret Njeri, a young Kenyan woman who has lived through violence and devastating poverty, but who, through AYP, has a new life. Margaret teaches children, Women with HIV and people in prison, and has found a life of purpose, vision and service. She and Paige give new meaning to selfless service and have inspired me to get involved with AYP on a deeper level. I plan to travel to Kenya to teach yoga and help this amazing organization continue to empower people and create and lead the change.

If you want to know more about Africa Yoga Project, visit www.afrricayogaproject.org or get involved with an AYP fundraiser at Dancing Dogs Yoga. Check out the new book, Portraits of Empowerment and Peace, available on the AYP website.

Lead the change. Start with challenging yourself, and join us for the Yoga Aid Challenge to benefit Africa Yoga Project on Sunday, October 2nd at 10am. Any donation to Africa Yoga Project gains entry to this worthy event.

“I am because you are.” – African Proverb

The Un-Struck Heart

As I was preparing for a workshop on the chakras, or the subtle energy centers of the body, I was struck by the meaning behind the Anahata Chakra, or the Heart Chakra.  Perhaps it was the proximity to Valentine’s Day, or maybe just the feeling in my heart that this chakra is the most important of all, but I found myself dwelling here.

The word chakra literally means wheel, and the chakras represent the places in the body where many nerves and energy centers meet.  They consist of the root chakra, the naval chakra, the solar plexus chakra, the heart chakra, the throat chakra, the third eye chakra and the crown chakra.  The fourth chakra and center chakra is the Anahata Chakra, and it is located in the area of the heart, or the cardiac plexus.  The word “anahata” literally means, “Un-struck” or “un-beaten.”

When we unfold our heart, we transcend our limited ego and over-indulgent sense of self so that we may find a less selfish and more natural love of ourselves, others and the world at large around us.  The sound of our pure heart is thus “un-struck,” so that we may live our lives as if our heart has never been struck by another.

Generally, the Anahata Chakra is associated with love (true, abiding love and something much more than the Hallmark holiday), devotion and self-confidence.  In yogic tradition, the Anahata Chakra is thought to govern our ability to love, and to control the quality and depth of our love.  It’s location in the center of our core and in the center of the chakras is not coincidental.  Our heart truly does govern our very existence.  Without it, we cease to exist.

Yogis believe that the chakras are responsible for different feelings and emotions, and that balanced and harmonized chakras produce balanced and harmonized individuals.  A heart in balance allows us to love openly and deeply, to feel compassion, peace and a deep connection to others.  An under-active Anahata Chakra leaves one feeling cold, isolated and detached, while an over-active chakra leaves one possessive, overly demonstrative, and operating from a place of fear of loss.

We keep our chakras in balance and harmony through a regular yoga practice, meditation, and by being true to ourselves.  By learning to forgive and to let go, we can learn to mend our hearts even when they are struck by some misdeed or tragedy in our lives.  Through forgiveness, compassion towards others, understanding and kindness, even a wounded heart can become un-struck again.

Open your heart fully to all of life, so that you may give and receive love, freely and fully.  May you live long, and may your heart bells ring un-struck.

For more information on the chakras, visit www.dancingdogsyoga.com/aboutus/resources/

Ahimsa for Arizona

With the tragedy in Arizona monopolizing the air waves, I’ve been thinking a lot about ahimsa.  In yogic philosophy ahimsa, literally the avoidance of violence, is part of the Yamas, or restraints, that make up part of Ashtanga, or the eight-limbed path.  It is a philosophy that will seem very familiar to Christians and Western society, even if you have never heard of it before in the sense of a yogic tradition.

In order to live in harmony, we must practice ahimsa towards all living things. Ahimsa implies non-killing, but in its comprehensive meaning, it means much more.  Ahimsa means that we should not cause pain or harm to any living creature by thought, word or deed, and that we, as practitioners of humanity. should be of harmless mind, mouth and hand.  In other words, through all of our thoughts and deeds, we should restrain from harming others, and do unto others as we would have done unto us.

Ahimsa is most often translated as non-killing and many yogis carry this to include animals, thus engaging in a vegetarian or vegan lifestyle.  While this is the most widely accepted translation of this tenant of yoga, it is not the most important application of this principle.  Many people would have a hard time giving up hamburgers, but they can practice ahimsa is more important and transformational ways.

Of course, when we look at ahimsa as this large, sweeping thing, it can be difficult to adopt its practice as a personal credo.  We must look at ahimsa as a small step that we can take every day, and in every day situations, to elicit real, positive change.  Even if we employ the principle of ahimsa just once a day, we will see changes in our relationships.  Even if we start by practicing ahimsa towards ourselves, simply forgiving ourselves for perceived shortfalls, we can create positive change.

But ahimsa is more that non-injury or non-violence; it is positively love, and the development of an attitude and lifestyle where hatred and injury are replaced by love.  Ahimsa is forgiveness, understanding, compassion and tolerance.  Ahimsa IS yoga.

It is easy to over-simplify ahimsa in regards to the recent tragedy in Arizona, but the violence there punctuates the need for our society to reevaluate the manner in which we treat each other.  If each of us took a moment in our daily lives to consider the implications of our actions, to take care not to cause harm to others through our actions, then our world would truly start to change.  As Gandhi famously said, “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.”  Start with the simple step of ahimsa.

Flowing Into a New Perspective

The New Year is symbolic of new beginnings, and as we shake off the holiday hangover, many of us are looking for a new perspective.  The practice of yoga can offer that fresh perspective to those who are searching for it.

Over the last week, I have told my students that if we set an intention to approach things in our lives from a different perspective, we can achieve subtle, though often powerful, transformation in our lives.  By looking at things from a different angle, be it upside down or sideways, we can find a fresh approach.  Sometimes the same old linear model of pushing from Point A to Point B simply does not work, and the creative solution may lie on your yoga mat.

Most yogis subscribe to the “off the mat into the world” theory, which is a belief that if we pay attention to the lessons we learn on our mats, we can apply them in the world off our mats.

On our mats, we learn patience with ourselves, with the practice, and with the pose.  When we are patient with ourselves, patience with others is easier.  It takes patience to learn how to do a headstand.  Most of us don’t walk into the studio for the first time and accomplish this pose.  But patience and hard work can turn things upside down, and a once impossible task becomes an achievable goal.  These lessons easily translate into our interactions with others.

Through asana we practice humility, as we learn not only our physical limits, but often times our mental and emotional limits as well. Sometimes the mat teaches us more humility than we would like.  The same feeling of finding out that the backbends we did as children are not so easy anymore can be translated into everyday situations in our lives.

In a challenging asana practice, we also become grateful for our physical strength, for the glorious things that our bodies can do, for the elation of accomplishment, and the rest that comes after hard work.  We become grateful for all that we can do and accomplish.  Yoga teaches a strong work ethic– if you work hard, and play your edges, you will find sweet reward in savasana.

Yoga also teaches loving kindness for all living things.  Compassion.  First, we must learn compassion for ourselves so that we may be compassionate with others, or our compassion is incomplete.  Our practice teaches us to forgive ourselves when we do not reach our own expectations, and that too can be applied to others.

All of these asana lessons can be life lessons.  The yoga mat is a vehicle for transformation.  If you close your eyes and open your heart, you can take a deep breath and dive, flowing into a new perspective this new year.

The Garden of Gratitude

Gratitude is the fairest blossom which springs from the soul.  – Henry Ward Beecher

Of the many lessons that I have learned on the mat, gratitude is perhaps among the most empowering.  Through a mindful yoga practice, we go through a gamut of emotions, including humility, acceptance, and the cultivation of gratitude. Gratitude is the sweetest way to live your yoga; when you are struggling or becoming self-defeating in your practice, gratitude can pull you through. It is the realization that each of us has been given an amazing gift; our bodies, minds, and hearts are unique and amazing, and we can instigate change, as Gandhi hoped, first within ourselves, then in the world.

But how do we light the fire of change, of tapas, in order to make a difference in the world?  How can we cultivate selfless gratitude within the garden of our hearts?

One of the chief tenants of yoga is mindfulness.  When we take a moment to be mindful of our thoughts, words and actions, when we savor each moment for the moment, when we accept our shortcomings along with our victories, when we consider the feelings of others, we tend the garden of our hearts and souls.  Mindfulness fertilizes and feeds gratitude.  It is often the smallest seed of gratitude that will grow and blossom in your heart.

When you truly cultivate the garden of gratitude, you will find joy even amongst life’s challenges and sufferings.  It is easy to be grateful for the magnificent things in life.  Growth and change happen when we can remain grateful through challenges and strife.  When we practice gratitude, we learn to be thankful for the tools we have to cope with a difficult situation.  If we are cultivating gratitude, then attitude is the hoe.  A positive and non-defeating attitude goes a long way.

This Thanksgiving, take a moment to express gratitude for all of the beauty and wonder in your life.  Count your blessings, seen and unseen.  Be thankful for the small wonders and the huge miracles that surround you.  Be grateful for those who love you, and who you love, but also be thankful for the people who serve you invisibly every day.  There is a Chinese proverb: When eating bamboo shoots, remember the man who planted the bamboo. Be grateful even for the hard lessons you have learned this year, and use those unpleasant moments to fertilize the soil of your garden of gratitude.

I am full of gratitude for my loving, supportive and patient family, my generous and thoughtful friends, and my diligent, dedicated, and amazing students.  I am grateful for the way that this community has received Dancing Dogs Yoga, for the amazing people that have come into my life this year and for the opportunity to roll out my mat, and experience the miracle of the human body as I move through my practice. I am thankful for the hurdles that I have overcome, for the mistakes that I have learned from (and for those that I am still learning from).  I am thankful for the miracle of the world that lies outside of my door, for the beauty that surrounds me, and the life that awaits.

Namaste.  Happy Thanksgiving.

The Bedeviling of Yoga

Earlier this month, I read an article in the Associated Press about Southern Baptist Seminary President Albert Mohler,who is calling for Christians to abandon the practice of yoga.  Mohler poses (no pun intended) that yoga is incompatible with the teachings of Jesus, and that those who practice yoga are either denying what yoga is about, or they are ignoring the tenants of Christianity itself.

I was shocked.  I suppose that intolerance, hatred and outright ignorance shouldn’t shock me, but the source of it threw me for the proverbial loop.  In speaking out against yoga, Mohler joins another bastion of tolerance, Pat Robertson, who referred to the practice of yoga, particularly chanting, as “spooky.”   It is clear that Mohler, Robertson, and people like them, do not understand what yoga is.

Yoga is not a religion in itself.  It is not exclusive of any religion, rather, it is inclusive of all religions. Yoga is for everyone – young and old, black and white, Christian or Jew, Hindu or Arab.  Yoga is, indeed, a spiritual practice, but I am still lost as to where spirituality is incompatible with the teachings of Jesus. I am also fairly certain that Jesus would welcome a practice that works to create overall wellness among its practitioners.  A strong mind and body are not anti-Christian themes.  If our body is our temple, taking care of that vessel and keeping it strong and healthy is a testament to God. Perhaps Mohler is more against the idea of healing and calming the mind through meditation for fear that a healthy mind would shun his very own intolerance and ignorance.

Meditation is, itself, a kind of prayer.  By quieting the mind, we can often bring ourselves closer to God – be that Yahweh, Jesus, Allah, or Buddha.  This is not, to this writer, in conflict with Christianity or any other religion.  I often tell my students that when we come to the mat, we bring our hearts to the practice.  We put forth our best efforts, and the yoga mat becomes a metaphor for the goals that we set for ourselves.  It becomes our vehicle to our higher selves, and as we become stronger in mind and body, we become better people.  Striving to become a better person, to do unto others, is the very basis of the human condition.  It is not in conflict with Christianity, or any religion, but rather the very heart of it.

There are many paths of yoga.  We each walk on our own yogic path just as we each walk on our own path to God.  A born-and-raised Catholic, I was always taught that the path to God is through the heart.  If the practice of yoga opens your heart, and helps you find inner peace, why would God not want that for you?  Why should taking care of yourself, relieving stress, and finding some calm in this hectic world be labeled by an ignorant and intolerant man as “anti-Christian?” Should we abandon yoga for Prozac??  Maybe Mohler’s sermons can melt all of our stress away?

The irony, of course, is that while Mohler denounces yoga as being “of the devil,” he himself sits in judgment of people and a practice that he does not understand.   Ignorance may be bliss, but this is most certainly a case of the blind leading the blind.  Albert Mohler should be ashamed of himself.

Healing Hands, Healing Hearts

Last week at YogaFest, I was lucky to have my first formal Reiki experience.  Under the capable hands of Reiki Master Ifetayo White and practitioner Lisa Lowther, the healing power of Reiki swept into my life like a holistic tsunami.

Reiki is an ancient hands-on healing method originating in Japan and Tibet that has been passed down from master to practitioner for centuries.  At a cellular level, we know that hands can be healing.  The soft touch of a friendly hand on your shoulder, the healing hands of a mother on her child— even if we cannot give words to the feeling that we get from a reassuring touch, there is no doubt that it can be powerful.

When working with pranayama, or breath, I often tell my yoga students to bring their hand to the part of the body where they want the breath to go.  The simple act of touch can help direct the prana, the life force, right where we want it to go.  In many ways, Reiki works this way.

According to Tanmaya Honervogt, author of The Power of Reiki , “Reiki is a natural and simple healing method which allows you to absorb more life force energy.”  This energy flows through the Reiki practitioner, the giver, to the receiver, often through touch.  The Reiki practitioner does not direct energy, but instead helps it flow.

Some experiences are difficult to put into words, and Reiki is a perfect example .  One of my students beautifully described her experience as feeling as if butterflies were hovering over her body, as she felt the energy tingling in her body.

All of the Reiki practitioners that I have had the pleasure to meet have something in common:  their kindness and mindfulness is apparent the moment that you meet them.  If any treatment is approached from this place of love, true healing can occur.

When you approach the Reiki table with an open heart and an open mind, the energy can flow through you.  Even if you do not believe it, you may feel it.  The healing hands of Reiki can heal hearts and minds with the simplicity and beauty of human touch.

If you are interested in Reiki, and want to “try before you buy,” consider attending the Free Reiki Cinic held every month at Where Body Meets Soul, 1606 B Paris Ave in Port Royal, or at the Solstices and Equinoxes at Dancing Dogs Yoga.  The next free  clinic is Sunday, October 17th from 1-4pm at Where Body Meets Soul. For more information, contact Ifetayo at (802) 730-3071 or email ifetayosun@yahoo.com

Be The Change

Mahatma Gandhi once said, “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.”  People often look outside of themselves for answers to why they are unhappy or are not reaching their goals, and this simple sentiment reminds us that only we are responsible for ourselves.  If we are looking for change, we must understand that change comes from within.

October 2nd would be Gandhi’s 241st birthday.  The word Gandhi itself means “Great Soul,” and his birthday seems an appropriate time to honor his vision of the powerful concept of self-change.

When Gandhi saw intolerance and tyranny, he fought with civil disobedience.  Based on the Hindu belief of ahimsa, or non-violence, this form of protest was often met with laughter and scorn.  Gandhi said, “First they ignore you; then they laugh at you; then they fight you; then you win.”  Eventually, through steadfast adherence to ahimsa, Gandhi was taken more and more seriously, and he changed the lives of literally millions of Indians living under unjust and unfair conditions.  Through ahimsa and satya (truth), Gandhi became the change he wished to see in the world.

But how do most of us react to strife and injustice?  What do we do when things are not going our way?  Most of us, when we are not striving toward a higher goal, will blame, minimize, justify or deny.  Some people even lash out, completely disregarding the principle of ahimsa.

Most of us do not turn to violence to express our displeasure, but we often do abandon the concept of satya, or truth to ourselves.  We offer reasons and excuses, external factors, to explain our defeat or unhappiness.  When we take ownership of our thoughts, words and actions, however,  we come one step closer to reaching a higher level of consciousness, and to being the change.  By accepting and taking ownership of our successes and failures, we become truer to ourselves.

Our thoughts become our realities.  If we stay positive and look for solutions, we will find solutions and happiness.  If we dwell in negativity and seek problems, we will be mired in them.  In order to be the change that we wish to see in the world, we have to take responsibility for everything that happens in our life: good and bad, happy and sad, success and failure.  We are the creators of our destinies.  We must be the change that we wish to see in the world.  Just like Gandhi.

Letting Go

A student recently told me how much yoga has changed her life. She confided that she not only feels physically better, but that she seemed to be handling so many things in her life in a calmer, more efficient manner. She told me that she was able to just let go of so many of the things that usually drove her crazy – that she would close her eyes, breathe, and just let them go.

She was preaching to the choir. I know personally how powerful yoga can be, and how it can change our lives by changing our perspective. In a hectic and unforgiving world, it is easy to let anger and resentment rise up and take control of situations. I’ve said it before –I have always had to struggle with anger.

Honestly, it feels a little silly to say that, as I have to admit that I am a lucky person. I have a good family I love, and who love me in return. I am healthy and my life has been relatively free of major tragedy. Yet at the risk of seeming ungrateful, as some have accused Liz Gilbert, the heroine of Eat Pray Love of being, I often found myself ANGRY, unsatisfied, and ungrounded. Why?

I have a theory that in our global world, the simple and wonderful things get lost. It is the failure to notice the bird in flight or the sunlight glinting off the river that allows otherwise healthy and happy people to sink into a kind of global depression. By being part of a world that is too big, we overlook all of the small miracles in front of our eyes, causing us to feel smaller, insignificant, and even angry.

Yoga allows us to look inward and observe the miracle that is each one of us, individual, special and spectacular. Through practice and meditation, we recognize the beauty in us and around us. Finding the divine in ourselves allows us to find the divine in everything. The absence of peace of mind, and peace of the heart, leads to the discontent and unhappiness that so many people suffer from in today’s world.

Yoga changed all of that for me, and I was happy to hear, for my student. I know that it cannot have that miraculous effect on everyone, but I do think that it is worth a try. If you have ever considered trying yoga, there is no time like the present. September is National Yoga Month. Yoga studios across the country (including Dancing Dogs Yoga here in Beaufort) are taking the Yoga Month Card, good for one free week of yoga for new students. You can register for and download yours at www.yogamonth.org

You can also try a variety of yoga styles and classes for free at YogaFest 2010 on September 25th and 26th at Dancing Dogs. Visit www.dancingdogsyoga.com for more information.

Namaste.

Mother Earth

As I look out at a room of pregnant women with their beautiful round bellies, I understand where the concept of Mother Earth was born.  The roundness of the belly, reminiscent of the Earth herself, creates a cocoon within the mother’s body and provides a life-sustaining environment for the baby.  As Mother Earth sustains all life, so do expectant mothers, albeit on a much smaller scale.

Yoga can benefit us at all stages of our lives, but there is a special connection that can happen when a mother-to-be practices yoga.  The physical benefits are numerous and obvious.  Yoga helps relieve back pain, sciatica, swelling in the hands and feet (though not the belly!) and can alleviate general exhaustion.  It aids in digestion and helps mom bring more oxygen to herself and the baby.  It helps her relax and aids in a happy and healthy pregnancy.

More subtle, though, are the psychological and spiritual benefits that come from making a solid spiritual connection between mother and child as part of the birth process.  Gurmukh Kaur Khalsa, Kundalini Yoga teacher and author of Bountiful, Beautiful, Blissful, said, “ A mother’s prayer holds the sacred space for her child, a mother’s prayer holds the world.”

Establishing this connection can help the mother-to-be prepare for birth.

Pregnancy can be stressful.  It is an awesome duty to be responsible for a life growing inside of you; with every step, every move and every thought the baby is affected.  The mother-to-be is directly tied to the health and well-being of her unborn child.  She is the support, the life-line and the entire environment.

Prenatal yoga classes, in turn, create a supportive environment for mothers-to-be, and help nurture the nurturer.  Like in all other times in life, yoga can aid in pregnancy by giving the mother-to-be more energy.  It can help her develop a connection with the life growing inside of her, allowing her mind, body and spirit to connect with the autonomous spirit that is her baby.

Prenatal yoga classes also can serve as a forum for mothers-to-be to express concerns, fears, and hopes, and to share ideas and solutions with other expectant mothers.  Prenatal yoga calms the nerves, relieves bodily aches and pains and gives the mother-to-be not only the energy, but the courage and presence of mind to prepare for the miracle of birth.

If you’re expecting, find a doula, a support system and a prenatal yoga class.  When armed with information, a woman can develop a birth plan, prepare for deviations, and know her options.  With knowledge comes power.

upcoming events

  • May 25
    • DJ Yoga Party

      with Mark White in Beaufort

  • May 30
    • DDY Bluffton Grand Opening

      A DJ Yoga Party with Mark White

  • Jun 17
    • Revolution Boot Camp Beaufort

      Transform your practice, transform your life!

  • Jul 15
    • Revolution Boot Camp Bluffton

      Transform your practice, transform your life!

specials for this month

Check in on Facebook 10 times and receive a free class!

NEW! Teacher Training Now Offered at DDY.

sign up for our