- "A good teacher is like a candle - it consumes itself to light the way for others"
My future colleague Kadi's intentions, and authentic desire to do anything to fulfill her dream is admirable and inspiring. Please support her by visiting her site listed below and leave a comment:
What does Yoga mean to Kadi?
"Balance, yes. Nature, yes.
Breathing, ah breathing. Something we do during all moments of life. We inhale, we take it in. Then we exhale, we give. Simple. Been doing it for a long time, right?
Now, take a second and do those two steps consciously. Breath in, pause, breath out.
You just did yoga.
Do it again, and again!
I hope we all know our infinitive beauties; there are 50 that Linnea reminded us about.
Visit my site, read my short essay/video. It touches on travels to Nicaragua and why I aspire to become a yoga teacher. Your comments give me votes… and with merely six days left, winning the yoga teaching scholarship may not be in the cards. But your words support my passion to spread yoga. Thank you for them. Namaste. And please, happiest of holidays!"
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
A Yogini's Quest to Yoga Teacher Training
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Yoga, The Big-C, and Physical Fitness
Cancer and Physical Fitness: The Benefits are Endless
Guest post by David Haas
The medical community has been taking a closer look at the potential benefits exercise can have for cancer survivors. Traditionally, the belief was that physical activity was too taxing for people going through or recovering from cancer treatments.
However, over the past number of years there has been an increasing body of scientific research indicating that moderate exercise could indeed be beneficial. The growing number of exercise classes designed specifically for cancer patients and survivors would tend to offer anecdotal evidence in support of this idea as well.
Yoga has been found to be a particularly valuable type of exercise. It includes a lot of stretching and range of movement exercises that help maintain or increase flexibility. The range of movement poses has been particularly recommended for those experiencing lymphedema. The focus on breath that's part of the yoga classes can also be particularly helpful for mesothelioma patients.
Perhaps most beneficial are the impact these classes can have on energy levels and emotional well being, both of which are critical to maintaining a high quality of life. Attending an exercise class regularly can instigate an energy boost that helps you stay active and present well beyond your time in class. The sense of community and connection you can find in these classes as well can inspire a greater sense of optimism that is so critical to improving physical health.
Indeed, some of the studies on the connection between exercise and cancer have found lower rates of recurrence in cancer survivors who exercise regularly. This result has been linked to exercise's ability to improve the functioning of the immune system and increasing muscle strength. Physical activity isn't a cure or a guarantee of prevention, but it's positive impact on physical and mental functioning is encouraging.
A variety of kinds of moderate physical activity can bring these benefits. The key, some oncologists have indicated, is moving your large muscle groups at a pace that suits you. This can be through walking, stretching, working with resistance bands - any number of options, not just yoga. Since there could be days when treatment makes working out impossible or at least not recommended, you should discuss with your own doctor what a meaningful physical fitness regime would be for you. You might find the increased activity becomes its own spiral of improved well being!
David Haas is a Cancer patient advocate who writes and researches for the betterment of others.
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Why Meditation & Action are Hand in Hand Practices
Meditation.
Its one of those words that has many images attached to it: of a person smiling, sitting cross-legged with their middle finger touching their thumb. Perhaps wearing gypsy pants, half naked in a cave in India, turning into a rainbow of their chakras as they float through their own psychic realm to instantly transcend all their problems, fear and pain into pure love, bliss and eternal consciousness.
And If you met me three years ago. I was on my way to that crazy train.
Okay, maybe not that extreme. But either way – I saw meditation as a my quick-fix solution. I viewed it as a way to find complete peace, stillness, awakening and extreme opening.
I found meditation my first year of college. Like many people I turned to spirituality because I didn’t know what else to do. I was fresh out of a serious relationship of several years. That same year I had five friends die from various forms of accidents or suicide. My mother was hit with the big-C: breast cancer. And I was “diagnosed” with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress. Which let me tell you – was not the case.
Yes, I had nightmares.
Yes, I felt broken and lost without my ex.
Yes, I woke up and called people that were dead.
Yes, I was in a new place and was experiencing ongoing episodes of extreme anxiety.
Yes, I wasn’t sleeping.
Yes, my mother was really sick, and I wasn’t by her side. Nor could she be by mine.
My answers to the doctors questions were always yes. I remember my mother sitting there in the chair, reading me like a multiple choice test. This threw me for a whole new loop of being caged in by my own pain rather than just simply being in a period of upset – that needed some serious processing.
Needless to say, there I was — starting my life, having absolutely no clue who I was or how to even begin. I was reactive, grasping, needy, stuck and I wanted a magic bullet (hence the need for the gypsy pants, and rainbow chakras).
I couldn’t understand how I had gone from a sensual, soulful, vibrant, playful soul… to a diagnosis. And in my pain, I knew she was still there, and intuitively I don’t think I ever fully believed anything that the doctors said. So I started with meditation and yoga with a defined goal (always a dangerous word when dealing with matters of the heart) to heal.
Without a doubt, yoga and meditation are the most heart-opening, healing, rejuvenating, remembering-who-you-are practices I have ever experienced. But eyes open, I was still afraid, sad and broken. So yes, It was absolutely how I accessed this foreign person again, but not at all how I brought her back to life.
This distinction became apparent in therapy a few years later.
This particular day is vivid in my mind – mostly because absolutely everything about my therapist was annoying me. He was sitting in the same position he always sat in, with the same expression on his face and yes – asking the same exact questions he had always asked. And with my goal-oriented, give-me-peace-and-love-now attitude – I snapped.
Dont you have any other questions? I mean I’ve been coming here for months. I meditate, I feel my pain, I notice it. I do everything I’m supposed to be doing. I just feel so stuck. This is your job.
His expression didn’t change.
Linnea, you’ve been through a lot and you are very wise because of it – but I have to tell you… you need something other than your old life to apply it to. I’m sitting here listening, and I can’t help but think this is sort of like the process of recycling – you’re reusing all of your old pain, heartbreak and depression to try to reconstruct something new. The thing about recycling that most people don’t talk about is – well, only about 10% of it is actually used to make new products. The rest is irrelevant. And besides, you’ve got a lot of trash mixed in with the recycling, so that 10% is decreasing by the minute. You keep coming in here, saying you’re working through your problems. But the only thing you’re doing is just getting calm enough to talk about it over and over and over again. I can see that you’re very present with your pain. You are sincere about wanting to heal. You already have that wisdom. The meditation isn’t helping anymore. You think you’re going to go from being in pain, stuck and depressive to pure love and by sitting on your ass and meditating? And then going back to the same old patterns – expecting that to change your life? You know who you are, so what are you afraid of? You need some new information in your head. Stop processing the same old thoughts. Take action. The growth will follow.
His words hit me like a ton of bricks. Funny how our irritation with other people is always about ourselves. There it was, the light bulb moment (and I wasn’t even wearing my gypsy pants!)
If you think yoga and meditation alone will fix your problems, transcend your fears and just hand over: what I like to call the reach-your-full-potential-in-an-hour-package deal – you are way wrong. Even if you are doing it everyday. The growth comes in the cold, hard, dirty work of becoming the sole activist of your own well-being.
My habits had been repeatedly playing themselves out like a broken record. I wasn’t moving forward in my meditation. I was just noticing the same old crap over and over again. These old habits (the ones that got me in this mess in the first place) weren’t going to work for who I intuitively knew I was suppose to become.
True healing is creating new patterns to replace the old fear-filled ones. Once there is seeing, there must be acting. So yes, contrary to stillness, this means doing. What you fear most, is usually the exact direction you need to head. Meditation is like the blueprint for your potential. It is absolutely essential. It shows you where you are holding on. It tells you what you’re running away from, what you are most afraid of and most importantly that you have the capability to be so much more than the definition of your problems. This is only one small part of the equation. Use that blueprint in conjunction with the potential that is waiting to be fulfilled.
Notice the signals. Hunt down your fears. Don’t let them go back into hiding. They always have an important message to reveal to you.
Go after that impossible job, give that speech you’ve always been too afraid to do, confront your ex with the words you’ve always needed to say, apply for the PhD program you’ve always dreamed of, become the honest, loving and transparent partner that you’ve spent years searching for. Whatever your story is, be a visionary. And then act on it. Embody that vision. Watch yourself grow, watch your meditation expand, and your confidence skyrocket.
It won’t always be pretty. In fact you might find that the first ten times you get up there and stare fear in the face, you make a fool of yourself. All the better.
You learn. You are alive. You are beautiful.
Growing is the imperfect process of being willing to look like a fool- knowing that you will soak up even more wisdom to apply to the next endeavor. This willingness to fail, to trust that taking daring actions is the only real way we can ever move through discomfort and into authentic, vibrant, sexy, explosive, expansion.
This article was written by Linnea Jensen Yoga. It was originally published on elephantjournal.com on October 22, 2011
Sunday, September 18, 2011
How Yoga Taugh Me To Be Less Nice
Being yogic versus being yourself.
If you’ve practiced yoga for awhile, you’ve had the experience of one of those ethereal, poetic it’s-all-peace-and-love teachers. It’s astounding, inspiring, but mostly just gets you wondering are they serious? Sometimes yes, but some are just plain full of it. You’re sitting on your mat, perhaps still swearing in your head about the traffic that caused you to be ten minutes late to class because you just got in a terrible fight with your partner and your boss wants an impossible proposal on his desk the very next day.
You need yoga, without a doubt. But the fact that the teacher is om-ing right now is really sending your stress level out the window. Everyone is smiling. Sitting up straight. You feel alone, broken, vulnerable and yes, impatient. Let’s face it, you’d rather be screaming than om-ing.
But that’s not yogic.
And you see all these people, and they look so peaceful, and happy. So you smile anyway. And it helps. You feel better after class. You keep coming back, and yes, keep smiling. Its almost seems uncomfortable not to.
Be the light of your heart, Open yourself to love, Withhold all judgment... Sound familiar?
These phrases were like bumper stickers spinning around in my mind. I became friendlier, more pleasant and always made my best effort to be nice (at the time, my version of compassion…). It’s almost like I was on a constant high. Who needs drugs when you have rainbows and unicorns coming out of your very own ass (au natural)?
I was like a girl in a new relationship – intoxicated by the promise of liberation, love and compassion. At that point I was probably regurgitating yoga-speak in my sleep. I felt I had finally found my perfect match.
But eventually the peaceful yogi in me was exhausted, burnt out, and was disappointed once again by something I had so much faith in. The blindsided romance came to an end. And like a fresh relationship turned vial, my love story faded and I was left with myself – raw and flaw-filled. This is a test that everyone faces with any love affair – no matter the circumstance.
Reality kicked in and I realized I took my own humanity out of the situation. I was bending over backwards and extending my own boundaries for the sake of being yogic. As Ana forest once said,
There is a difference between having an open heart, and having an open heart that lets all kind of shit fly in.
I was like a Venus fly trap. Blossoming beauty, wide open embrace, but catching everything and I do mean everything that flew by me. Not only was I catching it – I was taking full responsibility for it. The real yoga began when I realized that yoga alone wouldn’t save me from my problems, and I certainly couldn’t use it to hide behind.
Doing yoga was a co-participation that meant opening to my own confrontation.
So yes, I judge, I sometimes yell, and for the first time in my life I’m realizing that I don’t like people. I may be less nice than I’ve ever been in my life. But I am much happier, much more in touch, and much more direct. And hell, I’m even sassy. Embracing my chaotic, tumultuous background gave me a voice of authenticity.
Rainbows, sunshine and unicorns….not my thing.
Facing your shit. Being who you are.….that is my thing. Censoring yourself and being mindful are two different things. Practice your humanity, embrace your flaws, and speak from exactly where you are.
Making this transition in your practice is essential for moving through discomfort and into growth. We aren’t all going to be peace and love all the time. No matter how many days a week you practice yoga. I always tell my students to never sugarcoat anything (especially a pose) for the sake of being yogic.
Being you, raw, expressive and sometimes uncomfortable is the most yogic and beneficial thing you can do.
Only then can you really investigate what true compassion means – it’s in the corners of your own dark shadow that you find the juicy goodness that gets you into a place of real, authentic, badass, lasting transformation.
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Love is Louder
I am always talking. And I'm surrounded by people that are talkers. Its wonderful because I don't feel inhibited to express myself. But my most profound moments are in silence with someone. That moment when you just stop "trying" and whatever is left is an unspoken effortlessness. Ever heard the saying "you might not remember what a person said but you'll never forget how they made you feel?" To me that is the strongest form of empowerment, change and growth.
Were often talking instead of listening, or reacting instead of feeling. How can you make a bigger impact by saying less?
*This photo was taken by Jesse Sean Bernstein . Thank you!
*This photo was taken by Jesse Sean Bernstein . Thank you!
Sunday, July 3, 2011
4th of July Hangover Prevention & Cure
This is the weekend where we celebrate freedom. Which lets face it, most likely just translates to your alchohol intake and the fact that you don't have to go to work on Monday.
So on that note...heres the formula I've come up with (on top of the basics we all already know- ibuprofen, water etc) ways to prevent and cure hangovers.
2) Replenish your vitamin (B) levels. Opt for a sublingual vitamin B complex to carry around in your bag or pocket. Just put a few drops under your tongue before you head out- and then again before you go to bed. Drinking alcohol dehydrates you and subsequently sucks up all your vitamins. If you choose to do nothing else in this list- choose to replenish your b vitamins. It works WONDERS.
3) Go for the clear substances- vodka, white wine, gin. Darker booze contains more chemicals called congeners which inflame the body and intensify hangovers.
4) Avoid Diet Drinks. Diet sodas empty out your stomach more quickly which makes you woozy at an unexpected pace. Be smart about your mixers.
5) Drink electrolytes in your H20. Alcohol reduces the liquid around blood cells making your brain shrivel which is what causes the most commons symptoms of headaches and nausea. Opt for some H20 + electrolytes. SmartWater is a smart choice. Jennifer had a point here.
6) Eat eggs for breakfast. Ever wonder why you just crave them in the morning? Your body is intelligent. Eggs contain a substance called cysteine which breaks down acetaldehyde- a hangover causing toxin in alchohol.
7) Sweat and twist. Studies show that people report feeling better due to the feel good chemicals that are released during exercise. Yoga is great for detoxifying the body and moving around the stagnant energy to get your blood flowing (all of which needs to happen after drinking). Good blood flow = happy hangover. Specifically, try twisting poses and back bends to reverse the blood flow and wring out the toxic build up in your spine!
So make moderation your mantra, get plenty of sleep and enjoy the bliss of a well planned happy hangover. Ahhhhh (Thats a deep breath).
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Duality, Choice and Creativity
To me, our most common reaction to dualities- this idea that there is always two sides of the coin- is similar to speeding along a major bridge or highway --we begin at one end with the intent of arriving at the other- thinking that there is only one, either completely stagnant or accelerated, way across. But the real breakthrough comes in the unexpected moments when we aren't telling ourselves what to do. Why? If we move too fast, or beat ourselves up when we hit a road block- we miss the oppurtunity to draw upon our attention, creativity and strength.
It is in these moments that we allow ourselves to let go of the "getting there" because in between there is a journey that is much more valuable to our development and growth. This doesn't mean that crossing this bridge over and over again won't happen on a daily basis. But making the conscious choice to let creativity take over- to let ourselves feel what we're feeling and be exactly where we are is a step toward healing.
If were running from darkness toward light, striving to "get there" or "get healed" we miss the opportunity to dive into ourselves. It is inevitable that you will hit traffic again (literally and figuratively) in your life- all kinds of road bumps will come up- but this not a catastrophic event. Its an opportunity. Creativity comes in embracing your feelings- the good, the bad, and the ugly. It is so important to navigate the road in between the process of duality with this sense of freshness: to open yourself to the possibility that there is something magnificent there. The events that often bring up dualities, aren't about a one-time magic realization that you've moved out of the dark and into the light. There is not blueprint for success. It is gradual, its inventive, attentive, creative and often our best teacher if we just choose to let it be and show up throughout the entire process.
The ability to choose is the key, because choice is the process of creation itself. Its that magnificent place that I mentioned before where we say "yes- bring it on!" Making our choices CONCIOUSLY allows us to understand that each choice we make is a creative act of tremendous power for which you are held responsible. Choose to show up!
Monday, June 27, 2011
Compassion, Simplified.
For those of you that struggle with "compassion"- what it means, or more common- having compassion for absolute strangers, and people that you "don't like." This is a fun little exercise that can bring a whole new perspective:
“Sometimes, while riding the subway I try to look at each
person and imagine what they look like to someone who is in love with
them. I think everyone has had someone look at them that way, whether it
is a lover, or a parent, or a friend, whether they know it or not. It’s
a wonderful thing, to look at someone to whom I would never be
attracted and think about what looking at him or her would feel like to
someone who is devouring every part of his or her image, who has
invisible strings that connect to every part of his or her body. I think
this is a fun way of cultivating compassion. It feels good to think
about people that way and to use a part of my mind that is traditionally
reserved for a tiny portion of people I’ll meet in my life to
appreciate the general public. I wish I could think about people like
this more often. I think it’s the opposite of what our culture teaches
us to do. “
—Dean Spade, from ‘For Lovers and Fighters
“Sometimes, while riding the subway I try to look at each
person and imagine what they look like to someone who is in love with
them. I think everyone has had someone look at them that way, whether it
is a lover, or a parent, or a friend, whether they know it or not. It’s
a wonderful thing, to look at someone to whom I would never be
attracted and think about what looking at him or her would feel like to
someone who is devouring every part of his or her image, who has
invisible strings that connect to every part of his or her body. I think
this is a fun way of cultivating compassion. It feels good to think
about people that way and to use a part of my mind that is traditionally
reserved for a tiny portion of people I’ll meet in my life to
appreciate the general public. I wish I could think about people like
this more often. I think it’s the opposite of what our culture teaches
us to do. “
—Dean Spade, from ‘For Lovers and Fighters
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
The Whole Foods Parking Lot Rap Song
Im all for organic food. Im all for yoga. Im all for cleansing, and believe me....I do love Whole Foods.
But most of all, Im all for not taking myself too seriously- in hopes that others too will find a little inspiration in lightening their load.
Monday, June 13, 2011
50 Reasons Why You Are Absolutely Beautiful
Beauty is this word that is often thrown around conditionally. Its another category that can sometimes feel esoteric. To me, beauty is a celebration of everything in our lives- even the stuff that we shove deep down in hopes of never seeing that "ugliness" again- its the organic substance that fuels our gorgeous smile, and breathtaking laugh. Beauty in its rawness, can't be faked.
1. You are beautiful when you are afraid to do something, and you do it anyway.
2. If you have been to hell and back, your resilience is beautiful.
3. Beauty is long hair, and short hair; brown, black, pink, yellow, or white. Beauty is a smooth bald head.
4. Asking questions—especially “why?”—is always beautiful. Why? Because curiosity is beautiful.
5. If you can string words together into a sentence, and you’re brave enough to let someone else read it, that’s beautiful.
6. Flat stomachs are beautiful, sure, but big, soft bellies are beautiful, too.
7. It is beautiful to speak another language. It is beautiful to try.
8. Beauty is putting paint on canvas, or strumming a guitar, or baking bread, or dancing with your eyes closed.
9. Creating is always beautiful.
10. Your bare face in the morning is beautiful. Ask the person who loves you. It’s true.
11. Beauty is being brave enough to embrace your feelings- the good, the bad, and the ugly. To open yourself to the possibility that there is something magnificent there.
12. Remember the time your best friend called you crying? Because only your voice could calm her down? That was beautiful.
13. Beauty is laughing so hard your eyes are watering and your stomach hurts and you’re yelling, “Stop, stop! Seriously, I’m peeing!” Yes. Peeing your pants can be beautiful.
14. Beauty is not letting ignorance be mistaken for truth. Even if you're the one in the dark.
15. Beauty is calling someone out for saying something hurtful, even if you weren’t the one getting hurt.
16. Your legs are beautiful. No, really. They are. Look at the curve of your calves, the muscles in your thighs, the peaks and valleys of your knee.
17. Letting go of a toxic relationship? Ah, what a beautiful relief!
18. You are beautiful when you rock out so hard at a concert that your neck is sore the next day.
19. Intelligence is beautiful.
20. Worldliness is beautiful.
21. Compassion is very, very beautiful.
22. Beauty is wearing an outfit so fierce that when people compliment you on it you say, “I know, right?” and then, “Oh, I mean, thank you.”
23. Strong opinions are beautiful.
24. Respecting other people’s strong opinions is beautiful too.
25. Beauty is your hometown, whether you love it or hate it, because it helped make you who you are.
26. Beauty is telling a dirty joke and laughing so hard nobody can hear the punchline.
27. Women who never wear makeup, whatever their reasons, are beautiful.
28. Women who always wear makeup, whatever their reasons, are beautiful.
29. Floating in the ocean is a beautiful feeling.
30. Your eyes are beautiful. Nobody else has eyes like yours. They are deep and inquisitive and instantly recognizable.
31. The way our bodies tell the truth—we blush when we are attracted to someone, we blink twice when we lie—is beautiful.
32. Having faith in someone else's word, because we know we've been true to our own. That is beautiful.
33. Beauty is being comfortable enough with someone else to be silent. As a character in the movie Best In Show put it, “We could talk or not talk forever and still find things to not talk about.”
34. Beauty is being able to walk gracefully in high heels.
35. Beauty is digging your bare feet into the sand.
36. Beauty is sitting very still with your thoughts
37. It is beautiful to find the strength to ask for help when you need it. We all feel like we’re drowning sometimes, and we would all be glad to pull you from the rapids.
38. Beauty is loving your pet as much as they love you.
39. Beauty is a fresh flower in your hair.
40. The physical remnants of our life experiences—wrinkles, stretch marks, scars, and sun spots—are beautiful.
41. Wisdom is beautiful.
42. Humility is beautiful.
43. Beauty is the sweaty satisfaction of a hard workout- moving your body in the way it was meant to.
44. It is beautiful to finally tell someone your secret.
45. It is beautiful to turn the worst night into the funniest story- the ability to see the humor in the darker, sometimes neglected parts of our life.
46. Beauty is being able to truly enjoy the food you eat.
47. It is beautiful to be grateful to all the strong people who came before you: the ones who raised you, the ones who fought for your rights, the ones who were burned at the stake because they were too powerful.
48. Giving birth is beautiful. (Messy, but beautiful.) Rebirth- as many times as necessary- is also beautiful.
49. Freedom is beautiful. You are free to fill your life with the things that make you happy. You have a choice.
50. Happiness is beautiful. Never be ashamed of being happy.
inspired by frisky.com
inspired by frisky.com
Saturday, June 11, 2011
Going Steady with Joe
If you're a coffee nut you know the feeling. All it takes for us to get going in the morning is the tempting aroma of fresh ground espresso beans. Like an instrument tuned to its perfect pitch, we awake on command to the symphony of coffee grinding. Maybe its the only time in your day that you spend with just you and...your beloved- good ol Joe. He's seducing, smells fantastic, and the taste....well lets just say (all things considered) there really aren't more fish in the sea. And the way he gets you going....oh boy, its addicting.
But if you're like me--- and love what you like...a.k.a. you want to keep this committed relationship but the blindsided romance has got to come to halt. You've thought of a million ways to slow it down, or even do the unthinkable....break it off. But you know in the core of your heart that the whole "its not you, its me" line isn't going to fly....because lets face it, Joe is quite the catch.
SO.....lets. break. this. down.
Do you really need to quit drinking coffee? Although the answer is probably (Okay, its yes...), there are ways to counterbalance the adverse affects of caffeine by consuming more water and natural whole foods so the crash isn't pervasive.
Naturopath and Best-Selling Author Dr. Timothy Brantley gets real about the effects of coffee on our energy reserve and general well being. Although we can't kid ourselves that we can all stop right away, taking these baby steps toward healthier habits is easily do-able. Enjoy!
But if you're like me--- and love what you like...a.k.a. you want to keep this committed relationship but the blindsided romance has got to come to halt. You've thought of a million ways to slow it down, or even do the unthinkable....break it off. But you know in the core of your heart that the whole "its not you, its me" line isn't going to fly....because lets face it, Joe is quite the catch.
SO.....lets. break. this. down.
Do you really need to quit drinking coffee? Although the answer is probably (Okay, its yes...), there are ways to counterbalance the adverse affects of caffeine by consuming more water and natural whole foods so the crash isn't pervasive.
Naturopath and Best-Selling Author Dr. Timothy Brantley gets real about the effects of coffee on our energy reserve and general well being. Although we can't kid ourselves that we can all stop right away, taking these baby steps toward healthier habits is easily do-able. Enjoy!
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
The Labyrinth

I talked a little bit before about the labyrinth of our minds- about running into our own edge over and over again. But what I want to emphasize is the importance of recognizing exactly where you are on your path.
It is equally as important for us to have goals as it is to deeply accept each step along the way.
This acknowledgment is the source of our the energy that will carry us forward. Its so common to just jump from goal to goal without taking an honest examination of what were missing. If something isn't working for us- we don't just get up and run full speed at the next goal (although this is what most commonly happens). We have to come back to our center and get in touch with a more appropriate perspective, or approach. And this labyrinth, which is a combination of our minds tricking us, and the external unexpected blows that life throws at us are put in place for a reason. We are meant to transform in each step of the way.
We are all on the path... exactly where we need to be. The labyrinth is a model of that path. The symbol of the labyrinth represents wholeness. Labyrinths and mazes have often been confused. Usually when people hear the term labyrinth they think of a maze. A maze is there to confuse you- to test your analytical and sequential ability to get out of a situation. It mostly exercises your left brain with twists, turns and blind alleys. A maze is a puzzle to be solved- to find the "correct" way in and out.
A labyrinth however is continuous, and only has one path and can be swept out in a single movement. The way in is the way out. It leads you to the center, and then back out again. The labyrinth is a right brain tasks involving intuition, imagery and creativity.
The metaphor here represents a journey into yourself and then back out again with more focused sense of awareness and life purpose. Whatever your road block is- you loose your job, you just got dumped, you're diagnosed with a disease, or your company went bankrupt- the obstacles come in a million different forms.... but the most important thing now is to choose your next move from a place that is real.
We can choose to be beaten down or we can choose to access our own wisdom that knows exactly what we are suppose to do next.
In the last post I talked about bad habits as getting lost in the labyrinth of your mind. If we approach life with the intent of solving it like a maze, we will get stuck. There is no "thinking" you're way out of a road block, because there is no single right answer. This isn't a standardized test, its your life- your experience. And in the end you- with all your idiosyncrasies, your shadows, and your experiences are always your best teacher.
Hitting our own edge is not a problem to be solved but an opportunity to realize that we aren't lost, but rather, exactly where we need to be in order to move forward.
We can choose to be beaten down or we can choose to access our own wisdom that knows exactly what we are suppose to do next.
In the last post I talked about bad habits as getting lost in the labyrinth of your mind. If we approach life with the intent of solving it like a maze, we will get stuck. There is no "thinking" you're way out of a road block, because there is no single right answer. This isn't a standardized test, its your life- your experience. And in the end you- with all your idiosyncrasies, your shadows, and your experiences are always your best teacher.
Hitting our own edge is not a problem to be solved but an opportunity to realize that we aren't lost, but rather, exactly where we need to be in order to move forward.
"Your life is a sacred journey. And it is about change, growth, discovery, movement, transformation, continuously expanding your vision of what is possible, stretching your soul, learning to see clearly and deeply, listening to your intuition, taking courageous challenges at every step along the way. You are on the path... exactly where you are meant to be right now... And from here, you can only go forward, shaping your life story into a magnificent tale of triumph, of healing of courage, of beauty, of wisdom, of power, of dignity, and of love."
~ Caroline Adams
~ Caroline Adams
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