Tag Archives: Yoga

Something Good (Part Two)

oaklandbayviewAs promised, here’s Part Two of the list.

1. What Work Do Millenials Want to Do? by Lodro Rinzler on Huffington Post.

2. 8 Truths to Getting Unstuck and Reclaiming Your Freedom from Deva Coaching.

3. Looking to start a yoga practice, need a teacher but don’t want to leave the house? Yogaglo might be worth checking out.

4. Taped Rai – Shadow of The Sun, such a beautiful song.

5. I’ve Gained Weight. Now What Am I Gonna Do? from Drop It and Eat.

6. How To Find Your Calling on MindBodyGreen.

7. The Best Examples of Street Art from 2012. I may have shared this before, but it’s cool enough to do it again.

8. 10 Inspiring Bookshops around the World. This is what’s known in my tribe as book porn.

9. Wisdom from Rumi, “I have been a seeker and still am, but I stopped asking books and the stars. I started listening to the teaching of my soul.”

10. Kid Recites Bible – Then Busts Out George Strait During Pre-School Graduation. Right on, little dude.

harbor11. Good stuff from Be More with Less: I Want to Punch Perfection in the Face and 6 Blogs to Inspire Simplicity and Minimalism.

12. Less Clicking, More Making from Marc Johns.

13. Feeling drrrrrained by emails, blogs, newsletters — the whole Internet? Take back your power. from Alexandra Franzen.

14. The Shero’s School for Revolutionaries with Jen Louden. Lots of wisdom from lots of good people, for free.

15. Important questions from Ram Dass,

Ask yourself: Where am I?
Answer: Here.

Ask yourself: What time is it?
Answer: Now.

Say it until you can hear it.

16. I Am A Yogi on MindBodyGreen.

portofsanfran17. Good stuff from Marc and Angel Hack Life: 7 Miserable Choices You Make Too Often and 9 Things You Do NOT Need to Be Happy.

18. ten-to-go: in the kitchen, on SF Girl by Bay. Beautiful and yummy kitchen items.

19. Truthbomb from Danielle LaPorte, “You have what you need.”

20. From Brave Girls Club,

You can do amazing things with the simplest things. You can have so little and be so happy. You can take small amounts of time and perform life-changing acts…Your heart knows when it’s time, and you will have the strength to do it. And best of all, you will see enormous changes happen in your life when you let the unimportant things go and embrace the things that quietly sustain you and bring you joy…It may not look like the most glamorous life, but it is one filled with joy, peace, and harmony; one where laughter is a welcome and frequent companion; one where worries are few, where long meaningful conversations are many; one that is waiting for you when you are ready to take the steps to get there…Simplify today, one little thing at a time. You can do it. You are LOVED.

oaklandbayview0221. A poem from Rainer Maria Rilke, Go to the Limits of Your Longing,

God speaks to each of us as he makes us,
then walks with us silently out of the night.

These are the words we dimly hear:

You, sent out beyond your recall,
go to the limits of your longing.
Embody me.

Flare up like a flame
and make big shadows I can move in.

Let everything happen to you: beauty and terror.
Just keep going. No feeling is final.
Don’t let yourself lose me.

Nearby is the country they call life.
You will know it by its seriousness.

Give me your hand.

sanfranbridge0222. 10 Things You Should Do Every Day, on Elephant Journal. Again, I’ve shared this before but it’s important enough to take another look.

23. The Art of Decluttering on MindBodyGreen.

24. Me, Myself, & I from Rachel Cole.

25. Note from the Universe,

Nobody, Jill, is who they are based upon one decision, one day, one path, one chance, one relationship, or one anything else. Every day is brand new and opportunity never stops knocking.

26. Perspective from Dawn Dalili.

27. Can I Feel Your Soul Through Your Work? from Jonathan Fields. Word.

28. Everyday Icons: The Writer, an interview with Alexandra Franzen, and a follow-up blog post, Yet another (astonishingly simple) way to write your own bio.

berkeleymural29. Your Story Matters, in which Jen Louden references the workshop we did together this weekend, and makes an incredibly important point — maybe the most important point of all.

30. 8 Creativity Lessons from a Pixar Animator on Zen Habits.

31. Neil Gaiman’s Advice to Aspiring Writers on Brain Pickings.

32. A Chat with Inspired and Unstoppable Tama Kieves on The Mojo Lab.

33. the art of thinking highly of yourself by Justine Musk.

berkeleymural0234. Woman Secretly Filmed Dancing at Bus Stop Lands Prestigious Theater Gig on Gawker. This video makes me all kinds of happy. The fact that it has a happy ending is a bonus.

35. I am buying Sam an elephant, and here’s why: No Friendship Can Compare To This One Between A Dog And An Elephant on Buzzfeed and Elephant and dog best friends love playing in the water together (VIDEO).

36. Tears, Tails, Dickey and Duane from Susan Piver. Just one more reason I love her.

37. San Francisco Adventures! from Vivienne McMaster.

Self-Compassion Saturday: Anna Guest-Jelley

Most likely, I first heard about Anna Guest-Jelley and her Curvy Yoga from Rachel Cole. They are teaching a retreat together this weekend, Wise Body, Wise Hungers: Yoga & Coming Home to Our Desires, which I’m sure is every flavor and shade of fabulous.

Anna is one of the kindest people I know. She is one of the people who — even though she’d never met me in person — reached out to me when my Dexter died, offered comfort, (she has two of the cutest dogs herself, another reason I adore her). She gently guides my yoga practice from afar, with her blog posts and videos and newsletter and emails, reminding me that not only are modifications for my body acceptable, they are absolutely necessary, that yoga is truly for every body and I can trust myself. She is one of the reasons I decided to start yoga teacher training, made me feel it was possible, that I was allowed. She reminds me again and again that I am loveable, that I have the right and even the responsibility to love myself.

Anna’s bio: “Anna Guest-Jelley is the founder of Curvy Yoga – a training and inspiration portal for full-figured yogis and their whole-hearted teachers.

As a writer, teacher and lifelong champion of women’s empowerment and body acceptance, Anna encourages women of every size, age and ability to grab life by the curves. And never let go.”

ANNA-GJ-CURVY-YOGA-1871. What does self-compassion mean, what is it? How would you describe or define it?

Self-compassion is synonymous with gentleness for me. It means showing myself the same kindness, care and empathy I show to others. If anything, it means showing myself even more than I show others because if my reserves aren’t filled, it’s challenging to share from a true, not resentful place.

2. How did you learn self-compassion? Did you have a teacher, a guide, a path, a resource, a book, a moment of clarity or specific experience?

I learned self-compassion by walking (and continuing to walk) its path. I have had so many teachers along the way – books I found at the exact right moment, kind words from friends, role models who I both know in person and don’t, support from therapists, dear yoga teachers, and the encouragement of my husband and closest friends.

I never had a lightening bolt moment, although I’ve had lots of ah-has along the way. I haven’t found this to be a path of suddenly “getting it” and being done. Rather, I’ve found fits and starts, two steps forward and ten steps back.

What this has given me is resilience. What I know now about self-compassion that I didn’t at the beginning of my journey is that it’s always unfolding. So now I greet ten steps back as a teacher on the path (even if I do get pissed about it at first!). I have enough experience on the road at this point to know that it’s not linear, and that’s okay.

annabanner3. How do you practice self-compassion, what does that experience look like for you?

I become hardest on myself when I’m stressed about other people’s expectations in some way. After years of creating a habit of channeling that stress into a body project of dieting or otherwise deciding to finally become the perfect person I’ve always wanted to be, I now go much more gently.

The first thing I do is notice. Without awareness, I can’t get very far into self-compassion. So once I’ve noticed that I’m having a judgmental thought, such as “You better lose at least 20 pounds before next month,” I can pause.

In that pause, I can ask myself if this is really true. This is something I learned from Byron Katie, whose work has been really helpful for me. Of course, 99.99% of the time, my judgmental thought isn’t true. Of course I don’t have to lose weight before next month, no matter how many reasons my mind can invent why I “should.”

I feel a big relief when I can remind myself (which isn’t always) of this. Because from there, I can say to myself “Oh, right. You often feel this way when you’re stressed. So what need isn’t getting met right now? Or what can you shift off your plate? Or what just needs acknowledging?”

This is my self-compassion: telling myself the truth with love and kindness. It’s not fancy, but it has changed my life. I say that with no exaggeration.

annakindness

4. What do you still need to learn, to know, to understand? What is missing from your practice of self-compassion, what do you still struggle with?

Oh, so much! I’ve been actively on this journey for about six years (and less actively so for about eight before that), and I feel like I’ve barely scratched the surface. I mean that in the best way possible because what has been true for me so far is that every time I find a new level of ease with self-compassion, something else reveals itself as needing attention.

So much of it still feels challenging to me, though. As much as I know the back-and-forth of self-compassion is part of the package deal, I still sometimes wish I had to go through the process above less often, that it somehow could become more organic and effortless for me. And perhaps it will. But I also know that when part becomes more easeful, another becomes more challenging.

The day-to-day of self-compassion is challenging for me, too. Like many people, I find it difficult to keep up with the practices that most support me – yoga, meditation, writing. I’m just as likely to hop on the computer directly after waking up, lost in a haze of email and social media, than I am to hop on my meditation cushion or yoga mat. But when that happens, I try to remind myself that this, too, is part of the practice.

I’m grateful for the evolutionary nature of this process because I see it as healing. It feels like the work of my lifetime – to care for myself just a bit more with each passing year, and in doing so to perhaps raise the slightest possibility for others that they could do the same.

annasmileI so grateful to Anna, for taking the time to answer these questions, for continuing her practice and then gently guiding others in the same. To find out more about Anna, to connect with her:

Next on Self-Compassion Saturday: Laura Simms.

P.S. If you didn’t see the first post in this series, you might want to read Self-Compassion Saturday: The Beginning.