This Month Recommendation

Showing posts with label Spiritual. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spiritual. Show all posts

Friday, June 17, 2011

Son Of Shiva - MC Yogi

Here's anothe rap song by MC Yogi, on the story of Ganesh, son of Lord Shiva

1st verse
High up in the Himalayan mountain peaks / their lived a beautiful goddess named ParvatiParvati was the wife of the god named Shiva / the king of all yogis who destroys all demons / now Shiva loved to practice yoga deep in the forest / far away from the world & all the things that lure us /in deep samadhi for weeks and months / practicing detachment completely untouched / but whenever Shiva left Parvati stayed home / often feeling sad & all alone / so one day she prayed & made a wish / for a son who she could have fun & play with / the very next moment to her surprise / a little baby laid right in front of her eyes / Parvati could hardly control her joy / for the gods had blessed her with a beautiful boy

chorus
Son of Shiva & Parvati / with an elephants head and a fat belly

2nd verse
One day when Parvati was taking a bath / she instructed her son to protect the path so he stood in the door just like a guard / there to make sure no one entered the yard it was at that time when Shiva returned / not knowing that his wife recently gave birth when Shiva saw the boy he told him to move / but not knowing who his father was the boy refused / now Shiva’s like this, truth consciousness and bliss / but he’s crazy when he’s angry so don’t get him pissed / feeling dissed and dismissed Shiva started a rumble an epic struggle that shook the jungle / then out of nowhere Shiva’s trident went chop and that’s when the boy’s head was cut off / when Parvati heard the noise outside she rushed to find that her boy had died

chorus
Son of Shiva & Parvati / with an elephants head and a fat belly

3rd verse
All the gods quickly rushed to the scene / as soon as they heard Parvati’s scream she turned toward Shiva with tears in her eyes / and painfully explained how the boy was there child / when Shiva realized the size of this mess / he became depressed, upset & stressed that’s when lord Brahma came up with a plan / let’s find another head so the boy could live again / Shiva said “we’ll take the first head that we find / but we really need to hurry cuz we’re running out of time” / deep in the jungle the gods met an elephant a wise old being who attained enlightenment / he bowed to the gods and he offered his head / and then they quickly returned to where the boy laid dead / Shiva placed the big head on top of the boys body / and at first it looked funny and even ungodly / but Parvati said the head fit like a glove / truly the face only a mother could love / when Shiva saw the boy becoming refreshed / he embraced his son and named him Ganesh

chorus
Son of Shiva & Parvati / with an elephants head and a fat belly

Enjoy !

Namaste !

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Give Love - MC Yogi

Here is another lyrics for a song by MC Yogi, I love this very very much because it full of energy of love and spirit of love !!

Give Love - Giving4Living

Lyrics by MC Yogi (So you can sing along with me)

“Hush little darling don't you cry,
Every little thing's gonna be alright.
Don't worry don't be afraid,
Every little thing's gonna be okay.
Open up your heart, unlock the cage,
Turn the key and break the chains,
Love will always find a way.
If you want love, you gotta give love away.

(Chorus)
Give Love. Give your love away. Give love. Don't be afraid.
Give love. Give your love away now. Give love. It'll be ok.
Give love. Give your love away.

Love is life and life is living,
Living is love and love is giving,
When we live for love it gives life meaning,
When we live to give love, there's no greater feeling.
This feeling of kindness when loves inside us,
Nobody can sell this or try to buy this,
Cause love is priceless and it guides us,
Lifts us up and ignites us,
Love can bind us and remind us,
Love has no limit cause love is timeless,
Hate and fear will try to blind us but love unites us nobody can fight this,
Cause love is righteous,
And it might just save the whole world from this global crisis.
Throw your hands up if you know what the time is,
Open up your heart and let it shine the brightest.

(Chorus)
I believe the very best philosophy,
Is when we live to give love with generosity.
Giving consciously and constantly,
When we all give love there's no stoppin’, we
Just open up the door and let your love pour.
When you open up to love you can never be poor,
Cause there's always more inside the core,
Way more in store than you can bargain for.
An infinite supply for us to share,
So just throw your hands up in the air,
Wave ‘em all around the atmosphere,
Show the whole world how much you care.
We gotta give everybody love and respect,
Cause what we give is what we get, c'mon,
Always remember, never forget,
What we give is what we get.


(Chorus)
Hush little darling don't you cry,
Every little thing's gonna be alright.
Don't worry don't be afraid,
Every little thing's gonna be okay.
Open up your heart, unlock the cage,
Turn the key and break the chains,
Love will always find a way.
If you want love, you gotta give love away.

Give Love. Give your love away. Give love. Don't be afraid.
Give love. Give your love away now. Give love. It'll be ok.
Give love. Give your love away.”


Hope you like it too !

Namaste !

Be The Change - MC Yogi

MC Yogi, a very creative rap singer, who really turn me up side down. I wonder how' such a modern rap singer, can assimilate the essence of spirituality with the rythm of rap music. It really open up my eyes how American so keen in taking something old and change it to something new, acceptable by all the people in the US. They got their great talent. I really salute their creativity and innovative soul and mind.

Share with you one of my favourite songs from MC yogi. He sing out the whole story, of Mahatma Gandhi, the great gist of his life time in this great song !

Be The Change - Dedicated to All The Spiritual Activist

1st verse
Once upon a time not long ago / there was a boy who would grow & become a great soul he lived in India and his name was Gandhi / he believed in human rights & he felt so strongly / that he made a vow to train himself / because he realized first he’d have to change himself / he changed his clothes & decided to walk / some days he practiced silence and refused to talk / when he was young he studied to be a lawyer / and then he became a great spiritual warrior / he read from the scriptures of every religion / came to the realization that we’re all God’s children / because he understood that we’re all equal he became a spokesman for the people / a karma yogi devoted to service to spread truth & peace was his purpose.

chorus
Be the change that you wanna see / in the world, just like Gandhi

2nd verse
Gandhi dedicated his life to the cause / even when it meant breaking unjust lawshe often faced prison and incarceration / but that only strengthened his determination he said he would make every sacrifice / but that he would never kill or take a life he used his heart instead of his fist / and he taught non-violence as the way to resist a peaceful soldier who used his mind / to fight for the rights of human kind but not just people, animals too / and his basic teaching “God is Truth” he joined Muslims, Sikhs, & Hindus / Christians, Buddhists, Jains, and Jews all the many paths that lead into / the light that shines bright inside of me and you

chorus
Be the change that you wanna see / in the world, just like Gandhi

3rd verse
“An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind” / and it takes more strength and faith to be kind / with that in mind Gandhi took a stand / against the foreign occupation of his land / when things got violent Gandhi would fast / not eating for days until the riots would pass / but the biggest event that made the British halt / is when Gandhi-ji decided to harvest salt / the British empire installed a salt tax / and stealing salt was an unlawful act / so Gandhi and his peeps, took the streets / ten thousand deep they marched to the beach / but when they arrived they were beaten with clubs / but they didn’t fight back instead they chose love / the British military realized they were wrong / and eventually decided to go back home / you see, Gandhi-ji was a very great leader / but before all that he was shy & meager /as a young child he was just like you and me / before he became Mahatma Gandhi / the word “Mahatma” it means great soul / and its inside of us just waiting to unfold / if you follow your heart and act real bold / next time it’ll be your story that’s told!

chorus

Be the change that you wanna see / in the world, just like Gandhi

Check out more about MC Yogi from his very personal website : MC YOGI

Namaste !

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Wednesday, June 15, 2011

His Voice Really Touch My Soul - Dave Stringer

He is Dave Stringer, 1st time I heard his voice over Shiva Rea web site. The kirtan song's name is called "Hey Shiva Shankara".
His voice really touched my heart & soul. When 1st time I heard the voice, I thought the kirtan must be sang by an indian but later on I found out that he is westerner from Los Angeles. A very talented kirtan singer :

“A volcano of a voice! Stringer transported us to another time and
place. His fiery, soulful voice gave the entire room a feeling of a
down-home gospel jam and one could not help but sing along.” — LA Yoga
Magazine.


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Thursday, September 9, 2010

Sole Versus Soul....

What a such co-incident that sole read same sound as soul. It triggered me to think of sole is actually similar to soul during my yoga class when the yoga teacher said "Always make sure your sole is grounded firmly on the floor and pay attention to it whenever you walk, stand or even sit. By doing this,  it makes you feel more grounded, not floating.  I feel much more strength during that day class compare to last few weeks. My mind less floating I guess, feel more grounded after riding a big waves of emotional changes. Learning how to let go of something. I just want to feel my breath go in and out without thnking of anything. Finally the sea wave become calm and soothing.

I have posted an article about Intention and desire which is addressed by Sri Sri Ravi Shankar. It helps to settle my desire inside my heart and how to work towards my dream. Dragging too much by the life in a pupet form really makes me sick & tired all the time, as though as sleep without sleep, eating without eating, hearing without hearing, sensing without sensing. That's why I wrote post this. Living without soul but only with the body is a dead life just like living as a pupet with string attached with and control by others.

I am having the similar thoughts & feeling as last year. I am still stick back to my old pattern of thoughts & living. My soul
still trapped inside but trying hard and scream loud to come out eagerly. I surrender myself to Him with my intention/dream.

Else I would have become a dead leaf that flying down to the ground and waiting to be eaten by the time and go back to the soil where I belongs.

Namaste !
 







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Seeing Hearing Nothing....

Seeing without seeing...
Hearing without hearing...
Sensing without sensing...
Moving without moving...
But perform blessing towards your heart and your soul fully without any failing.




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Desire & Intention...

(Quoted from : Sri Sri Ravi Shankar blog post)
Sri Sri Ravi Shankar:
There are two schools of thought.
One is you visualize dream and work for it. Other school of thought says surrender everything to God, whatever God gives you is the best, and God will take care of everything for you. Where is the compatibility? They appear to be completely opposite. One is your own visualization, your own dream and your perseverance, and another is having trust in God and leaving everything on God. They appear to be incompatible but I would say they are very much compatible. It is good
to have an intention or a goal. You don’t keep on visualizing your goal 24*7, but continuing to work for that, you leave it to the Divine. Only the combination of two will work.



It is beautifully described in Scriptures: You take a vision or goal,
and then you offer it to the Divine while working for that – “This is
what I want and you know what is best for me. If this or anything
better, I am ready to accept.”

Sometimes you don’t know what you want. If you know what you want, it
is not difficult to get it. Half the time we are unsure of what we
want. Often you find if you are persistent to get something, you don’t
want the same thing the next week, the next month or the next year. So,
before you take an intention, you expand your awareness.



So, put an intention in the universe - I want this or anything better.



Now, what is the difference between a desire and an intention? Suppose
you want to go to Mumbai from Bangalore. You buy a ticket and travel
for around three hours and go there. But you don’t keep chanting in
your mind all this time that you want to go to Mumbai and you are going
to Mumbai. You may even land up in a mental Hospital like this! Desire
is the feverishness that clogs on to an intention. An intention is a
desire free from feverishness. And then working towards your intention,
this faith is to be there whatever nature brings back is for my growth.


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Friday, July 30, 2010

Floating In The Air

It's kind of hard to go through this stage, feeling like myself floating in the air and hoping there's something for me to grab on but don't know what that could be. Riding the wave slowly is all I can tell myself.

You feel like no direction, don't know which is right or wrong and what you want, except keep dragging by this materialistic world. Well I guess these is just a temporary illusion that occupied my mind, nothing more. It's to test my ability and my true heart and intention.

You feel like you are loosen up but still try to keep everything together which such a weak energy, falling apart but trying to get back to the track with full effort. Totally 0% energy level and out of battery ....






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Thursday, July 8, 2010

Yoga For Kids

When presented in a child's language, yoga can help
counter the stress experienced by young people living in a hurry-up
world.

By Marsha Wenig

Our children live in a hurry-up world of busy parents, school
pressures, incessant lessons, video games, malls, and competitive
sports. We usually don't think of these influences as stressful for our
kids, but often they are. The bustling pace of our children's lives can
have a profound effect on their innate joy—and usually not for the
better.

I have found that yoga can help counter these pressures. When

children learn techniques for self-health, relaxation, and inner
fulfillment, they can navigate life's challenges with a little more
ease. Yoga at an early age encourages self-esteem and body awareness
with a physical activity that's noncompetitive. Fostering cooperation
and compassion—instead of opposition—is a great gift to give our
children.

Children derive enormous benefits from yoga. Physically, it enhances

their flexibility, strength, coordination, and body awareness. In
addition, their concentration and sense of calmness and relaxation
improves. Doing yoga, children exercise, play, connect more deeply with
the inner self, and develop an intimate relationship with the natural
world that surrounds them. Yoga brings that marvelous inner light that
all children have to the surface.

When yogis developed the asanas many thousands of years ago, they

still lived close to the natural world and used animals and plants for
inspiration—the sting of a scorpion, the grace of a swan, the grounded
stature of a tree. When children imitate the movements and sounds of
nature, they have a chance to get inside another being and imagine
taking on its qualities. When they assume the pose of the lion
(Simhasana) for example, they experience not only the power and
behavior of the lion, but also their own sense of power: when to be
aggressive, when to retreat. The physical movements introduce kids to
yoga's true meaning: union, expression, and honor for oneself and one's
part in the delicate web of life.


A Child's Way
Yoga with children offers many possibilities to exchange wisdom,

share good times, and lay the foundation for a lifelong practice that
will continue to deepen. All that's needed is a little flexibility on
the adult's part because, as I quickly found out when I first started
teaching the practice to preschoolers, yoga for children is quite
different than yoga for adults.

Six years ago, I had my first experience teaching yoga to kids at a

local Montessori school. I looked forward to the opportunity with
confidence—after all, I'd been teaching yoga to adults for quite a
while, had two young children of my own, and had taught creative
writing for several years in various Los Angeles schools. But after two
classes with a group of 3- to 6-year-olds, I had to seriously
reevaluate my approach. I needed to learn to let go (the very practice
I had been preaching for years) of my agenda and my expectations of
what yoga is and is not.

When I began to honor the children's innate intelligence and tune in

to how they were instructing me to instruct them, we began to co-create
our classes. We used the yoga asanas as a springboard for exploration
of many other areas—animal adaptations and behavior, music and playing
instruments, storytelling, drawing—and our time together became a truly
interdisciplinary approach to learning. Together we wove stories with
our bodies and minds in a flow that could only happen in child's play.


The kids began to call me Mrs. Yoga, and I called them Yoga Kids. We
continued to work and play together until our creations bloomed into a
program and video called YogaKids. The program combines yogic
techniques designed especially for children using Dr. Howard Gardner's
theory of multiple intelligences. Gardner, an author and professor of
education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, describes eight
intelligences innate in all of us—linguistic, logical, visual, musical,
kinesthetic, naturalistic, interpersonal, and intrapersonal—and
emphasizes that children should be given the opportunity to develop and
embody as many of these as possible.


In keeping with this theory, YogaKids integrates storytelling,
games, music, language, and other arts into a complete curriculum that
engages the "whole child." We employ ecology, anatomy, nutrition, and
life lessons that echo yogic principles of interdependence, oneness,
and fun. Most of all, our program engages the entire mind, body, and
spirit in a way that honors all the ways children learn.


Taking the Practice Home

If you're planning to teach yoga to kids, there are a few general
things to know that will enhance your experience. The greatest
challenge with children is to hold their attention long enough to teach
them the benefits of yoga: stillness, balance, flexibility, focus,
peace, grace, connection, health, and well-being. Luckily, most
children love to talk, and they love to move—both of which can happen
in yoga. Children will jump at the chance to assume the role of
animals, trees, flowers, warriors. Your role is to step back and allow
them to bark in the dog pose, hiss in the cobra, and meow in cat
stretch. They can also recite the ABCs or 123s as they are holding
poses. Sound is a great release for children and adds an auditory
dimension to the physical experience of yoga.


Children need to discover the world on their own. Telling them to
think harder, do it better, or be a certain way because it's good for
them is not the optimal way. Instead, provide a loving, responsive,
creative environment for them to uncover their own truths. As they
perform the various animal and nature asanas, engage their minds to
deepen their awareness. When they're snakes (Bhujangasana), invite them
to really imagine that they're just a long spine with no arms and legs.
Could you still run or climb a tree? In Tree Pose (Vrksasana), ask them
to imagine being a giant oak, with roots growing out of the bottoms of
their feet. Could you stay in the same position for 100 years? If you
were to be chopped down, would that be OK? Would it hurt?


When they stretch like a dog, balance like a flamingo, breathe like
a bunny, or stand strong and tall like a tree, they are making a
connection between the macrocosm of their environment and the microcosm
of their bodies. The importance of reverence for all life and the
principle of interdependence becomes apparent. Children begin to
understand that we are all made of the same "stuff." We're just in
different forms.

Think of yourself as a facilitator—the term we use in the YogaKids
program—rather than a teacher. Guide your children while simultaneously
opening your heart and letting them guide you. They'll no doubt invite
you into a boundless world of wonder and exploration. If you choose to
join them, the teaching/learning process will be continually reciprocal
and provide an opportunity for everyone to create, express themselves,
and grow together.


Marsha Wenig is the creator of the YogaKids video and
educational curriculum. Her YogaKids Facilitator Certification Program
trains teachers to share their yogic wisdom with children. For more
information contact her at (800) 968-0694 or e-mail innerwrk@niia.net.




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Monday, May 3, 2010

You Can Go Om Again

Practicing yoga regularly isn't always easy. Life can get in the way. Fear not. We can help you get your groove back.

By Jennifer Barrett(Taken from Yoga Journal)

When I was expecting our first daughter, and then our second, what I'd
always loved about yoga proved true. As long as I kept doing it,
everything ran smoothly. My pile of pregnancy books warned of sciatica,
lower back pain, and varicose veins, but I escaped these
difficulties—thanks, I believed, to my time on the mat. A Pigeon Pose
each morning, a few Cat/Cows before bed, a weekly class at my favorite studio, and my pregnancies hummed along.

Two years ago, when I became pregnant a third time, I again planned formy asanas to get me through with nary a stretch mark. But this time,things were different. Hip pain made it nearly impossible to move fromone position to another. Standing hurt; so did sitting and lying down.

I still made it to class each week, but as the baby grew, the pressure she exerted increased to the point where I couldn't do many of the poses, no matter how gentle they were. Finally, with several more months to go, I couldn't practice at all. I spent my Tuesday evenings with a physical therapist instead of a yoga teacher. Facing a third C-section and the subsequent recuperation period, I wondered if I'd ever make it back to the practice I loved.

Such setbacks are common. A difficult pregnancy, as in my case, oran injury or illness or emotional upset can take the steam out of aonce-joyful practice. There are times, too, when life just gets in theway. With children to raise, aging parents to care for, and jobs andchores to do, committing to yoga isn't always easy. But even those ofus with lapses of months or even years can make a successful return tothe mat. By taking time to examine the reasons you stopped and yourmotivations for returning, you can ensure that this time around, yourpractice will prove fluid and flexible enough to remain a permanent part of your life.

The Obstacle Course
Stephanie Rose Bird can remember a time when yoga fit seamlessly into her schedule. A serious dancer in her New Jersey high school with a keen interest in movement, she'd quickly taken to the practice when a teacher introduced it one day in class. "This woman was already an
elder, and she did so many incredible things with her body that we teenagers couldn't do," Bird recalls. "I did yoga regularly with her, and after leaving high school, those breathing techniques stuck with me for years."

Her enthusiasm remained strong during and after college, as shepursued a master's degree in art and started a family. But as she tookon more responsibilities, finding time for yoga proved increasinglydifficult. Eventually, as a published author who managed to writebetween teaching art classes, painting, and caring for her fourchildren, she rarely practiced at all. "With all of thoseresponsibilities, I had to pull in my energy and focus on what I needed to do each day," she says.

Bird's experience represents a major hurdle that's faced by many practitioners who lose interest in yoga amid the demands of an already full schedule. "Yoga is often something we really want to get back to," says registered yoga therapist Barbara Harding, director of the Cambridge Yoga School in London. "But when faced with the responsibilities of an extremely demanding job, for instance, or a new baby, we just can't find the space for it."

But plenty of busy people still find time for yoga. For those who can't, emotional issues often underlie their reluctance or inability to return to class. "The beauty of yoga is the freedom it offers you," Bird says. "But I seldom felt free enough, or gave myself permission, to take this kind of adventure with everything else I had to do." Setting aside precious time for yoga can sometimes seem selfish, especially for caregivers, since that's time away from others in need.

Disenchantment, apathy, and ambivalence can be further stumbling blocks. Many onetime yogis find that they're notpining for their former practice, having left yoga on an unsure, oreven sour, note. "I've had friends say they tried yoga and didn't like it because it was too vigorous, like running or gymnastics," says Sarah Swersey, a Kripalu-certified instructor in Northampton, Massachusetts,who is currently studying Anusara Yoga. "Others tried a class and saidthey were falling asleep. Even within each yoga tradition, there are so many different styles of teaching based on each teacher's experience."While there probably is a yoga discipline out there for everyone, asSwersey believes, finding it can take time. In the process, some simplylose their motivation to keep trying.

In addition to teacher-student mismatches, personal conflicts such as body issues, self-doubt, and egocentric concerns can stall a practice, too, leaving a residue of negativity that dampens any desire to return. Joe Bilman, a business owner in the San Francisco Bay Area, has started and stopped his yoga practice five times during the past 20 years. "I first took classes as a young man, just out of high school. I pushed myself, doing show-off poses," he recalls. "Then one day, while in a backbend, I heard my lower back pop. I was sore for weeks." He returned to yoga and kept going back every few years. But each time, the competitive attitude he brought with him led to the same negative result. "I pushed beyond my limits," he admits. "My ego kept writing
checks my body couldn't cash." As Bilman discovered, if your practice stalls because of an internal conflict, it will most likely remain stalled until you can uncover those deep-seated issues that continue to impede your progress.

The Comeback

Like Bird, you may have abandoned an otherwise fulfilling practice due to life circumstances, or perhaps you found your own particular mental constructs too hard to get past, as Bilman did. But no matter what your reasons, it's possible to make a permanent return. The journey back
begins with identifying the factors that caused the break then setting attainable goals that can get things back on track and get you back on the mat, step-by-step.

TAKE STOCK.

Identify and address your reasons for having left yoga, so those same issues won't thwart your attempts to return. Bilman, for one, says he wouldn't be the regular practitioner he is today without the benefit of self-examination. "I finally realized that my mind had to let go of the
reins," he says. "Yoga is about learning to be content with what already exists and leaning up against your limits, rather than being a cop banging down the door." This understanding not only helped him stick with yoga but informed other areas of his life too—"other types
of exercise, the way I throw dinner parties, the way I do business, everything," he says. Similarly, Bird came to see that the responsibilities that crowded out her yoga practice were the best reasons for resuming it, which she eventually did. "Doing yoga is a gift for my family," she says, "since I'll live longer and be more agile."


ADJUST THE BAR
If a major life change precipitated the end to your yoga routine, you may have to make significant adjustments. "I once had a woman call me, wanting a private lesson," recalls Baxter Bell, a physician in Oakland, California, who divides his time between teaching yoga and practicing medicine. "She'd had an advanced yoga practice, and then she gave it up
entirely when she developed multiple sclerosis." Bell suggested she practice the standing poses lying on her back, with her feet at the baseboard of a wall. "Suddenly, she had a way back into the practice," he says. For people with illness and chronic injury, modifications can facilitate the transition back to the mat.

SET GOALS.

Once you’ve explored your history, you can begin to specify your present intentions, whether this means greeting each morning with a Sun Salutation or attending a weekly studio class. Try not to be overly ambitious. Keep your goals modest, realistic, and achievable. “If you
tell yourself you have to do yoga for an hour a day, you may fail,” Harding says. “Even 10 minutes done consistently in the morning will make a huge difference long-term.”

Add a time frame to your goals once you’ve identified them. Commit to a series of classes that lasts a certain number of weeks, or try todo a set number of poses by a specific date.

FIND YOUR COMMUNITY
Discovering a place to call home can bring joy and longevity to your practice as well as increase your chances of sticking with it. This includes finding a teacher, a style, and even a community of yoga friends that will support your return to the mat.

To start with, actively search for a different teacher or yogatradition if the class you were attending fails to inspire you. Seek agentler style if you found yoga too vigorous, and a more active classif you found it too gentle. Also allow for the fact that yourabilities, goals, and interests may have changed since the last timeyou practiced regularly.

The experience of Valeria Lombardi underscores the extent to which a yoga community can influence your practice. A textile and landscape designer, Lombardi practiced faithfully for five years with a teacher in Berkeley, California, until a difficult divorce drew her attention
elsewhere. By the time she was ready to return, her favorite teacher was unavailable. She tried others but couldn’t make a similar connection. Her practice would have stalled if a friend hadn’t
introduced her to a new teacher, one trained by her initial instructor.

ACCEPT SUPPORT

Make good use of your personal network by accepting any encouragement that friends and family offer. Julie Havens, a high school French teacher in central Connecticut, temporarily abandoned yoga when she committed to attending foster-parenting classes. Once she got out of
the habit of going to yoga, it was hard to get back, even after foster-care training was over. “I would think of it at 2 in the afternoon, and then forget about it until 6, when it was too late.” But
with prodding from her husband and stepmother, she rekindled her practice. “Their interest in me keeps me going,” Havens says.

Just as the domino effect of multiple conspiring factors can plunder a practice, it can help build it up again. Once you get yourself going to class each week, Harding says, suddenly you may find you have five minutes or so to stretch every morning. You may even meet others in
class who will help motivate your efforts, or find you want to try a weekend retreat. Yoga then becomes an effortless and natural part of nearly every day.

As for me, I did make my way back to yoga, and faster than I hadhoped. With my hip pain gone after the arrival of my daughterGenevieve, I took a friend up on her suggestion of visiting a new

studio in town—and trying a new style of yoga. Whereas I’d always resisted the idea of practicing in heated rooms, I grew to love it. The heat loosened my muscles, giving me confidence in the face of the challenges that arose from my long hiatus.

I now turn to yoga on a regular basis, valuing it more and more asmy husband and I adapt to the exponential increase in laundry, diapers,and general chaos that came with our new addition. I’ll admit I don’talways make it to class. Often I have to snatch asana time when I can,

doing poses here and there in quiet pockets of the day. But I’ve learned that no matter what injuries, responsibilities, or internal sabotage conspires to draw me away from yoga, I always return. The door is always open. No obstacle is insurmountable, especially when I draw
such health and happiness from yoga’s gifts.

Jennifer Barrett, a YJ contributing editor and freelance writer, lives in suburban Connecticut.

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Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Cycle Of Life

Life should be full of cherish moments, rather than dullness. And it all depends on how your reaction to the life event that matter. If you are not mindful enough or not aware of your surrounding, then things will just flow away without your notice and a cherish moment turn up to be meaningless to you or you have no feeling at all when facing it.

If you notice the movement of the sky clouds, that means you are mindful enough. If you notice the fallen of the leaves, then you are mindful enough.
If you are enjoying your life moment very well, then you definitely are mindful in your life !

The great thing about life is that you can enjoy the process and experience it truely and learned from it. The knowledge/lesson learned through life is the most precious knowledge you never get anywhere.

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Friday, March 26, 2010

Consciousness In Motion

Vinyasa yoga teaches us to cultivate an awareness that links each action to the next—on the mat and in our lives.

By Shiva Rea (Taken From Yoga Journal)


Sit back and relax. Take in these images and see if you can sense the
underlying pattern: the flow of the seasons, the rise and fall of the
tides in response to the moon, a baby fern unfurling, a Ravi Shankar
sitar raga or Ravel's "Bolero," the creation and the dissolution of a
Tibetan sand mandala, the flow of Suryanamaskar (Sun Salutation).

What do these diverse phenomena have in common? They are all vinyasas,
progressive sequences that unfold with an inherent harmony and
intelligence. "Vinyasa" is derived from the Sanskrit term nyasa, which
means "to place," and the prefix vi, "in a special way"—as in the
arrangement of notes in a raga, the steps along a path to the top of a
mountain, or the linking of one asana to the next. In the yoga world
the most common understanding of vinyasa is as a flowing sequence of
specific asanas coordinated with the movements of the breath. The six
series of Pattabhi Jois's Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga are by far the best
known and most influential.

Jois's own teacher, the great South Indian master
Krishnamacharya, championed the vinyasa approach as central to the
transformative process of yoga. But Krishnamacharya had a broader
vision of the meaning of vinyasa than most Western students realize. He
not only taught specific asana sequences like those of Jois's system,
but he also saw vinyasa as a method that could be applied to all the
aspects of yoga. In Krishnamacharya's teachings, the vinyasa method
included assessing the needs of the individual student (or group) and
then building a complementary, step-by-step practice to meet those
needs. Beyond this, Krishnamacharya also emphasized vinyasa as an
artful approach to living, a way of applying the skill and awareness of
yoga to all the rhythms and sequences of life, including self-care,
relationships, work, and personal evolution.

Desikachar, Krishnamacharya's son, an author and renowned
teacher in his own right, has written, "Vinyasa is, I believe, one of
the richest concepts to emerge from yoga for the successful conduct of
our actions and relationships." In his book Health, Healing, and Beyond
(Aperture, 1998), he gives a subtle yet powerful example of how his
father attended to the vinyasa of teaching yoga. Krishnamacharya, to
the amazement of his private students, would always greet them at the
gate of his center, guide them through their practice, and then honor
the completion of their time together by escorting them back to the
gate.

The way he honored every phase of their session—initiating the
work, sustaining it and then building to a peak, and completing and
integrating it—illustrates two of the primary teachings of the vinyasa
method: Each of these phases has its own lessons to impart, and each
relies on the work of the previous phase. Just as we can't frame a
house without a proper foundation, we can't build a good yoga practice
unless we pay attention to how we begin. And just as a house is flawed
if the workmen don't finish the roof properly, we have to bring our
actions to completion in order to receive yoga's full benefits. Vinyasa
yoga requires that we cultivate an awareness that links each action to
the next—one breath at a time.

Initiating a Course of Action

Applying vinyasa in your yoga practice and daily life has many
parallels not just to building a house but also sailing a boat. Like
sailing, moving through life demands a synchronization with natural
forces that requires skill and intuition, the ability to set a course
yet change with the wind and currents. If you want to sail, you have to
know how to assess the conditions of the weather—blustery, calm,
choppy—which constantly fluctuate, as do our physical, emotional, and
spiritual states.

The teachings of yoga include a view called parinamavada,
the idea that constant change is an inherent part of life. Therefore,
to proceed skillfully with any action, we must first assess where we
are starting from today; we cannot assume we are quite the same person
we were yesterday. We are all prone to ignoring the changing conditions
of our body-mind; we often distort the reality of who we are based on
who we think that we should be. This can show up on the yoga mat in any
number of inappropriate choices: engaging in a heating, rigorous
practice when we're agitated or fatigued; doing a restorative practice
when we're stagnant; going to an advanced yoga class when a beginning
class better suits our experience and skills. In order to avoid such
unbeneficial actions, we need to start out with an accurate assessment
of our current state.

So what are the observations a good yogic sailor should make
before initiating a vinyasa? Like checking out the boat, wind, and
waves before you sail, an initial survey of your being can become an
instinctive ritual. Ask yourself: What is my energy level? Am I raring
to go? Holding any tension? Am I experiencing any little physical
twinges or injury flare-ups? Do I feel balanced and ready to sail into
my practice? How is my internal state? Am I calm, agitated, focused,
scattered, emotionally vulnerable, mentally overloaded, clear and open?

These questions are relevant to how we begin any action, not
just our asana practice. In choosing what foods we eat, when we sleep,
our conversations and our actions with others—everything that we do—we
must understand where we are coming from and choose actions that
address any imbalances.

In teaching my students about vinyasa, I offer them ways of
checking in with their current state at the start of their session. I
also will suggest specific strategies for addressing impediments that
may break up the flow of their practice. For example, on the bodily
level students can choose a more calming practice or one that provides
them with a more invigorating opening. If they have a twinge in the
lower back, they might want to modify certain postures, perhaps
substituting Bhujangasana (Cobra Pose) for Urdhva Mukha Svanasana
(Upward-Facing Dog Pose). If they're suffering from typical urban
tensions in the neck and shoulders, they can use a small series of
stretches—a mini-vinyasa, you might say—to encourage softening and
release. On a more internal level, agitated students can focus on
releasing tension by relaxing the face and breath; if their energy is
more lethargic and diffused, they can focus on their drishti, or gaze, to increase their concentration.

The same insight that we use on the yoga mat can be applied to
the way that we initiate actions elsewhere in our lives. Are you
feeling anxious on your way to a big appointment? Drive more slowly and
listen to some calming music to ensure that this imbalance doesn't
carry over into your meeting. Such adjustments do not show an
unwillingness to accept what is or a compulsive attempt to fix
everything until it is just right. Rather, they are evidence of a deep
awareness of and appropriate response to reality. A yogic sailor
embraces the changing winds and current and the challenge of setting
course in harmony with the ebb and flow of nature.

Sustaining Power

Once you've properly assessed conditions and initiated action,
you can focus on the next phase of vinyasa: building up your power,
your capacity for a given action. Power is the sailor's ability to tack
with the wind, a musician's ability to sustain the rise and fall of a
melody, a yogi's deepening capability for absorption in meditation.

The vinyasa method has many teachings to offer about how to
build and sustain our capacity for action, both on and off the mat. One
of the primary teachings is to align and initiate action from our
breath—our life force—as a way of opening to the natural flow and power
of prana, the energy that sustains us all on a cellular level. Thus in
a vinyasa yoga practice, expansive actions are initiated with the
inhalation, contractive actions with the exhalation.

Take a few minutes to explore how this feels: As you inhale,
lift your arms up over your head (expansion); as you exhale, lower your
arms (contraction). Now try this: Start lifting your arms as you
exhale, and inhale as you lower your arms. Chances are that the first
method felt intuitively right and natural, while the second felt
counterintuitive and subtly "off."

This intuitive feeling of being "off" is an inborn signal that
helps us learn how to sustain an action by harmonizing with the flow of
nature. Just as a sagging sail tells a sailor to tack and realign with
the energy of the wind, a drop in our mental or physical energy within
an action is a sign we need to realign our course. In an asana, when
the muscular effort of a pose is creating tension, it's often a signal
that we are not relying on the support of our breath. When we learn how
to sustain the power and momentum of the breath, the result is like the
feeling of sailing in the wind—effortless effort.

To build real change in a student's capacity for action, Krishnamacharya utilized a method which he entitled vinyasa krama
("krama" means "stages"). This step-by-step process involves the
knowledge of how one builds, in gradual stages, toward a "peak" within
a practice session. This progression can include elements like using
asanas of ever-increasing complexity and challenge or gradually
building one's breath capacity.

Vinyasa krama is also the art of knowing when you have
integrated the work of a certain stage of practice and are ready to
move on. I frequently see students ignore the importance of this
step-by-step integration. On the one hand, some students will tend to
jump ahead to more challenging poses like Pincha Mayurasana (Forearm
Balance) before developing the necessary strength and flexibility in
less-demanding postures like Adho Mukha Svanasana (Downward-Facing
Dog), Sirsasana (Headstand), Adho Mukha Vrksasana (Handstand), and
other, easier arm balances. The result: They strug-gle to hold
themselves up, becoming frustrated and possibly injured. These Type-A
students should remember that strain is always a sign that integration
of the previous krama has not yet occurred.

On the other hand, some students may congeal around the
comfort of a beginning stage and become stagnant; they often become
totally energized when given encouragement to open to a new stage which
they had written off as beyond their abilities.

The Art of Completion

All of us are better at some part of the vinyasa cycle than
others. I love to initiate action and catalyze change but have to
consciously cultivate the completion phase. As Desikachar explains it,
"It is not enough to climb a tree; we must be able to get down too. In
asana practice and elsewhere in life, this often requires that we know
how to follow and balance one action with another. In the vinyasa
method this is known as pratikriyasana, "compensation," or
literally counterpose-the art of complementing and completing an action
to create integration. Can you imagine doing asanas without a Savasana
(Corpse Pose) to end your practice? In vinyasa, how we complete an
action and then make the transition into the next is very important in
determining whether we will receive the action's entire benefit. These
days I invite my students to complete classes by invoking the quality
of yoga into the very next movements of their lives—how they walk,
drive, and speak to people once they leave the studio.

Pathways of Transformation

It is important to remember a vinyasa is not just any sequence
of actions: It is one that awakens and sustains consciousness. In this
way vinyasa connects with the meditative practice of nyasa
within the Tantric Yoga traditions. In nyasa practice, which is
designed to awaken our inherent divine energy, practitioners bring
awareness to different parts of the body and then, through mantra and
visualization, awaken the inner pathways for shakti (divine
force) to flow through the entire field of their being. As we bring the
techniques of vinyasa to bear throughout our lives, we open similar
pathways of transformation, inner and outer-step by step and breath by
breath.

Shiva Rea teaches vinyasa yoga and leads adventure
retreats and workshops around the world. You can reach her at
www.yogadventures.com


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Friday, March 19, 2010

The Liberation Of My Soul

There are something in my heart, it keeps on calling me,
There are something in my heart,waiting to be release.

No one ever tell me how, but I have to find my way.
With the faith, I have to walk on and facing the sun bravely.

Have you ever look to the sky, giving you some sign and telling you something.
The sky is trying to tell you to go back to your very own soul.

Between destiny and fate, I have chosen the braver path,
which shall lead me to my very own shelter of my soul.

I have to paint my own path and crave out each every steps ,
With higher determination, patient, confident and faith.

Only the God will light the path and know where shall I rest.


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Across The Universe - The Beatles

I like this song very much, those words in the lyrics inspired me and remind me of we are just small part of a universe, just like a small particle floating in the air. And each every little thoughts come across our mind actually letting out some energy to the universe. Bad or Good, it is affecting how this universe is going on and what it is going to happen to it.

"Words are flying out like
endless rain into a paper cup
They slither while they pass
They slip away across the universe"



Here is the full lyrics for the song :-

Across The Universe..
Words are flying out like
endless rain into a paper cup
They slither while they pass
They slip away across the universe
Pools of sorrow waves of joy
are drifting thorough my open mind
Possessing and caressing me

Jai guru deva om
Nothing's gonna change my world
Nothing's gonna change my world
Nothing's gonna change my world
Nothing's gonna change my world

Images of broken light which
dance before me like a million eyes
That call me on and on across the universe
Thoughts meander like a
restless wind inside a letter box
they tumble blindly as
they make their way across the universe

Jai guru deva om
Nothing's gonna change my world
Nothing's gonna change my world
Nothing's gonna change my world
Nothing's gonna change my world

Sounds of laughter shades of life
are ringing through my open ears
exciting and inviting me
Limitless undying love which
shines around me like a million suns
It calls me on and on across the universe

Jai guru deva om
Nothing's gonna change my world
Nothing's gonna change my world
Nothing's gonna change my world
Nothing's gonna change my world
Jai guru deva
Jai guru deva



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Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Destiny & Fate

I have extracted this from my yoga teacher blog, which i hope to share it out with someone that looking for a bright candle light on life.

"Fate is that, out of our hindsight, people keep repeating the same old patterns of suffering again and again. Destiny is that, out of reflection, you start to choose deliberate action course that will make you grow toward happiness and fulfillment. No one can bring us happiness except ourselves."

"That is destiny. We have the choice to make our destiny based on our decision today. If we chose the action course that will make us feel better and proud of ourselves, today, then, our tomorrow sure will be brighter. But if we choose to drift away with whatever comes along mindlessly, irresponsibly, then, we bound to repeat the same mistake, to the same fate, again and again while wondering why life is still so full of suffering despite your hard work. They often blame fate, parents, spouse, children, education, culture, society, etc, for their misery while real problem lies in our ignorance to look around ourselves."

"When we awaken to life, you suddenly realize that, you have all the things, people, jobs, etc, the right and perfect conditions for your best evolution and happiness. You can see with your own eyes that how you have been the very cause of your own misery and unhappiness. The past is past that which brought you here to the present moment. Whatever seems imperfect at the moment, you don’t repeat or feel remorseful but adjust the course so that it can bring you different destination. Why are we keep repeating yesterday’s thoughts and behaviors again and again today, while wondering better future never seem to be in the horizon? No one asked us to walk on the same foot- steps with our troubled past but we constantly duplicate what we have been exposed to, especially from the parents’ and cultural conditionings. It takes mindfulness and repentance to bypass our humpy bumpy road blocks that are marked with many wrong sign posts. That is true humanity, accepting our shortcomings at the same time resolving to improve."

Namaste !

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Monday, February 8, 2010

Step By Step

When looking back, I have my trail being path gracefully,
Once I take my very 1st step out, no return shall be witnessed.

Looking to the sky, I see a vast of space that giving me oppoturnity,
Waiting there for me to fly up and grab on it.

If you know the jewel is there, would you overlook it ?
If you know the heaven is there, would you turn your back on it ?

Nothing more important than understand your very own self,
Able to see it clearly like a pond of crystal clear water without any ripple.

If you know your purpose here, even though the journey is tough,
You have to move on and overcome whatever thorns come across the path.

That;s how you conquer yourself and become stronger and stronger,
Learning how to let go of something is what you need.

I know the sky never lies to me and the sun never tells a lie,
The rainbow will always be there for me even after a thunderstorm.

Believe in fairy tales and little angel living inside your heart,
they are the sincere inner child that will light up your path.


So what you need is just a step forward into another new world of opportunity,
Use you bestowed talent fully and everything shall be unfold magically without failing you.

Namaste !


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Wednesday, February 3, 2010

A Little Tiny Seed - A Poem Dedicated To My Soul

Last weekend while I was doing my laundry work, I hum this poem out following my heart rythm. Later, I keep thinking of incorporating some yoga asana into this poem and make it as a theater play.

Here's the original script of my poem:

A little tiny seed laying on the ground,
Waiting for the right moment to have its 1st sprout,
With the shiny bright sunshine in the sky & crystal clear water from the sky.
With all the secret kept inside, nobody knows what is going to be.
But the secret is all well kept inside.

With the wind blow across all the trees,
while the tiny little seed still waiting.....
Until one fine day, the little tiny seed awakened with its 1st sprouting,
that marks the beginning of a new face of life.

Everything is gonna change and become different with its 1st sprout.
The well kept secret finaly revealed.
With its 1st flower & its leafing, the beautiful flower open & close, day & night.
This is all a tiny littl eseed waiting for.

The blooming stage finally reached and that's the special moment every tiny little seed waiting for.
(written on 30 Jan 2010, 9:40am)

If you read through the poem carefully, I hope you can feel my heart rythm & its message.
The message that I am trying to convey her is the seeding stage that every little tiny seed has and its final blooming.
The seed resemble a person, who needs time, effort, experience and etc to cultivate whatever it is required for his own growing and seeding. The seeding is the most important stage. It is the stage where a person gather whatever it is required in order to bring him to highest peak or allow him to make a breakthrough.

When all the things are ready and the seeding stage consider complete, that person will wait for the right moment for a perfect blooming. When the blooming stage is reached, we have completed the full cycle of life or we have reached the harvest season.

That's the purpose of life and I believed each individual is bestowed with hidden seed inside. Along our life, we pick up whatever we needs, throw always whatever not needed, cultivate good values, sharpen our skills, gather our strength and discover our true self in order to discover the tiny little seed being planted inside our heart. That's what I mean by seeding stage.

I know that this poem still need some finetuning. Well definitely will do that when the moment comes.

Hope one day I can make this a real theater play/dance by combining yoga asana with this poem and the rythm in my heart.

Namaste !

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Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Seven Lessons of Life

I getting to know about these 7 valuable life lessons from an article sent by my project manager. These lessons really inspire me and I would like to say thanks to him for sharing it out with us.

Lesson No #1: Stop analyzing the past and worrying about the future and choose to live in the moment.
Lesson No #2: When you are learning a new skill or activity, give yourself time to learn. Try not to
get worried or
frustrated when you make mistakes, instead, try and see the humor in
the situation and enjoy the
journey.
Lesson No #3: Believe in your dreams with a ‘Child Like’ faith.
Lesson No #4: Seize every opportunity you get to laugh out loud.
Lesson No #5: When you love someone, let them know.
Lesson No #6: If you’re carrying a grudge – let it go and move on. A grudge gets heavier the
longer you carry it.

Lesson No #7: Take the time to stop and look at the world around you through the eyes of a child.
It really is an amazing place!


I particularly attracted by lesson #3 & #7. I remember I have posted before an article about Inner Child living in each one of us. We need to spend time to reconnect with our inner child as our source of inspiration. We shall claim for it all the time.

Namaste !


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Thursday, January 28, 2010

Another Year Ahead

It's another year ahead again. It's always good to start on something new. Something which is not within your comfort zone. Something that can bring a breakthrough to your life. Well, I have planning out a new direction for myself - A Truely My Own Custom-Made plan, just for myself. After went through all those up and downs along the life stream, I guess I have matured enough to plan for myself and my future and where shall I head to.

Time fly and we truely need to grab whatever moment we have now to do whatever our heart desire to do and achieve. When looking back at all those time, you should never and ever regret on whatever that you have done in the past and whatever you haven't done in the past.

Wish my dreams will come true !

Namaste !

PS: I just got a lucky message from the lucky biscuit during my company birthday celebration event. Well the lucky message is "Believe In Your Dreams". It really lifts me up and inspire me a lot. :)




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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Ishta Devata

I came across these words while reading through a book about meditation. It sounds beautiful to me when I read it. 'Ishta Devata' means personal god. What a wonderful words that sounds good.

Last week I wrote an email to my yoga teacher, asking her whether is there any chanting classes going to be organized by her yoga center. I was also raised up some questions about mantra & meditation. The reason why is because I feel an urge to start something on it last couple of days ago. That's the reason. Then she replied back to me, saying that not many people are ready for such classes and she will keep it for future planning. She asked me if is there any god that appeals to me, such as buddha or hindu deities. Well so far I have heard of the mantra for Lord Shiva "Om Namah Shivaya", so I replied to her that I have heard of that mantra before. And guess what, she told me that my guardian planet is Saturn and Lord Shiva is my deity. Well, it's never a coincident at all, as I pointed out in my previous post. It's destined to be that way I believe.

My yoga teacher advised me that not to start right away from that mantra, but instead start with the "Mrityunjaya Mantra" first. She is willing to spend a sunday morning with me, to teach me how to start it. It's never be a co-incident but I am the one that request for it through my sending of the right energy field to her. And I know she received my request energy. Thanks for everything that bestow on me and I know it's going to be a very interesting and enjoyable spiritual journey ahead !

Namaste !

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