Read this and re-awaken to the miracle that is your life.
Thanks to Andrea Leber
Read this and re-awaken to the miracle that is your life.
Thanks to Andrea Leber
Thanksgiving is right around the corner. Our to-do lists are full, as are our shopping lists. We will spend a significant amount of time this week cleaning and cooking, and preparing to welcome friends and family into our homes. We may even travel to join our friends and families in near or distant locations. This is the time of year when we as a culture sanction taking a few precious moments out of our busy schedules to open our hearts to gratitude. And we do it in community. Perhaps we all become yogis on Thanksgiving.
I believe that gratitude is the foundation of yoga. We start our practice with intention setting and we finish it with gratitude for the practice and our teachers. We strive to cultivate the niyama of santosa (contentment) on the mat by letting go into each of our asanas; accepting and rejoicing in each asana for the strength and energy it brings to us. We seek to be present and content for each moment and for each breath during our practice. And finally, we bring our hands together in Namaste in recognition and gratitude for the divine spirit which lives and breaths in all of us.
But once we leave the studio, and move beyond the mat, shouldn’t we also seek to build a mindfulness practice of gratitude? Medical studies from such esteemed institutions as the Harvard Medical Center note the health benefits of engaging in a practice of mindulness meditation. Indeed, such practices have been shown to reduce the effects of stress related to chronic health concerns, and loss of loved ones.
The question then, is where and how to begin. Why not this week with Thanksgiving?
As you prepare for the holiday, take time to note the beauty around you. Notice the red and yellow leaves as they fall to the ground. Take a moment to be consciously grateful for friends and family. Remember those moments of joy shared with different family members. Appreciate the bounty in the stores, the truckers who delivered it there and the farmers who brought it forth from the earth. Open your heart with gratitude for the artists who bring beauty to our eyes and ears; for the activists and foundations who provide shelter and services to those in need; and the for physicians who bring healing. The list can go on and on. Be thankful for each moment of life, the beauty that surrounds you and the kindnesses you experience.
Lest someone should accuse me of polyannaism, let me state that there is no denying that these are difficult times we’re living. Challenges of hunger, poverty, racism, sexism, exploitation and yes death are a part of our daily existence. The goal though, is not to descend into to pain of these experiences. The understanding gained from practicing mindful gratitude keeps us from getting lost in the loss of freedoms and life. So even when you are stuck in traffic, late for a meeting, low on blood sugar, or suffering from illness or the loss of a loved one, you can still allow gratitude to soften the moment.
Breath in, look around and remember many wonderful moments in your life and community. Practice santosa and gratitude, both on the mat and beyond.
Happy Thanksgiving
Shalom & Namaste,
Diana Bonyhadi
Brahmacharya – a modern conceptualization.
Brahamacharya is the fourth of the yamas, which compose the first limb of the yoga tree. The yamas articulate the ways in which we should intereact with one another in our yogic path. The first of the yamas are pretty easy to digest; ahimsa – the practice of non-violence, satya – truthfullness, asteya – non-covetessness, and then we get to brahmacharya. I spent some time this morning looking up the word Brahmacharya. This is the most precise definition I could find. Thank you wikipedia. The word brahmacharya stems literally from two components:
So the word brahmacharya indicates a lifestyle adopted to enable one to attain the ultimate reality.
The most common working definition of Brhamacharya is celibacy. Restraining from spilling vital sexual energy. Many respected sources cite the health benefits, both physical and spiritual of restraining and redirecting powerful sexual energies. Ok, fine. If I want to progress in my path towards attaining the ultimate reality, I am going to have to give up sex. Not. And honestly, I think I am not alone here. There are many of us on the yoga path who are interested in living more fully in accordance with the yamas and niyamas, and this one presents the biggest hurdle.
So what would a working definition of brahamcharya be for those of us who will not be retreating to a monastery in the near future?
If we take the intention behind the words, I think living a life of moderation, restraint, consistency and respect for ourselves and others would be an apt definition. Further, if we resist from spreading ourselves too thin, if we resist from spreading our seeds to far and too often, then we can be more present in any given moment. And in today’s culture, that is a difficult thing to do. There are so many demands upon our time and energies, it is difficult to choose when to engage and when to hold back.
I have a husband, 3 kids, a job, a home, a garden and pets. All of these place demands on my time. I also have a job, I do community service and I have friends. I want to be able to give to and support my family, and friends when they are in need. I want to do well at my job and support my community. Thus the real question is how best to support them without draining myself. If I continue to give and give, there could well come a time when I am too drained to be present for those whom and I love and who are in need.
You know what I am talking about here. Your youngest spills the milk, the phone rings, the dog runs through the milk onto the new carpet and you go bezerk. She begins to cry, and shortly so do you. It’s not that the spilt milk was such a big deal, it’s just that you are overwhelmed. You have been trying to do too much for too many. You have spread yourself too thin. Your ability to reside in a place of wholeness is gone. At this moment you cannot walk the path of the Brahmin, because you are to tired, too drained and too scattered.
So what to do? Practice yoga. Take time out everyday to do some asanas, some pranayama, and some meditation. And this doesn’t have to de a daily marathon session. Grab a few minutes here and there to stretch, to breath, and to focus on the present moment. Five minutes of meditation will go a long way towards restoring your inner balance. Try not to say yes to every project, every job opportunity, every community service need. Turn off the extra noise in your life – the computer, radio and TV do not always have to be on. Your cell phone is a cool and useful tool, but you don’t always have to answer it or check emails at every traffic light. Give yourself some space for quiet. Practice restraint. Don’t try to be everything for everyone. Don’t spill your seed too often, don’t spread yourself too thin.
Walking the path of the Brahmin is not impossible, but it is difficult. Learning how and when to say no, so that we can be more fully present when we need to be is the challenge. That and learning to take care of ourselves in the midst of all the chaos of daily life. So, embrace your life, celebrate the joys, live your yoga beyond the mat, and know that you do not have to become a monk to practice brahmacharya.
Shalom & Namaste.
Diana Bonyhadi
Did you know that if you hit shift -four instead of simply hitting the four, you get a dollar sign? Thus 4th of July becomes $th of July, and I wonder if there was any significance in that typo? Has celebrating American Freedom come to mean celebrating our quest for financial freedom? Or the celebration of the almighty dollar as opposed to the celebration of the spirit of religious and political freedom upon which this country was founded? I am afraid I am about to get to heavy and cynical here. This is a yoga blog after all, and my original intention was to write a blog of celebration.
So first a scheduling note. Sunday Salutation Class is cancelled this Sunday as I will be out of town with my family for the holiday weekend. Do lift up your arms in celebration and bow to the earth in respect and bring your hands back to your heart in honor of the connection you provide between the heavens and the earth.
Second, Yoga for Hope: Samena Club and I are joining forces to offer an Eastside event for Yoga for Hope on July 16th at 10:00. Yoga for Hope supports the work done at City of Hope for Cancer, AIDS and HIV/AIDS. Come out and join us. This is a really good organization, doing some of the most cutting edge research and providing the most nurturing and integrative of care for patients and their families. You can support me and them by coming out on the 16th and doing some salutation with us and/or by clicking here and making a donation.
And now back to 4th of July. I spend every 4th with my family in Cannon Beach, OR. We have a great gathering of the clan. Meals are shared on porches, bonfires lit on the beach. Old and young share in songs and s’mores around the bonfire. And yes, we join in the annual parade. It is truly a small town parade, half the town is in it and the other half line the street, cheering. Everyone dresses in red, white and blue. In these moments, with family and friends surrounding me, I am reminded of how truly lucky we are to live in this beautiful country. And I honor the strength and perseverance of our forefathers, who left the confines of religious persecution to come to this country to start a new life. On the 4th of July, I stop to honor their strength and vision, and I hope that our country will try to remember the purity of vision that brought so many of us here. May we continue to open our hearts to others and support all peoples in their quest for freedom – freedom of religion, freedom from war, freedom from fear and hunger and persecution. And may we take better care to support those freedoms within our country, so we can truly be a country of light and hope and possibility
So, lift up your arms, and let your heart shine forth. Breathe in – in Celebration, and Exhale with Joy. Sparkle!
Shalom & Namaste,
Diana Bonyhadi
Check this out.
A radio show dedicated to the voices of wisdom. It’s sorta like NPR, but its PRN – Progressive Radio Network. And it is on everyday, all day long. Cool, now I have a new preset for my radio. A place that fills the need for something between news, which is mostly depressing and music which allows me to check out. Without having to buy or download anything, I can hear lectures and dialogues of people who are really looking to see and be with the world at its deepest level.
Imagine spending your morning with; Dr. Helen Caldicott, an afternoon with Bill Thompson, or an evenings commute with Jim Hightower.
Have a great weekend and enjoy the present – moment that is.
Shalom & Namaste,
Diana Bonyhadi
Andrew Harvey & Karuna Erikson
Heart Yoga in Seattle
It’s been over twenty years since I had the pleasure to participate in a workshop with Andrew Harvey. It is no understatement to say that he is a wise man of great proportions. I remember clearly the sense of wonder at his gentle ways and his immense wisdom. He is perhaps most famous for his translations of Rumi, and his gentle rendering of other great sufi teachings. He is in short a modern mystic; a man capable of leading all of us towards the deeper turnings of our souls.
Monday night, as I participated in the live teleconference, a precursor to the Heart Yoga workshop to be held here in Seattle at the end of March, I was again struck by Andrew’s intense intellect and deep commitment to helping us find our path to the sacred through Heart Yoga. To hear the full content of the teleconference, click on the following link: download the recording here .
If you are interested in deepening your yoga practice, and strengthening your commitment to your life’s work here on earth, I encourage you to consider this fabulous opportunity to spend 5 days with two amazing teachers of yoga and mystical traditions.
Heart Yoga and Sacred Activism Registration: click here
Syllabus: click here March 28 – April 1, 2011
Logistics (transport, rooms, meals, map, etc.): click here
Eight 1-hour prep videos by Andrew & Karuna: click here (from Daily Om)
From the Syllabus: “This initiation will open your heart to love, strengthen and infuse your body with light, and deepen and inspire your yoga practice (whatever your level of experience) as well as your commitment to sacred service. You will experience the profound union of the radiant body with the awakened heart, and the love, peace, and sacred passion that is birthed from this marriage.”
Greetings,
I spent this past weekend with Sara Powers who is the founder of Insight Yoga. Sara and her husband Ty have been leading yoga classes and workshop for many, many years, and although I had not yet had the opportunity to study with her in person, I had been familiar with her through her video “Insight Yoga.” As the only yoga video with which I like to practice, it felt like re-meeting an old friend when I walked into to take her workshop.
Sara Powers has set her heart and mind to the integration of yoga, meditation and transpersonal psychology. So to spend a weekend with her, was an experience focused within, on the prospect of “being in yoga”, rather than of “doing yoga.” And what a pleasant prospect it was.
As everyone knows who reads this sporadic blog, my focus has always been on “living yoga,” whether it occurs on the mat or hopefully even beyond the mat. Thus to spend a weekend focused inward, breathing our way into the deepest parts of ourselves, was a great blessing. I will admit however, that I am not so adept at being still for such long periods of time. Not only did my body shout out its discomfort, but my brain was also busy, sending me all sorts of messages.
And yet that was what we were there to do. Become aware of the ramblings of the brain. We sat meditation before and after asana practice. We practiced meditation in the asana practice. In fact, yoga with Sara is meditation in stillness and in motion. Our work in meditation was not to shunt away the messages of the brain but rather to become “mindful” of them. Instead of noting a thought and saying “I see you now go away,” we were to acknowledge the thought and follow it. By allowing ourselves to follow a thought, we engage in a process of self-acknowledgement, and self-affirmation. It becomes liberating to enter this process, and a bit entertaining. For example, here is just one of the thought trains that I followed…
“Breathe in to the hara. Awareness of breathing into the hara. Am I thinking my breath? Am I focusing on my breath? Am I focusing too much on my breath? Am I distracting myself from my breath? Am I really meditating? Mindfulness… What happens if I spend the whole time analyzing the focus of my breath? Will I no longer be practicing mindfulness? Follow a thought … There are no thoughts … How did I do that? Oops, there is a thought. My thighs are beginning to hurt … Should pay more attention to hip openers, or maybe I should pay more attention to closed hip positions … how to teach this balance … Are my students getting it? How can I serve them better”
Okay, you get the idea. Not only did my mind search around for things to latch onto, but under it all, was a common thread of “am I good enough?” And I doubt I am the only one out there who is constantly filled with self-doubt. But that is the power of a mindfulness practice. We can see how often we go to these places, and by doing so disempower those voices of self-doubt. Recognizing our communal need for love and affirmation, and the collective tendency towards self-doubt, we in turn become more accepting and nurturing as individuals and as community.
Now that is pretty darn cool.
So, take some time (ten minutes) to sit in contemplation of your thoughts. Acknowledge them for what they are. Enjoy the process. Enjoy letting go. Live your yoga.
Shalom & Namaste,
Diana Bonyhadi
Happy Halloween.
Hey Yogis and Yoginis. How is your Fall going? Her in the Northwest, we have been blessed with the most amazing October. Many sunny skies, some clouds, some wind and a couple of powerful storms. And today, Halloween, it is sunny, crisp and the sky is filled with clouds of the most interesting patterns.
Today is a day for celebrating spirits that play in the night; Jack-O-Lanterns, trick or treating, parties, costumes, and masks. As I was out raking leaves, I began thinking about the dress-up aspect of Halloween. When we don our costumes, are we setting out to hide our true identities or are we taking the opportunity to show the hidden sides of ourselves. Maybe we are exploring deeper aspects of ourselves we don’t have the chance to explore at other times of the year, those parts that we are perhaps to shy to share in normal circumstances?
And of course, I began to look at this from the yogic perspective. I began to explore the parallels between a deep yoga practice and the celebration of Halloween. Yes, I know you are probably laughing right now. But really, I think we can do this. Look for example at how in yoga, we get the chance to go deeper into each pose, perhaps reaching into areas we don’t normally go. Trying out poses that we have seen but never thought we could do. Encouraging our breath and our bodies to reach out and explore the limits of that which we consider ourselves to be, and in doing so, find that the boundaries to our identities might be pushed just a bit further.
Maybe the most interesting question is …. What masks do we wear everyday to shield ourselves from ourselves and the rest of the world? How do we present ourselves to the world and how do we protect ourselves from the world. Perhaps everyday is Halloween, and it is only during our yoga practice that we begin to shed the masks and explore our true selves. Indeed Patanjali in laying out the eightfold path of yoga states quite clearly that it is through our practice that we can learn to take off the masks and experience our Divine selves (see list of limbs cited below). A scary and yet magnificent possibility.
So, as you play this Halloween and dress up yourself, your home, your children, and perhaps even your pets, take a moment to explore how your costume might indeed be a manifestation of a deeper part of your being. Step into that space and enjoy it.
Shalom & Namaste & Happy Halloween
Diana Bonyhadi
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The core of Patanjali’s Yoga Sutra is an eight-limbed path that forms the structural framework for yoga practice. Upon practicing all eight limbs of the path it becomes self-evident that no one element is elevated over another in a hierarchical order. Each is part of a holistic focus which eventually brings completeness to the individual as they find their connectivity to the divine. Because we are all uniquely individual a person can emphasize one branch and then move on to another as they round out their understanding.
In brief the eight limbs, or steps to yoga, are as follows:
1. Yama : Universal morality
2. Niyama : Personal observances
3. Asanas : Body postures
4. Pranayama : Breathing exercises, and control of prana
5. Pratyahara : Control of the senses
6. Dharana : Concentration and cultivating inner perceptual awareness
7. Dhyana : Devotion, Meditation on the Divine
8. Samadhi : Union with the Divine
A Week of Divine Enlightenment
Well no, I can’t say that I have become an enlightened being this week, but I did set the intention for the week to open myself up to the possibility of experiencing the divine fully in each and every moment. And what a great week it has been.
It started as a simple question; “If I were truly an enlightened being, how would my actions in the moment change?” The first thing I noticed was a shift of awareness. My internal critical self took a step back. Enlightened beings are not so judgmental – wow what a relief that was. In my practice, I found it easier to open more fully to each asana, delighting in the postures for their own sake. My breath flowed more gently and my meditations were longer and deeper. In my daily life, I discovered that the traffic was less annoying and chores became vehicles for nurturing my family – not dreaded tasks. In short, I found myself more open to the positive in every situation and more supportive of everyone around me – even those teenagers with whom I share space.
As a yoga teacher, this has turned into a deep blessing. Opening each class with an invitation to honor the divine within, allowed all my students to reach deeper into their practices. As a result the room became a sanctuary, and each student a manifestation of the divine. Literally, all of us were glowing. The asanas shimmered and the meditations were nurturing and affirming.
When we invite the divine into our lives, we are making the choice to fully acknowledge the grace, beauty and sacredness of our world. If my experience this week is any indication, creating space for the divine is a pathway for creating greater possibilities for peace in our lives and the world.
Finally, a comment on the numerous articles in the press about the perceived conflict between yoga and religions. First, yoga is not a religion, it is a philosophy. It is best viewed as a road map for our intrapersonal and interpersonal interactions. Yoga – which literally mean yoking or union – strengthens the connections between the individual and their own religious commitments. In my practice this week, I found support and clarification of my Jewish faith, particularly as expressed through the Sh’ma: “Listen Israel, Adonai is holy, Adonai is one.” By embracing the divine, I embraced the concept of the holiness of all beings and the interconnectedness of everything. I mean, if I am divine, then you are too, and he is, and she is and he is, and so forth. What a beautiful sparkling world of divine beings we are.
Shalom & Namaste,
Diana Bonyhadi
Anitya asuci duhkha anatmasu nitya suci sukha atma khyatih avidya
Sutra 2-5
The need for pleasures and the source of suffering comes from identifying with
that which is not eternal. True self is pure and eternal.
`L’Shana Tova
Happy New Year. I spent most of yesterday and the evening before in synagogue. It’s Jewish New Year and so a time for deep reflection. We are called to reach deeply into that reflective space and ponder where we have been and where we want to be in the future. This is the time when we take stock.
Traditionally, we call this the time of repentance. The ten days of awe, when the book of life is opened and we get to re-write ourselves into the book of life. It is the time when we look back at the past year and hold ourselves accountable for all that we have done. For many it is a time of self-flagellation. Our minds fill with the “I should’ves, Why didn’t I, Why did I?” And we ask for forgiveness. Some of us even write the difficult letters, or make the phone calls to those we love and have hurt during the year. But most importantly, it is a time of letting go.
I belong to a unique synagogue. We practice an integrative form of Judaism which is draws upon ancient Jewish practices of mysticism, meditation and chanting. It also draws upon the wisdom teachings of Buddhism and Daoism. I find that the combination of song, prayer and meditation allows me to go deeper into myself and to nurture the divine spark that lives within.
According to our Rabbis, the real work to be done during this week is the work of self-love. Yes, look inside, take stalk, but also forgive yourself and let go. I don’t know about you, but I certainly am my own worst critic. So to be presented with the task of looking inside and practicing self-forgiveness is a deep spiritual challenge.
This is a time of catharsis.
And I find that my yoga practice is deepened by my Jewish faith and vice versa. We meditate on the mat and we meditate in synagogue. We honor the divine that lives within in our yoga practice, and we honor the One that is Universal Being in our Jewish faith. Patanjali reminds us that our attachments to what has been and what could be, keep us from living fully in the moment, and thus lead to pain. The days of awe remind us to look back, take stalk and then let go, and embrace the New Year with an open heart and a clean slate.
So to all my fellow yogis and yoginis, and to all my Jewish brothers and Sisters, may I wish you a sweet New Year. I encourage you to open yourselves up to yourselves. Take time for silence and meditation. Listen quietly to the clear voice that lives within. Know that we are all manifestations of goodness. And celebrate your unique unfolding, on the mat and in your life.
Shalom & Namaste
Diana Bonyhadi