Showing posts with label Ashtanga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ashtanga. Show all posts

Friday, June 19, 2015

Why I Teach Yoga

I'm a musician to my core. Since I was a baby I've been musical. Singing was all I ever wanted to do. And I've been singing and working professionally - with varying degrees, and various parts of the entertainment industry - since I was nineteen. Since moving to Minnesota in 2013, a lot of things have shifted. For one, this is the smallest market I've worked in as a free-lancer, and I'm attempting to delve into a new area of entertainment in voice over and production. The days of paying bills with music have been skinny since I moved here, and I've had to be patient and realize that I'm attempting new things in a new place. I recently went to my formerly-usual Monday night hang at Ice House, and one of my musician buddies said,

"Calley you ever gonna come back to music?" 

He was referring to all the pushing I've been doing for my yoga classes. It made me think. I didn't really think that I'd left music, its just that work can be hard to come by when you're the new girl in town, and I'm putting efforts in new directions, including a very exciting project which is currently in the works.

But it also made me think about why I'm teaching yoga.

How to consolidate into one post?! I'm teaching yoga because I love to teach, and I love the way yoga makes me feel, and I think there are plenty of options of studios and teachers out there for flexible, pretty girls to feel good about touching their toes. Trust me, I am alllllways all about girls feeling better about themselves, especially the pretty ones who often get pegged as bitchy, or snotty, or dumb. Those girls deserve happiness as much as any other human. But with the growth of yoga as a business and a presence in our culture, I see a need for teachers who can connect with other types of seekers. The yoga I love and teach may help you feel better immediately, but its essence is never in the expectation for a quick fix. I teach with the intent to stay true to why I started practicing, and help offer this resource to others who are looking for a resource.


I recently came across an article on Omeleto about this yogi from Durham, NC. I don't know this girl from Eve, I have no idea if she's a great yoga teacher or not, but man do I stand for what she stands for.

And I hope she's an inspiration for some of you to invite your own humility, love yourself into a new habit, and show up on the mat.




Friday, May 8, 2015

Allergies - They Suck, But This Shiz WORKED for me.

Hey friends! It's been a hot minute since I wrote a yoga blog post - I got some real info here for ya!

Spring has sprung in Minneapolis, and tis the season for allllll those yummy yummy allergy symptoms. Mmmmmmm, puffy eyes and sniffly noses. Or if you're anything like I used to be - sick with a massive congestion and chest cold that won't go away fully untill June.

Being that my yoga community and friends here in Minneapolis have only known me for about a year and a half, most of you probably see me as this incredibly healthy person. Which is true. But its because I used to be a chronically unhealthy person.

Now granted - I AM NOT A DOCTOR. (Though my sister is, and I brag about her all the time, and love geeking out with her on body stuff and health-related topics.) I'm'a pass on my decade of reading and practice with this shiz: I started suffering from pretty bad chronic allergies in 2005 while I was living in Texas, and had to be put on three daily prescriptions, weekly shots, and was seeing a voice therapist to help my inflamed and swollen vocal chords so that I could continue to work as a singer. Because I was amazed at the cost of drugs, allergy testing, and specialist visits, and horrified at the idea of being chained to this routine and trapped in an unhealthy body, I basically became an allergy information vacuum consuming every opinion and remedy I could find on chronic allergies. Over the years I've done a lot of reading. I've seen MD's, allergists, DO's, physical therapists, massage therapists, and even saved a bunch of green one spring and used an acupuncturist weekly for two months because I was sooooo dreading being sick and miserable for an entire month. I've read up on diet studies and how they affect our bodies' immune system (which is where immunodeficiencies AKA allergies originate in the body), I've tried all kinds of cleanses, diets, and remedies, and I've gone to about a thousand yoga classes.

And so, as a person on a quest to bring the happiness of health to all my peeps, scroll down to read what I've learned over ten years.  Its difficult to appreciate your health until you don't have it, but man does it suck when you don't. I figured I would share with you what I've tried and used in the event that what has worked wonders for me might work for you. Because of my lifestyle and diet changes, I've been self-managed with my allergies since the summer of 2010. I no longer get sick and bedridden for two weeks every May, I no longer take allergy shots or medications, and I no longer feel like my health is out of control. Are my symptoms gone entirely? Nope, but they're a hell of a lot better.

Everyone is different. Everyone. And your life factors DO affect your health, particularly - as the studies are catching on to - your stress level. Do you like your job? Are in a supportive relationship(s)? Do you get the outlets you need in life, be they emotional, physical, mental, or spiritual? These things affect your stress level, and your stress level affects your immunity, and your immunity is directly tied to allergies. So take note - these are remedies, not cures. And I do all of these things because yes, I was that miserable and it was better and easier to make these changes than to insist on keeping my old habits and be sick all the time. Life is a series of choices, you must find your own "happy life cocktail."

Foods I avoid during allergy season (because they contribute to either inflammation or congestion, or both):

Sugar. Sugar. Sugar. Sugar. Sugar. Sugar. Sugar. There are so many studies being done on how addictive and dangerous sugar is, so this is a HAAAAARD one to give up - especially because its in almost everything pre-packaged, so get ready to become that annoying person reading all the labels in the grocery store. Just do it. Think about it: sick...  read labels... sick... read labels... your call. PS - Honey and maple syrup are nice alternatives that don't affect your body the same way - when used in moderation. And truly, once you've managed to kick the sugar habit, you won't crave it. It starts to taste kind of chemical after you've gotten it out of your diet for a couple of months.

Gluten. Gluten means wheat, barley, and rye. I actually figured out this was a problem for me in 2008, had a hard slow letting go of New York City baked goods for three years, (oh, the baked goods that can be bought on every street corner of New York City... be still, my gut), and cut gluten out of my diet entirely in 2011. The change was incredible for my own health. Eating gluten for me is almost a guarantee that I will get a congestion cold, and an absolute guarantee that my energy level goes in the tank. That does not mean this is the diet for everyone. What I read and found out was that seasonal allergies are often exacerbated by other latent food sensitivities. (Other common culprits are soy and corn. Neither of those was a problem for me.) The kicker?: with the the way that digestion works, you have to be willing to cut out a food for a minimum of six weeks (usually) to start to really notice a difference, as our intestines and digestive systems hang on to nutrients for quite some time. (Sometimes years, which is gross to think about, but a bit enlightening as well... eeesh.) As was recommended to me, cut foods out one at a time for six weeks. Take note of how you feel. Try a small amount of that food after six weeks and see what you feel then.
Now, yes, you can go buying expensive gluten-free bakery items to try to maintain your current diet... but I've always thought if you're going to change your diet, be willing to really change and maybe try new things that are just naturally gluten free: like rice, and quinoa, and vegetables, and meats, and legumes... Thankfully Indian, Thai, and Latin food have all kinds of naturally gluten free dishes. And I love me some Indian, Thai, and Latin food. Mmmm, mm. I haven't ventured much into the paleo land (no grains whatsoever), but I know lots of friends with similar symptoms who've had great success with a paleo diet.

Dairy. Pasteurized dairy contributes to mucous production, and if your body is already over-producing mucous from your allergies, then this is a good thing to cut out of your diet. This one I cheat on with cheese and butter because I usually don't eat large quantities of butter (more than a tablespoon or two), nor do I eat it very often. I've largely switched any use of butter in cooking and baking with oil alternatives, so now I just eat butter when I want to taste it ON something. And cheese... well, everybody has a secret mistress (or mis-TER-ess as I would prefer to say), and mine is cheese. Same thing, I don't go downing a giant thing of mac-and-cheese during allergy season, but I'll have a slice on my burger. Also, did you know about Coconut Bliss ice cream? Its amazing. You seriously will not miss regular ice cream. Some non-dairy-ites have also had no problems with raw and unpasteurized dairy. This is tricky to find, as the sale of it has very specific legal specifications, but the few times I've gotten my hands on it, I notice that it doesn't seem to make me all mucous-y. And now that I've talked about my mucous how many times in this post, I will surely never have a date again. ;p

Alcohol. Yep, its a toughie. Especially if you're like me and the warm weather outside just makes you want to sit on patios and drink in the sunshine and a tall cocktail after a long Minnesota winter. But, you know, maybe find a friend to join you in sober nights-out? Or pick one night a week to reward yourself. I dunno, we all have to figure it out.

Foods I INCREASE during allergy season (because they are great at supporting immune health, and countering inflammation):

Tart cherries and apples. There have been some studies on the effect of tart cherries and tart cherry juice on inflammation of the joints. I happen to love tart cherries, and I feel that when I eat them, I do notice my inflammation and sinuses respond. Apples same thing. If you're buying the juice, beware the added sugar. PS - If you are CostCo shoppers, they sell an unsweetened cherry mix in the frozen fruit section that's like $10, and you can turn your frozen cherries into sorbet with a blender, some maple syrup, and either water or your pick of non-dairy milk. Mmmmmm sinus sorbet!

Turmeric. Sooooo, my sister - the awesome one who is a doctor - told me about taking turmeric supplements for inflammation. It's a bright orange root with light brown skin that is often used as a powdered seasoning in lots of Indian and Ayurvedic dishes. You can buy the root in raw form at the grocery store and add it to dishes (it's a bit more expensive this way, but also more potent), or get the powdered variety. You can buy turmeric supplements at a vitamin store, but if you're cheap like me, I go to the local ethnic food store and buy a bag of turmeric for about $3, and then buy pill capsules from the vitamin store and make my own capsules for wayyyyyy less than $20 a bottle. I take 3 capsules in the morning and 3 at night during high stress times or peak allergy times.

Miso, Kombucha, and Pro-Biotics. The jury is out about weather probiotics are actually helpful, as supposedly we all need different amounts and kinds of bacteria to balance out our gut, but we do know that good bacteria are good for us, when you can find the right balance.
These are foods that make me feel better when I'm starting to feel sick. And I go with what feels good most of the time, as opposed to what a doctor in Boston found out about a bunch of patients that have nothing to do with me. I know, I'm such a hippie. I add miso to just about any hot food that I can for the health benefit - you don't need much, a teaspoon or so. Vegetables, soup of any kind, use as a mayo substitute. The trick is to NOT cook it, as you'll cook and kill all the beneficial bacteria - add it to your hot foods just before you eat. Kombucha: Don't know what it is? It tastes a bit like fruity beer. Yes, its expensive if you think of it like buying a soda. No, its not expensive if you think of it like buying a beer. And, again, well, CHOICES PEOPLE. Pro - Biotics: I would ask someone in the supplement isle. I've found a brand that I notice seems to affect my energy level, so I use those. Trial and error might be your best bet, or ask a dietician.

Cider Vinegar. Mix it with salt, pepper, and water, and either drink a few sips if you can stomach it - OR, cut up some cucumber and let them brine for 20 minutes and then eat them. THIS STUFF IS AMAZING AT CLEARING OUT STUFFY SINUSES! Seriously, I don't even care what the medical research or reasoning is on this one, cider vinegar is a nectar of the gods, if you ask me. And I've converted a few people along the way who say the same thing. This is seriously something you should try on a day when you are miserable with allergies.

Other things that help my allergies:

Shower before bed. This is one of those things that's so simple and logical. I was MAD when after years of suffering from allergies, my sister said to me, "hey are you showering before bed? Cause you should be." Why had none of the allergists I'd spent thousands of dollars on ever said this to me? Ay, ay, ay, I digress. Here's the thing: we walk around all day and our hair and clothes and skin pick up small allergens in the air. Then you go and shove your face in a pillow with all these allergens clinging to your body while you're supposed to be sleeping and recovering and recuperating from the day, and instead you're breathing in the very thing you're allergic to all night long. And then you wake up feeling puffy, and stuffy, and un-rested. Duh. Shower at night. It's so easy. And makes SUCH a difference.

Yoga. Or Stretch. Same Dif. The reason yoga helps SO MUCH with allergies is that you literally get the lymph flowing through your blood when you stretch out or do yoga. Lymph fluid gets stuck in inflamed nodes when we're ill, and getting the lymph moving can help get rid of the symptoms of allergies. Even if you're sick at home, or low on energy, just lie on the floor for a few minutes while you watch a movie and stretch out your legs, arms, chest, and neck. Take deep breaths while you stretch. 10 minutes can make a world of difference. Come to a yoga class, and you'll wonder why you ever spent any money on decongestants at all. A word of warning: depending on who you are, and how regularly you exercise, this can also make you feel temporarily worse, as the lymph loosens the allergens and pushes them through your system all at once. Usually the effect is short-lived (a day or so), but just be prepared that you might feel worse before you feel better. Drink lots of water, stretch slowly, be your own keeper.

Ayurvedic Spring Cleanse. Ok, if you are really committed, and want to go the extra mile, here is the cleanse that I do every spring. It's a little intense to stick to, as you have to eat a strict diet for 8 days, take some supplements, and take time to do things like take baths and rub yourself down with oil. But man oh man, every spring that I have done this cleanse, I barely notice my allergies. It has been passed around in my yoga community for several years, and all my yogi friends who've done it, swear by it. Also, depending on how hard core you are or aren't, you can take the gentle approach and skip the supplements, oil rubs, and enema at the end. Just do the diet and you'll still get some real benefit:


Step One - Days 1-4

Internal Oleation.  The purpose of oleation is to loosen impurities lodged deeply in the cells and tissues.  This requires the consumption of ghee.  Ghee loosens the impurities and acts as a solvent to dissolve and mobilize the impurities so that they can be eliminated in the laxative phase of the cleanse.  Note: ghee can be heavy  to digest and may case slight feelings of dullness and/or nausea

Method
Day 1: 2 teaspoons of ghee
Day 2: 4 teaspoons of ghee
Day 3: 6 teaspoons of ghee
Day 4: 8 teaspoons of ghee

Diet
Kitchari
Steamed vegetables
Chapati/Tortillas
Green juices (celery, parsley, spinach, kale, ginger)

Tea 
Ginger root tea
Cleansing tea

Supplements
Triphala - 2 caps before bed (or 1/2 tsp of powder steeped for 10 minutes and strained)
Trikatu (ginger tea) - 1 cap in the am with ghee and 1 more with each meal
Blood/Liver cleanse - 2 caps with each meal

Step 2 - Days 5-7

External Oleation. Self massage for 3 days followed by a hot bath, shower or steam. Use generous amounts of oil.  Organic Sesame Oil is good.
Diet
Kitchari
Steamed vegetables
Chapati/Tortillas
Green juices (celery, parsley, spinach, kale, ginger)

Tea 
Ginger root tea
Cleansing tea

Supplements
Triphala - 2 caps before bed (or 1/2 tsp of powder steeped for 10 minutes and strained)
Trikatu - 1 cap with each meal
Blood/Liver cleanse - 2 caps with each meal

Step 3 - Day 8 morning

Purgation method
Take 3-6 teaspoons of castor oil in the early morning on an empty stomach.
Castor oil in warm milk with cardamon, ginger and raw sugar
Castor oil in orange juice.  Take quickly and bite into another orange
Take a warm bath to increase circulation  and loosen the impurities before the laxative effect takes place
The laxative effect should take place in 1-4 hours. You may have several evacuations.  
If you have several evacuations, you may want to take an electrolyte supplement (sea salt, honey and lemon in warm water).

Diet
Kitchari
Steamed vegetables
Chapati/Tortillas
Green juices (celery, parsley, spinach, kale, ginger)
Tea 
Ginger root tea
Cleansing tea

Supplements
Blood / Liver cleanse - 2 caps with each meal


Step 4 - Day 8 evening

Basti (enema)
100 ml (about 4 ounces) of warm sesame oil.
Do this in the evening before bed. You may release or retain. Do what you body says, don’t deny urges
You may wish to use a sanitary pad.

Coming out of the cleanse
Reintroduce foods gently.  
Add more fruits and fresh fruit juices
Add stir-fry to veggies
Add salads with dressings
Add more and varied grains
Be slow to reintroduce complex carbohydrates, Sugar, especially anything refined, Caffeine, Alcohol
Continue with supplements for 30 days, unless contraindicated


Kitchari

makes 4 servings

1/2 cup organic basmati rice
1/4 cup yellow mung dahl
3-4 cups water
2 teaspoons ghee
1/2 teaspoon each: ground coriander, ground cumin, ground fennel, ground ginger and turmeric
2 teaspoons fresh, chopped coriander (cilantro)
1 teaspoon salt

1. combine rice and mung dahl in a bowl and rinse well, drain.
2. add water and bring rice and dahl mixture to a boil. reduce heat and simmer for about 45 minutes.
3. in a separate pan, heat the ghee (careful not to burn it)
4. saute all spices, except the turmeric, in heated ghee (30 seconds..until aromatic)
5. add spices, including the turmeric, to rice and dahl mixture and stir well
6. add salt
7.  garnish with fresh corrinder leaves.

note:  you can add carrots, zucchini, sweet potato or other vegetables as desired

you want the consistency to be moist.

Ghee

To make one quart of Ghee, melt  two pounds of butter in a saucepan over medium - low heat.  Do not leave ghee unattended as it can quickly scorch and burn. Do not cover the pot.  Stir occasionally.

Over the next 30-40 minutes, the water will boil away (note: approximately 20% of butter is water).

White milk curds will bubble to the top and settle to the bottom, separating from the oil. The ghee will make a sputtering sound throughout this process. When the curds turn a very light brown and the sputtering sounds diminish, the ghee is ready.  The ghee may faintly smell like popcorn.  Skim the foam off the top and gently spoon the oil into a glass jar, straining it through several layers of cheese cloth. Discard the curds and foam. 

Keep water and food out of your ghee jar, and there is no need to refrigerate it, and it will last indefinitely. 

Cleansing Tea (or use yogi de-tox)

Fennel seed ( 1part)
Fenugreek Seed (1 part)
Flax seed (1 part)
Burdock root (1/2 part)
Licorice root (1/4 part)
Peppermint (1 part)
Marshmallow root (1 part)

Simmer all the herbs together for 20 minutes. Strain.

Guidelines: Eat only kitchari as your meals during these seven days, but eat as much as you’d like.  Drink lots of water.  You may also drink herbal teas (like herbal laxative teas to help you wash out toxins) and eat fruit between meals as a snack (eat one type of fruit at a time).  Fruit juices may also be used (examples: freshly squeezed orange juice, or a mix of ginger/apple juice if you have a juicer).  TIP: You can top of the kitchari with pico de gallo, avocado, kale, or salad.



THAT'S ALL MY ALLERGY MAGIC, FRIENDS! 


Happy Allergy Season!




#YogaWithCalley at Yoga Garden Minneapolis:


Sundays @ 10:00am - Abbreviated Ashtanga (great for beginners!)
1229 Tyler Street Northeast, Minneapolis, MN 55413

Yoga Garden is cash / check only. 
Please note the doors to the FROST building lock 15 minutes after the start of each class.


Saturday, April 4, 2015

Down Dog, Pigeon...Yoga Bunny!

We have all these animals in yoga. Down dog. Pigeon. Cobra. Mexican Moose. Ha, just kidding, I made that last one up.

I've decided that in honor of Easter (for which I celebrate the chocolate, bypassing the religious aspect entirely. Thank-you Cadbury for this awesome addition to the consumer calendar) I will give the great animal of the BUNNY its own pose. This pose is what we - begrudgingly, I'm SURE - call "upward facing dog." Why? Well, come on DOG, don't be so selfish. You don't get two poses all your own - "downward facing dog" AND "upward facing dog." Not, when "forward bunny" is SUCH a great name for this pose!


Oh by the way, Happy Easter. AND, this post is dedicated to one of my favorite singers and songwriters, Elizabeth and the Catapult, because of her amazing bunny Oslo.

Yes, class is on for Sunday morning. And yes I'll accept chocolate for payment for this class only if you mention this blog post, (the darker the better, just like.... my coffee... gotcha.) Hope to see you Sunday at 10am.

Yoga with Calley at Yoga Garden Minneapolis:
Sundays @ 10:00am - Abbreviated Ashtanga (great for beginners!)
1229 Tyler Street Northeast, Minneapolis, MN 55413
Yoga Garden is cash / check only. 
Please note the doors to the FROST building lock 15 minutes after the start of each class.

Friday, February 27, 2015

Do What You Want - #DWUW

It doesn't take long for anyone who meets me to realize the things I'm most passionate about: music and yoga. The former has been a part of my professional life since I was nineteen, and the latter was
always my little gift to myself. Music is the thing I've made - with varying amounts of success, depending on the year - into my profession. Yoga was like my power cape that I brought with me everywhere. I put that cape on, and man, I can get through anything.

Over the years, I've had a handful of friends who have known me for varying amounts of time come to a very similar realization that they felt compelled to tell me: This yoga stuff is incredible. In fact I remember my friend Cameron once saying to me, "Damn I feel good. Its like some ancient wisdom."

After twelve years of practice, in four different US markets, with dozens of teachers and a handful of styles under my belt, I still feel like a beginner in the vast world that is yoga, but that very word -

V A S T

- is the reason I think yoga is so effective for so many people. "Yoga" is now common enough in our culture that it has a common association: flexible, healthy women in attractive active wear. In fact, just the other day I invited a friend to come to my class and he said he was worried that, as a young adult male, he'd be distracted by all the beautiful women in the class. This goes to show you what our cultural perception is of "yoga."

But this is exactly why I chose to add the hat of "teacher" to my yoga rack. Part of yoga's beauty - and its incredible and never-ending challenge - is that it can be an activity of almost any nature you need: yes it is a workout....  but also

It is muscular strength training, if you choose to engage your muscles in that way...

It is relaxation, if you bring focus to where your body is tight and have the patience to use your breath and invite the muscles and facia (the fibers that bind your muscles to your bones and organs) to release...

It is emotional healing, if you allow yourself to truly feel what you are feeling in that moment, no matter how beautiful or ugly your feelings may be...

It is allowing empty time for your brain, if you make efforts to try and think of nothing, and just breathe, and know that when your mind wanders back to active thinking, you are patient and bring it back to nothing...

It is a lesson in work and perseverance, if you use your breath, your deep down strength, and your belief that you can conquer this pose!...

It is physical healing, if you are patient with the limitations of your body on that day, and know with time, repetition, and attention, you can heal your ailments...

So yoga is whatever you want it to be. It's learning yourself, your habits, your body, your mind behavior, your sticking points, your stuff that makes you YOU. That's why you hear so often in yoga classes and yoga speak, "your practice." Because you really can do whatever you want. Teachers are there to suggest, to notice from an outside perspective, and to help, using their experience.

But the learning is up to you: DO WHAT YOU WANT. #DWUW

Yoga with Calley at Yoga Garden Minneapolis:
Sundays @ 10:00am - Abbreviated Ashtanga (great for beginners!)
1229 Tyler Street Northeast, Minneapolis, MN 55413
Yoga Garden is cash / check only. 
Please note the doors to the FROST building lock 15 minutes after the start of each class.

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Push Through or Back Off?


This is not a blog going out to hundreds of people, so you guys get a little special-ized Calley-centric perspective on yoga / health / wellness as I've gathered bits of info and practice over the last twelve years. And welcome to the mailing list for the new-comers!This week I was reminded of the importance of practice. As in, not talking about it, not thinking about it, actually doing it: practicing. Life has been a bit of a juggling act for me lately, as I'm moving into new business with my VO / production work, keeping the day job, teaching yoga, and somewhere in there hosting a podcast (that's been a liiiiiiiiiittle bit on hiatus through this time). I have not been getting on the mat as much as I want or need in the past month +, and so last week when I re-committed to not just squeezing in yoga here and there, but really dedicating time to practice FOR myself... ay ay ay. I'm a little rusty in some poses, I'm a little sore in some places, and I got a big fat cold.

Enter the perfect scenario to talk about pushing through or backing off? For me in this time period, pushing through means giving myself T.I.M.E. on the mat. As in, dedicate the whole freaking hour, because frankly there's only so much I can get done in terms of bettering my health and practice in 15 minutes (though I am ALWAYS the champion of 15 minutes is better than no minutes. Its the tactic I always recommend for people wanting to do more yoga - 15 minutes every day will take you farther than 1 hour per week in my experience). But once I got on the mat, and re-acquainted with my beloved Astanga primary series, I was reminded that oh yeah... I don't have the same stamina right now. Time to back off. Take some extra breaths. Sit in the pose a little longer, till I can really feel my body shift and move INTO the pose. If you don't know what I mean, go sit in child's pose or down dog or even stand on your floor in tadasana (aka mountain pose, aka standing with the attempt to have equal weight and balance in the left / right and front / back body) for FIVE WHOLE MINUTES. I mean it. Put a timer on. You will then understand that "pushing through" or "backing off" is a moment - by - moment adjustment, and only you can actually DO either of those things. A teacher can recommend, but at the end of the day, we're all our own keepers.
Hope to see you tomorrow (or this) morning!

Yoga with Calley at Yoga Garden Minneapolis:

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Don't Be A Barnacle

Before I tell you WHY you shouldn't be a barnacle, know that you're getting a double post this week, as I finish this cycle of talking about chakras, and how they can help guide your practice.

First a cheater - this was last weeks:

Chakra #6 of 7

I'm leaving you with simple words on this Saturday - the first of the new year.

Health is not hype. 
Its not something you can read in a magazine, or buy in the right pair of exercise pants, or get on an app. Health is a practice, its the way we see ourselves, the choices we make every day (or week... some days you just gotta get the Ben and Jerry's pint and eat the whole damn thing). Its the pits we fall into and then how we choose to either be thrown by them, or find a way - maybe a new way - to get out of them.

Your health is only yours to own and to practice. And with the freshness of the new year, this can be a great time to make an effort in that direction, whatever that means for you. This is what yoga has given me time and time again. Yoga is the the thing I can count on no matter what to treat me well, give me space, and help me find the light.

Change in unavoidable, but choosing to evolve with the change is easy to avoid. And that's why we have community, trial and error, and ultimately, ourselves.

Tomorrow we welcome the new year with a brief description of Ajna - the 6th Chakra which helps us observe the inner and the outer as a witness, an observer. It is a great place to start the new year and attempt something new without beating ourselves up for what we have done, or not done, before.





















And now  Chakra #7 of 7
We're at the top, folks! The crown of the head, the point in the body where we no longer exist only physically, but where we start to understand a sense of greater connection - that we really are all a part of something larger than ourselves. I don't mean to get all Avatar on you guys (though I will completely admit to being a cheeseball about how much I LOVE this movie), but truly the challenge in accepting that we are a part of a larger unit is attachment. 

And enter the CROWN CHAKRA - SAHASRARA. This is the place where thought ceases, and is taken over by the sensations of peace, bliss, serenity, joy, and a feeling of the deeper meaning of life. The challenge of realizing these sensations is that they are just that - sensations. You can think about it, you can't muscle your way into it with logic - it is a letting go of our logical need to put it in a box, to control. You have to allow the thoughts to go, and the feelings to take over, and this is not an easy task. 

Do you see why I say don't be a barnacle? Not to sound like such a stereotype, but you gotta just let go...man.  Tee hee. This is why we breathe. It's why we practice being in our bodies and get out of our minds. There is value in unplugging, allowing the brain time to rest and not be in a state of work, and damnit if this isn't a huge tool towards greater happiness, and health. Which is kiiiiiiiiind of the point. We're all working on this together, one big happy (amongst other emotions) humanity. 

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Who the hell are you?

No really think about that - and make sure you're reading that question like this: Who the hell are you? (Instead of how we usually think of it "Who the hell are you?")


Why do I ask this? --- think about the two contexts of those same five words: in one instance, it is a question directed outward, and in the other, it is a question directed inward.

We've all heard the term "giving away your power." Well, in the sense of Chakras (which is the kick I'm on for this holiday season) the third chakra - which is located at the soft spot between your belly button and your solar plexus, and is called the MANIPURA - is our sense of self. Our sense of self-worth. Our sense of power. It means "city of gems," which seems entirely random, unless you dig a little deeper (which I always love to do). It is our own individual "city of gems;" a place of resource and power.

Where last week's sacral chakra svadisthana (the lower abdomen, where the base of the spine connects to the hip bones), is about pleasure and enjoyment, and the first chakra muladhara was about our primal selves (survival, or fear, if that survival is compromised), the manipura goes a bit further. Our sense of self is awakened, and along with it, an ability to choose - to use willpower, and be proactive, instead of reactive or inactive.

Sooooooo, realistically, there's no way to realize and actualize everything that the chakras represent in one week's time. But, like I allllllways say, hang on to what works for you, be willing to learn a bit at a time, and as my Minneapolis yogi hero Laurel Van Matre would say,

ITS ABOUT SHOWING UP.


Hope to see many of you on Sunday :)



Yoga with Calley at Yoga Garden Minneapolis:

Saturday, December 6, 2014

Bandhas, breath, chakras, sex organs?

I've always kind of enjoyed being that friend / relative / person who says the thing that you're not supposed to say because its sooooo unCOUTH. But see, that's the thing with yoga - its supposed to be about dealing with real feelings, emotions, physical characteristics, etc. no matter what they are. Its good to unbutton every once and a while in life. (Hey, if we can adopt "It's 5:00 somewhere," we can use the word procreation when talking about yoga - especially around the holidays when its getting nice and cold outside... and everyone is warm inside... yeah you get it.)


So on that note, this Sunday in class (12/7/2014), we'll briefly talk about the second chakra - SVADHISTHANA, or the LOWER ABDOMINAL / SACRAL CHAKRA - which means "dwelling place of the self," and is directly governed by - you guessed it - the sex organs. It's also about emotions, sociablity, and movement.
Why talk about this? Welll...


READ LAST WEEK'S POST


Yoga with Calley at Yoga Garden Minneapolis:

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Getting Your HEART Ready for the Holidays


I've been thinking a lot this week about the true meaning of the "holiday season" in our culture. We all know that the grinch's heart grew three sizes when he figured out that its not about greed, but about love. We all know that having our loved ones and/or family around us is the ROOT (alluding, alluding...) of what this time is supposed to be about. But the thing is, there's a few other elements tied in with these concepts of love: Expectation - a byproduct of the human experience; & Consumerism - a byproduct of capitalism.

Now, obviously can't get rid of either of these other factors - nor should we worry that its necessary. If yoga is about anything, its about finding balance, health, and happiness with the truth in front of you, whatever that may be. But often, the thing we forget in this season, is that can't nobody feel the love, if you
A) are doing it begrudgingly; and
B) have not been careful to take care of your own needs and heart.
Its easy as pie to get wrapped up in what you want, what your mother wants, what your partners' mother wants, what your boss wants, and then there's all the stuff.... gifts, decorations, baking, parties... we forget that a very important part of the pie is L O V E. So, for the next four weeks in my blogs and Sunday class, we'll be gearing up and getting you prepped to give and receive the love, unleash the power of BREATH, and get your body, mind, and heart ready with some tools to make it all happen.

Ok it's TERMS time.  If you don't care about the terms, skip down to the next fun colored section.
This is a timely little project, as I was just thinking its about time that I mention to my class the importance of both the bandhas, (or energy centers, often most easily thought of as a muscle group for starters) and the controlled breathing aspect of yoga, called pranayama. Which got me thinking how the heart center is activated by the breath. Which made me realize, well, if we're focusing on getting the heart ready for the holidays, I should talk about the heart chakra.  Except that the chakras (which are considered energy "wheels" or circles in constant motion which govern different parts of body functions and how they interact with the outside world) are "realized" from the bottom up, meaning its best to start with number one, get a concept of what the freakin thing is, start to feel it and think about it & understand its importance in life and health, and then move on up to the next chakra.

And wouldn't you know it -- the heart chakra is the 4th chakra, and there are four weeks till Christmas, and five weeks till New Years, and the fifth chakra is at the throat, which governs the intake and release of air. And when thinking of the throat region in terms of Vayus, which is another concept of how air and breath move through the body - the throat Vayu (called conveniently the Pranic Vayu) governs all the rest of the vayus, or air, throughout the body. Oh the circle of life. 

AND SO!  For the next four weeks - we'll spend a few minutes at the beginning of each class activating and getting familiar with the bandhas, practicing controlled pranayama, and thinking about how these help us to realize our chakras, one at a time, all the way up the heart (for loving yourself and others), and the throat, which is the access point for the breath, and source to facilitate allllll the other stuff.

So!  Tomorrow is the ROOT CHAKRA called MULADHARA. It means "foundation," influences the excretory and reproductive organs, and is ruled by the element of Earth.

Come to class over these next four weeks, and get ready to TREAT YOUR HEART WELL, so that you are goooood and ready for the holidays :)





I found this beautiful 
painting of Muladhara from 
California artist 



Saturday, November 22, 2014

What, What, What are you DOING?

Process: its how you get from A to B. To bake a cake there is a process. To launch a product there is a process. If you have a job - of any kind - chances are you understand that the "final deliverable" of whatever you do, is 1% of your job.  The rest of it is the process getting there.

There is a common phrase you'll hear in the yoga world (or at least the Astanga world) that says yoga is 99% practice, and 1% theory. Which I personally remind myself every time I can't remember the damned sanscrit name for a pose. My brain is just not fast at remembering terms and random factoids.  But processes: there I'm golden. (Good thing I'm a musician and a yogi right? Can you imagine, "Hello I'm Doctor Bliss, and you have an infection in your.... oh dear, what's it called?")

I'm re-using this fun little moving gif that I created for a post a few months back:

- partly cause it was a challenge to TAKE all the individual photos in the 3-second window from "click button" to "be in pose" so I wanna get some use out of this puppy.
- partly cause I'm too lazy and warm here in my bed on Saturday morning to get up and take a new picture for you all. Please forgive.
- partly cause these are great to look at process:

On first glance, here are the "end deliverables":
1 - reach hands up
2 - bend forward at the waist
3 - plank
4 - slow push-up for chaturanga dan
dasana

But lets talk about it from the perspective of process:
1 - reach hands up
     a. make sure feet are spread wide, even contact with the floor from all points of the foot
     b. feel your feet rooting down into the mat, but meanwhile lift energy up through the arches of the foot, and continue that muscular / energetic pull all the way up the legs to the hips
          i. toes are gently touching, heels are 1-2 inches apart, so as to open up the sacral muscles in your low back
          ii. legs are turning slightly in towards one another, activating this idea of a "hugging the middle line" up through the center of the body.
     c. feel the base of the spine strongly connected to the hips, and helping with the rooting sensation in the feet.
     d. feel the spine grow up gently out of the base, respecting your natural spinal curve.
     e. feel your shoulders resting on top of you elongated spine, as though they were placed on top of the spine, and are dangling around it, with a nice, relaxed, wide base across the clavicle and front of the shoulders.
     f. keeping this weighty, relaxed, "dangling" feeling in the shoulders, attempt to raise the arms to the sky, reaching out first, then swooping up, all the while, not allowing the shoulders to become part of the lift.
          i. take note that if you think of your arms as lifting up and out of the belly or even low back, it can help the feeling of keeping the shoulders down.

AND THAT'S JUST #1.  

So take that idea, and apply it to the harder poses. (This is also why its good to ask questions!) You will start to see that even in yoga, all the "end deliverables" (the shape, the pose, the form) is really just many many processes.

It's not about what you can or cannot do. 

IT'S ABOUT WHAT YOU'RE DOING.

Yoga with Calley at Yoga Garden Minneapolis:

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Ah yes, The horse.

This is a pre-emptive post for a lot of us - I will likely be linking back to it the first week of January, when we're all thinking about New Years' resolutions, and of course everyone's favorite one is something to do with health, wellness, or fitness. (Enter our magic friend yoga. Stick with her, she's slow to commit.)

But it's worth talking about while I'm revved up about it. Some days you just have to say, "Oh well, today I fell off. Tomorrow I'll get back on the horse."

Case in point - for the last 14 days or so I have be a BAD yogini... I was traveling for a tour with this lady, and you know, when you're traveling all day, playing shows at night, and then catching up with friends, or meeting new ones something has to give. So I did get on my mat a few times, and even got in a whole 45 minutes once on the trip. But mostly I did 10 minutes of salutations, and that has been it.

So what do I decide to do tonight?  Eat a bowl of crack-corn (as I call it) at midnight, when I'm teaching yoga in 10 hours, after not having taught for 2 weeks. I'm already off this damned horse, I figured I might as well get one last roll in the grass before I hop on back up.

I know, I know, there's all kinds of health professionals who would be telling me "never binge before you start (or return to) a routine."  You know what I say to them?  "It's one goddamned bowl of popcorn. It's not gonnna kill me, it makes me happy, and I'm still gettting on the freaking horse in the morning, leave me alone."

For real. This is why I chose yoga. Theres enough expectation out there to choke a bear. Yoga is a great place to just come to breathe, come to learn, come to turn off, and know that its always ok to just do what you can today. The yoga horse is chained to your ankle. He walks with you, and is always up for a trot around the block. You just have to show up :)

Yoga with Calley at Yoga Garden Minnneapolis:

Saturday, October 4, 2014

Get your insides ready for the "H word."

HOLIDAYS.  They'e coming. 

No - don't look at the displays in stores (that are already there on October 4th).  It cannot be healthy. You know what is? Getting your digestion ready. As in, help all that yummy food make its way through you, like its supposed to.  Read on. (there's a story.... as there always is with me.)

I have a tendency to be the kind of practitioner - in ALL my practices: music, yoga, cooking, teaching - who likes to get bare bones instruction and then physically figure it out on my own, trial and error. Yet, last weekend during master yogi Christina Sell's visit from Austin, we referenced B.K.S. Iyengar's Light On Yoga several times for alignment. (For those of you saying BK-WHA?? Iyengar is considered one of the modern-day grandfathers of yoga who helped bring its teachings to the western world).
So every once and a while I get on this kick of "oh yeah, lets read that book, written by that master." for a few weeks. Today marks day 2-in-a-row of me practicing with my trustee "yoga bible" Lino Miele's Astanga Yoga. 

So I'm sitting there on the floor in perhaps my favorite pose of them all: Paschimattanasana. (a.k.a. seated stretch.) And when I say favorite, I mean sometimes I will hang out here for fifteen minutes or more and simply RELISH in all that internal shifting. So I thought - what is it about this thing? Why does it feel SO good to me?  Well, according to Mr. Miele (and Astanga master Sri K. Pattabhi Jois, and a doctor, and a few other contributors), this pose is pretty key to all the abdominal organs, which all aid in digestion and blood purification. Which I found interesting (and telling) that I love this pose so much, and I happen to be someone with all kinds of interesting digestive issues (gluten, dairy, probably all kinds of other things I've never seemed to pinpoint). So it shouldn't be too surprising to see that this pose is like YOGA GOLD for digestion.
<-- This was literally me, sitting in one of the other poses (which happens to be super fun to say - all together now!: Triang Mukhaepada Paschimattanasana) reading about regular old Paschimattanasana and all the inner goodness it provides us.


Hoo ray for digestion!  There's more, come to class :)

Friday, September 5, 2014

Simple Repetition

There has been a re-occurring theme that keeps surfacing in fairly different areas of my life this year: overcoming fear.

We all have fears. 


For some of us even admitting that we are fearful of something IS the fear. (ahem, not that I know anyone like that, because I'm always fearless and powerful, and amazing. Oh wait. That's a lie.) And if you're anything like me, the fear comes from a bad habit: comparing ourselves and our skill(s) with those of people who happen to be better at said skill than we are, and expecting that we should somehow magically be as good as said person, even though we are avoiding the very thing that would bring about improvement.  Sound familiar?

You'll hear me say it a lot: I approach yoga from a practical stance. One of the ways I have combatted some of my fears --- and an approach I used DAILY as a classroom teacher and private lessons instructor is this concept:

Overcome your fears with simple repetition.


I got the idea from for this post from reading this article today (thanks to the lovely yogini Laurel Van Matre of Yoga Garden), and I love this quote from the article:

Article courtesy of Fast Company 
"The notion that a habit takes 21 days to form if you stick to it every day is a myth, says psychologist Jeremy Dean in his book Making Habits, Breaking Habits.
On average, a habit takes more like 66 days to form, with more intensive habits like doing 50 sit-ups every morning taking around 84 days to form, according to research out of University College of London that Dean references in his book. 

But these figures will often vary greatly from person to person."


In its simplest form, repetition is how habits are created. If you really think about it, this is how we create our lives. Most of what we do every day is simply a series of habits: where you buy your groceries, what time you leave for work in the morning, who you call when you're having a bad day, the first thing you do when you walk in the door... Creating new habits is hard because its unfamiliar. But breaking it down into something simple. And repetitive
And repetitive
And repetitive
And repetitive
And repetitive
And repetitive
And repetitive...

...makes it easier to pave the way for a new habit. Enter my argument (again) that Ashtanga is GREAT for the following people: 

Avoiders stand proud! 
Procrastinators unite! 
There's-not-enough-timer-ers stay busy! 
The fearful, shameful, and trepidatious be meek!

If you already know this is who you are, why worry so much about changing? Find a yoga that works for you! 

Ashtanga IS simple repetition. 

It's the same set of poses, in the same sequence. So it's a little easier, in my opinion, to create a new yoga habit with Ashtanga because there's no room for "If I try to practice on my own, I don't know what to do next," which is when the demons and distractions take over. Of course if you look at an entire 90-minute Ashtanga Primary Series you'll freak out because it looks like alien behavior. But remember, people who can do an entire series of Ashtanga have been practicing for YEARS, and probably on a daily basis. It's OK to just learn parts of it, and repeat that. Progress happens because of repetition. Whatever you repeat is what progresses. So focus on something simple and it will be easier to stick with it.


Yoga with Calley:
Sundays @ 10:00am - Abbreviated Ashtanga (for beginners!)
Tuesdays @ 6:30 pm - Full Circle Yoga


If you would like to schedule a private yoga session, or corporate yoga class for your company, please contact me:
p. 612.666.9183
e. calley@calleybliss.com