Monday, December 10, 2012

Conscious Transitions






"One of the most important differences between a change and a transition is that changes are driven to reach a goal, but transitions start with letting go of what no longer fits or is adequate to the life stage you are in." --William Bridges

In our life's journey we are continuously dancing with change. However, in the midst of change, we don't always attend to the internal aspect that is in need of attention. Change may happen around us, but are we really making the deeper shifts within ourselves that will provide the movement into the next level of our personal evolution? Significant passages in our lives are often experienced with some sort of challenge or difficulty. The state of our health or relationships dissolve, a career may abruptly end or slowly drain of meaning; and even our deeply held spiritual beliefs may be questioned. Through the difficulty, we are given an opportunity to to grow and expand beyond anything we have known. Perhaps the "end" is ushering forth a new beginning.

The end of the calendar year is a great time to pause and honor any transitions that are happening in our lives now. What is it time to let go of? In acknowledging our transitions we can step forward into the new year consciously and clearly. Join me for this month's Soul Matters discussion on this theme. We will gather on Wednesday, December 19, 7:30-8:30 pm at One Yoga and Fitness: www.oneyogafitness.com. This is free and open to all! Please bring a journal and pen.

Monday, November 19, 2012

Spiritual Bypass



 
         Many of us embark on a spiritual path as a way of seeking meaning in our lives for the pain and suffering we feel both personally and in the larger world. Without a spiritual context, we can easily fall into an existential despair that deepens the suffering and immobilizes our mind and body. Each of us longs to be free from this kind of discomfort and spiritual pursuit offers a way through the confusion. However, the very source of our comfort may also be disguised as a trap door to deeper levels of abandonment-namely, to ourselves, the world and our obligations to serve humanity in a way that fosters liberation.

“Spiritual Bypass” is the term given to this use of spirituality that offers an escape from the tension inherent in our everyday lives. Rather than letting our lives be guided and informed by our spiritual practice, we use spirituality as a way of buffering ourselves from the difficulties in living. Instead of using the teachings from sacred traditions like a light that must be brought into the depths of our darkness, we deny our shadows and pretend that the light is all that exists. Used in these ways, spirituality is no different from other modes of anesthetizing our pain—drugs, food, sex, shopping, intellectualizing, spiritualizing…. What they all have in common is an ego that would rather do anything than face what hurts.

I am intimately familiar with this desire to replace living fully in this world with the seduction of existing in some other realm that feels less dense, dark and difficult. I am guilty of using spirituality in this way and I am working on addressing the underlying issues that have led to my own bypass. I recognize that this is a big issue for many seekers that are genuinely longing for a connection that transcends the corporeal. However, if we do not find very concrete ways of applying our discoveries, we risk creating a greater divide that will only cause more pain. This is why, I now believe, combining psychological therapy and spiritual practice is of the most benefit. Sometimes praying more, meditating longer, or going on yet another retreat is not enough. We have to face the issues that keep us bound and limited.

In an article I read recently on psychoanalysis and Buddhism, called Becoming Somebody and Nobody, (1993) the author—John Engler writes:

 
The therapeutic issue in psychotherapy and psychoanalysis is how to “regrow” a basic sense of self or how to differentiate and integrate a stable, consistent, and enduring self-representation. The therapeutic issue in Buddhism is how to “see through” the illusion or construct of the self. Are the two therapeutic goals mutually exclusive, as they appear to be? Or from a wider perspective might they actually be compatible? Indeed, might one be a precondition of the other…? Put very simply, you have to be somebody before you can be nobody. (119, italics mine)     
 
I think this is such an important point that is often missing in spiritual circles where people claim to have evolved beyond the issues of the ego. In reality, many have actually done little but bypass it entirely. We see this all the time in spiritual leaders that fall from grace after some incident often including one of the “lower” levels of consciousness (money, sex, and power) is uncovered. Perhaps, as Engler states, before we attempt to transcend our ego, we must first develop a healthy sense of self. Developmentally, just as a baby must first learn to crawl before it can walk, we must allow ourselves the proper time to develop spiritually as well. That means we need to attend to our suffering with the help of spirituality, but not as a way of covering it up. The function of psychotherapy is to help create a sense of inner cohesiveness by way of understanding our pathologies. In this view, where therapy ends--spirituality begins. However, it is not a linear process,—an evolution of consciousness involves a circling back many times to deeply held psychological issues with, perhaps, deeper insight. In fact, for some, it can be dangerous to embark on a spiritual path if a healthy sense of self has yet to be defined. It could lead to a spiritual crisis or emergency (another subject that I will expand on in the future) causing greater fragmentation and distress.

Is your mode of spirituality one that continually returns you back into this world or are you looking to escape? What are the ways in which you are able to apply your practice to your life? Are there any specific psychological issues present that need to be addressed? These are a few questions we can begin to ask ourselves regularly to keep us on track as we move forward on our path.
Here is Hafiz, the Sufi poet, pointing the way:

 

WISE MEN KEEP TALKING ABOUT

Time is the shop

Where everyone works hard

 

To build enough love

To break the

Shackle.

 

Wise men keep talking about

Wanting to meet Her.

 

Women sometimes pronounce the word God

A little differently:

They can use more feeling and skill

With the heart-lute.

 

All the world’s movement’s

Apparent chaos, and suffering I now know happen

In the Splendid Unison:

 

Our tambourines are striking

The same thigh.

 

Hafiz stands

At a juncture in this poem.

There are a thousand new wheels I could craft

On a wagon

And place you in—

Lead you to a glimpse of the culture

And seasons in another dimension.

 

Yet again God

Will have to drop you back at the shop

 

Where you will still have work

With

 

Love.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Engler, J. H. (1993). Becoming Somebody and Nobody: Psychoanalysis and Buddhism. In R. Walsh, Paths Beyond Ego The Transpersonal Vision (pp. 118-121). Los Angeles: Jeremy P. Tarcher.

 

Monday, October 1, 2012

Soul Matters




Soul Matters with Jenny Clarke


Every third Thursday of the month from 7:30-8:30pm
One Yoga and Fitness/1214 Bowman St. Clermont
“One of the most calming and powerful actions you can do to intervene in a stormy world is to stand up and show your soul. Soul on deck shines like gold in dark times. The light of the soul throws sparks, can send up flares, builds signal fires, causes proper matters to catch fire. To display the lantern of soul in shadowy times like these - to be fierce and to show mercy toward others, both, are acts of immense bravery and greatest necessity. Struggling souls catch light from other souls who are fully lit and willing to show it. If you would help to calm the tumult, this is one of the strongest things you can do.”  --Clarissa Pinkola Estes


Each of us comes into this world with a soul as unique as our fingerprints. Truly we are on a spiritual journey together. This will be a casual discussion forum open to anyone interested in topics related to life, the soul and spirituality. We will be discussing SOUL matters. Why? Because soul MATTERS! Each month a different theme or idea will be presented as a way of opening the circle and time given for all to listen and share your own perspective or understanding. It is free and open to all who are hungry for a meaningful connection… Feel free to bring a journal and pen.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

 
 
 
 
 
Maybe one hour
is all we have
to know about
the many deaths we've
survived.
 
Time submits
while eternity
steps into
 the gap
made deep by grief.
 
The hot wind and tree stained water
our only memories
of home.
 
One moment-
perhaps only now-
to remember what it is
to be alive

with all of the elements
of infinity swirling
inside.
 


Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Back to School



For several years I have been dreaming of going back to school.  I have been mostly home raising children for the past six years and although I am grateful for the challenge and the privilege of being a stay at home mama, I have been desperate for the kind of stimulation that ensues from learning and exchanging ideas.  I have been on a trajectory of self-discovery for most of my adult life, so I knew that I would need something that would support that kind of inquiry and discussion.  I love the study and practice of yoga and spirituality and am passionate about the mind/body/heart interplay.  The work in the world that I am most interested in is that which helps people transform into their greatest selves.  For me, going back to school to study Transpersonal Psychology is the perfect next step in my evolution.  And better yet, I can study and learn in an on-line forum that provides the flexibility of still being on the home front with my kids.  I enrolled in the Global Masters Program at Sofia University (formerly The Institute of Transpersonal Psychology).  www.sofia.edu

So what exactly is transpersonal psychology?  It is an integrative/holistic perspective that includes behavioral, cognitive and humanistic paradigms in addition to a spiritual perspective that has heretofore been absent in many therapeutic models of psychotherapy.  Psychology as understood from its Greek root psyche (soul) is, essentially, the study of the soul.  When we view our lives (including our dysfunction) from this perspective the possibility to heal becomes a matter of not just how we behave or what we think, but also (vitally) our state and level of consciousness.  And we know from the ancient wisdom traditions that our connection to consciousness is the path to health and well being in the greatest sense.  Ultimately "transpersonal" is an experience of ourselves and our lives as multi-dimensional beings created with a purpose. The path is the discovery of our true Self.

I recently returned from the opening seminar of the program in California. The theme of the week was "The Call To Adventure In A Time Of Change And Possibility." Inherent in the transpersonal approach is an emphasis not only on study but also personal practice and application to our everyday life experiences. Over sixty of us gathered from all over the world in response to a deeper call to live in congruence with our soul longing. It was a powerfully transformative experience that has already begun to alter my life in ways I can not yet completely understand. During the week I came to terms with the fact that I need to dedicate this next year of my life to this process of change and creating the space necessary for the emergence of what is longing to be expressed in my life. It is time again for me to really work on myself so that when the time comes, I might be given the honor to help others in the same way. Nothing excites me more than exploring what is possible when we are willing to let go of our limitations and live the adventure that is our authentic calling. 

So this is what I'll be up to for the next two years!  Pictured above are just a few of the books I will be reading in this first semester--truly it is like Christmas each day I open the mailbox and find another book I can't wait to read waiting for me.  I look forward to sharing my insights, inspirations and challenges here and welcome your questions and comments.   

Yours with sharpened pencils,
Jenny

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Got Sensitivity?


   

      Do you consider yourself a sensitive person?  Or has anyone ever told you that you are "too sensitive?"  If not, I am sure that someone in your sphere of existence is.  Sensitivity can be far more than just an increased emotional experience of life, but rather a physiological predisposition in which one's nervous system is actually quite acute and processes the information or stimulation of life at a more rapid rate than some other people.  Perhaps loud noises create extreme discomfort or bright flashing lights and large crowds of people.  Individuals that are highly sensitive may also be empathic, that is, they tend to "feel" others deeply and are very responsive to others' emotions whether exposed or hidden.  Througout history, people in all walks of life, but especially poets and artists have often been sensitive in some of these ways which has fostered thier creativity, but they are also subject to the shadow side of sensitivity which can easily lead to depression, addiction and isolation.

     In addition to heightened sensory experience, creativity and empathy I have recognized deep sensitivity among both depressed and anxious people, those suffering food allergies and environmental disorders, "mystery" diseases such as chronic fatigue syndrome, and fibromyalgia, and addicts that are naturally very empathic.  When not managed properly, our sensitivity can push us toward isolation, a constant state of feeling overwhelmed, fearful and sad without being able to identify why, constant issues of unworthiness, stuck or blocked creativity, and inhabiting the body only partially.  Like all challenges, being highly sensitive has both its dark and light sides.  Many are drawn to spirituality and mysticism, the healing professions or teaching in some capacity and tend to be very intuitive.  Highly sensitive people have much to offer their families or communities and world at large but prefer finding their own way of expressing themselves.  Most, but not all, sensitives are introverts and prefer a more quiet approach to life and work.  Unfortunately our culture places a significant value on the personality that is "out there" and often like the loudest child in the family, gets the most attention.  This sends a message to those who operate under different conditions that they we are not good enough and should be more like them in order to be successful. 


     It comes as no surprise that much of my own depression came from great sensitivity.  I believe that as I have learned to hold both the gifts and limitations of sensitivity with equality and become involved in work that allows me to use my intuition and knowledge together, I have been able to heal.  Now as a parent, I recognize a similar sensitivity in one of my children and am learning how to parent in a way that will hopefully encourage the gift as well as support the passage through the difficulties.  As valuable and empowering as it can be to recognize yourself as highly sensitive and understand that there really is nothing inherently "wrong" with you, it can also become an identity trap that will only limit your full range of being.  So use it wisely to help you learn about yourself but be careful not to attach too concretely to any "type." 

     I hope to work with HSP's* more in the future but for now here are the five main keys I would offer to anyone who is highly sensitive and looking for help:

  • Support--know that you are not alone and that it is important to find someone or a group of people that sees, hears and understands you.
  • Accept--use your sensitivity to recognize that you have a gift rather than hide behind it (which is what most sensitives would rather do)!
  • Empower/Embody--get into your body--commit to a physical practice like yoga that will help you ground and open safely.
  • Align with the Highest--nurture your spirituality by connecting deeply with your heart and studying a sacred tradition that resonates with you.  Focus on developing the qualities of the heart: forgiveness, love, compassion, gratitude, etc.
  • Give--share your gifts with someone in need.  Perhaps a healing touch or simple smile or any way that feels most natural for you to offer your sensitivity to another.
     Sensitivity is synonymous with being concious, keen, knowing, perceptive and responsive when expressed positively.  These qualities are imperative for us to live whole and sustainable lives.

     Below are a couple of resources that I have found helpful in understanding sensitivity:

*"Highly Sensitive Person" from the work of Elaine Aron on the subject.  She wrote both The Highly Sensitive Person and The Highly Sensitive Child ( http://www.hsperson.com/)

Susan Cain wrote a wonderful book on introverts--check it out here: http://www.thepowerofintroverts.com/

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Picture Perfect


Recently in a yoga class I asked the group if anyone thought of themselves as a perfectionist.  At first I saw one or two low hanging hands and upon further prompting at least half of the class sheepishly admitted to the title.  I was in good company because it is something I have wrestled with as well.  As I looked at those around me that admitted their tendency to perfectionism I saw such strength, creativity, discipline and sensitivity.  Perhaps perfectionism isn't all bad.  But it can, however, also be quite debilitating if we aren't fully aware of just why and how our quest for perfection can paralyze us and create a deep rift between who we think we should be and who we are at any moment.  We create pictures of what it means to be a perfect mother, wife, son, employee, American, Christian (Muslim, Buddhist), etc. and then hold ourselves prisoner within the confines of that exact picture.  We create a separation between ourselves as we really are as well as anyone who doesn't live up to our expectations (we like to call them "high standards-" it sounds more appropriate). 

Research psychologist Brene Brown (http://www.brenebrown.com/) wrote an incredible book that I highly recommend to all recovering perfectionists called The Gifts of Imperfection.  It is one of those books that calls forth lots of light bulb moments but one that really got me is when she writes:

"Where perfectionism exists, shame is always lurking.  In fact, shame is the birthplace of perfectionism." (italics mine)

Shame! It is the last thing we want to talk about.  We use perfectionism to protect ourselves from seeking out the places within ourselves where we feel shame.  Those are the voices that tell us we will never be good enough.  Always wounded; never satisfactory.  We can all identify such areas in our lives: body image, career, parenting, relationships, money, etc.  And Brown advocates the cultivation of shame "resiliency" by consciously choosing to be vulnerable. That means we have to talk about it--with someone we trust--as a way of bringing to light what thrives in darkness and secrecy.  Own your story and you won't be controlled by it. 


For me, personally, I encountered shame around the fact that for years I struggled with depression and had to take medication to feel like I could be in the world with some semblance of peace.  At the same time I was starting a path in the healing arts and yoga and the voice of shame that stalked me was: "how can you possibly be teaching healing and wellness when you are being treated for clinical depression?" And I began to create a separation between myself as a healer/teacher and myself as depressed and seemingly "broken."  This only seems to magnify the shame and it wasn't until I really worked to integrate these two aspects of myself that deeper healing was able to take place. 


As practitioners of yoga, we can use our practice to heal our bodies and minds from this shame and blame that keeps us stuck in a deep groove of unworthiness and thwarts us from living fully.  In many of the wisdom traditions, stories are told of the "village idiot" or the "fool" that everyone believes knows nothing and is worthless.  But they always turn out to be the wise ones that carry an important message for the community at large.  I like to think that we all carry this quality within us and especially those of us that believe we have to "have it all together" (perfectly) can benefit from allowing ourselves to learn from this part that isn't afraid to look ridiculous or make plenty of mistakes on our way to wholeness.  These very same traditions also purport that the deepest essence of who we are is perfect and when we experience ourselves from this perspective there is nothing we have to "do" to prove that.

This week take some time to write in a journal your own story regarding shame and then choose a way that you can allow yourself to be safely vulnerable in sharing your story with a partner or friend.  And take it to the mat--shame often lives in the belly or solar plexus--breathe into those areas and offer yourself the qualities of courage and compassion.  See yourself as perfectly imperfect! And know you are not alone.

And here is Brene Brown in a funny and inspiring Ted talk on vulnerability: http://www.ted.com/talks/brene_brown_on_vulnerability.html


Friday, June 8, 2012



For the past six weeks my family and I have watched a bird create a nest home in one of the tall bushes just outside of our front windows.  The kids and I were amazed at how fast this mama bird gathered sticks and wove them together to create a sweet little abode.  Within a week or so, four small blue and black spotted eggs showed up and we were so thrilled that things were progressing so quickly.  Each day we would go out and check the nest to note any changes.  By the third week there were only three eggs; the forth we found lying on the ground broken under the bush.  My three year old was quite concerned and repeated all day to anyone who we met--"we had four eggs, but now we only have three."  She focused on what had changed with some remorse, while my five year old son remained positive and replied each time with: "well at least we still have three!"  A perfect first lesson in the proverbial glass half full or empty.

 I admit that I have gotten quite invested in the whole experience myself, often being the first to check the nest situation out in the morning in case any big changes arose that I would have to navigate through later.  And in a way this little bird has been a great reminder for me of some important lessons I was in need of as well.  For example, I have been in a bit of an introspective space lately, really enjoying more time to be quiet and practice slowing down.  I have felt the need to pull back from some of my work outside the home and have felt the urge to "nest" with my family.  Typically this is what women experience close to birthing a baby; and although I am not physically pregnant, I definitely have been in the midst of a reordering/restructuring of my life in preparation for a new beginning.  I have been nurturing creation by being more present with my family and focusing on enjoying the simple moments of each day.  My challenge comes with being at peace with my choice to be less in the world at this time and working toward some career goals.  Every time I walk by the window and see mama bird sitting in that nest, I see myself almost in mirror image protecting, warming, and nurturing my own family with a sense of renewed purpose.  I am reminded again by a simple piece of guidance that one of my spiritual guides often gives: Don't make a separation between anything you see or do.  In other words, relate to all aspects of yourself and your life with love and care and be careful of making anything more or less important.  Whatever I am doing now can be considered holy and precious work.  Everything is from the One and returns back to that One.   

Yesterday's nest report was still three eggs and holding.  This morning's nest check revealed our first baby!  (S)he is so tiny and is lying partly on top of the only egg left-I am not sure where the third egg went?  Mama bird has been back and forth quite a bit and I can't stop checking on her baby whenever she leaves.  Truly I feel like that little one could be my own!  I have been acutely aware during this journey with the birds, that the process of coming to this earth may appear simple to some, but I am beginning to think it might actually be quite an amazing feat.  As the great Jungian analyst, Clarissa Pinkola Estes says, perhaps the act of incarnation itself takes eons as our souls wait for suitable parents, location in the world, and the exact conditions required for the fulfillment of our purpose.  And even at that, not every one makes it.  My children are learning about the fragility of life through this nature show right outside our window.  And today from my little stucco nest I appreciate my own life and my two babies that still really need this mama bird close!

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

The Survival Trap

There are far too many survivors in this world.  By that, I don't mean to undermine those who are battling some disease and fighting for their life, but rather to highlight the truth that many of us have become content with survival and have lost sight of what it is to THRIVE.  Thriving is being open to experiencing yourself more fully and to live in wonder at what is possible for you now.  But first, tell the truth about why you have chosen apathy over living your deepest desires.  Usually some fear will be uncovered and that fear is a doorway to freedom.  Go through it in any way and with any means available.  Just do it.

Once on the other side ask: What brings me alive?  In what circumstances do I feel most free and at peace?  I have come to see that everything in our lives, even the pain and difficulty, is a call for us to awaken to our soul--to the call of our spirit to live more fully within what is possible for us in any given moment.  Be gentle as you awaken to your essential nature, it can be tiring for the body and mind to be so luminous.  Be generous with those around you who are awakening in their way and in their time, it is easy to slip into judgement when you feel "more enlightened."  Most of all, try to be grateful for where you are and what you have now and be present to the truth that you are free and you are alive and all is well.

"Don't ask what the world needs.  Ask what makes you come alive, and go do it.  Because what the world needs is people who have come alive."  Howard Thurman

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Healing the Heart--Part II




In the former post on healing I introduced the concept of using body awareness and breath to begin to cultivate a deeper relationship with our bodies and minds.  Of course this is a very rich subject and I am certain that future posts will offer more in the way of insight and information in that arena. But for purposes of getting a broader view, I'd like to move on to the next level in personal healing.  It is fitting that I am writing this on the first day of February--a month dedicated to love!  That is precisely the quality that we are seeking when we are involved in this work of making ourselves whole.  In fact, I shared with my yoga classes today the Latin root of the word "courage" comes from cor which means heart.  One original definition of the word courage was "To speak one's mind by telling all one's heart."  This suggests that a willingness to be wholehearted in our lives is key to living authentically.  Brene Brown wrote a wonderful book called "The Gifts of Imperfection" on this subject.  (Note to self--a future post on healing perfectionism, specifically, is on the horizon)! 

So once we begin to gain access to ourselves by sensitising to our feelings in connection to our bodies, the heart begins to open automatically and we may even find ourselves feeling things that we haven't actually felt in a long time.  This can make way for memories to surface, dreams may become more lucid, etc.  And for most of us there is an overwhelming sense that there just "has to be more" to our experience than what our sensory experience makes clear.  This is such an important feeling to listen to and move toward.  However, this requires quite a bit of courage because for most of us to open beyond what is familiar or comfortable can be unsettling.  Again, this is where a practice (like yoga) can aid us in opening (stretching!) beyond our limits with wisdom and intelligence in order to grow and ultimately find greater freedom. 

I don't know many grown people who haven't endured a fair amount of heartbreak in their lives.  It can begin in childhood with parenting (or lack of) issues, and later with unrequited love, divorce, loss of loved ones, and any type of pain caused by relationships gone bad. . . . Who hasn't had to deal with such things?  The good news is that this is all fodder for healing on a deeper level.  Healing the heart is about invoking the qualities of forgiveness, compassion, love, acceptance, gratitude and so on.  This is usually the point in one's life path that she begins to seek out different spiritual paths that can offer a context for all that is surfacing.  Again, follow this prompting of your heart.  I recognize that this is a touchy subject for a lot of people (pun!) and to be clear, I am not pushing any one path.  I can only share my experience and I offer it in a spirit of respect.  I spent many years seeking and studied several different religions/spiritual paths.  In fact one of my B.A. degrees is in Comparative Religion because it is a subject of immense personal interest.  To make a long story abbreviated, I settled on the Sufi Spiritual path after meeting my guide in 2002.  The Sufis have been referred to as the "mad lovers of God" and Sufism is a path of Love.  Rumi and Hafiz, the widely regarded poets, were Sufis.  I found that if I was really serious about going deeper into my heart/consciousness that I needed a teacher or guide.  A simple analogy: if you are travelling to a foreign country and know nothing about where to go or how to get around, you would like to have a map--and perhaps better yet, a guide or someone that knows the landscape well in order to show you around, right?  Well this is what an established path and teacher, guide, guru, saint, or holy person can do for our walking.  Perhaps, for many, seeking a new path isn't necessary, but going deeper into your own is what is required.  Ironically, the Sufi path has brought me closer to my own Christian roots and the teachings of Jesus, and my family and I go to church weekly.  When we get caught in making pictures about what we think is right, based on our limited understanding (or wounds) then we stop ourselves from the purpose for which we were created: to know Love (or God, Jesus, Allah, Buddha).  And this Love (Divinely inspired) is what heals.  Often it arrives unlike what we'd expect.  But if you are sincere and wholehearted in what you desire and work to align your heart with this love by healing all that keeps you from it, then you are on your way to significant transformation.  My guide, Sidi Al-Jamal says:

 "When you find the love, you find yourself.  The secret is in the love.  You are the love, not another.  Everything is in the love, and everything needs the love.  If you find this, what more could you want?  When you have the knowledge of the love, you feel peace in your heart.  The jewels are inside you."

Contemplate this quote and decide for yourself what it means.  It is the heart of my own daily practice and what calls me back again and again when I go astray.  The greatest healing occurs when we can apply this kind of remembrance to our pain and suffering.  It is the essence of Sufi healing and something I look forward to sharing much more of, perhaps, in a workshop setting this Spring! 

Here is a simple exercise to get you started on your own healing:  set aside some quiet time with your journal and a pen.  Sit comfortably and close your eyes.  Let your awareness settle in your heart and breathe there gently.  Notice how your heart feels (expanded, constricted, shaky, still, hot, cold, colors, images, voices?)  and write down what you experience.  Go back inside and use your awareness to "go behind" that first experience and move a little deeper.  Use your breath to open your heart and move inside a bit deeper.  From that place ask your heart for a word or image to connect you to the Divine.  Pause and allow as much time as necessary.  I find that for many people this comes very quickly but the mind enters with doubt and uncertainty.  Trust what comes!  And spend 3-5 minutes with the word or image and pay attention to what (if anything) arises.  Be sure to make notes, or draw in your journal.  If possible practice this simple meditation each day in conjunction with any other practices you may already have in place.  It will begin to strengthen the qualities that you may need for your own healing on any given day.  Stay open and have the courage to move into your heart.  Your own healing in this capacity, is precisely the medicine our world is in dire need of now! 

With Love,
Jenny

Monday, January 23, 2012

On Healing--Part One



This past weekend I was granted the rare treat of being alone for several uninterrupted hours in my own home.  The kids were with the grandparents and my hubby took his chance to ride his motorcycle (his way of treating himself to some precious quiet time).  After some prayer and meditation time and the bliss of savoring a hot cup of coffee, I rolled out my yoga mat and lavished in a two hour practice that left me feeling amazingly expansive and bright. (Above photo was the view from my mat).  At a certain point during the practice I could feel, almost palpably, a sense of healing taking place.  I just knew that was what was at work.  At that particular time it came with a vast sweetness that was soft, encompassing, and spacious.  And I knew that was the medicine I needed specifically to generate my current healing.  One of the things I have come to accept is that healing can happen in an infinite number of ways and that really what matters most is our level of readiness and receptivity to what comes.  Fundamentally, are you really ready to heal? 

For just a moment, pause and think about what images, places, people, or things comes to you when you say the word "healing."  Perhaps something in nature arises, or a certain person, or location you have visited, or experience you have had, or maybe music, art, food. . . .  Notice what you are drawn to.  Chances are there is an important clue there for your own healing.  In fact, I would suggest placing yourself there more often to begin the conversation.  Yoga practice continues to offer up a rich landscape for my own healing and for those I see in my classes weekly.  In fact, if I had to sum up in a single word what yoga means for me I'd say "healing." 

When I began yoga in 1995 as a college student, I had already been battling depression for several years and was seeking relief from what felt impossible to overcome.  If you have ever experienced the depths of depression you know how difficult it becomes to function on a purely physical level.  In fact, most of the time I only felt partially in my body, and it certainly was not comfortable when I was there.  The physical practice called me back again and again to this home that I was continually seeking to abandon.  It provided a way back into my body that felt safe and gave me the tools to learn how to ground myself so as to begin to build a new foundation upon which to stand.  Simply by learning to feel my feet and legs, breathe into my belly and stand tall, something very deep was being templated into my consciousness that offered a new way of living. According to Somatic Therapy, all of our experiences are stored in the tissues of the body and particularly traumatic events can cause deep tension, contraction or even illness that can eventually develop in the body.   Despite individual circumstances, I'd say this is where the healing journey begins: in the development of body awareness.  And of course there are many practices that can help with this, but yoga continues to be the modality that I return to.  Through the practice of postures (asanas) with particular focus on the breath, we can begin to develop a new relationship with ourselves by tuning in and listening to the voice of the body via sensation and feeling.  "Feeling" in this context surpasses "emotion" in its range and diversity of experience.  Feelings can contain and take on a multitude of forms including sensation, shape, color, texture, temperature, etc.  At a base level, the yoga practice is a way of cultivating a deeper and more intimate relationship with ourselves that is based on love, acceptance, gratitude, etc.  That, in itself, is very healing for those of us who are in continuous conflict with the way we treat the body; not to mention being a captive to the inner dialog that can be incessantly negative.  In working specifically with the alignment of the body--stacking bones, lengthening muscle, placing ourselves in space in a particular way; with a specific intention to open and create space for ourselves, a greater coherence begins to develop between the body and mind.  It becomes clear, many times in just one or two sessions, how focus on the physical body in this way facilitates a clearer connection to our minds and hearts.  In time the membrane between body/mind/heart becomes more permeable and we gain deeper access into our essential nature.  I am fascinated with learning more about the body and its various systems as it pertains to fostering a deeper knowledge of myself even beyond the limits of the structure itself.  The body is truly a gateway. It is not to be denied, beat into submission or even transcended.    Many spiritual traditions refer to the body as a temple or sacred place.  I have come to share that belief.  And when we approach ourselves in this way, we begin to reconsider our choices with regard to lifestyle, relationships, and so on. . . .

Coming home to my own body in this way was the first step in my own healing journey.  Sometimes this "step" can span the length of years in terms of healing.  But by doing so, we take responsibility for ourselves in a way that no one else can!  It becomes quite a wonderful adventure to really be present and feel our aliveness and connection to others in a brand new way.  Desikachar, one of the teachers to bring Yoga to the West says, "Yoga is about making the impossible, posssible; and the possible, easy."  This has certainly been the case for me in terms of depression.  Possibility fills me (most days) and I no longer feel that deep fragmentation of living only half-alive.  Yoga is a bridge that connects spiritual and physical in me.  This practice continues to uplift, inspire and empower my life.  And once we make this connection to ourselves through the physical practice, our heart begins to open naturally.  And this is the next step into deeper healing and greater joy!  Stay tuned for more to come; in the meantime involve yourself in those things that heal you:) xoxo

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Beginner's Mind

"In the beginner's mind there are many possibilities, but in the expert's there are few."
-Shunryu Suzuki Roshi

 Several years ago I had the honor of spending some precious time at The San Francisco Zen Center.  I began with a two week guest/student program, living right in the Zen Center and then moved a few blocks away and continued to take classes and practice meditation daily.  In many ways that time in my life felt like a continuous beginning.  Everyday really was brand new--living in such an amazing city provided new possibilities for discovery at every turn.  Often I'd leave my apartment without any plan and simply choose a direction in which to walk.  I'd find a cafe, bookstore, museum, or park and investigate for, sometimes, an entire day.  Even after two years in the Bay Area I'm sure I didn't see half of what was there. 

Now, my life is quite different and I admittedly have fallen into a routine with two small children that often feels a bit like groundhog day. . . making lunches, changing diapers, reading the same book (again!), doing laundry (again!!), and seeing the very same people everyday dropping off and picking up from school. . . . It seems to go on like this for a while until I intentionally pause and actually practice a different perspective.  Beginner's Mind is a wonderful way to practice being where we are (perhaps for the gazillionth time) with an attitude that is open, curious, and willing to show up in a new way.  Our lives get so crowded with expectations and assumptions that we actually think we know something! And while this may provide a certain level of comfort and security, it also has a narcoleptic effect that causes us to miss big chunks of what is actually happening around us and we lose that sweet sense of innocence and simplicity that we came into this life with.  Very often when I am reading the same book to my children and I am reciting from memory the words, I will look at their faces, intent and thrilled by what they are experiencing seemingly for the first time!  And through them, I attempt to make myself a bit more available to the wonder of what is before me.  Simple, but not easy.

I love teaching yoga to beginner's because it reminds me of what it is to learn something new! And for the same reason, I love to practice challenging poses that throw me flat on my face and keep me in the fertile territory of student.  Once we think we've "mastered" or "achieved" something, this potential within us is limited to that particular place or experieince leaving little room for much else.  So the yoga practice, like zazen, is a way into this landscape of "original mind."

Suzuki Roshi says in his book, Zen Mind, Beginners Mind: "So the most difficult thing is always to keep your beginner's mind.  There is no need to have a deep understanding of Zen. . . . This is also the real secret of the arts: always be a beginner.  Be very careful about this point.  If you start to practice zazen, you will begin to appreciate your beginner's mind.  It is the secret of Zen practice."

So here's to beginning. Again. 

What task, practice or relationship can you use to practice beginner's mind this week? 

Thursday, January 5, 2012

If you're not happy Now. . .

I don't really have time to be writing a blog. . .but it is time.  I have had this little chunk of Internet space for two years now and I am ready.  My intention here is to share my personal experience with healing and to offer a forum for a conversation to take place around various topics such as yoga, healing, spirituality, conscious parenting/living, and holistic health.  I have spent over a decade now studying, practicing and offering healing from many traditions including Ayurveda, energy healing, vibrational medicine, Sufi spiritual healing, herbs, aromatherapy, etc.  One of the most important things I have learned is that "healing" is very different from "curing."  To embark on a healing journey we must be willing to let go of what we think is best for us and offer ourselves to a deeper process that is as unique as each of us.  A certain combination of practices may work for one and not another--but the key is to continue to seek; not to give up.  Usually a combination of modalities (rather than just one thing) is necessary and it may take some time (yes, years) to find what works.  But it is out there-or IN there as I have come to find. 

I teach and practice yoga and I love to run.  Since having kids, running has become one of my spiritual practices! At home I roll out the yoga mat and the little monkeys are climbing all over me, but when I put on my running shoes everyone knows I intend some alone time.  I don't even listen to music anymore when I run.  I use the first mile to empty-to breathe out anything stagnant and make some space. From there, I just try to make myself available to whatever needs to enter.  Sometimes nothing, sometimes a major "download" regarding what I am to do next, most often a whisper that reminds me that all is well and equilibrium is restored! Today was such a day when the latter happened.  I am working on being more present to my life as it is now rather than wishing for something else.  I looked around and saw the trees, felt the sun, noticed the little "diamonds" sparkling on the path of the trail, and felt grateful for my life.  I heard (or felt) very clearly: "If you are not happy now, you won't be then."  I really let that sink in as I made my way back to my house.  As a result, I feel strangely content.  And even more so now that I have shared this with you.  Writing has always nurtured me and I look forward to finally sharing in this capacity in the year to come!