books, inspiration, yoga

Beginning: Meet Matthew Sanford

Matthew Sanford
As a yoga teacher, I’m very interested in getting involved with trauma recovery. I have some personal experience with post-traumatic stress disorder having endured it for a period of a few months following a fire that happened in my apartment building in September 2009. My experience doesn’t even begin to scratch the surface of the trauma that so many people go through not for months, but years, decades, lifetimes. My yoga and meditation practices have been with me now for over a decade, and they have never failed me. They helped me forgive, others and myself. They helped me grow and thrive, when I thought my very best hope was only to survive from day-to-day. Now having experienced their tremendous power, I want to gift them to others as a way of paying forward my gratitude.

My Uncle Tom recently sent me the URL for Matthew Sanford’s site. I had never heard of Matthew but from the moment I read the first line of his story I knew he would become a teacher for me: “It took a devastating car accident, paralysis from the chest down, and dependence on a wheelchair before I truly realized the importance of waking both my mind and my body.” Now a yoga teacher, author, speaker, nonprofit founder, and sustainable investor, Matthew’s wisdom gained from his own experience is transformative for anyone who comes into contact with him through any medium. He shares his own traumatic and harrowing story of tragedy and redemption, and how that journey brought him true awareness.

I encourage you to take a look at his website, read his book, and attend one of his events. He has much to share and we have much to learn.

1 thought on “Beginning: Meet Matthew Sanford”

  1. Christa,

    Yoga is like comfort food when you are emotionally needy. Yoga is like a warm security blanket on a cold, wintry night.
    Yoga is therapy without having to meet an actual therapist.

    Your wonderful and absorbing post reminded me about the power of yoga to cure and to heal our suffering and our pain.

    I feel happy for you that you managed to recover from the fire that engulfed your building. Such traumatic experiences can leave an indelible impression on our mind. It can make one feel less than one, in the immortal words of Joseph Brodsky.

    Recovering from that shock must have knocked the wind out of your sails, but you persisted in your yogic practice. In that sense, yoga is like a catharsis: it helps you to purge emotions and leaves you feeling like a whole person again.

    More power to you on your yogic quest and please do continue with this journey. Life is full of challenges. These stumbling blocks and tasks come to us thick and fast–oftentimes, without warning. Yoga helps us to cope. Thanks.

    Cheers.

    Like

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