creativity, design, environment, imagination, innovation, inspiration

Leap: New York Begins Its Quest for the LowLine, an Underground Park on the LES

Image courtesy of Delancey Underground

Is it technically “leap” or “jump” – as in down the rabbit hole below Delancey Street?

You’ve got 37 more days to back an incredible public works project known as the LowLine that promises to bring a year-round underground park to New York’s Lower East Side. The project envisions a re-purposing of a long-abandoned trolley terminal into a wonderland of green space, a badly needed amenity in that part of town.

When I read the article in GOOD yesterday, the concept was brand new to my ears and I jumped up out of my chair from excitement. It’s quite possibly the most innovative use of public space I’ve ever seen. The idea alone is enough to make any and every New Yorker crack open their wallets to support the vision. Go to the site to see the proposed images and the deal is sealed.  And that’s just the reaction that the founding team is hoping for!

Founder Dan Barasch and James Ramsey posted the project on Kickstarter (where it seems that all good project ideas are housed these days) they need our help to gain $100,000 in collective funding by April 6th to show local government that New Yorkers want to see this vision brought to life.

Join the effort for Delancey Underground and support it with as little as a buck. Let’s get this done!

yoga

Leap: Compass Yoga Adds a Weekly Class at the Epiphany Branch of the New York Public Library

Logo designed by Kyle Waldrep

I’m thrilled to announce that this Saturday from 11:00am – 12:00 noon Compass Yoga is adding another free weekly class to our roster!

Newly-minted teachers Lindsay and Frances will rotate to bring free weekly yoga to the Epiphany Branch of the New York Public Library located at 228 East 23rd Street between 2nd and 3rd Avenues.The class is suitable for students of all levels. Please bring your own mat or towel, and any props that you wish to use.

Wait a minute! Didn’t I write a post almost exactly like this a few weeks ago? Yes. Yes, I did. We’re expanding and now have two classes on Saturdays – this new class at Epiphany for the Downtowners and the class at Riverside for the Uptowners. Plus our weekly class on Thursday nights for the Way-Uptowners like me at Bloomingdale, which is just about to hit its one year anniversary. (Woohoo!) And we’ve got more on the way – details coming in the next few weeks.

We hope you’ll join us at any or all of our classes and spread the word to your friend, family, neighbors, and your favorite coffee cart barista. More information on all of our classes is available at http://compassyoga.com. See you on the mat!

writing, yoga

Leap: Those Who Heal, Teach – My Writing on the Therapeutic Yoga Training Program Website

I am incredibly honored to have my writing featured on the Therapeutic Yoga Training Program website. I took this training with the incredible Cheri Clampett and Arturo Peal at Integral Yoga NYC last year. It changed my view of the world and my place within it. There are not enough words to thank Cheri and Arturo for their guidance and generosity in sharing their gifts, though I gave it a whirl in this piece.

Cheri and Arturo will be gracing the New York City stage again in June at Integral. Spend two weekends with them and watch your path open up before you.

Those Who Heal, Teach

“People who practice yoga and meditation are the most courageous people in the world. They are willing to sit with their pain in order to heal it. I don’t know anyone who’s had an easy life. Do you? Trauma and suffering are part of the human experience. Give yourself over to explore it; go into it. We are so complex and so amazing.” ~ Cheri Clampett, Yoga Therapist and Teacher

“Toni Morrison said, ‘The function of freedom is to free someone else,’ and if you are no longer wracked or in bondage to a person or a way of life, tell your story. Risk freeing someone else.” ~ Anne Lamott, author of Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life

New York City has a yogic dilemma: though an increasing number of people are practicing yoga, the paid opportunities for new teachers to teach full-time are tough to come by if they rely solely on the traditional yoga studio model. To make their way as full-time teachers, they need to expand their vision of who needs yoga and how best to provide it to non-traditional populations. We have to carve our own paths, rather than taking the predetermined ones defined by existing studios and the model upon which they’re all built. We need to grow the yoga market as a whole, and to do that we must draw upon a very deep understanding of our own yoga practice.

My opportunity to teach yoga full-time appeared slowly over the course of a year after I completed my teacher certification. My vision crystallized during Cheri Clampett and Arturo Peal’s Therapeutic Yoga Teacher Training at Integral Yoga. I originally started to practice yoga as a form of healing. I was under a tremendous amount of stress and anxiety from a very early age, and went through several bouts of PTSD as well as a lifelong battle with chronic insomnia. Nearly 20 years after his passing, I have now come to understand that my father had PTSD that went untreated for 40 years and ultimately it claimed his life after it caused him to develop an addiction to alcohol.

It was difficult for me to embrace all of this information; I had worked very hard for many years to suppress it far below the surface and suddenly in this therapeutic training this information would no longer lay in wait. It forced its way up into my consciousness and refused to be ignored any longer.

Luckily I was in the care of great expert guides. In every session, Cheri and Arturo would give us tiny jewels of wisdom and I picked each one up so carefully, grateful for its comfort. They helped me see beyond the walls I had constructed around my life for so long; they expanded my view of what I have to learn as a student and what I have to offer as a teacher.

Arturo taught me that a student who’s uncomfortable needs one of two things – support or space. Cheri taught me that I didn’t need to be ashamed of feeling so broken because everyone is always healing in one way or another. I was not alone on the path, and so I could keep going. The freedom I wanted would never be mine so long as I suppressed my pain; what I needed to do to be truly free was to give myself over to the pain. In that way, it would be healed. I knew that Cheri and Arturo’s training would help me to help others; I didn’t expect it to help me heal so profoundly. Of course, the deeper my healing, the more I am able to provide to my students. It is a virtuous cycle.

Cheri and Arturo helped me to understand how my own trauma, and the subsequent healing, could be the asset to help others through my teaching. I could use what I know, what I understand from my own practice and life, as my greatest resource. For a year I tried a countless number of avenues to make a go of full-time teaching. I kept looking for answers “out there” and tried a number of experiments that didn’t pan out as I hoped they would.

The practice of therapeutic yoga helps us to look deeply inside and tap our own wisdom, our own sense of prajna, “knowing beyond knowing”. The answers I sought to find were with me all along, and the practice of svadhyaya, self-study, helped me to recognize it. My true teaching path lies in helping people heal from trauma, whether they experience trauma themselves or suffer from it second-hand as a family member or caregiver to someone challenged with trauma. I especially understand the burden that trauma places on children; I know their challenge all too well.

Once my purpose became clear, the path of action revealed itself. I quickly began to see that the returning veteran population, as well as their family members and caregivers, are a group of people who need deep healing. And like yogis, their own training and strength is their greatest asset. They have what it takes to heal themselves; they just need a guide to help them become aware of their own power, just as Cheri and Arturo helped me to realize my own capacity for healing.

And so, I’m on my way to teaching full-time by own design, using the life experiences, good and bad, that I’ve collected for so many years. This path makes those experiences mean something, and in many ways it is breaking the cycles that have existed in my family for too long, cycles that needed repair. It is never too late to heal.

change

Leap: How to Start a Transformation

From Pinterest member http://pinterest.com/india_brittany/

“Transformation literally means going beyond your form.” ~ Wayne Dyer

We talk about transformation and change all the time. We want our luck to change; we want other people to be the way we want them to be; we want to lose weight; we want to get a job we love that doesn’t even feel like a job at all; we want to find our passion and purpose; we want to be in love. But what we often overlook is the idea that change doesn’t happen to us; it happens because of us. We cause change; we are its agents. If we want change, then we must change.

Give up old habits. Give up a grudge. Ditch fear. Stop waiting. Think differently. Recognize that time is precious and fleeting. Get out there and make it happen. Change.

health, priorities, time

Leap: How We Surprise the Dalai Lama

My friend, Sol, posted this on his Facebook page. How about we make our health our priority, live in the present, and make the most of the time we have together?

choices, time

Leap: Be Ruthless With Your Time

From Pinterest member http://pinterest.com/kholt/

Pam Slim offers up this advice for entrepreneurs, though I think we should all honor it since we are all working on something of real value – be ruthless with your time. There are people who will be careless with it; there are people who think they own it because you work for them; there are people who don’t respect their own talents, gifts, and time, and therefore it never occurs to them to respect those of others. You have to guard your energy, and your energy is carried on the rails of time.

Free time is a misnomer. Time is never, ever free. There is always a trade-off. Even if you are the most supreme multi-tasker on the planet, there is a limit to how much you can do in any one moment, and you never get a single moment back. It’s spent and gone, and your time is finite. We won’t go on forever.

Life is generous, but it’s not that generous.

Forget would, should, and could when it comes to your time. The only verb that time understands is “do”. And what you do is always up to you. Be ruthless with your time. Take it very seriously, and do something so valuable with it that it will be worth remembering when it’s gone.

human factors, technology, yoga

Leap: Steve Jobs Built the Mac Based on Yoga

From Pinterest member http://pinterest.com/sunshineater/

The similarities between yoga and technology continue over at ISHTA.

Last week, I wrote about yoga as a form of spiritual technology. In our Saturday lecture, Alan Finger talked to us about the subtle body (the energy lines within us that connect us to a greater intelligence), and its linkages between our karma and our physical body. He spoke about these energy bodies as things waiting to be double-clicked. Once we open up these energy channels, we find they are able to pull in information that is beyond our own experience. By freeing these channels, we literally tap in to something greater than ourselves.

Sound too hippy dippy yoga for you? Steve Jobs didn’t think so. 

Think about your computer, and specifically think about a Mac (just because Alan and I both love our Macs.) Think of its intelligence and the way it ladders information. We don’t have code cluttering our desktops, do we? Of course not. The code is contained in programs. We open programs and we’re able to tap into different capabilities and functionality available at different levels within the programs installed on the computer. Computers pull from different systems, guided by our physical directions, our double-clicks from the mouse or track pad.

Our yoga is the same way. Our physical actions, our asanas, allow us to link into the different layers of programs installed in our being. Some of them relate to our physical body, mind, spirit, or energy channels. How a computer works is based very much on how we work, and yet we are so much more intricate, so much more amazing, than any machine will ever be. Steve Jobs understood that fact to a frightening degree and it fueled his creativity. He made machines more human.

The technologies we love so much are a reflection of our fascination with things so complex that lie at the outer edges of our comprehension. We are our greatest experiment, our greatest tool for discovery. Go within and really wonder at what you find. We are amazing!

priorities, teaching, yoga

Leap: Prepare, and Then Be Prepared to Change

From Pinterest member http://pinterest.com/jacquecramey/

I’m what’s termed an over-preparer. My years as a Girl Scout could be to blame for this neurosis. It could also be that I have an enormous fear of people staring at me waiting for some kind of answer. Ever since I was a very young child, I’ve had horrible stage fright. I wouldn’t say I prepare for every event in my life – only the ones I care about. My yoga and meditation classes fall in that camp.

For the first few years that I taught yoga, I would prepare for hours. I would develop the sequences and then practice them over and over again until I was dreaming about them. No matter how much I prepared, I found myself having to change everything in every class. My students needed something different than what I had prepared, and in an effort to meet their needs, I’d completely adjust the sequences. It felt like all my preparation was worthless, and yet I couldn’t help myself. If I didn’t prepare, my anxiety went right through the roof.

Then about a year ago, Brian asked me what would happen if I didn’t prepare for a class at all. (Mind you, I used to prepare for my sessions with him by making a list of subjects to discuss. I think this annoyed and amused him in equal amounts.) What if I just showed up, surveyed the room, and taught from my heart?

“What if I fail?” I asked.

“What if you do?” Brian asked. “Would that be so bad?”

Against my better judgement, I gave it a whirl. It wasn’t great, but I didn’t crash and burn either. All my preparation over the years had given me tools I didn’t even know I had. I was a better improver than I thought I was. I was better able to connect with my students in real-time than I ever thought possible. My nerves were on a bit on edge at first because I didn’t have the crutch of my preparation, but it got much better in a very short period of time. I started to pay attention more closely, on and off the mat. The less I prepared, the more present I was forced to be. It was beautiful to learn to be spontaneous, more alive, and have the confidence to know I could make it work.

I’ve yet to give up my preparation habit altogether, but I do prepare a lot less than I did in my earliest years of teaching. And though I’m always a bit on edge at the start of a class, I find that preparation doesn’t help to calm my nerves. What does help is to simply and honestly look into the eyes of my students, to recognize their humanness, their vulnerability, and their courage. And I’d miss all those things if I taught from a script.

By all means, prepare until you feel like you’re ready to take the stage in your life. But also be prepared to toss it all out the window in favor of what’s needed in the moment.

change, family, gratitude, religion, writing

Leap: Ask, and Allow – More Life Advice from Author, Anne Lamott

From Pinterest member http://pinterest.com/dbockus/

Anne Lamott recently wrote a very personal piece in Reader’s Digest about the birth of her grandson to her teenage son and his girlfriend. Lamott is my favorite author because of her ability to be so raw, honest, and hilarious all in the same breath. Her voice is so unique and she doles out advice on writing and life with such generosity that sometimes I think she’s personally mentoring me through my own adventures on the page. This article about her grandson had all of her signature wit, charm, heartbreak, and hope.

Half way through the article she discusses the two slogans that kept her going in the anxious months leading up to the birth of her grandson – “Figure it out is not a good slogan” and “Ask, and allow – i.e., ask God, and allow grace in.” I love them both equally, though that second slogan rang so true for me at this moment.

A few days ago, I began reading the book The Wishing Year on recommendation from my friend, Katherine. The Wishing Year recounts a year in the life of a woman who consciously and passionately wishes for three changes in her life – a man to love, a house, and deep spiritual healing. The book also explore the science and art behind wishing and intention. It’s inspired me so much that I’m taking up its example in my own life. Why not wish, and then do in equal amounts.

Lamott’s advice dovetails perfectly with The Wishing Year. In many ways, she is saying the same thing, but with a very poignant nuance. We can wish, ask, and work toward a goal and a dream, but if we don’t allow grace in, if we don’t allow ourselves to then realize the opportunity that is then laid down in front of us, then the question and the wish will do no good.

If we ask nature, the Universe, God, to be on our side, to work with us, then we have to allow that work to happen. We have to be open to possibility, to a change in course, to a new way of thinking and being. And if we can go that, if we can allow change to enter our lives with grace, then we will truly begin to see the magic unfold in our lives and in the lives of those around us. We will realize our own potential, and it will be greater than we ever imagined.

growth, inspiration, nature

Leap: Grow Where You’re Planted

From Pinterest member http://pinterest.com/pewterandsage/

I spent the weekend with my friends Ken, Tom, and Amber in Bucks County, PA, just outside of Philadelphia. Ken and Tom recently purchased a home there that put me so at ease I thought of asking to become their live-in housekeeper / dog walker / cook. Some day soon, I’m sure they’ll be appearing on the House Proud segment of the Nate Berkus Show. The house is that beautiful.

I loved my time there so much that on the way home I wondered if a small home in Bucks County might some day be my reality. I went to school in Philadelphia and have long thought that my life may loop back in that direction some day. Looking out of the window of the train, I day dreamed about a place to get away from it all, to write, and to teach yoga and meditation. I began to wonder again about a possible move.

And then I remembered a small piece of art that was in the room where I was sleeping at Ken and Tom’s house. It said simply, “Grow where you’re planted.” Though I may be daydreaming of Bucks County, I realize that there is still so much for me to learn right here in New York, in my tiny studio way up above the bustle of the streets. This leg of the journey is not yet over; there’s still so much to do exactly where I am.