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My Yoga Journal: Finding the Peace

Muscle Gelz Transdermals
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Okay, for those who just got to reading my journal, I'll go ahead and break it down for my w/o. It just basicly changes whenever I find a new pose that I see fit. Here is how it is right now:

Tummy and back

half moon: 4X 5 breaths

dolphin: 4X 5 breaths

down dog: 4X 5 breaths

up dog: 4X 5 breaths

cobra: 4X 5 breaths

Legs

Lunge: 4X 5 breaths

warrior 1,2 and 3: 4X 5 breaths

wind: 4X 5 breaths

figure 4: 4X 5 breaths

tree: 4X 5 breaths

eagle: 4X 5 breaths
 
Sister Shae, thank you so much for the kind words!!! Hope all is well with you and yours!!!
 
Hey all. :wave: Had a good day.

My best friend, Martin (he's from California) fessed up that he loved me and we are now a couple. :clapping: Well I'm gonna try and give a crack at a long distance relationship again and hopefully it will work out fine.

In yoga, I did some twists and bends type poses. Felt real nice. Especialy upward dog.

Here is how it went down:

Child: 4X 5 breaths
Sitting foward bend: 4X 5 breaths
Sitting twist (will explain when I get time): 4X 5 breaths
Down dog: 4X 5 breaths
Dolphin 4X 5 breaths
Bridge:4X 5 breaths
Modifyed bridge (will explain later): 4X5 breaths
Child: 1X 6 minitues (Georgeanna worked me like a dog. Had to do it! lol!)
Legs up the wall: 5 minitues
Corpse: 10 minitues

Now I feel like I am floating on a cloud. :D
 
Modified bridge

You know how the regular bridge goes. Right?

Ht_bridge_handsFree_W.jpg


If you don't have that strong of legs, you can allways go for a yoga brick underneath your hip bones. You can at least get get a little stretch out of it.
 
Nada for the work out today. I had to help with a catered function at my school. But I got a great reward afterwords:

Grilled cilantro lime marinated sea bass and steamed asparagus. :lick:
 
Did some balances with and without the wall tonight like half moon and noose. Did well I reccon. ;)

But in non related crap, a local camra crew came to do a story about the resturant I am at for class. French Bastard didn't want to be interviewed because t.v. land won't understand his accent. :rolleyes:

So the cooks got taped doing what they do and the waiters were taped doing what we do. And I took part for taping the opening credits. And it was so cheesy.

"Hi, I'm from the Phoenix College Culinary Studies program. You are watching M.C. T.V. BONE APATITE!", or along those lines. :lol:

May be some of you Arizonans know which channel M.C. T.V. is on. Becasuse I don't watch the channel. I'm supposed to find out what time it airs tomorrow.
 
b_reed23 said:
that looks extraordinarily painful...:cry:
Only if you do that the regular way like the one in the pic. If you have a yoga brick inder your hip bones for the modifyed bridge, you don't really have to arch like usual. Just bend your knees and hold the pose for 5 breaths. You get that nice gentle stretch in the lower back without all the work. :)
 
:hello:

Just letting you know that I am still alive and still doing the yoga. Tonight, I was taking a pose and see how long I can hold it. Tonight was the plank/up dog/down dog combo (start at plank, then lower, up dog than down dog ). Did that 7 times in one try. Second try was five.

;)
 
Just letting you know that I'm still doing the yoga. It was Veterans Day last week. And my class starts back tomorrow.

In non-news: My class mates in my serving class are trying to get French Bastard fired. He kinda disrespected one of my friend's family. Let me give you my chat with another pall of mine about it:

Liz: hi
shae2k3: hows u?
Liz: im good how are you
shae2k3: man, where do i begin? it all started with me waking up with a head ache
Liz: i woke up wiht a head aache too
shae2k3: keith the coffee guy did not have my peper mint tea
shae2k3: the kitchen got a meal, the waiters did not
shae2k3: and i was dragged into a yell down between yvonne, one of my class mates and french bastard
Liz:
shae2k3: blowing off the last bit of good vibe in the room. shall i enliten u?
Liz: sure
shae2k3: the waiters go have a group talk like we do every day to talk about frenchie
shae2k3: yvonne came up to saying that frenchie disrespected her family.
shae2k3: i'm like," like how?'
Liz: why did he do that
shae2k3: i'm like," like how?'
shae2k3: yvonne told me that yesturday, she called frenchie to tell him that she won't be able to go to class because she had to take her sick dad to the doctors."
Liz: yeah
shae2k3: frenchie was like, "why didn't i get 2 days notice? why didn't you make someone else take him?"
Liz: dam
Liz: n
shae2k3: she brought it up today and she wanted to call frenchie out and wanted everyone as witnesses
shae2k3: so off i went. even tho i did not do shit.
Liz: yeah
shae2k3: so off yvonne went like an atomic bomb. she's crying. frenchie is making it worse so i yankd yvonne by the arm to the bathroom to calm her ass down
shae2k3: the other waiters were like, "you owe her an apology"
Liz: yeah 4 real
shae2k3: ruined my chi today. i thought the head ache would be the only thing wrong.
Liz: wow
shae2k3: so i guess i'm expecting frenchie to get fired in the next few days or weeks
Liz: yea thats what i was thinking
shae2k3: i suppose yvonne is going to take it to chef ass wipe, the culinary director
Liz: good
........................................................................................................

So my chi got messed with today so tonight, I had to do some extra meditation to have myself really relaxed. And here is what I'm going to do, if you want, you all can help me decorate this place with good vibes with pictures of buddha and om symbols. If you do, I'll find some info about meditating.
 
Muscle Gelz Transdermals
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What I learned tonight...

Solar Plexus Chakra

Also known as: Power Center, Manipura

Body Mind Associations:

Location: Solar plexus

Color: Yellow

Parts of the Body: The parts of the body associated with this chakra include the muscular system, the skin as a system, the solar plexus, the large intestine, stomach, liver, and other organs and glands in the region of the solar plexus. Also the eyes, as the organs of sight, and the face, representing figuratively the face one shows the world.

Endocrine Gland: The pancreas

Sense: Eyesight

Consciousness: Parts of the consciousness associated with this chakra include perceptions concerned with power, control, freedom, the ease with which one is able to be themselves - ease of being. Mental activity and the mental body is also associated with this chakra. The solar plexus chakra is also associated with the level of being we call the personality, or ego.

The relationship a person has with fire, or the sun, can be seen to have its parallels in the person???s relationship with the parts of their consciousness that this chakra represents. Someone sensitive about the sun, then, can be seen to have particular sensitivities about power, or control, or freedom.

Element: Fire, the sun.
....................................................................................................................

The w/o

meditation: 6 minitues
downward dog: 4X 5 breaths
upward dog: 4X 5 breaths
side plank: 4X 5 breaths
child: 5X 5 breaths
warrior 1,2,3: 2X 10 breaths
wind: 2X 10 breaths
corpse: 6 minitues
 
Pretty interesting in here Sister Shae, sorry to hear your taking the loss of Eddie so hard!!!
 
Archangel said:
Pretty interesting in here Sister Shae, sorry to hear your taking the loss of Eddie so hard!!!
I know. Its silly that I'm like heart broken over a celebirty's death.

But I don't give a shit.
 
I don't think its silly at all, we grow up with people, and its a shock when stuff like that happens!!!
 
Well, I have incorperated the chakras into my journal. And now, I will add another subject: meditataion.

Meditation Glossary

Keep your meditation terminology straight with this mini guide.

Asana. In meditation, the pose in which you do formal meditation. It should be comfortable and stable, but also support alertness. Examples: Full or Half Lotus, kneeling (Zen), or sitting in a straight-backed chair.

Japa. In Hinduism, repetition of a mantra or divine name.

Mandala. Sacred diagram used as an object of meditation, particularly in esoteric and Tibetan Buddhism.

Mantra. Sacred words or sounds used as an object of meditation. In Hinduism and esoteric Buddhism, they are said to have transformative powers that aid the meditator.

Nirvana. Buddhist term for self-realization.

Samadhi. In Hinduism, a state of meditative union with the Absolute. In Buddhism, a high state of awareness and concentration that is short of self-realization.

Credit goes to yoga journal.com
 
I never do enough meditation. Thats why I don't have good progress in holding the poses longer like downward dog. May be meditation about 15 minitues or so will do some good before the yoga. :)
 
Meditation 101
To give meditation a try, sit comfortably, set a timer for 10 minutes, and explore one of the following strategies. And consider yourself forewarned: Meditation is a delightfully simple practice, but that doesn't mean it's easy!

Just sit. Commit to doing nothing more than sitting quietly and watching what happens. Don't pick up the phone, don't answer the doorbell, don't add another item to your to-do list. Just sit and observe the thoughts that arise and pass through your mind. You will likely be surprised by how difficult it is to sit quietly for 10 minutes. In the process, though, you may learn something important about the qualities of the restless mind and the ever-changing nature of life.

Listen to the sounds of life. Close your eyes and tune in to the sounds percolating both within and around you. Open your ears and adopt a receptive attitude. At first, you'll likely hear only the most obvious noises, but over time, you'll discover new layers of sounds that you had previously tuned out. Challenge yourself to observe what you hear without clinging to it or resisting it. Notice how the world feels more alive as your awareness of the present deepens.

Practice bare attention. Notice the raw sensations of the present moment???feelings of warmth and coolness, hardness and softness, pressure and ease. Which parts of your body are in contact with the earth? How does the shape of the body shift with each inhalation and exhalation? How does your experience change over time? Cultivating an awareness of the present moment will foster a more serene and attentive mind, one that is able to settle into the here and now.
Follow the breath. Attach your mind to the breath. While you're breathing in, note that you're breathing in, and while you're breathing out, focus on the exhalation. Don't manipulate the breath in any way; simply watch it with your mind's eye, just as you would follow a tennis ball bouncing from one side of the court to the other during a particularly engrossing match. When you find that your mind has strayed, as it inevitably will, gently refocus it on the breath and begin again.

Use a mantra. Choose a favorite word, phrase, prayer, or fragment of a poem, and repeat it slowly and softly. Let its rhythm and meaning lull you into a quiet, contemplative state of ease. When you notice that your mind has wandered off to other thoughts, simply redirect it back toward the words you've chosen as your touchstone and rededicate your awareness to them.

Practice kindness. As you sit quietly, focus your inner attention on someone you know who might benefit from an extra dose of kindness and care. In your mind's eye, send this person love, happiness, and well-being. Soften your skin, open the floodgates of your heart, and let gentle goodwill pour forth.

credit goes to yogajournal.com
 
Heya-

Thought I would drop in and poke around a bit. Great info in here. When I get time, I'll browse thru the whole thing.

I've never gotten to do yoga, but may start trying it to improve flexibility. I've been doing meditation for about 4 years off and on (mostly off) but am always amazed at the difference when I finish.

Props for trying to educate the masses. :D
 
Meditation techniques

Points of Entry

By Swami Durgananda


In my early years of meditation, I wasted countless hours wondering which technique to use. The teachers of my lineage offered several basic methods: repeating a mantra, focusing on the space between breaths, witnessing the thoughts. But an early mentor had told me to decide on one technique and stick with it, and I reasoned that if I had to choose one practice, it had better be the right one. So I worried. I worried about which mantra to use, about whether to meditate on the Witness???the observing awareness that remains ever-present through all the fluctuations of our moods and mental states???or follow my breath. I worried about when it was permissible to leave the technique behind and just relax. It wasn't until I stopped making techniques into icons that I began to discover how liberating it can be to work with different practices at different times.

We use techniques in meditation for a very simple reason: Most of us, at least when we begin meditation, need support for the mind. A technique provides a place for the mind to rest while it settles back down into its essential nature. That's all it is really, a kind of cushion. No technique is an end in itself, and no matter which one people use, it will eventually dissolve when their meditation deepens.

I like to think of meditation methods as portals, entry points into the spaciousness that underlies the mind. The inner spaciousness is always there, with its clarity, love, and innate goodness. It is like the sky that suddenly appears over our heads when we step out of the kitchen door after a harried morning and glance upward. The Self, like the sky, is ever present yet hidden by the ceiling and walls of our minds. In approaching the Self, it helps to have a doorway we can comfortably walk through, rather than having to break through the wall of thoughts separating us from our inner space.

Most of us already know which modes of meditation feel most natural. Some people naturally have a visual bent and respond well to practices that work with inner "sights." Others are more kinesthetic, attuned to sensations of energy. There are auditory people, whose inner world opens in response to sound, and people whose practice is kindled by an insight or a feeling.
Once we become aware of how we respond to different perceptual modes, we can often adjust a practice so it works for us. Someone who has a hard time visualizing can work with an image by "feeling" it as energy or as an inner sensation, rather than trying to see it as an object. A highly visual person might get bored with mantra repetition when he focuses on sounding the syllables, but feel the mantra's impact if he visualizes the letters on his inner screen. One person might experience great love when repeating a mantra with a devotional feeling, while a friend's meditation only takes off once she lets go of all props and meditates on pure Awareness. Each person needs to find his or her own way.

Perhaps the most important thing to remember about any practice is to keep looking for its subtle essence. Every technique has its own unique feeling, which creates an energy space inside. For example, when repeating a mantra with the breath, a person might feel a sensation of prana (vital force) moving between the throat and the heart, as well as a subtle feeling of expansion or pulsation in the heart space when the mantra syllables "strike" it. Focusing on the space between the breaths, one might begin to feel the breath moving in and out of the heart and notice a subtle expansion of the heart space. One might notice that certain parts of the inner body are activated by a particular practice; the space between the eyebrows, for example, might begin to pulsate when one imagines a flame there. Following the rhythm of the breath might make a person especially aware of the currents of energy flowing through the body.

That energy sensation, or feeling-sense, is the subtle effect of the method and its real essence. It is the feeling-sense a technique creates???rather than the technique itself???that opens the door into the Self. For this reason, one effective way of going deeper in meditation is to keep one's awareness moving "into" the feeling-space created by the practice: into the sensation created by the mantra as its syllables drop into one's consciousness, into the sensation of the breath as it pauses between the inhalation and the exhalation, or into the vividness of the object being visualized.

As we do this, we automatically release ourselves into a subtler level of our being. This release will happen more easily if we can allow ourselves to give up any feeling of separation from the technique. Nearly always, when people have difficulties going deeper into meditation, it is because they are keeping some sort of separation between themselves and their method and between themselves and the goal. The antidote for nearly every problem that arises in meditation is to remember that the meditator, the technique of meditation, and the goal of meditation are one: that within the inner field of Awareness, everything is simply Awareness itself.

Another reason to experiment with techniques is to keep from being stuck in a particular method. Some people can take a single technique and continue with it for a lifetime, going deeper and deeper. Others, however, find that the original practice they learned stops being effective after a time. Some people stick with a practice they learned years ago, even when it no longer helps them go deeper. After a while, when the practice doesn't seem to work for them, they come to feel that they aren't good meditators, or that meditation is just too hard or boring, or even that it comes so easily they miss a feeling of growth. Often their only problem is trying to enter meditation through the wrong doorway or a door that once opened easily but is now stiff on its hinges.

Ultimately no meditation practice is going to work unless you like doing it. This piece of wisdom comes from no less an authority than Patanjali's Yoga Sutra, a text so fundamental that every yogic tradition in India makes it the basis for meditation practice. After listing a string of practices for focusing the mind, Patanjali ended his chapter on concentration by saying, "Concentrate wherever the mind finds satisfaction." How do meditators know the mind is finding satisfaction in a technique? First, they should enjoy it and be able to relax within it. It should give them a feeling of peace. Once they've become familiar with it, the practice should feel natural. If they have to work too hard at it, that may be a sign it is the wrong practice.
Meditators who have received practices through a lineage of enlightened teachers usually find that these practices are especially empowered???infused with an energy that yields relatively quick results as they work with them. Those without a lineage teacher find that the sages of meditation have offered us countless techniques???such as mantras, visualizations, practices of awareness???that open up into the Self as one explores them.

I suggest spending some time experimenting with a particular practice; work with it long enough to get a sense of its subtleties and see how it affects meditation over time. When we clearly understand that a technique is not an end in itself but simply the doorway into the greater Awareness, we can begin to sense which doorway is going to open most easily at a particular moment. Some techniques energize while others kindle love or help quiet an agitated mind.

Of course, we don't want to become technique junkies, flitting from one method to another and never going deeply into any single method. However, playing with different practices helps us get to know ourselves and discover what works best. Everyone's road is unique, and ultimately no one else can tell a person what he or she needs. That's why there aren't any rules about the "best" way to meditate, except that a practice should soothe the restlessness of the mind and make it easier to enter the interior silence. This is discovered only through practice.

Credit goes to yogajournal.com
 
Pylon said:
Heya-

Thought I would drop in and poke around a bit. Great info in here. When I get time, I'll browse thru the whole thing.

I've never gotten to do yoga, but may start trying it to improve flexibility. I've been doing meditation for about 4 years off and on (mostly off) but am always amazed at the difference when I finish.

Props for trying to educate the masses. :D

Namaste! :bow:
 
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