Monday, February 29, 2016

Top 9 Questions I Get Asked About Yoga



1. I’m not flexible – can I still practice yoga?

Of course! The practice of yoga will open your hamstrings slowly over time. Think of it this way: If you are not flexible now, where will you be next year without yoga?

“Yoga is not about touching your toes, it is what you learn about yourself on the way down.”
 – Jigor Gor

2. Is yoga a religion?

No. Yoga is a philosophy that began in India about 5,000 years ago. Yes, yoga sometimes interweaves other philosophies like Hinduism and Buddhism, but it’s not expected that anyone align with these, it’s just part of the yoga education.

All religious beliefs are welcome on the mat. In fact, you may find that as your mind becomes quieter, your connection to your faith deepens.

3. How often should I practice yoga?

If you are attending one 75-minute class a week (like the ones offered at More Peace Yoga), that’s a fantastic start and you will experience many benefits from just that one class. You may find that’s just right.

Adding another class, or a home practice, will likely organically evolve as your body and mind begin to crave the gifts of feeling more open and relaxed.

4. I have ugly feet! Do I have to be barefoot?

This is one of the most common things I hear – it seems no one likes their feet! But after a short time on the mat in mountain pose, really honoring the gifts of our feet from a place of gratitude rather than critique, we find what was once considered ugly is now beautiful.

After all, how would we get around without feet? :)

If your feelings about your feet don’t transform this way, there are always yoga toe socks that allow you to feel almost as connected to the mat as bare feet.

“Change the way you look at things,
 and the things you look at change.” 
– Wayne Dyer

5. What does namaste mean?

Nama means bow, as means I, and te means you. Therefore, namaste literally means “bow me you” or “I bow to you.”

As a way to honor the light within one another, I like to use this phrase at the end of class as a ritualistic and positive conclusion to a lovely experience.

6. What is Hatha yoga?

Hatha is also translated as ha meaning “sun” and tha meaning “moon.” This refers to the balance of masculine aspects—active, hot, sun—and feminine aspects—receptive, cool, moon—within all of us.

Hatha yoga is a path toward creating balance and uniting opposites. In our physical bodies we develop a balance of strength and flexibility. We also learn to balance our effort and surrender in each pose.

Hatha yoga is a powerful tool for self-transformation. It asks us to bring our attention to our breath, which helps us to still the fluctuations of the mind and be more present in the unfolding of each moment.

7. What should I wear to class?

You don’t need to dress like the women on the cover of Yoga Journal in order to practice yoga, and that can get very expensive.

In the More Peace Yoga studio, we dress casually. Just be comfortable and consider making sure that your shirt doesn’t slip over your head when you’re in an inverted pose (head beneath your heart). 

8. What if I can’t do some of the poses?

There is only one pose you must learn and that is a pose where you are comfortably able to breathe and relax if another pose isn’t working for you. That might be child’s pose, puppy pose or on your back in Shavasana.

You’ll learn the poses when the time is right, and until then, I’ll show you modifications that will get you close.

9. What Is yoga?

The word yoga comes from the Sanskrit word yuj, meaning to yoke or bind, and is often interpreted as “union” or a method of discipline. A male who practices yoga is called a yogi, a female practitioner, a yogini.


There are 8 limbs or asanas (the poses and the physical practice) of yoga in total. The asana were created in order to provide comfort, physical strength and stamina that is needed during long periods of meditation. We practice the 3rd limb (asana) most often in our classes.

Sunday, February 28, 2016

Burning the Myths of Meditation

While I'm not the one in our home to turn on the news, I do try to stay fairly current, especially when the subjects covered align with my interests.

A few Sundays ago, CBS Sunday Morning was on in the living room while I was cleaning up the kitchen.  When I heard the next two stories that were coming up were two of my favorite topics – meditation and cats – I nearly ran into the room, green tea in hand.

The Cat Island Story was adorable and made my day, but I had a mixed reaction to the meditation portion of the program.

Part of me is absolutely thrilled that meditation is so mainstream that it’s highlighted on such a popular and long-standing show.

But part of me was saddened, because I know of few people who are able to stick to a twice-daily practice for any length of time, let alone 20 years like the man featured in the story.

In typical American news fashion, we were told how Allan Lokos had survived a fiery plane crash – literally engulfed in flames and told he had no chance to live.

“He says had he not been calm, ‘I would be pretty certain that I would have died in the plane. The person right behind me did,’ Lokos said.”

I’m awed, inspired and motivated by his story. He’s a true inspiration for us all. Not only did he make it through alive and recover more quickly than any doctor predicted, he was teaching meditation classes just four short months after the crash. How amazing is that?

Yet even though I only personally know one person with a twice-daily meditation practice, I know that those of us with a more casual meditation practice still experience innumerable benefits from better sleep, to learning to PAUSE before reacting, to simply being a kinder person.

Am I more likely to survive fires as a result of my almost daily meditation practice? Yes. The fires of life, that is. Meditation has helped me to weather through intense challenges in ways that I could never have before I began meditating. It works. It’s life changing. It can save your life – literally and figuratively.

But it doesn’t have to be done every single day, two times a day, for decades, in order for it to work.

That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t strive for that ideal – we should. But I worry that those who watch the CBS story will make up that meditation isn’t available to them, because their own dedication will never match that of Allan Lokos.


Enormous benefits can be realized with just ONE minute of meditation – or even five mindful breaths – once a day. It’s that easy. Start there and I bet that you will naturally begin to increase the time you devote.

Saturday, February 20, 2016

Top 5 things you will NOT experience in my meditation workshops



1)   Receiving a mantra that you can not share and that you must keep using.

A mantra is a word or phrase that we repeat to focus the mind during meditation. It can also act as an affirmation for a concept or way of being we'd like to embrace. Some monks give secret mantras to yoga students, but I believe in each of us creating our own mantra that is uniquely ours. I also believe that mantras very often change, according to the circumstance.

2)   Describing HOW LONG my practice is, nor will I ask anyone else in the room to share how long theirs is.

Meditation is a personal practice (not perfect), and if you feel the need to compare or live up to what I do as an instructor, or anyone else in the room, then I have failed to teach that point.

3)   Calling myself a meditation expert.

Like you, I’m just doing the best I can to try to quiet my busy mind. While I have had yoga and meditation training, and have a practice (not perfect) of my own, I have aspirations to be even more dedicated.  I will always yearn to embrace stillness even more than I do today, and my guess is that we are all learning.  In the practice of meditation, I don't know any true "experts." As Ram Dass shares, "We're all just walking each other home."

4)   Giving you only one style of meditation to try.

In my early days as a yoga instructor, I had just one meditation technique to offer my clients – a twice a day, 20-minute practice. It’s no surprise that most of them failed, and that I couldn’t hang through it either.

Today I understand that there are many ways to experience stillness and mindfulness. I hope that one of the many ideas presented in the workshop will be a fit for you, and that you’ll notice your life changing as a result. (Mine has...)

5)   Claiming that meditation is the answer to all of life’s challenges.

It’s not. There are times when you should purposefully occupy your mind with things like light movies and fiction, because what you are going through is too scary to sit with.  This may be the death of a loved one, the sudden loss of a job, or an unexpected diagnosis. During challenging times like these, there are safe ways to practice mindfulness, and you'll learn these.

My goal for the workshop is simple - that you walk out with a solid understanding of the benefits of meditation and are inspired to create your own unique practice.