This is Your Brain. This is Your Brain on Meditation. But This is Your Brain (Mind and Body) on Transcendental Meditation ~ by Chris Liss

The modern world is filled with a variety of stressors that bombard our brains and bodies. These stressors - diet, especially sugar and caffeine, a noisy or polluted environment, an alarm waking us in the morning or a timer going off to alert us to the next item on our daily agenda, the bicycle horn, or “Bell tower,” “Robot,” or verse of a favorite song telling us we’ve received a text message, traffic, or simply surfing the internet and trying to keep up with all the news that’s “fit to print,” at least electronically - triggers our sympathetic nervous system, our “flight or fight” response. Our sympathetic nervous system is a survival tool, an ancient survival tool that should be used only in “fight or flight” – life-threatening - circumstances. It is a perfect, vital marriage of function between the brain’s amygdala and adrenal glands. It has kept us alive for 500,000 years. So, it works.

We can think we are multi-tasking throughout the day: texting and driving, cooking dinner while helping our children complete their homework, or practicing our yoga while distracted by our agenda for an important meeting with a new client at work. The brain and body suggest otherwise. In fact, try balancing in standing bow pose for a minute while creating a Thanksgiving dinner menu and I bet you fall! Studies have shown that our brains actually do not multi-task, but shift focus from one task to another a micro- second at a time. This results in ineffective work and actually lower productivity. More importantly, our bodies cannot multi-task when it comes to the sympathetic nervous system and the parasympathetic nervous system, the “rest and digest” system. It’s either one or the other. The default is the “fight or flight” mechanism, putting tremendous stress on our body and brain, flooding our system with adrenaline and cortisol. Our primordial self wants to survive and this system has been successful for 500,000 years. Why fix something that isn’t broken, right? …

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Yoga is for Everyone!!! ~ by Susie Crate

I begin my essay about ‘Yoga is for Everyone!!!’ with a quote from Pema Chodron about why it is important to mediate:

‘People often say, “Meditation is all very well, but what does it have to do with my life?” What it has to do with your life is that perhaps through this simple practice of paying attention—giving loving kindness to your speech and your actions and the movements of your mind—you begin to realize that you’re always standing in the middle of a sacred circle, and that’s your whole life. This room is not the sacred circle. Gampo Alley is not the sacred circle. Wherever you go for the rest of your life, you’re always in the middle of the universe and the circle is always around you. Everyone who walks up to you has entered that sacred space, and its not an accident. Whatever comes into the space is there to teach you.’ – Pema Chodron, The Wisdom of No Escape.

I do this deliberately to emphasize the point that yoga IS meditation and therefore for everyone. If that is not enough to convince you, consider my first deep understanding of exactly how it is that yoga is for everyone. It was during the 2011- 2012 teacher training year and all of us 200-hour teacher-in-training yogis and yoginis had gathered for a monthly intensive weekend, this month with master teacher Baxter Bell. He opened one of his session by telling us that one of the best yoga practitioners he knew is paralyzed from the neck down. We all exchanged confused glances and Baxter went on to explain that in reality only a very small part of the practice of yoga are the asanas—in fact the asanas are one of eight parts—and they are there to bring into the physical realm the ‘yoking of mind and body,’ the ultimate objective of and literal translation of the word ‘yoga’ from Sanskrit. He went on to say that having a physical body that can master all the poses is not as important as ‘embodying’ the philosophy. Baxter’s story was powerful for me and it changed the way I understood yoga and my role as a teacher and my approach to facilitating anyone who has a desire to learn yoga, even if they are paralyzed from their neck down.

Later that spring we had another master teacher, Tias Little, who also brought more light to the subject. Tias mentioned several times over the course of the intensive weekend that ‘If you can breathe, you can do yoga.’

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