Friday, August 7, 2009

Kapotasana (Pigeon Pose)



To begin the pose, step forward with your right foot and lean into a lunge position, keeping your back leg straight behind you.
Slowly move your right foot to the left side and drop your knee to the right onto the ground while flexing your toes outward. Try to keep your shin perpendicular to your back leg but if you feel discomfort, bring your foot closer to the groin area.
Square your hips by transitioning your right hip back and your left hip forward. (If your right hip drops too much use a blanket to prop it up to keep your hips level.)
Your left leg should still be stretched out straight behind you, but now resting on the ground.
As you sit in this pose be aware of your breathing - inhaling and exhaling deeply - and imagining all the tension in your buttocks and hips to be spacing out and relaxing. A myriad of emotions and sensations will arise the first few times you practice this pose. It's important to stay focused as you observe these changes while they pass through you.
You will find that the longer you sit in this pose the more it will deepen; releasing tension that you didn't even know existed in the depths of your buttocks and hips.
Stay in the pose as long as you need and then repeat with the left leg.
To Extend the Pose: While you are in the pose, slowly bend forward to lie on top of your bent knee, bringing your face toward the ground.
** If you have knee injuries such as damage to the ligaments or tendons, lift the hip of the back leg a little bit. Generally though, knee problems often stem from tight hip muscles so the pose may decrease knee pain.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Utthanasan (Squat and Rise Pose)


Stand up straight with your feet about three feet apart, with toes pointing out.
Hold your hands in a prayer pose in the middle of your chest.
Keeping your spine straight, bend at the knees and lower yourself until your buttocks are only inches from the floor.
Slowly rise to a standing position.
Repeat as desired.

Benefits:
Strengthens and tones muscles in the knees, legs, middle back and buttocks.
Increases circulation in the legs and pelvic region.
Stretches buttocks and back muscles.
Increases balance and concentration.
Opens the pelvic region for easier delivery.

http://www.parentingweekly.com/pregnancy/breathingspace/vol26/pregnancy_exercise.asp

Friday, November 7, 2008

The Theory of Water and the Power of Words


"Words are the vibrations of nature. Therefore beautiful words create beautiful nature. Ugly words create ugly nature. This is the root of the universe."
~ Masaru Emoto
Japanese researcher Dr. Masaru Emoto's experiments on water first gained worldwide attention when he was featured in the 2004 documentary "What the BLEEP Do We Know!?" His hypothesis seems simple and universal: water reacts to the vibrations of words. The phenomenon is called Hado (rhymes with shadow) and means 'wave' and 'move' in Japanese. Dr. Emoto studied water in its smallest unit of energy, the atom, and found its form changed dramatically with the suggestion of a word or phrase. This finding led him to wonder: if we are made up predominantly of water, how do words affect our basic atomic structure and health?
According to Dr. Emoto, Hado is a vibrational frequency resonance wave and the source of energy behind the creation of all things. Since a field of magnetic resonance is always present wherever Hado exists, Hado can be interpreted as the magnetic resonance field itself.
Dr. Emoto used a magnetic resonance analyzer (MRA) to observe and measure the effects of this magnetic resonance on the atomic particles in matter. He discovered that all substances and phenomena have their own unique magnetic resonance field. According to Dr. Emoto, modern medicine focuses on the body at a molecular level. However, in order to be able to understand the real cause of a disease so that we may cure it completely, he believes that we must look at the atomic level or even at the micro-particle level.
Through his study of Hado, Dr. Emoto has come to believe that people fall ill due to negative thinking, which triggers an imbalance of elements within the body. When our body is in this state of illness, the only way to heal it is to normalize immunity through a balanced peace of mind. Dr. Emoto feels that the most effective medicine for a serious disease is an awareness that we are living in cooperation with microorganisms throughout our lives. He encourages us to keep them in mind at all times and to convey our honest appreciation for their contribution.
Dr. Emoto has concluded that "all things lie within your own consciousness" and that we should do our best to raise our Hado level by doing things such as saying blessings over our food and water, drinking good water and not accumulating negative feelings.
To see the results of Dr. Emoto's experiments, click here.

Friday, October 31, 2008

Lotus Flower Meditation


"Bright but hidden, the Self dwells in the heart. Everything that moves, breathes, opens, and closes lives in the Self-the source of love. Realize the Self hidden in the heart and cut asunder the knot of ignorance here and now." ~ The Upanishads
Sit in your meditative pose and breathe deeply and slowly. Relax your entire body. If you feel any tension, focus on the feeling of space in that area to relax it.
Inhale and move your consciousness up slowly from the base of the perineum up to the center of your chest. Continue to focus on your chest as you breathe deeply.
Allow your awareness of the sensations in your chest to deepen. As you breathe in, breathe into the heart.
As you focus on the heart during your breath, imagine a lotus flower slowly opening its petals as you inhale. As you exhale, just rest your awareness inside the lotus flower.
As feeling and thoughts arise, imagine them like drops of water on the petals of your heart flower that will drip down or evaporate as the seasons change.
As you rest within your lotus flower, feel the abundance of unconditional love emerge. Continue to breathe steadily as you exist harmoniously within your bountiful heart flower.
Once you feel comfortable in your heart flower, bring your palms together in the Salutation Seal or prayer pose and take a moment to feel gratitude for the benefits you've received.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Education May Delay Aging


Scientists studying the aging process and software companies have recently become unlikely bedfellows as they consider the same idea: learning can extend a person's lifespan and improve their overall quality of life. It appears that elderly people who engage in adult education are more likely to maintain good memory and cognitive skills as well as increase their lifespan.
The New York Times recently published a story claiming that having money and insurance "paled in comparison" to education as a factor in graceful aging. The article pointed to the first serious effort to study this possible link as the 1999 dissertation thesis of Adriana Lleras-Muney, then a graduate student at Columbia University, who found that people at the age of 35 could increase their life expectancy as much as 18 months if they completed one extra year of schooling. In her study, she referenced research completed in 1969 by three health economists who found that education over many years had a greater affect on anti-aging than medical care. Similarly, Anne Case, a student at Princeton, reported that "each additional year of schooling for men in the U.S. is associated with an 8 percent reduction in mortality."
Education and mental fitness also appear to stave off the debilitating effects of age-related mental degeneration. The New England Journal of Medicine published in 2003 a study that revealed seniors over 75 years of age had lower rates of Alzheimer's and dementia if they continued to read and engage in other physical and artistic activities. As a result of these findings, the Alzheimer's Association now sponsors "Maintain Your Brain" workshops all over the country to encourage people to enroll in courses at local education centers and community groups. In addition, Dr. Gary Small, Director of the UCLA Center on Aging, conducts research he calls "Mental Aerobics," as a way of "cross-training" the mind to keep it conditioned.
But how do these activities actually combat mental aging? As people age they tend to become less socially active and demands on their memory and cognitive abilities decrease. While there are many who do not settle for this "mental retirement," others allow their neural networks to slowly shrink due to a lack of stimulation. Researchers have found that without maintenance, the brain's nerve cells shrink and eventually die off, while learning creates new networks for the brain's electrical impulses to travel through and consistent use of those networks strengthens their connections.
This new research may lead to a new philosophy for elderly care. Dan Michel, founder of Dakim Inc., began researching techniques to combat Alzheimer's after watching his father suffer from the disease and ultimately developed the (m)Power cognitive fitness system. (m)Power uses age-appropriate multi-media, such as old movies, songs and art, to exercise different brain functions including long and short-term memory, language, critical thinking. The Posit Science Corporation has also recently developed software called the "Brain Fitness Program" designed to improve memory and brain "plasticity" (the ability to create new neural pathways and connections in response to new experiences). Even computer game maker Nintendo has gotten in on the trend with "Brain Age," which claims to measure your "brain age" before presenting a string of exercises designed to stimulate the brain and shave years off the gamer's calculated brain age. Although Timothy Salthouse PhD, psychology professor at the University of Virginia, points out that the Nintendo game should not be taken too seriously because brain age can not be accurately calculated.
Scientists once believed that the adult brain was "hard-wired" and steadily declined into old age. Now it is becoming widely understood that the brain can be progressively re-modeled well into old age through challenging activities such as learning new subjects, trying new things and tackling problems that pose the greatest difficulty for the individual.
Stepping out of your comfort zone and having the courage to attack the most challenging issues is the key to mental health. It all begins by believing in yourself.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Never Lose Hope


Sit on the floor and close your eyes. Concentrate on your breathing until you are absorbed in your slow breath, in and out.
Continue your breathing as you read the following passage. When you have finished, continue breathing with your eyes closed.
Remember that your soul is, in essence, happiness itself and enjoy the beautiful landscapes of your mind.
Never Lose Hope
If you have given up hope of ever being happy, cheer up. Never lose hope. Your soul is, in essence, happiness itself.
If you keep the eyes of your concentration closed, you cannot see the sun of happiness burning within your bosom; but no matter how tightly you close the eyes of your attention, the fact nevertheless remains that the happiness rays are ever trying to pierce the closed doors of your mind. Open the windows of calmness and you will find a sudden burst of the bright sun of joy within your very self.
The joyous rays of the soul may be perceived if you interiorize your attention. These perceptions may be had by training your mind to enjoy the beautiful scenery of thoughts in the invisible, intangible kingdom within you. Do not search for happiness only in beautiful clothes, clean houses, delicious dinners, soft cushions, and luxuries. These will imprison your happiness behind the bars of externality, of outwardness. Rather, in the airplane of your visualization, glide over the limitless empire of thoughts. There behold the mountain ranges of unbroken, lofty, spiritual aspirations for improving yourself and others.
Glide over the deep valleys of universal sympathy. Fly over the geysers of enthusiasm, over the Niagara Falls of perpetual wisdom, plunging down the hoary crags of your soul's peace.
If you have made up your mind to find joy within yourself, sooner or later you shall find it.
by Parahamsa Yogananda

Friday, September 19, 2008

Descending to Your Spirit Guide's Temple


Sit comfortably in a private place. Close your eyes and make sure your back is straight. Now draw your attention to your breath...
Notice the rising and falling of your rib cage. Feel any tension or anxiety leaving your body with each exhale....
Pull your breath deeper into your stomach area. Let yourself relax, starting at your toes and working your way upward, until you reach the top of your head and your entire body is relaxed... In your mind's eye, imagine yourself standing at the top of a staircase. You can see a radiant, white light shining out from below...
Visualize yourself descending the stairs. At the bottom of the stairs you find yourself inside a beautiful, sacred temple. Sitting in the center of the room is a dazzling being of light. This being invites you to sit down...
This can be any ascended master that you identify with; Jesus Christ, Kuan Yin, Buddha, or even Metatron...
Now see yourself reaching out and joining hands with this loving being. Feel this master's powerful, healing light come into your hands and pass through your body in waves. Let this light flow freely...
Feel its peaceful, healing wisdom expanding in your body, raising your consciousness. Let the essence of this pure light extend beyond your body, filling the temple around you. Then feel it stretch beyond the temple to infinity...
Finish the meditation: http://www.parentingweekly.com/pregnancy/breathingspace/vol17/pregnancy_meditation.asp

Meditation by Avalon De Witt
Visit www.AskAvalon.com for more mediations and spiritual insight. Reprint permission granted with this footer included.