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.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Candlelight Meditation


Imagine you are an unlit candle. Someone comes along and lights your wick and you begin to glow with orange light. Your flame grows stronger and your whole body becomes engulfed. Feel yourself giving off this warm light.
Your fire light is like the brightness of wisdom that is driving away the darkness of ignorance. You are the bright orange light. Feel yourself expanding, your light reaching out further and further until it fills your entire house...

Friday, August 29, 2008

Migrating Birds take Powernaps


Many people find that taking a fifteen minute powernap during the day can help improve their productivity and maintain their energy level. As it turns out, animals also use powernaps to keep them on their migratory schedule.
A recent study published in the journal Animal Behavior found that birds take hundreds of powernaps all day long, each one lasting an average of just nine seconds. This information helps explain the mystery of how birds are able to fly for many long hours during their migration with little time for rest.
The team of scientists from the Bowling Green State University in Ohio studied Swainson's thrushes, which fly up to 3,000 miles from Canada and Alaska to Central and South America each autumn, only to return north in the spring. The birds fly mostly at night and rest during the day. Scientists observed caged thrushes for a year and recorded their sleep patterns and found that during their migratory seasons, they reverse their sleep patterns to stay awake at night.
The thrushes were found to take two types of powernaps, which the scientists termed "unilateral eye closure," during which the birds rest one eye and one half of their brain while the opposite eye and side of the brain remain awake and alert; and "drowsiness," in which the eyes are partially shut but some visual processing is still performed.
If you co-sleep with your baby, this type of semi-consciousness may sound very familiar to you. Many new mothers claim they remain completely aware of their surroundings when they are sleeping with their child nearby. These mothers say that, particularly while co-sleeping, they can sense the child's presence and hear any noises that might alert them to a problem. While they are able to get some sleep, their senses remain awake all night.

Friday, August 22, 2008

Spinal Breathing


Find a wall or flat surface to provide back support during this advanced pranayama technique.
Close your eyes and your mouth. Slowly and gently inhale and exhale through your nose. The breath should be deep but not forced and should fill your abdomen up through your chest to the top of your collar bone, before retreating during the exhale. Slowly repeat this a few times.
As you inhale, focus your attention and imagine there is a tiny tube or cord that originates at your perineum and stretches up through your spine to the stem of your brain and terminates at the center of your head. Once your attention reaches your head, imagine a tiny nerve turns forward to reach the point between your eyebrows.
With each slow inhale, imagine energy funneling up from your perineum up to the point between your eyebrows and then back down again to your perineum. Repeat this with each breath.
This exercise should be done for a few minutes before meditation. Remain seated when you are finished with the exercise and begin meditation immediately.

Friday, August 1, 2008

Lotus Pose (Padmasana)


The Lotus Pose is said to have been routinely used by Buddha and is a popular meditation pose. It may be uncomfortable at first until your ligaments extend. It's a common misconception that meditation should be done in the Lotus Pose, so if it is too difficult, any other seated pose will work well. This is one of the basic yoga postures, so take your time becoming comfortable in it.
How to do it
Bring your right foot onto your left thigh. Bounce the right knee and, if it touches the floor with ease, bend your left knee and grab your left foot with both hands and place it on your right thigh. Your hands should rest on your knees, either open or forming a mudra.

Friday, July 18, 2008

Kapalabhati



Kapalabhati is a cleansing breath that literally translates as "skull that brings lightness." Use it to clear a foggy or heavy head or when you have mucus buildup in your air passages and tension or blockages in your chest. It can also help with sinus issues, such as numbness around the eyes.
During this breathing exercise, the breath is deliberately sped up using only diaphragmatic (abdominal) breathing. Each breath is short, rapid and strong as the lungs act as a pump to expel air from the lungs and remove waste from the air passages.
It is important to do this exercise carefully while sitting. If you are pregnant, skip the breath retention step, as holding your breath can harm your baby. This exercise may create tension in the breath and cause dizziness, so always end your practice with some deep, slow breaths.
One Repetition:
Begin by breathing normally twice. Inhale, and then exhale while pulling in your diaphragm. Repeat this 20 times, maintaining a steady rhythm and emphasizing the exhale each time. Follow this by inhaling and exhaling completely. Now, inhale and hold your breath for as long as is comfortable (skip this step if you are pregnant). Slowly exhale.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Primate Dads Gain Sympathy Weight


Between 11 and 65 percent of all human dads-to-be experience sympathy symptoms when their partners are pregnant, including weight gain, nausea, headaches, irritability, backaches, and hormonal changes. Now a new study has found that males in at least two species of primates also experience physiologic changes when their mates are expecting.
Researchers at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, observed that two types of primates, the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) and cotton-top tamarin (Saguinus oedipus) - both known for their monogamous partnerships and good parenting - gained roughly 10 percent more weight when their mates were pregnant. And scientists believe they're not alone; it is estimated that males in most monogamous primate species - including gibbons, some lemur species, and humans - experience such sympathy symptoms.
During the study, researchers weighed 29 male marmosets and 29 male cotton-top tamarins monthly. Of these, 9 marmosets and 11 tamarins had pregnant mates. The scientists found that the males increased their total weight by approximately 10 percent gradually over the course of their mate's pregnancy (five months for marmosets and about six months for tamarins). The researchers also determined that the added weight was not because the males copied their mates' eating habits.
Scientists believe that the primates are so in tune with their mates that they pick up subtle clues about their fertility. According to Toni Ziegler, a senior scientist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison and lead author of the study, "They…detect when their mate is going to ovulate and have an increase in testosterone a few days before she ovulates, so I think they are getting signals from the female at important reproductive events." The researchers observed elevated estrogen and testosterone levels in the males, as well as the lactation-inducing hormone prolactin which they believe is most likely the cause of the weight gain.
These pregnancy symptoms were previously thought to be psychosomatic, but scientists now believe that these changes may actually help the male primates to prepare for fatherhood and deal with the added stress once the baby is born. "Males do most of the carrying of infants - usually two - once they are born," said Zigler, adding, "The males invest highly in infant care, even losing weight while carrying these heavy, multiple infants through the trees."
These findings are giving scientists a window into the driving force behind fatherhood - primate and human. "We're interested in what motivates dads to be good parents because there are so many men who just aren't good fathers," says Ziegler. "This work could help to tease apart what makes a good dad."

Learn more:
http://www.parentingweekly.com/pregnancy/breathingspace/vol09/pregnancy_health_fitness.asp