Showing posts with label Meditation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meditation. Show all posts

Thursday, January 14, 2016

A Breathing Exercise that Will Transform Your Day

15 comments:

How do you feel as you wake up and begin your day? Are you overwhelmed by everything surrounding you or are you calm, ready for a new day?

How do you feel as the demands begin falling on your shoulders? Are you tense or ready to enjoy each task?

I’m guessing most of us are overwhelmed, tense, and stressed for a good portion of our day. Why is this? What’s the key to finding a peaceful, calm foundation to live by? You have the answer, you have the power to change, and it’s available to you at any time for free!

So what’s the answer to a calm, happy life? Your breath.

It’s true, I know it sounds so simple and easy that it can’t be effective but it is. Let’s look at how powerful breathing is.

Mindful Breathing Corrects Posture

When you take that deep breath in you immediately correct your posture. With correct posture you reduce & eliminate bodily pains. The most common areas of pain include back, neck, and shoulder.

Breathing becomes easier when you maintain good posture. Combining good posture with a deep breath and you will feel the pain leave.

The more pain you release the more your muscle balances can correct and eliminate future injuries.

When you slouch you lose your core muscles and you prevent good digestion. There’s no need for 1000 sit ups when you have the opportunity to maintain good posture throughout your day. Your core’s endurance becomes off the charts.

Correcting your posture improves your muscle tone, flattens the stomach and improves your confidence, body image and self esteem. If you slouch, you are suppressing your stomach and colon preventing good digestion.

Mindful Breathing Establishes a Mind-Body Connection

When you breathe deeply you give yourself the opportunity to feel your breath, feel what your body is holding on to and where, and feel where your mind is distracted. As you connect your movement to your breath it becomes more mindful. As you connect your breath to your thoughts you decide what really matters.


Mindful Breathing Creates Positive Change

With a few deep breaths you can change the moment you are in, your day, and your entire day. With every inhale you can manifest. With every exhale you can release.

The sort of breathing I am speaking of doesn't need to be difficult - I've created a free guided video for this breathing exercise. Are you ready to enjoy the benefits of breathing through your day?

Visit: A Breathing Exercise that Will Transform Your Day.

As you continue to practice your breathing, give yourself an advanced challenge to see where you are at. Just for fun, choose the longest line at the bank or the grocery store. Breathe slowly and pay attention to your bodily sensations. Put those waiting times to work for you, instead of regarding them as the enemy as you rush to the next thing.

Do you use mindful breathing as a part of your wellness routine?



Thursday, October 15, 2015

How Yoga Changed My Life: The 8 Limbs of Yoga

47 comments:

Five years ago, I thought yoga was just another form of workout that would increase my flexibility. I had taken a few yoga training courses, and decided to attend a 200 hour intensive training. Boy, was I wrong thinking yoga was just a workout! In those 200 hours my life was flipped upside down. I learned a new perspective on yoga and life.

The essence of yoga is:

  • Letting go of competition, judgement and expectations.
  • Breathing, feeling and listening to the body.
  • Being in the  present moment.

Yoga is more than just a physical discipline, it is a way of life to maintain a state of equanimity (a state of mental or emotional stability).

I’m here to share with you what I learned that changed my life.



 The 8 Limbs of Yoga:

1) Yamas: Guidelines for how we interact with the outer world.
  • Ahimsa: nonviolence.  Compassion, love, understanding, patience, and self love.
  • Satya: truthfulness. Honesty, non judging, and giving constructive feedback.
  • Asetya: nonstealing. Letting go of competition, cravings, and false value.
  • Brahmacarya: moderation. Awareness of cravings and attachments.
  • Aparigraha: nonhoarding. Non attachment to possessions and relationships.


2) Niyamas: maintaining a positive environment in which to grow. How we interact with ourselves and our internal world.
  • Sauca: purity. Evenness of mind, thoughts, and speech.
  • Samtosa: contentment. Gratitude and joyfulness, remain calm in good and bad.
  • Tapas: zeal, austerity. Determination to pursue daily practice.
  • Svadhyaya: self study. Reflection, meditation, and wanting to know.
  • Isvara-pranidhana: devotion to a higher power.

Yoga is about finding the truth for yourself and connecting with it. Yamas and Niyamas are not about right and wrong. They are about living our lives in a better way, and moving towards a greater understanding of our selves and others.

3) Asana: Yoga postures, balance and harmonize the basic structure of the human body.

4) Pranyama: Mindful breathing, breath control practices help us to release tension and develop a relaxed state of mind.

5) Pratyahara: Turning inward, withdrawal from distractions of the outside world. Rightly managing the senses and going beyond them. Practiced with mantra, meditation, and visualization towards achieving 3 meditative states. 


6) Dharana: One of the three Meditative States: Concentration on an object, place - meditation with effort

7) Dhyana: One of the three Meditative States: Meditation effortlessly

8) Samadhi: One of the three Meditative States: Union of the Self


Before learning the 8 limbs of Yoga, I would get bent out of shape over things and be everywhere but the present moment.

I originally started going to yoga for the workout, but along the path I learned it was much more than cool poses and touching your toes. Yoga changed my life and continues to remind me to be present.





Tuesday, July 21, 2015

My Life Balanced: 120 Days Challenge - Mindfulness & Meditation

20 comments:
For this My Life Balanced update, I want to focus on what I consider to be the biggest strengths of the 120 Days Challenge Workbook: its focus on mindfulness and various forms of meditation as a core practice that bolsters all the work being done to change and refine the users' work on their nutritional health and fitness.

As I've mentioned before, each day includes short statements that can be used to spark the direction of one's own goals from a holistic place that includes meditation or journaling, nutrition, movement, and food for thought.

On frequent rotation is the suggestion to do a 'body scan' - that is, to pause and listen to one's body - does it feel tight? Sore? Tired?  What is it craving - certain foods, movements, rest or activity?  What makes it feel relaxed or joyful or satisfied?

Body scans and me go way back - as someone who has lived with rheumatoid arthritis since my late teens, this is a frequent and useful way to pay attention to what is needed to treat symptoms and determine how to avoid overdoing (or underdoing) so that comfort and functionality can stay optimal.  It's a constantly shifting target - today may need to be a rest day, and tomorrow may be an opportunity to get a few extra things done, but the more you pay attention to your body's response to activity, food and stressors, the better you get at challenging yourself as far as you can while stopping short of the point where recovery costs more in energy than the original effort.

So, I really appreciate seeing it here as something that can and should be applied to everyone who uses the My Life Balanced process - because not only does the 'right' answer vary from person to person, it varies from day to day for each person.  So many 'plans' assume that everyone starts from the same place with the same resources, which sets people up to either be overchallenged (and set up for failure and feelings of guilt), or underchallenged and not seeing any significant results - turning effort into pointless busy work.

This sort of mindfulness of our own body's signals and responses to what we do with it is what enables the My Life Balanced Program to be infinitely modifiable to whatever each person seeks to get from it.  For me, the connection of meditation and inner work with the outer work of eating appropriately for me, and keeping my body as limber and functional as it can be is key to making this work for me.



Regarding meditation, I am also noticing another thing I really appreciate - there are a variety of meditational processes that are noted, as well as plenty of room to incorporate whatever methods have worked for you before starting it.

I am one of many who has never had very good results with the sort of meditation that involves no movement at all, and focuses on 'emptying the mind'.  Vanessa includes at the front of the book a few specific breathing techniques which are beyond helpful in attempting this form of meditation - breath provides a focus and a rhythm that makes it much easier to clear the mind (not so much empty it as declutter) because instead of 'trying' to focus on nothing, you're focusing on breath, releasing random thoughts and creating space to listen - to your body, to that still small voice of wisdom.

My favorite sort of meditation, though, involves more active movement.  One of the day's movement suggestions involved a form I used to love several years ago when I was more mobile - a walking meditation.

Try a walking meditation today. Choose a surface that we are able to walk barefoot on and connect with the ground. During our walk, bring all our awareness to what we feel with our feet connecting the earth.


I was really happy to be reminded of form of moving meditation, as it worked very well for me, and while I have been striving to walk more (I still use my Pacemaker walking sticks regularly), this offers me a great platform for getting back to an old pleasurable activity.

I plan to dust off my old copy of The Spirited Walker: Fitness Walking For Clarity, Balance, and Spiritual Connection and begin using it again. It is a truly lovely book that, much like the My Life Balanced Program, blends practical advice about walking with a spiritual meditative component that incorporates nature awareness, rhythm techniques, and other aspects of walking that make it an exercise in mindfulness as well as fitness.

Finally, I want to mention a third form of meditation practice that I find helpful - visualization.  Here, the purpose is not to empty the mind of stray thoughts but to visualize a thoughtform in order to experience it.

The one I use most often is a part of my spiritual practice and is a variation of a grounding and centering meditation used often by various people.  It is known as the Two Powers Meditation and can be done seated or standing, staying still or incorporating movement to reflect the visualization.

It can be done silently but it is also often done in groups, with one person talking it through for the others.  The basic process is to imagine yourself a tree (or 'the World Tree' - an ancient depiction of the cosmos), roots grounded deep in the earth, the trunk creating a home for all life on earth, and the branches reaching up to the heavens for light and nourishment.

In the meditation, you first stretch your roots down deep into the earth into a pool of water, drawing up cool energy into yourself - the Well of the World, where our ancestry and past are.  The cool watery energy is used to fill cauldrons within us, sometimes conceptualized as chakras.  Then you visualize life growing and living on our branches - all those things that share life with us here and now, and then reaching upward past the atmosphere and into the universe to draw down divine light and fire, filling those same spaces within so that the water and fire combine.  Finally, especially when done with a group, it is helpful to visualize one's branches extending outward and intertwining with one another so that together, we are a Grove, strengthened and supported by one another as we each are rooted firmly in the earth and nourished by the divine.



I know this particular visualization might not be for everyone, but I find it a very compelling metaphor and as a meditation practice, it stills my stress and 'busy brain', reminds me that I am supported in whatever I do, and gives me a perspective that reminds me that while this moment is all I have now, it is but a very small moment and nothing to stress over.

If you're interested in doing visualizaton work, searching iTunes or Amazon Music or YouTube will give you a huge collection to try out - find a few and see how they work for you.

Getting back to the My Life Balanced program, if your experience is anything like mine, you will find that, like that tree metaphor, it leads you to branch out, seek more information on those portions of it that appeal to dig deeper - learn more about specific practices unfamiliar to you, as well as draw on old and possibly neglected practices that have served you well in the past.  You won't find everything you need to know within its covers - and I think that is its strength.  It doesn't lay out a lot of 'must do' instructions, but instead is a launch pad to discover your own potential and passions.

And all that starts with a simple bit of mindfulness. Do a body scan. Listen to what your own body.. and mind.. and spirit... how are they expressing their needs and desires, and how might you respond?


Previous posts in this series:
 
My Life Balanced - Introduction to a New Series
My Life Balanced - 1st Progress Report
My Life Balanced: 120 Days Challenge (Heavy on the CHALLENGE!)

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

How to Feel More Calm With Breathing Exercises

33 comments:


Chances are we’ve probably heard it before “calm down, take a deep breath”. Right? Now how often do we practice breathing deeply regularly. Go ahead, take a deep breath right now. How did it feel? We should probably do it more often right? Well here’s how you can.

First, let’s look at why taking a deep breath is so important. When we are in high stress situations whether it be a very upset child or an angry boss our breath becomes very shallow. As our breath becomes shallow, our body tenses, we often can not think clearly and what’s our reaction? Next time you’re in a situation like this, try an experiment and take a few deep breathes before you react.



When we practice breathing exercises regularly it becomes more natural to use a few deep breaths here and there throughout the day.

I suggested trying out each of the breathing exercises below. Choose which one feels most comfortable and practice it first thing in the morning. Set a timer for a few minutes and dedicate that time to breathing. Your entire day could change by beginning it with breathing.

1) Begin inhaling and exhaling through the nose. Start to count how long you inhale and how long you exhale. Try to match them now. Example: inhale for 3 seconds, exhale for 3 seconds. Make the inhale and exhale both feel even and comfortable.

2) As you inhale through the nose feel the belly rise, ribs expand and chest rise. Pause and hold that breath in. Exhale and sigh it all out as you feel the chest fall, ribs retract, and stomach sink back in. Inhale feel how amazing a deep inhale is, pause and notice whats bothering you, exhale that thing that is bothering you as you sigh.

3) As you inhale bring your mind to a thought that makes you happy. As you exhale smile. Go ahead really smile, it works. Keep repeating the same thought or go through every thought that makes you happy.

Unfortunately we do not have a pause button that can teleport us to our favorite getaway when things get tough. But you do have deep breathing available to you whenever you need it for as long as you would like it.

Take a deep breath, repeat again, again, and again because it really works.

In good health,
Vanessa Hartmann