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LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

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Regional yoga magazine for Los Angeles and peopl ethat travel to LA to study and practice yoga and enjoy the beauty of the city.
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LA YOGA AYURVEDA AND HEALTH MARCH 2011 VOLUME 10 / NO. 2 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA’S FREE YOGA MAGAZINE LAYOGAMAGAZINE.COM sweep out space for spring ayurvedic home makeover herbs for cleansing sam slovick is seduced into wellness daryl hannah says speak out beth lapides lady yoga’s marathon i am: the ultimate reality show una práctica para encender la luz en el corazón enter to win a trip to the sun valley wellness festival
Transcript
Page 1: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

LAYOGAA Y U R V E D A A N D H E A LT H

MARCH 2011VOLUME 10 / NO. 2

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA’SFREE YOGA MAGAZINE

LAYOGAMAGAZINE.COM

sweep out space for spring

ayurvedic home makeover

herbs for cleansing

sam slovick is seduced into wellness

daryl hannah says speak out

beth lapides

lady yoga’s marathon

i am: the ultimate reality show

una práctica para encender la luz en el corazón

enter to win a trip to the sun valley wellness festival

Page 2: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue
Page 3: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

March 2011 LAYOGA 1

Community04 Get Up & Go, News, New Doors

17 The Poet's Corner: Infinite By Dylan Barmmer

18 Seva in Action: West Hollywood Considers Fur Ban

20 Finding Health Freedom Through Our Food By Felicia M. Tomasko, RN

Lights of LA22 Teacher Profile: Beth Lapides By Felicia M. Tomasko, RN

Practice Pages24 Honor Your Inner Rebel By Dr. Lorin Roche, PhD

26 Life is Messy; Clean It By Leslie Hendry

28 Kidney Shakti By Tias Little

Practice Pages: Español 30 Una Práctica para Encender la Luz en el Corazón Escrita por Sussy Castilla

31 Kundalini Yoga By Sussy Castilla

Sitting Down With:38 Tom Shadyac By Felicia M. Tomasko, RN

32 Curestream: Seduced Into Wellness By Sam Slovick

34 Creating a Healing Home Environment By Mary-Alice Quinn, CAS

march 2011:c

ont

ents

On the cover:

CLEANING UP FEELS GOOD!Feels like this cleanse Issue comes at the perfect time. Clearing out the old to make

space for the new is such a great Life lesson. A good reminder this month as the seasons

change and we welcome in the growth!

This cover Image was captured at sunrise in Santa Monica just up the PCH with the Filmmaker, Dancer, Yogini and occasional

muse, Micheline Pierrette Berry. zendancing.com

(Congratulations Micheline on your next adventure!)

Cover Photograph by Amir Magalamirmagal.com

get more LA YOGA online:layogamagazine.com

Ayurveda Pages44 Ayurveda Q&A By Dr. Jay Apte

46 Ayurveda Practitioners

48 Spring Cleansing Ayurveda Style By Dr. Singh Khalsa

Yogi Food50 Mung Bean Rasam By Darshana Thacker

50 The Farmers' Corner By Red Jen Ford

52 Kumquat Rosemary Rice Pilaf By Felicia M. Tomasko, RN

Media54 The Art of Yoga: Mahasivratri By Nandhi

56 CD Reviews

57 Book Review

LA Astrology Pages58 LA Heaven to Earth Jyotish Forecast: March 2011 By Tamiko Fischer

Yantra Series64 Dhumavati Yantra: Potential By Sarah Tomlinson and Dr. John Casey

06

20

50

Don't miss Lady Yoga's latest adventures on p13!

18 54 Art

: Meg

anne

For

bes

Page 4: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

2 LAYOGA March 2011

southern ca l i fo r n ia 's f ree yoga magaz ine

EDITORIAL EDITOR-IN-CHIEF FELICIA M. TOMASKO, RN [email protected] NEWS DESK FELICIA M. TOMASKO, RN [email protected]

STAFF WRITERSMelissa Chua

Vanessa HarrisKaren HenryLaurie Searle

Joni Yung

EDITORIAL ASSISTANCEMichael Blahut

Rachael CleghornSelah MichelleTim Shullberg

INTERNSJoseph ParraAshley Wynn

CONTRIBUTORS

SPANISH EDITORIAL ASSISTANCEJaime Carlos Casessas, Ph.D.

Thank you to the entire Yoga community for participating in and supporting this effort to educate, inspire,

and share wisdom.

Special Thanks

ART ART DIRECTOR KERRI BLACKSTONE DESIGN / PRODUCTION [email protected]

WEBSITE / HOSTING RAY PROFET [email protected]

ADVERTISING ADVERTISING EXECUTIVES ASSIA VALOVA [email protected] (310) 435 - 6490

LA YOGA FOUNDER JULIE DEIFE PUBLISHER EMERITUS JASON GOODMAN

editor's noteLAYOGA

Phot

o: A

Kar

no

AYURVEDA AND HEALTH

LA YOGA Magazine is being published by Chandra Publishing, 1234 26th Street, Santa Monica, CA 90404. (310) 828 - 8218

Dr. Jay ApteDylan BarmmerMercer BoffeyDr. John Casey Sussy Castilla

Lama Surya Das Derek Feniger Tamiko Fischer

Meganne ForbesRed Jen FordSara Ivanhoe

Leslie HendryJasper Johal

A KarnoDr. Karta Purkh Singh Khalsa

Erin KirkTias Little

Amir MagalCaroline Myss

NandhiDaniel Overberger

Madhavi RathodDr. Lorin Roche

Rob SidonSam Slovick

Robert SturmanDarshana ThackerSarah Tomlinson Mary-Alice Quinn

David WattsDiana Winston

Lady Yoga

Micheline BerryJulie CarmenDoug Corbett

Cristi Christensen

Frank Fitzpatrick Sara Ivanhoe

KailasAdam Latham

Andrea MenesesDr. Mark Singleton

Helen Tomasko

As we’ve been putting together an issue for the Spring Equinox and exploring topics related to

cleansing, in some convoluted manifestation of life imitating art, my own life has been going through some seismic shifts lately, and I don’t think I’m the only one. We moved the magazine’s office, I moved my home, and I succumbed to whatever virus was being passed around LA, ending up bedridden for several days even with the best of integrative medical care. But then as one friend pointed out, sometimes the cocooning is necessarily in order for the butter-fly’s wings to unfold. And I have a theory that some-times when the body becomes ill, we need the sleep more than any other remedy. In the midst of all of this was my latest birthday.

This is only a partial list; it’s a list that has made me feel that an entire lifetime has happened since the turn of the year. And I don’t think I’m the only one who seems to feel an eternity has been squeezed into 2011 thus far: A lifetime that has asked all of us to hold on tight—and remember to breathe.

As we’re springing into Spring, we’re entering the time of year when we are natu-rally drawn to cleanse, when we take a deep breath, when we sweep away the old and make room for new growth and new beginnings. These are some of the topics we addressed in these pages, whether considering our home, our herbal remedies, our mung bean soup, or even they way we may rebel against the patterns in our meditation practice.

Every page here seemed to speak to my life somehow, as I hope it does for yours. While reading through Mary-Alice Quinn’s instructions for an Ayurvedic Home Makeover (take your spring cleanse to your living room) with the elements in mind, I was in the midst of putting my unpacking of my new living quarters on hold to work on this issue. Within her words, I found a sense of solace and hope for the ar-rangement of my new space. The poetic and kind suggestions found within her as-sessments of space, air, fire, water, and earth gave me important points of reflection as I’m getting ready to make decisions related to how I will arrange the objects in my environment to create a sacred, comfortable, and welcoming home.

We’ve moved the magazine’s offices as well, as many of you may have heard in one way or another. And in the of shifting space and clearing out old dust, it’s a symbolic gesture of not only changing desks, but preparing to launch a series of new initiatives for 2011 to shake up our image and to deepen the practice of building community and sharing inspiring stories. These are the very core values upon which this magazine is based and to which we are committed on every page. You may no-tice some new opportunities to interact within these pages. And I hope that you all sign up for our email newsletter to stay in touch more often.

Rob Sidon’s interview with Tom Shadyac speaks to these values as well—how we end up literally Spring cleaning our life in one way or another, asking the bigger questions and projecting them onto a screen for all to see.

I was also struck by long-term contributor Sam Slovick’s story of his own recent cleanse and the stripping away of patterns and habits he experienced after giving up cigarettes and then how the cleanse helped him to evaluate—with compassionate honesty—what he was picking up with his hands and putting into his mouth. Often we stuff ourselves for unconscious reasons. When we strip it away, we are able to find a new relationship with ourselves—and come home.

I’m so proud of this community, of all the people who have practiced Yoga, even just for the first time, and all of our attempts to clear up our space, to clean up our body, to renew ourselves and start over when needed. And amidst everything going on in the world today, new Yoga studios are opening, offering people places to en-gage in a Spring cleanse of their body, minds, hearts, spirits, and breath.

Happy Spring,

Felicia M. Tomasko, RN

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4 LAYOGA March 2011

letter to the editor

Support our

advertisers!

Tell them you saw

their ad in

LA YOGA magazine!

Dear LAYoga,I just wanted your readers to know that at

the age of 61, I was determined to start a yoga regimen. I had to beat the odds. So, I committed to 30 Bikram Yoga classes within 30 days. The results were beyond my expec-tations. I experienced a sense of relaxation

from my very fist class. With each class, the pain from the fibromyaligia lessened and I was able to sleep better. Over the next six months, I lost 25 pounds.

All my teachers were well trained and ded-icated to my success. Because the Long Beach site offers one week of unlimited classes for

$20, I felt I was given ample time to deter-mine if Bikram would work for me.

Please share this letter with you readers

Sincerely,Linda Anna Hobbs

We love to receive letters, feedback and suggestions from our readers. Please write us at: [email protected] or send mail to: 1234 26th Street, San-ta Monica, CA 90404. We look for-ward to hearing from you.

We’ve been receiving a lot of positive feed-back and affirmative emails praising the email newsletter, Living LA YOGA, and some of the recent notes therein, including exclusive editorial, contests, events and more. Sign up at: layogamagazine.com or write us at: [email protected], sub-ject line: newsletter.

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6 LAYOGA March 2011

(Continued from p.4)

community : get up and go

Snatam Kaur & GuruGanesha SinghWednesday, March 2

Snatam Kaur, GuruGanesha Singh and Ramesh Kannan share their crystal-line radiant voices that reverberates in all audiences’ hearts. Tickets $35-$55. 7:30 P.M. Wilshire Ebell The-ater, 4401 W. 8th St., Los Angeles, CA 90010; FMI:

snatamkaur.com; showclix.com

Spring AliveThursday, March 3

Spring Groove is offering an interactive concert and theatrical experience that will transport the audience around the world and

into their hearts. It will incorporate original Kirtan blended with folk music by Spring Groove intended to bring bhakti lovers and mainstream music lovers together to cele-brate Love. Tickets $10; Pre-reception 7:00 P.M. Show 8:00 P.M.; Santa Monica Play-house; 1211 4th St.; Santa Monica, CA 90401; FMI: [email protected]; santamonicaplayhouse.com

A Contemplative Approach to Aromatherapy Friday – Sunday, March 4 – 6

David Crow of Floracopeia bringsa medi-tation-based approach to understanding how pure essential oils can transform conscious-ness and benefit your emotional and spiri-tual well-being. Topics include: how plant essences awaken our awareness of bio-logial unity and sensitivity to all beings, the Yoga of olfaction, Buddhist meditation, and con-templative practices that help us recognize the hidden dimensions and intelligence of bo-

tanical fragrances. Friday evening free. Reg-istration fee for full weekend. 8 P.M.- 10 P.M. Friday March 4; Yoga Desa; 120 N. Topanga Canyon Blvd, Pine Tree Circle; Sat and Sun. 10 A.M. - 6 P.M.; Ribbit Tree; 301 Old Topanga Canyon Rd.; FMI: (808) 346 - 1838; alohanamaste.com

Ayurvedic Cooking Class Saturday, March 5

Dr. Parla Jayagopal offers a new paradigm for eating through Ayurvedic concepts of diet

and nutrition. Our spiritual well- being is invariably influenced by our food habits. Alongside hands on cooking demonstra-tions, Dr. Jayagopal will introduce the six tastes, qualities of spic-es, and seasonal modi-

fications. Proceeds benefit the Sri Karunamayi Sangha in Southern California. $35 including samples of dishes; 10 A.M. - 1 P.M. 3068 San Marino St., Los Angeles, CA 90006. RSVP: [email protected] or (213) 268 – 2260.

Family ConstellationsSaturday March 5

The Family Constellations workshop facili-tated by Thomas Irzl from Italy offers effec-tive ways of healing on a deeply felt energetic level with life-changing results. This one-day workshop introduces insights into the laws of success in human relationships and approach-ing personal conflicts, as well as physical and emotional suffering from the spiritual dimen-sion.. $75; 1 P.M.-6 P.M.; 2538 Westridge Rd, LA, 90049 FMI: (949) 46 6- 5888; [email protected].

Yoga Gives Back Long Beach FundraiserSaturday, March 5

Leading the heart toward the seat of the soul: Tag team class with Ramona Tamuli-nas, Kim Wolf and Michelle Libeu with a $25 donation to support microfinancing projects in India. Asana 1:00 – 2:30 P.M. Lunch (donated by Open Sesame Long Beach) and Raffle 2:30 – 4:30 P.M. Yoga World Studio Downtown, 250 West Ocean Blvd, Long Beach, CA 90202 (562) 804 – 5525. Yogaworldstudio.com

DanceWorks Master ClassSunday, March 6

Learn the moves that will make you feel great and have fun on the dance floor as you sample YogaWorks newest future class—DanceWorks. You don’t need any dance experience, as Karen Russell, professional dancer, Yoga instructor, and founder of Yoga Groove® Entertainment, will show you how to move with the rhythm

MahaKirtan Pre Bakti Fest Party Saturday, March 5

Enjoy an majestic evening fully im-mersed in the joy of kirtan and sacred mantras led by Donna De Lory, Joey Lugassy, and The Breath of Life Tribe. Before the music begins, min-gle with the community and enter drawings for door prizes, sip on chai and enjoy raw food refreshments, free treats, and loving like-minded souls. Doors open at 6 P.M. so every-one can come early. You can pur-chase your Bhakti-Fest spring OM-mersion and Fall Bhakti-Fest tickets. $20-$25; Concert 7:30 P.M. Art of Living Los Angeles Center; 948 W. Adams Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90007; FMI: prebhaktifest.com

(Continued on p.8)

Page 9: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue
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8 LAYOGA March 2011

with good alignment. $45. 2:30 – 4:30 P.M. YogaWorks Tarzana Studio. To register, call (818) 457 – 6900.

USA Yoga Federation ChampionshipSaturday and Sunday, March 5 and 6

Asana can be inspiring, and when executed beautifully, can allow our hearts, minds, and

spirits to revel in the possibility offered through the practice. Watch participants in the eighth annual United States Yoga Asana Championship as they share the joy of Yoga. Free for members. $10 one day; $15 both days. 10:00 A.M. – 5:00 P.M. Westin Hotel LAX, 5400 West Century Blvd, Los Angeles: usayoga.org.

Yoga Inspired SongsSunday, March 6

Gurani Anjali, founder of Yoga Anand Ashram, will be joined by Karren Doukas, John Matthis, and Don Jeremiah for a free evening of songs like “Yoga Path,” “The El-ements,” “MahaDeva,” and “Into a Spin.” 7:00 P.M. The Church in Ocean Park, Santa Monica, CA.

Darshan With Louix Dor Dempriey Monday, March 7

Louix Dor Dempriey is a spiritual Master whose darshan and ageless wisdom have in-

voked profound transformation in thousands of peo-ple worldwide. Darshan 7:30 P.M. The Hills Hotel, 25205 La Paz Road, Laguna Hills, CA For more information, please contact Samantha

at (888) 288-3735; e-mail [email protected] or please visit: www.Louix.org. Atten-dance is by donation.

Yoga Stops Trafick BenefitSaturday, March 12

Yoga stops trafick is a one-day global Yoga event to raise awareness and money to help

bring an end to hu-man trafficking. This class will be led by Daniel Overberg-er (pictured) and 100% of the money raised will support Odanadi, a non-profit organization located in Mysore. Yoga has become a vital role in the re-

habilitation of many of the survivors of slav-ery, domestic abuse, and forced prostitution. By donation. 10:30 A.M. Runyon Canyon, Los Angeles, CA: FMI: odanadi-uk.org, [email protected]

Yoga, Kirtan & the MahabharataSaturday, March 12

Heidi Rayden will teach gentle one hour Chakra Bhakti Flow yoga class accompanied by The Temple Bhajan Band offering live kirtan music. A satsang follows with Sura Das reading selected prose from the Mahabharata, an an-cient text containing compositional layers of philosophical and devotional material. Suggest-ed Donation $20; 1:45 .- 3:45 P.M.; Bhakti Yoga Shala, 207 Arizona Ave., Santa Monica, CA 90405; FMI: bhaktiyogashala.com

Yoga Doctors Mandir Grand OpeningSaturday, March 12

Celebrate this new wellness center on the Westside spearheaded by Yoga Doctor Eden Goldman, DC, E-RYT with an evening of live music, gourmet vegetarian food, drinks, and community. Free. 7:30 P.M. 2211 Corinth Avenue, Suite 211, West Los Ange-les, CA 90064. Call (310) 990 – 9648 or vis-it: yogadoctors.com. Save 33% off your first visit when you mention LA YOGA.

Environmental Art ShowSunday, March 13

This environmental art show by New Roads Spectrum Program middle school-ers will be held at the Malibu Farmers’ Mar-ket from 10:00 A.M. – 3:00 P.M. organized by Exhale yoga teacher and psychotherapist, Julie Carmen.

“The kids learned about the anatomy of a cell structure by putting jell-O in a baggie with floating lima beans. They photographed images of plant cells while visiting the Cor-

nucopia Foundation Environmental Learn-ing Center and collected collage samples from the garden.”

Quest for AnswersFriday, March 18

Mark Singleton, author of Yoga Body, calls to question many commonly held beliefs about the nature and origins of postural yoga (asanas) and suggests a radically new way of unders tand the meaning of Yoga as it is practiced by mil-lions of people across the world. Dr. Sin-gleton’s thesis turns all conventional wis-dom about Yoga on its head. His discus-sion will bring an in-formative depth of insight to the historic and cultural back-ground of modern Hatha Yoga for all sincere students. $20 advance; $30 door; 7:45 - 10:30 P.M. YogaWorks, 2215 Main St., Santa Monica, CA; FMI: (310) 664-6470 ext. 125, yogaworks.com

The South Bay Rocks! Operation ShantiSaturday, March 19

Join Angela Kukhahn, Garth Hewitt and other yogis for this all-levels donation class followed by a DJ, food, wine, and a raffle to raise funds to build an orphanage in In-dia. $35 suggested donation. Class: 4:00 – 6:00 P.M. After party: 6:00 – 8:00 P.M. Hermo-sa Beach Commu-nity Center, Clark Building, 861 Valley Drive, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. Operationshanti.org.

(Continued on p.10)

(Continued from p.6)

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10 LAYOGA March 2011

Spring Equinox Yoga with the Namaste Women’s ChoirSaturday, March 19

The Namaste Women’s Choir will be sing-ing harmony and sharing the vibration of their voices while Mary Donovon leads a Yoga class focused on the renewal of the changing seasons and the invitation of spring. $20. 7:00 P.M. Santa Monica Yoga, 1640 Ocean Park Blvd, Santa Monica, CA 90405 (310) 396 – 4040. Santamonicayoga.com; namastewomenschoir.org.

Dove DashSunday, March 20

Spend time with the whole family running or walking Dove Canyon and then enjoy breakfast to support Ryan’s Reach, a local charity devoted to aid brain injured individ-uals and their families. The Ryan’s Reach foundation helps provide financial, emotion-al, physical and spiritual support. Registra-tion closes March 17; 8 A.M. Corner of Dove Canyon Dr. and Sycamore Dr.; Dove Canyon, CA; FMI: ryansreach.com

Art Reception: Therapeutic Art Thursday, March 24

Art therapy is a powerful and healing prac-tice that allows for the creative expression of deep emotional states. Premiere Oncology

offers ongoing art therapy class-es as well as a gorgeous display of art in its facili-ties. Join the community for the art curated by Corinne Light-weaver and Es-ther Dreifuss-Kattan, PhD, with works by Diane Michelle and artists of the cancer & cre-ativity and heal-

ing arts group. Opening reception 4:30 – 7:30 P.M. Premiere Oncology Foundation, 2020 Santa Monica Blvd, Suite 600, Santa Monica, CA: premiereoncology.org

Darshan with Louix Dor DemprieyFriday, March 25

Louix Dor Dempriey is a spiritual Master whose darshan and ageless wisdom have in-

voked profound transformation in thousands of people worldwide. Darshan 7:30 P.M. Seaside Center for Spiritual Living, 1613 Lake Drive, Encinitas, CA. For more infor-mation, please contact Samantha at (888) 288-3735; e-mail [email protected] or please visit: www.Louix.org. Attendance is by donation.

The Rising Lotus Seva ProjectSaturday, March 26

Celebrate in this evening to launch the Ris-ing Lotus Seva Project, which will put Yoga teachers directly into communities in need.

This full Saturday eve-ning will include a tag-team Yoga class, silent auction, and kirtan with Daniel Stewart and friends. This event is in partnership with House of Ruth, who assists families victim-ized by domestic vio-lence. Register online or at the Front desk

space is limited. $20 yoga; $20 Kirtan; 5 P.M.-10P.M. Sat. March 26; 13557 Ventura Blvd.; Sherman Oaks, CA 91423 FMI: (818) 990- 0282; risinglotusyoga.com

Workshop to Benefit Abused Women and ChildrenSaturday, March 26

Join The Yoga Collective (formerly Yoga-Co) teachers Ashley Albrand and Liz Arch for a workshop of inversions and hip open-

ers to benefit women and children who have been victims of domestic violence, sexual abuse and human trafficking. Elevate, cele-brate and liberate in this three-hour explora-

tion. Learn to conquer fears, while building tremendous physical and emotional strength in a safe and playful environment.

100% of the proceeds will go directly to A Window Between Worlds (awbw.org) - a nonprofit organization based in Venice, CA, dedicated to using art to help end domestic violence, and GEMS – Girls Educational & Mentoring Services (gems-girls.com) –based-int of NY, dedicated to empowering girls and young women, ages 12-21, who have expe-rienced commercial sexual exploitation and domestic trafficking to exit the industry and develop their full potential. All attendees will be entered into a drawing to win prizes do-nated by lululemon Santa Monica.

$35 Pre-registration; $40 at the door. For additional donations, email Liz at [email protected]. The Yoga Collective, 1408 3rd St. Promenade, 3rd Floor Santa Monica, CA 90401, 1:00 - 4:00 P.M. theyogacollec-tive.com; For registration: (310) 395-0600

Spring Cleaning Yoga Detox &Donation DriveSunday, March 27

Stefani Manger, RYT, will be leading a two-hour practice featuring fun, sweat, and deep relaxation to release toxins from the body, purify, and then restore with a chakra clear-ing meditation in this seasonal detox. Bring water, a towel, and goods to donate to the D o w n t o w n Women’s Cen-ter. Items for donation can include sweat-ers and other clothing, roll-ing luggage, and sheets and bedding. For a wish list, visit: dwcweb.org. $25 with RSVP/ $30 at the door. 10:00 A.M. – 12 Noon. Brazilian Yoga & Pilates, 3191 Casitas Ave #112, Los An-geles, CA 90039.

Dansa VinyasaSaturday, April 2

Join Debbie Steingesser for this blend of flow Yoga, traditional West African dance, kirtan, and live African percussion. $35 ad-vance, $40 day of. 12:30 – 3:30 P.M. Exhale Venice, 245 South Main Street, Venice, CA. (310) 450 – 7676. Exhalespa.com.

(Continued from p.8)

LAYOGA

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12 LAYOGA March 2011

Enter to Win! LA YOGA Magazine and the Sun Valley Wellness Festival are teaming up to offer one lucky LA YOGA reader a trip for two to the Sun Valley Wellness Festival, in Sun Valley, Idaho, on the weekend of May 27 – 30. The winner will receive roundtrip air (there are daily nonstop flights on Horizon Air from LAX to SUN starting May 27), lodging at the festival headquarters at the lovely Sun Valley Resort (sunvalley.com), and VIP admission to all festival events.

The total value of this package is approxi-mately $2,000.

Write: [email protected] by April 15 and tell us why you want to win and what wellness means to you. The winner will be announced on April 20. We look forward to hearing from you.

For more information on the Sun Valley Well-ness Festival, please visit: sunvalleywellness.org.

community : news

Giveaway!

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LAYOGA

Yoga Alliance Board Appointment Announced

Dr. Linda Rowe (pictured), a licensed chi-ropractic physician and a YogaFit® Senior Master Trainer has been newly appointed to the Yoga Alliance prestigious board of direc-tors. Dr. Linda Rowe, D.C. and YogaFit RYT 500 Senior Master Trainer, has set her primary focus in guiding others to achieve fitness and wellness. A licensed chiropractic physician since 1995, she is the creator of YogaFit’s 300 Hour Therapy Program, Therapy Four-Day Training, the star and au-thor of YogaFit’s YogaBack™ DVD. She has been on staff with YogaFit®, the world’s largest Yoga school since 1998 and she leads educational Yoga trainings around the na-tion: yogafit.com.

Yoga Alliance® is the national education and support organization for yoga in the United States. They work in the public inter-

est to ensure that there is a thorough under-standing of the benefits of yoga and that the public can be confident of the quality and consistency of instruction: yogaalliance.org.

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14 LAYOGA March 2011

Yoga for Kids and TeensSanta Monica’s newest Yoga studio, KID-

SREVOLVING, hosts a unique schedule of classes exclusively for children and teens. Customized by age level, the classes help strengthen visual, auditory, spatial, and kin-esthetic awareness by engaging kids in a way their growing bodies and minds can relate to

receiving and processing information. Studio director and founder Tiffany Craft

says, “kidsrevolving gives me an opportuni-ty to inspire youth to connect with their bod-ies and create with their minds, so they dis-cover a foundation of empowerment that helps them to live the best lives possible.”

At kidsrevolving, no two classes are the same, but all sessions share a common goal of balancing the body, mind and spirit. While the kids explore a series of asanas based on themes inspired by cultures from around the

world, they gain creativity, self-appreciation and cultivate an awareness of other cultures. “kidsrevolving is a place for kids of all ages to be themselves, learn about themselves and ultimately feel good about themselves,” says Tiffany. kidsrevolving, 1657 12th Street, Suite B Santa Monica, CA 90404. kidsrevolving.com

––Melissa Chua

Hatha Yoga in ChatsworthIn a city that doesn’t get enough Yoga,

Chatsworth now welcomes a new Yoga cen-ter. Marydale Pecora created PARAM YOGA HEALING ARTS CENTER, hoping to transform her city into a “healthy (and) vibrant Yoga community,” she says.

Marydale has been a Yoga practitioner and teacher as well as an energetic healer for de-cades. For years, she would teach and offer private sessions in her own home, but as her students multiplied, she decided to expand into a new space. Marydale named the studio in honor of her guru, Paramhansa Yoganan-da, and the name means “supreme Yoga.” Once you step into the beautiful studio, you’ll notice five white arches draped over each window. The elegant space is decorated in shades of blue, white and gold.

Param Yoga hosts mostly Hatha-style Yoga classes for all levels. There are also pri-vate sessions for Yoga therapy as well as Reiki training for levels 1 and 2 along with master teacher training.

“Our desire is to communicate what our logo says, which is to love, serve, meditate

and realize that we are deeply anchored in the eight limbs of Yoga,” says Marydale. “We offer Yoga to everybody who is inter-ested giving them a personalized Yoga prac-tice (that is) hands-on and community-ori-

ented,” she says. Param Yoga Healing Arts Center, 21750 Devonshire St. Chatsworth, CA 91311. param-yoga.com ––Melissa Chua

Melissa Chua is a Los Angeles-based writer with a journalism degree from Cal-State Uni-versity Northridge. [email protected]

community : new doors

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March 2011 LAYOGA 15

Montecito YogaPeaceful and safe, partially below ground,

in a cave-like setting ascending into light, is how MONTECITO YOGA owner and Yoga teacher Denise Zaverdes describes the serene yet welcoming Yoga space on Coast Village Road in the seaside enclave town of Mon-tecito. She opened the studio with the intent for a place where, as she says, “People can come to explore what it means to be them-selves in this world today.” She’s not the only one who found magic in the space, judging by the vibrant community who showed up at the not one, but two, grand opening events. She feels that the students and visitors bring in the mojo and Zaverdes hopes the space serves the needs of the community.

Zaverdes began her Yoga journey when she was a commercial film editor living in Chi-cago. “My friend Jackie said for many years that I would love Yoga.” A Pilates instructor at her local health club became a Yoga in-structor and Zaverdes feels she got lucky with that experience. A longtime dancer, she says, “Yoga was everything I was looking for, with-out knowing I was looking for it; Yoga has the spirit of dance, with breath and inten-tion.” Before moving to the Central Coast in 2004, Zaverdes taught in Orange County at YogaWorks and Yoga Place in Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach and practiced and studied with Chuck Miller and Ana Forrest.

Many of the studio’s current students are new to Yoga and they continue to remind her why she loves the practice. In addition to Zaverdes’ flow classes, the full schedule in-cludes Yin, all levels classes (including a lunchtime midday break), core flow, mindful Yoga, gentle, Kundalini, power flow fusion and level 2/3 classes. The first class at the studio is free. Montecito Yoga, 1187 Coast Village Road, Montecito, CA. (805) 845 – 1301. montecitoyoga.com

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LA Single Yogi Tia Dobi says the couple who Yogas together stays together. Here she is with the Valentine’s issue…all over town. She picks up her monthly copy at the Agape International Spiritual Center.

Jodi Bye (above) picks up my copy of LA Yoga ev-ery month at Santa Monica Power Yoga where she also teaches Yoga, takes class, and manages the re-tail boutique. She says she’s surrounded my life by the Yoga community and it couldn’t be better.

Tell us where you pick up LA YOGA and send us a photo for inclusion in an upcoming issue. Write: [email protected].

Where I pick up LA YOGA

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InfinitePush down to melt yourheart into the earth whereall good things flower andgrow don't you know youare just waiting to blossom

Rise up and reach forthe sky lift so high tofly free of your burdens orworries fears they onlyhold you back if you let them

Reach out to unite yourbody mind and soul justflow as one like the oceanlike a vinyasa like somethingyou only dreamed of being

You are Infinite in essence

*2007 Word Is Born

Dylan Barmmer is a writer, poet, performance artist and yogi living, laughing and playing in the stunning San Diego surf enclave of Cardiff-by-the-Sea. Dylan also serves as Raconteur for creative copywriting consortium Word Is Born (wordisborn.net) and outlaw oratorial outfit Random Acts of Poetry (youtube.com/wordisborntv), and authors the Mad Yogi Poet blog on ElephantJournal.com (elephantjournal.com/author/dylan-barmmer). Motivated by creativity, driven by passion and defined by heart, Dylan has often been called “a real piece of work.”@wordisborn

the poet’s cornerby dylan barmmer

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seva in action

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West Hollywood city council candidate John D'Amico recently announced his

intention to ban the sale of fur within city lim-its, which would make WeHo the first city in the United States to ban fur. The animal wel-fare community has come out strong in sup-port of the fur ban and since initial campaign rallies, other candidates have come on board, showing that the issue has much broader po-litical appeal than previously thought.

"West Hollywood has the opportunity to once again be a leader for animal welfare by becoming the first fur-free city in the nation," said D'Amico. "We have pledged to be a place that is free of cruelty to animals and we can no longer support the barbaric fur trade by selling the products of that cruelty in our city." In 1989, West Hollywood passed Res-

olution Number 558 proclaiming the city a "Cruelty Free Zone for Animals." The city has already passed a historic ban on declaw-ing cats, and banned the sale of dogs and cats within city limits.

"Sometimes we have to get into the politi-

cal arena to make change,” said Ed Buck, a WeHo resident and one of the Fur Free West Hollywood campaign organizers. "If you want humane laws, you have to elect hu-mane lawmakers." Citywide elections will be held March 8. furfreeweho.com

west hollywood considers fur ban

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Top Left: PETA volunteer extraordinaire Christina Cho, Bottom Left: Rory Freedman, Lacey Conner and friends, Right: WeHo City Coun-cil candidate John D'Amico addresses the crowd

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Felicia Marie Tomasko: As we enter Spring, we notice the sprouting of new growth, mak-ing this a profound time to start to look at how we can contribute, even within an urban environment, to being more self-sufficient with our own food, herbs and medicines. Where do you feel is an important place for people to begin?

Daryl Hannah: Self-sufficiency in any way is great thing! It helps us feel free and indepen-dent and relieves a lot of pressure - both fi-nancially and from the fear associated with any dependence. So growing some of your own food, or joining a community CSA (Community Supported Agriculture pro-gram), or becoming part of a renewable fuel co-op - these kinds of actions are all liberat-ing gestures and a great way to empower ourselves.

FMT: As more GMO crops are being inserted into our food supply, can you speak to how can individuals or communities take action to ensure access to organic and safe food?

DH: The best insurance that you’re not being slipped GMOs is to stay away from conven-tionally grown produce and processed foods. GMOs don’t need to be labeled, so conven-tionally grown corn, packaged goods, and other items are a particularly sneaky way to force feed the American populace GMOs.

Grow your own or stick with organics. It’s also crucial to let your public representatives know if you want GMOs to be labeled.

The Organic Consumers Association

(http://www.organicconsumers.org/) is doing great work - keeping up the fight for our right to know and keep organics free of ge-netically engineered crops.

FMT: Some of your activism has centered around urban gardens. Can you share a par-ticularly heartwarming success story?

DH: The South Central Farm land which I helped fight for is now back up for sale! Check out my video blog on its earlier de-struction – (Found on week 12 of the archive of shows on Daryl Hannah’s website: dhlove-life) (http://www.dhlovelife.com/v2/show/archive/?wk=12)

There are so many inspiring stories of the emerging urban gardening movement—schools all over the country now have living classrooms and are growing gardens—the city of Detroit has really embraced and is now leading the urban gardening movement, it’s spreading like wildfire.

FMT: How can people become activists and become more involved in gardening in the community or supporting others to do so?

DH: Plant! Having a garden, even a small herb garden in window pots is so incredibly tangibly satisfying! It cleans the air in your home and tastes great. There’s just no down-side.

Join a CSA (Community Supported Agri-culture program). Shop at a farmers market. Support or start your kids’ school garden.

Study permaculture. Permaculture is a phe-

nomenal way to mimic nature’s genius to harvest and store water, arrange crops and design everything!

FMT: What one action could people take that you feel would make the greatest impact?

DH: Speak out!

Daryl Hannah will be speaking out at the Health Freedom Expo in Long Beach, Cali-fornia. The three-day expo, March 25- 27, will feature a full slate of enlightening speak-ers encouraging empowerment of our health care, taking freedom seriously. Join Daryl Hannah, Mariel Hemingway, Mike Adams, John Gray, Jeffrey Smith, Kevin Trudeau, George Noory (and LA YOGA editor Felicia Tomasko—Friday at 4:00 P.M.), among oth-er speakers and educators. For more infor-mation, visit: healthfreedomexpo.com.

There’s a new CSA in town! The McGrath Family Farm in Camarillo are partnering with the Sinai Temple in Los Angeles to of-fer a Spring, 2011 Season CSA from March 1 – May 24. Different options are available and pick up is at the Holmby Drive garage entrance at the temple on Tuesdays from 2:30 – 4:00 P.M. Members are encouraged to help volunteer if possible during the sea-son. For more information, please contact Lisa at [email protected].

For more information on other CSA pro-grams, please visit: csacalifornia.org.

finding health freedom through our foodfive questions with daryl hannahby felicia marie tomasko, rn

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Tby felicia m. tomasko, rn

bethlapides

lights of LA : teacher profile

100% happy 88% of the time…

and in the moment

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THE FIRST TIME I encountered Beth Lapides, she was accepting an award for her work as a comedian, teacher, entertainer, speaker, and collaborative force in creating funny, smart, and dare we say uplifting story-telling through the popular and groundbreak-ing Un-Cabaret series. And in that meeting, I couldn’t help but be struck by her sense of daring, the bold way in which is commanded attention, and her great clothes—a well-put together ensemble that fully expressed that this was a woman with a sense of fun, some-one who is comfortable at home in her own self, fully expressive, and imbued with a sense of freedom. I had to speak to her.

From that conversation, a common inter-est in Yoga was discovered, and not long af-ter, LA YOGA began running Beth’s humor-ous column, “My Other Car is a Yoga Mat.” (She has produced license plate holders with this phrase emblazoned on them. I’ve seen them adorning cars in L.A. and you, too, can buy one online on Beth’s website to proclaim your love of Yoga.) In her writing in this magazine and other places (including O Magazine and the Huffington Post), her wry and right-on sense of humor, her inquisitive nature, and her views on Yoga and how it

relates to life never fail to delight.As she is on the page, she is also in person:

unfailingly funny, never afraid to be vulner-able, compassionate, and caring. She is always ready with a kind word or encouraging thought, always ready to try something new. And she is always dressed as if she is on stage, even when I visited her and her husband and frequent collaborator Greg Miller, for cock-tails and dinner in their home, on the night that her camera revealed its first orb photos. (For more about these orbs, see some of her previous columns—or check out her current show, 100% Happy 88% of the Time.)

Speaking of the show,She sings in the show and in order to de-

velop this voice, Beth has been taking singing lessons. “It’s my new Yoga,” she says. “You have to be so present, it’s crazy.” And it’s not just about getting out of your head. “I’m learning to feel that notes happen in different places in the body, and I can direct the breath in different places in the body.”

“It’s so much about breath,” she says. Sounds familiar.

Singing is more than an exploration of breath, according to Beth. She waxes philo-

sophical about the use of singing in her per-formance. “It feels balanced, combining sing-ing and speaking.” The two complement each other. As she says, “I’ve heard that talk-ing is the yang part of vocal expression, while singing is the in part of vocal expression.” Exploring both the yin and yang help us to be more fully who we are, a common theme for Beth as she speaks about her aims and goals as a teacher. She wants her students to get comfortable being who they are, with the Yoga of developing that increasing self-knowledge, through performing, even if they never intend to perform professionally. “As a teacher I’m always teaching how to under-stand yourself better and through that prac-tice, how to live a fuller life and how to shape who you are.” It’s literally through our voice, and as Beth says, “Free your voice and the rest will follow.”

Beth and Mitch Kaplan, who works with her on 100% Happy, have been co-teaching an ongoing series called Singers Anonymous, on Saturdays in LA. She describes her co-teacher as a consummate professional, who teaches the musical part of singing, while she teaches the performing. Whether someone is singing their own material, or interpreting

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songs written by others, performing songs is a profound exercise in self-knowledge. “It’s a Yoga practice, to get to that place of being comfortable with it.” And she is good at en-couraging beginners, “I’m a great cheerlead-er for those who are learning. I cheerlead, applaud, and give performing notes.”

Giving notes is a frequent part of her meth-od as a teacher when she teaches solo, or with one of her other collaborators or co-teachers, including Miller (with whom she has been teaching The Comedian’s Way: A Creative Path for Writers, at venues including in Los Angeles and as a residential retreat at the Kri-palu Center for Yoga and Health in Massa-chusetts). Part of the teaching method is to let people talk, to perform what they’ve written, and then give them notes. It asks the student, the other people in the room, the teachers, to be vulnerable. It’s transformative. And it helps uncover the story any of us held locked up in our hearts. We find it when we speak it out loud. Performing it is raw, courageous, and helps us figure it out. The courage is a big part of the process. “Living now requires a lot of

courage, and any time we practice courage we build it.”

She’s practicing courage in the creation of her own show, 100% Happy 88% of the Time, and it evolves with each performance, as she develops the material in front of the audience. When I tell her this is daring, she laughs and says she wishes there were an-other way, but “the hell and beauty of being a performer is that you can’t do it yourself, it has to be in front of an audience.” There’s a connection there. “People don’t realize how much a monologue is a dialogue with the audience.”

For some people, speaking out loud, sing-ing, or being involved in any kind of perfor-mance is one of their worst fears, yet building the courage is profound and spills over into many other parts of life. And while some of Beth’s students are professional performers, others are lawyers, teachers, therapists, peo-ple who are changing jobs, people who may not initially see themselves as performers, but for whom the ability to tell a story, express an idea, and be real, is vital. Through that

expression, people can work out the mate-rial, just like finding a dress that is the right shape, by knowing oneself as a performer, people can see what they can speak, deliver, and express.

She likens the work with people in this way to being analogous to a participating in a be-ginners’ Yoga class. “I love seeing people at the start of their practice, and I love taking beginning Yoga classes. It’s exciting.”

One of the things that keeps her teaching is her love of laughter, her joy of being in the moment. “I love it when my students make me laugh.”

Fortunately Beth laughs easily.

For more information about upcoming per-formances of 100% Happy 88% of the Time (to be seen in LA and Palm Springs in March), license plate holders, recordings from Un-Cabaret, and ongoing classes with Beth Lapides in Southern California, as well as re-treats at Kripalu, visit: bethlapides.com.

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practice pages: meditation

meditating with the radiance sutras:

honor your inner rebel by dr. lorin roche, phd

YOU NEVER KNOW where your spiritual self is hidden. We’re told to find it through the discipline of practice. Because this is meditation, and not the Army, your impulse to rebel against discipline is as important as your desire to change yourself for the better. You may have noticed in the past that when you try to get yourself to do a self-help pro-gram, you wind up tyrannizing yourself. Then you rebel against the tyranny. The reb-el becomes a saboteur of your program be-cause you left her out. The way through this is to embrace the rebel right from the start.

Welcoming the rebel may mean listening to the feeling, “I don’t want to meditate to-day,” and finding out what it wants. To hon-or such a feeling means taking it so seriously that you would be willing not to meditate in your usual way, but rather enter the feeling, explore it, let it teach you. Welcome the re-bellion, then listen to it. The rebel is there to make sure you do not become enslaved in an external system that takes away your inner authority, your inner freedom, or oppresses you in any way. If you don't start with free-dom, you won't end up there.

Meditating the rebel’s way may seem very strange. Once I was working with a school-teacher, and she was getting restless just a few minutes into the first session. I asked, “What are your impulses?” She said, “I just want to be outside.” We went outside and since we were on a mountain we could see vast horizons. She breathed a sigh of relief.

It turns out that she prefers to be outside as much as possible, even in winter. She dresses warmly, and sits in the snow, and has a great time meditating. The rebel in her is her spiritual part. For another woman, her rebel insists she stay in bed and be cozy to meditate on certain days.

A man I worked with had an amazing Zen

practice, he could close his eyes and enter The Stillness and stay there. But his body was through with it. His impulse was to jump up and dance wildly, then sit briefly and savor the combination of free-flowing passion supported by inner peace. That be-came his practice, and he began to thrive in his life as never before. The rebel can sound like an Ayurvedic doctor, prescribing just the treatment to balance your constitution.

The rebel in you is probably more useful, smarter, and healthier than your “spiritual” impulse to practice meditation. Many people, when they imagine meditating, conceive of it as some sort of confinement, an inner prison. Your inner rebel will immediately alert you if you start making up Odious Rules, such as, “You can’t think, you can’t feel, don’t wiggle, you can’t scratch if you itch.” The rebel will have none of this.

The way in which you rebel is your indi-viduality. We are in human bodies, so the whole point of meditation is to explore and delight in the intersection of the body with universality. Individuality is height-ened and illumined by contact with the vast forces of life.

So honor your inner rebel. As you practice any meditation, be alert for the voice of skepticism in you, the voice that says, “Hey, wait a minute, this is bull!” The rebel looks out for your individuality. Invite it in, no matter how much trouble it seems.

As you read and explore meditation notice anything you hate or don’t want to do. Al-ways take your own side. Be willing to hunt to find your own path.

Lorin Roche, a meditation teacher for more than forty years, is the author of The Radi-ance Sutras and Meditation Made Easy: lorinroche.com.

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IF YOU ASK PEOPLE on the street where their mind is most of the time, they will prob-ably think you are really odd, but then they will answer, “My mind is right here.” Is it? Most of us spend a great deal of time lost in thoughts about the past or the future. Many of our thoughts are about things we regret from the past or things we are worried about in the future. We obsess, worry, grieve, imag-ine the worst happening in the future, and replay situations from the past that caused us pain. Theoretically, it might be wise to re-play only pleasant thoughts, but we mostly replay negative thoughts, as if we have bro-ken records in our heads. Most of our thoughts hardly seem to vary. We have been thinking the same (often painful) thoughts day after day! So our minds are often not aware in the present but living in a different time period, either the past or the future.

Mindfulness can take you out of your ha-bitual thinking by bringing you to what is ac-tually happening at the present time. Stop right now, take a breath, and pay close atten-tion to the present. Exactly in this moment, are things, for the most part, okay? The future has not happened, the past is over, and right now, well, it just is. This foundational tech-nique of learning mindfulness—learning to re-turn your mind to the present, no matter what

is happening—is tremendously helpful for working with challenging thoughts, emotions, and experiences.

Emma, a twenty-three-year-old aspiring ac-tress, struggled constantly with negative thoughts about herself. After a few weeks of the Mindful Awareness Practices (MAPs) class at our Mindful Awareness Research Center at UCLA, she came into class elated: “I had an audition today, and for the first time ever I didn’t judge myself. Well, I did notice judgment in my mind, but I just stopped and took a breath and decided to be mindful instead of judgmental. I felt my body, noticed my thoughts, and all the judg-ment just stopped.”

Coming back into the present moment by letting go of thoughts does not require that you eliminate creative ruminations, reflec-tions on the past, or abstract thinking. Mind-fulness is more about giving yourself a choice with your thoughts. You can exert some con-trol over them rather than being at their mer-cy. As you learn to regulate your attention, you also learn when it is useful to focus on the present moment (particularly when work-ing with difficult or negative thinking) and when it is useful to use creative and other functions of mind.

Diana Winston is the Director of Mindful-ness Education at the UCLA Mindful Aware-ness Research Center. You can download a number of different free meditations led by Diana at: marc.ucla.edu. She also leads a free weekly mindfulness practice in the Billy Wilder Theater at the Hammer Museum at 12:30 P.M. on Thursdays.

Diana Winston will be one of the featured speakers on March 2 at Music, Meditation and Mindfulness; An Inquiry…presented by c3: Center for Conscious Creativity, Lotus Post, Omstream Music, the UCLA Mindful Awareness Research Center and LA YOGA Magazine that will be part of an ongoing se-ries exploring the connections between sound, meditation, and neuroscience.

Music, Meditation, and Mindfulness, Wednesday, March 2, 7:00 P.M. $20. Space is limited. Lotus Post, 1533 26th Street, San-ta Monica, CA 90404. (310) 828 – 1001: lotuspost.com; omstream.com.

This practice excerpt is from Fully Present: The Science, Art and Practice of Mindfulness by Sue Smalley, PhD and Diana Winston. Da Capo Press, 2010.

my mind is right here by diana winston

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life is messy; clean ithandling the broom by leslie hendry

FOUR HOURS NORTH of Mexico City is a town called San Miguel de Allende. In the mornings, if one stays long enough to numb to the sounds of barking dogs, crowing roost-ers and the all too occasional cohetes (fire-works), the whisper of a straw broom against aged-old cobblestones can be heard.

For many around the world, sweeping is the morning Joe. It’s the start of the day and a new beginning.

In India, front walkways are swept and washed then adorned with a rangoli, a man-dala drawn with powdered colors, created to invite prosperity and bountifulness into the home.

Yet who has the time, or inclination, to

engage with personal space on such a micro level?

Time is precious. Sometimes we can afford the time to do as we please, but mostly we buy and sell it like a commodity. We value jobs that afford us the ability to buy the con-sumer goods we want. We fuel the economy. We work and buy, work and buy. Sell our time to buy more things, to wake up again and sell more time.

Hopefully our time is highly valued, and hopefully we have some left over to spend on things we enjoy, things we value. Like time with our kids or with friends who inspire us, or having much needed alone time to recharge, or simply being in our personal space.

Our hearth and home, is where we put our kids to bed and arise in the morning. What we put into it can be qualified as energy. If we put too many things into our home then we become out of balance. According to an-cient Indian knowledge, when balanced, the five elements: earth, fire, water, air, and ether allow humans to function at the highest lev-el. If we buy many things, store them in cab-inets and closets, and fill our home with un-essential items, we risk leaving little room for space. Our homes become cluttered and

harder to manage.Creating space and time for our family is

equally as important as preparing a healthy meal. We spend time being creative in the kitchen, but what about the energy we put into our homes by simply creating a clean, fresh space.

Sweeping may not be viewed as pleasure, but it doesn’t have to be work. Placing signifi-cance into any action can have a transforma-tive effect if we simply choose to consider it.

The next time you and your surroundings feel flagged and uninspired, reach for the broom. It’s not simply what has sparked tales of witches flying about. Consider it a staff in your hands used to freshen up the space around you, to sink your feet more firmly into the ground, to be quiet, to rest your mind, to have a moment, as you mun-danely move the broom back and forth back and forth.

Leslie Hendry is an attorney, writer and au-thorized Ashtanga Yoga teacher from the Sri K. Pattabhi Jois lineage. She is the founder of Azawhistle.com, a company dedicated to clean living.

Azawhistle: Cleaning from the outside in.

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Hpractice pages: therapy

kidney shaktiby tias little

HOW CAN YOGA practitioners build a strong and sustaining life force? Is it simply a matter of gaining strength and flexibility? One way that we can think of generating vi-tality in the body is by strengthening the pulse or functioning of the kidneys. All the organs play a critical role in the body’s health, yet the kidneys are unique in their support of our overall life force.

The kidneys are located roughly in the mid-dle of the body, suggesting the central role they play in the regulation of energy. The kidneys, along with the adrenals, communi-cate with the reproductive organs below them in the pelvis and relate to the lungs, heart and brain function above.

Energetically, they mediate our life force and in Chinese Medicine, they balance rest (yin) with activity (yang). They are the most deeply positioned organs in the body. Com-paratively, the lungs, heart, and brain are more superficial. The depth and interiority of the kidneys—protected by the strong mus-culature of the back, and set deep behind the abdominal viscera in front—suggests the role the kidneys play as a source of our vitality. We could think of the kidneys as an under-

ground reservoir of blood in the body. They are the well-spring of our prana in Yoga or qi in Oriental Medicine.

In structure and function, they are like sponges with small air pockets that serve to filter, wash, and cleanse the blood. Along with the liver, lungs and spleen, the kidneys serve to purify the bloodstream. Thus the kidneys are constantly engorged in blood, filtering 1,700 liters of blood per day (of which only 1-2 liters are secreted from the body as urine).

The liver, kidney, and spleen are the yin organs in Chinese Medicine, for they are blood filled (the stomach and intestine by contrast are “hollow”). I like to think of these yin organs as our “blood banks.” Be-cause they are blood-filled, the kidneys con-tribute to our overall fluidity and energy (shakti) in the body.

The kidneys are not held in place by fixed attachments—they “float” in a sense. How-ever, due to the abundance of muscular tight-ness in the low back and a lack of support from the abdomen in front, the kidneys may become restricted. They may also prolapse, that is to drop downward. Jean-Pierre Bar-

ral, an osteopath and author of Visceral Ma-nipulation notes, “Our estimate is that 25% of women over 50 years of age have renal ptosis, usually on the right side.” 1

How in Yoga do we prevent the kidneys from dropping or from becoming overly re-stricted? Twisting poses are invaluable for maintaining the fluidity and stability of the kidneys. Backbends, both done with support (as when the spine is propped by a chair, bol-ster or a set up of blocks) or practiced safely without support, can help to prevent the kid-neys from prolapsing.

The kidney region is prone to compression and stagnation from a variety of factors. The primary factor is excess sitting, which can cause compression and tightness within the lumbar and low back muscles. Given that the kidneys are located directly against the sub-surface of the respiratory diaphragm, when the kidneys and the surrounding fascia are restricted, it may affect one’s capacity to breathe in fully on an inhalation. Also, the kidneys are vulnerable to restriction and stagnation due to a poor quality diet, one that includes high levels of sodium. Processed food and “fast food” is often laden with so-dium. High levels of sodium can cause the body’s cells to dehydrate and the body tissues to swell (the presence of sodium increases blood volume).

Another contributing factor for kidney im-balance is anxiety and stress. In Chinese Medicine the emotion most often associated with the kidneys is fear. This is related, in part, to the action of the adrenal glands, which are located directly atop the kidneys, and govern the fight or flight response.

We can think of the kidney region (and the third chakra, the Manipura Chakra) as being the source for power and vitality. In right-handed people, the right kidney is a chief source of vitality (it is paired with the liver, the right lung and the right shoulder).

In addition to helping to maintain the po-sition of the kidneys in the body, a Yoga practice can provide nourishment and sup-port for the kidney area. Forward bends lengthen and stretch the low back region,

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while twists encourage the circulation of blood into the kidneys and their adjoining musculature. Backbends draw the kidneys and adrenals deep into the body, thereby stimulating the flow of kidney chi.

Meditation practice can replenish the kid-ney region when focus is on a steady long inhalation. The inhalation helps encourage greater suppleness of the diaphragm and serves to help increase circulation in the bloodstream. In general, mobility of the dia-phragm influences the kidneys, making them more responsive. And in pranayama practice, the lungs are directly supported by the kid-neys. This is why during seated pranayama (breathing practices), the lumbar and kidney region must be drawn upward and forward into the body. In Chinese medicine it is said that, “The lung is the canopy and the kidneys

are the root,” and the lungs “reach down” to grasp the kidney chi. In yogic breathing, the kidneys support the expansion of the lung and chest cavity. In the circulation of our prana and our qi, the kidneys are strong anchors that interact with the lungs with ev-ery breath. When we take care of these inter-nal yin aquifers of the body, we encourage greater vitality of the essential life-force of our shakti.

Tias Little, M.A. is trained in Iyengar and Ashtanga vinyasa Yoga and has been practiced Zen since 1995, is a student of Dzogchen prac-tice of Tibetan Buddhism since studying with Tsoknyi Rinpoche and in the past two years has been studying koan practice with Roshi Joan Sutherland. Tias’ teaching specializes in Yoga and anatomy, blending both Western

and Eastern perspectives. He currently directs Prajna Yoga in Santa Fe New Mexico with his wife Surya: prajnayoga.net.

Tias Little will be teaching a Prajna Yoga Im-mersion at the Seaside Center for Spiritual Living in Encinitas, March 18 - 20. Classes include:Kidney Shakti, Folding Inward, Side Bends, Unwinding the Low Back and The Sacred Skull in Yoga. Call (505) 988- 5248 or visit: prajnayoga.net.

1. Visceral Manipulation II by Jean-Pierre Barral, East-and Press.

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30 LAYOGA March 2011

Cpaginas de práctica: español

una práctica para encender la luz en el corazónescrito por sussy castilla

CUANDO LLEGA EL VERANO y los días se tornan más largos, naturalmente nos vol-teamos hacia los rayos del Sol para nutrirnos y recobrar la energía. La temporada de hi-bernación nos ha mantenido cómodos por bastante tiempo y ha llegado la hora de re-sucitar la luz en nuestro corazón.

La siguiente meditación que enseño el Maestro de Kundalini Yoga, Yogui Bhajan, nos ayudará a encender esa luz interna. Practícala por 40 días consecutivos y verás como te transformarás. ¡Es práctica que te rejuvenecerá!

El Kundalini Yoga es una ciencia que nos da las fórmulas para elevar la esencia de nue-stro ser. Es cómo una receta para hornear un pastel, lo cual requiere ciertos ingredientes y el seguir ciertas instrucciones. Si se nos olvida agregar hasta una pizca de bicarbonato de soda el pastel no saldrá tan gustoso.

Un ingrediente esencial que se usa en el Kundalini Yoga es el acto de resonar con la energía del Universo recitando el Adi Mantra "Ong Namo Guru Dev Namo"; que quiere decir "Doy reverencia al maestro sabio que vive en mí y en todo el Universo".

Para resonar, siéntate en el piso con las pier-nas cruzadas o si te sientas en una silla, con los pies firmemente plantados en el piso. Tu co-

lumna y el cuello deben estar derechos, como si estuvieras sentado contra una pared.

Presiona las palmas firmemente en postura de rezar y empuja los pulgares contra el es-ternón. Cierra los ojos y enfócalos en el centro de la frente, es decir, hacia el “Tercer Ojo”. Respira profundamente unas cuantas veces y luego empieza a cantar el mantra tres veces.

Para oír como suena el mantra, dirígete a la página del Internet: kundaliniresearchinstitute.org/tools4teachers/toolsforteachers_3.htm

Después de repetir el mantra, inhala profun-damente y mantén la inhalación por algunos segundos. Luego exhala y relaja las manos.

Instrucciones para la meditación:

Posición de las Manos/Mudra: Aprieta las manos enlazadas al nivel del corazón con la espalda derecha. Si sientes que tu espalda se arquea hacia adelante es recomendable que te sientes en un cojín para elevar la columna y mantenerla derecha.

Respiración: Con los labios en la forma de “O” inhala por la boca dividiendo la in-halación en tres partes. Luego, exhala com-pletamente por la nariz en una sola ex-halación.

Ojos: Los ojos se mantienen cerrados duran-te la meditación.

Movimiento: En cada inhalación, aprieta y suelta la presión de las manos rápidamente sin desenlazarlas. Esto se repite tres veces duran-te la inhalación. Continúa el ritmo de la in-halación y la presión y relajación de las manos por tres minutos. Eventualmente, aumenta el tiempo hasta un máximo de 14 minutos..

Para concluir: Inhala profundamente y man-tén la inhalación por 21 segundos, encogien-do el cuerpo forzosamente como si fuera de hierro forjado. Exhala como un cañón por la boca. Vuelve a inhalar y tensar el cuerpo; esta vez sosteniendo la inhalación por 20 se-gundo antes de exhalar enérgicamente. Vuelve a inhalar profundamente tensando el cuerpo forzosamente y sosteniendo la in-halación por 17 segundos antes de volver a exhalar enérgicamente por la boca. Relaja la postura y siéntate con los ojos cerrados por un momento, enfocándote y prestando plena atención a tu cuerpo y a tu postura.

Para terminar la “receta” y finalizar tu meditación, pon las manos en postura de rezar y canta un largo “Sat nam”; que quiere decir, “Yo soy la verdad”.

Con la práctica habrás aumentado tu reser-va de prana de una manera excepcional para mantenerte energizado. Ahora podrás decir, ¡Adiós a la comodidad de la cobija hibernal para encender la luz en tu corazón!

Sussy Castilla ayuda a los adolescentes a riesgo a conectarse con su fuente de luz a través de Yoga for Youth: yogaforyouth.org. Para más información sobre el Kundalini Yoga y para ubi-car a un profesor, visita las páginas del Internet: 3ho.org y kundaliniresearchinstitute.org.

La información que se provee en este artículo es solamente con propósitos educativos y no debe de ser un sustituto del cuidado medico. Antes de empezar esta práctica de yoga consul-ta con un proveedor calificado de la salud.

LAYOGA

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March 2011 LAYOGA 31

Apractice pages: english

kundalini yogaa practice to shine the light from within

by sussy castilla

AS WE EMERGE from the blankets of hi-bernation in the turn of the season from Winter to Spring, we naturally seek the rays of the Sun to energize and nourish us while we stimulate the light from within.

This meditation, given by Yogi Bhajan, Master of Kundalini Yoga, will do just that. It promises to make you radiant, light, bright, and even young! Practice it for forty consecu-tive days and observe your transformation.

Kundalini Yoga is a science that gives us for-mulas for achieving higher states of being. This process is akin to baking, where specific ingre-dients and processes are necessary to create a cake. If you leave out an essential ingredient, such as a pinch of baking soda, you will end up without the delicious cake you envisioned.

One essential ingredient practiced in Kund-alini Yoga is the initial act of tuning into the Universal energy with the Adi Mantra. This mantra is: “Ong Namo Guru Dev Namo,” which means, “I bow before the wise teacher that resides in me and resides in all creation.”

To tune in, sit on the floor cross-legged or in a chair with your feet flat on the ground. Your spine should be straight and the back of your neck long, as if you were going to flatten the back of your neck against a wall. If you feel your spine arching forward, it can be a good idea to place a cushion underneath your buttocks to prop you up and align the spine.

Press your palms firmly together in prayer pose and press the thumbs into your ster-num. Close the eyes and focus them at the

Third Eye. Take a few deep breaths and then chant the mantra three times.

(To hear a sample of the mantra visit: kun-daliniresearchinstitute.org/tools4teachers/toolsforteachers_3.htm)

After chanting inhale deeply and hold the breath for a few seconds, exhale and then al-low your hands to release.

Instructions for meditationBody position: maintain a straight spine as the instructions above.

Hand position/mudra: clasp the palms of the hands together in front of the heart center.

Breath: shape the lips into an “O” shape and inhale in three strokes through the “O” mouth. Exhale in one stroke through the nose.

Eyes: Keep your eyes closed throughout the meditation.

Movement: On each stroke of the inhalation, squeeze the clasped hands together and re-lease them quickly, still holding the hands in a clasp when you release the squeeze. You will be squeezing the hands and releasing them for a total of three times as you inhale. Continue repeating the cycles of breath and movement for three minutes. You may gradually build up the time to a maximum of 14 minutes.

To conclude: Inhale deeply and hold the breath for 21 seconds, squeezing the body like iron and making a very tight grip. Cannon-fire exhale through the mouth. Inhale again and squeeze your body tightly, this time hold

the breath for 20 seconds, then exhale power-fully. One last time, inhale deeply and squeeze the body, hold for 17 seconds, and again ex-hale with force through the mouth. Relax the posture and sit with eyes closed for a few mo-ments, feeling your body.

To finish the recipe and finalize your prac-tice bring the hands into prayer pose again and chant one long “Sat nam,” to ground yourself, which means, “I am truth” (it rhymes with “but Mom”).

You have now increased your pranic re-serve exponentially to sustain you with en-ergy, radiance and brightness. It’s time to kiss winter’s Snuggie goodbye and shine your light from within!

Sussy Castilla helps at-risk teenagers connect with their source of light through Yoga for Youth: yogaforyouth.org. For more informa-tion on Kundalini Yoga and to find a teacher near you visit: 3ho.org and kundaliniresearchinstitute.org.

The information provided here is for educa-tional purposes only and should not be a substitute for medical care. Before beginning this yoga practice consult with a qualified healthcare provider.

LAYOGA

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32 LAYOGA March 2011

Cseduced into wellness

how the desire to lose weight created a desire for wellness

by sam slovick

THE CURE STREAM, an online video series focusing on global healers, is a reoccurring

feature on layogamagazine.com.{ {

CHANGE WAS NEEDED. I had recently retired a multi-decade to-bacco addiction and gained twenty pounds in two months when my metabolism came to a screeching halt without the nicotine. A friend of mine had dropped twenty-five pounds in twenty-six days on the Jennings’ RealMecleanse. Cautiously committed, I met with the naturopath who created the cleanse to get the skinny on how to loose some weight fast.

“Naturopathic medicine is something that some people still don’t know about,” Dr Kelly Jennings tells me during our consultation in an upscale production office in Santa Monica. Miles away from her prac-tice in Portland, Oregon, this naturopathic doctor is calm and disarm-ingly vibrant with a focused compassion… the poster girl for wellness.

As a naturopathic doctor and licensed acupuncturist (abbreviated ND, MSOM, LAc), Jennings looks at health though a broad lens, as-sessing and evaluating my health and well-being with a comprehensive intake and review of my past medical history. She does this with prac-ticed precision…and a contagious smile. “Naturopathic medicine? It is four to six years of medical school, with all of the subjects typically taught in a conventional medical school such as anatomy and physi-ology, neuroscience, immunology, and biochemistry, then add on to that training in homeopathy, botanical medicine, hydrotherapy and, for many students, including me, Chinese medicine,” she says.

Just under the social skin the doctor is all business as she cuts to the chase breaking down the protocol for her RealMEcleanse; a met-abolic enhancement and weight loss cleanse that utilizes hCG (hu-man chorionic gonadotrophin). It’s all good fun until she drops the following bomb, “500 calories a day maximum,” she says. Though initially alarming, I found that I was never hungry during the 26 day period on the protocol and dropped 20 pounds with minimal exer-cise. The hCG acts as an appetite suppressant.

Dr. Jennings has been working with a variety of cleanses with ex-ceptional results over the last decade in her practice at Urban Well-ness Group in Portland. This group of holistic physicians focuses on the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of disease with a focus on natural health. She assures me that this particular cleanse was the

right cleanse for me. It was safe, given my history, and would stimu-late my metabolism so I’d lose weight while doing it.

I’d done the research on other hCG diets and thought they seemed a little extreme. The many important distinctions between Jenning’s cleanse and others gave me the confidence that this was responsible and right for me: Others involve injectable hCG which I wasn’t interested in taking. The RealMEcleanse uses homeo-pathic hCG drops taken orally plus it’s a vegetarian/vegan friend-ly, medically supervised process that addresses any potential side effects and maximizes weight loss.

hCG is human chorionic gonadotrophin, a glycoprotein hormone produced in pregnant women by the placenta. It acts on the hypo-thalamus, signaling the body to release stored fat into the blood-stream where it’s used by the cells for nourishment. Coupled with decreased food intake, taking hCG forces the body to use the mobi-lized fat that is now circulating in the bloodstream to fuel the daily metabolic rate. The best part is that it preferentially stimulates the release of abnormal fat stores in the body and does not affect struc-tural fat and muscle tissue. All this means that people on this regimen predominantly lose fat in the stomach, hips, thighs, buttocks, and upper arms.

I’d read that hCG was extracted from the urine of pregnant wom-en, which, although a little disturbing, wasn’t an issue for me. I was focused on weight loss and wellness and the magic of hCG. I opted for the homeopathic oral preparation.

During our initial consultation, Dr Jennings completed a full medi-cal intake including a review of my past medical history. Her thorough evaluation made me confident that I wasn’t doing anything reckless. At the end of the program, her final consultation focuses on helping people develop a sustainable long-term eating program. Mine was in-dividualized for my particular constitution and incorporates foods that I like to eat. She also offers additional detox support to help boost me-tabolism and support fat cleansing during and after the process. And, though I didn’t require it personally, the availability of 24 hour/7 days a week medical supervision would have been helpful for any questions

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March 2011 LAYOGA 33

or concerns that emerged during the cleanse.When I was cleared for take-off, I entered the wellness matrix

through the RealMEcleanse portal on a Monday morning. I was good to go, although still concerned about the 500 calorie a day re-striction, I committed to a twenty-four-day cleanse motivated by the promise of losing weight. Although I entered this plan with the pri-mary motivation to lose weight, the experience led me to consider the broader implication of wellness in general as a lifestyle. I recom-mitted to my Yoga practice and was now seeing a future with new healthy possibilities.

I had somehow been seduced into wellness. At least the idea of wellness. Wellness as a framework for personal motivation. That and the promise of losing a pound a day, which is exactly what happened over the next month.

The RealMEcleanse protocol is: six small meals at two hour intervals daily combined with hCG drops before all but the last meal of the day. Two of the daily meals are 100 grams of protein and 40 to 60 calories each of vegetables. Other meals are fruit or bread sticks.

As part of the agreement Dr. Jennings was available for bi-month-ly phone consultations. She also made herself fully available by email in the case that anything came up during the course of the cleanse. The benefits of her expertise and experience were essential for mak-ing a dietary lifestyle change as opposed to a crash diet. I already knew from experience that those types of diets would only lead me back to where I began in a month or two.

A few days into my first 500 calorie per day cleanse I began to under-stand the journey was not just about changing my relationship to body fat. The challenge and the opportunity presented involved a psycho-emotional purge as well as an expanded awareness of my emotional eating habits. My hands automatically reached for things I couldn’t eat… so I didn’t. The subsequent emotional upheaval that followed clearly mapped out what I’d been doing with food: Food I didn’t like and wasn’t hungry for but still ingesting. The pattern was glaring. As the fat drained from my cells, the process became more than physical.

I could see the pounds melting away. I felt at home in my body

again. And what had been stored in my tissue was being expressed in another way. It was coming through my senses as emotion. I was now processing what I had inhaled in a cloud of smoke and then stored in my fat cells from the subsequent weight gain when I quit smoking at a rapid pace.

Though it’s usually advised not to exercise during the process, Dr. Jennings encouraged me to continue my burgeoning Yoga practice. I showed up every other day at the new YogaWorks mega-plex in Tar-zana. The convenience of the studio right next to Whole Foods was a big help in the first week as I became oriented to the protocol. I shopped for the following day’s food before my Iyengar level 1 & 2 class.

During the RealMEcleanse I lost twenty pounds. There were a few days I didn’t lose any and a couple I gained a pound. I could prob-ably have lost a few more but I repeated some meals, which is not advised.

What happened over the course of the process was something much more valuable and lasting than temporary weight loss. I taught my-self how to eat for optimum efficiency in a way that benefits my over-all health. My body, now cleansed, has a new understating of high performance digestion.

The things I’m interested in eating now are good for me. The idea of putting sugar, wheat, and dairy into my system is not something I’m compelled to do. It’s not a conscious decision but rather an internalized function that doesn’t require thought. I’m no longer reaching for things that I really don’t want to eat but only served as an emotional suppres-sant. For me, the RealMEcleanse is a super conscious, lasting systemic dietary education.

For more information about Dr. Kelly Jennings and the RealMe Cleanse, visit: urbanwellnesspdx.com/jennings. She can also be reached at her clinic (503) 445 - 9771 for individualized consultations.

Sam Slovick is a regular contributor to LA YOGA Ayurveda and Health Magazine (among other publications) and the author of the current LA Weekly series, PAVEMENT: found at blogs.laweekly.com/informer/pavement. His website is: samslovick.com.

LAYOGA

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A

creating a healing home environmentan elemental home makeover and ayurvedic spring clease

by mary-alice quinn, cas

ACCORDING TO AYURVEDA, the universe is made up of Five Great Elements: Ether, Air, Fire, Water, and Earth. Ether is the space that connects life together in all of its manifestations. Air represents everything in a gaseous state, for example oxygen, vapor, and wind. Fire is the transforming aspect of nature manifested through light, heat, and friction. Water is the liquid form of nature found in every-thing fluid and flowing. Earth is the solid form of nature found in all substances hard, heavy, and dense.

These five elements in their physical forms surround and interact with us in all aspects of our daily experience: what we smell, taste, see, feel, and hear. How we interact with these elements can have a profound effect on our overall well-being. Too much or too little of any element can create imbalances within our body, mind, and spirit.

To create harmony in our living space we can begin by observing each element in its current state, noting any excesses or deficiencies. We can then take steps to rebalance our home environment.

The following suggestions will explore some simple and practical ways to maximize the healing potential of any home environment:

ETHER (Akasha): How cluttered is your space? Do you need to clear space in your home in order to induce a sensation of freedom and expansion? Or does your space feel too open creating a sense of emptiness and insecurity?

Clutter often stifles creativity. Whenever possible, keep the center of a room empty. A room’s center is considered the place of Divine Consciousness (Bhramasthana). When kept free from material ob-jects, this spiritual power is free to radiate in all directions.

Remove all unused and unwanted objects from your home.•It’sbesttofocusononeroomatatime.•Startwithclearingoutclosetstomakeroomforthingsyoudecide

to store.•Considerhoweachitemmakesyoufeel.Doesitaddtothehar-

mony you are creating? •Keepit,throwitaway,giveitaway,donateit,sellit,recycleit,or

store it.

AIR (Vayu): What are the sources of air pollution in your environ-ment? According to the Environmental Protection Agency, levels of indoor air pollutants often measure three to seven times higher than levels outdoors. Prana, the life-force energy, is directly absorbed through the air we breathe. Depending on the quality of air in our en-vironment, this vital element may feed our wellbeing or our dis-ease.

Identify sources of air pollution in your home. •Howmanydifferenthouseholdcleanersdoyouuse?•Areyouexposedtovaporsfrompaintsorstains?•Areyouexposedtofumesfrombedding?Polyestermattresspads,

sheets, and pillows are typically treated with formaldehyde—an extremely potent carcinogen and respiratory irritant.

•Areyouexposedtofumesfromfurniture?Furniture,cushions,and bookcases are also often treated with formaldehyde and may emit fumes for up to five years.

•Areyouexposedtofumesfromyourclothes?Drycleanedclothescan fill a home with toxic vapors for a week or more.

•Areyouexposedtofumesfromoutside?Livingonabusystreetor near a freeway can expose you to car exhaust and airborne particles from rubber tires.

Clean your air!•Switchtoeco-friendly,all-purposecleanersormakeyourown.

Simple, natural ingredients can be prepared in a variety of ways to clean most everything in your home.

•Movetowardeco-friendlypaints,furniture,andnaturalfabricsfor your next home upgrades.

•Useeco-friendlydrycleaningservices.Handwashclothingwhen-ever possible.

•Keepavarietyofhouseplantsthroughoutyourhome.Manyspe-cies are known natural air purifiers. They also help offset electro-magnetic field radiation from electronics.

•Considercleaningyourhome’sventsorhavingthemprofession-ally cleaned annually.

•Investinaqualityairpurifierandcleanorchangeitsfilterregularly.

Phot

os: J

agat

joti

Kha

lsa

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March 2011 LAYOGA 35

FIRE (Tapas): How much natural light does your home receive? Are you chronically living in a dark, dim space or are you exposed to extreme doses of afternoon sun? Either end of the spectrum can create chronic imbalances in energy throughout the day and quality of sleep at night. Modern living removes us from direct sunlight, disconnecting us from the natural circadian rhythms. Artificial in-door lighting during evening hours also contributes to the disruption of our natural sleep cycles. Honoring the Fire element by maintain-ing a balance of natural light has a harmonizing effect on energy, mood, and immunity.

How does the temperature within your home suit you? Is it com-fortable or a source of discomfort? Excessive cold or frequent shifts in temperature aggravates vata, the dynamic force of movement in the body. Vata imbalances can manifest as anxiety or digestive irregular-ity and are at the root of many chronic diseases. Excessive heat or sunlight exposure aggravates pitta, the metabolic force of heat and transformation in the body. A pitta imbalance may manifest as anger and irritability and is the source of many inflammatory conditions.

To balance excessive darkness:•Removeanyobstructionstonaturallight.Moveplantsorrear-

range furniture in front of and around windows.•Considerrepaintingwallswithlightercolorstohelpreflectnatu-

ral light. Pastel colors are particularly useful as they increase the qualities of lightness, purity and clarity.

•Changewindowcoveringsthataretoodark,heavyorobstruct-

ing. Replace with sheer, light fabrics. •Usefullspectrumlightbulbsthroughoutyourhome.

To balance excessive light:•Useindoororoutdoorplants,drapes,shadesandroomdividers

to buffer sharp sun exposure.•Considerrepaintingwallswithdeep,richcolors.Earthtonesab-

sorb light and help create a stable, grounding sensation.

Make any necessary adjustment to the temperature of your home.•ConsiderusingaspaceheaterorportableACunitintheroom

where you spend most of your time.•Utilizenaturewheneverpossible.Oftenclosingupwindowsand

doors during the day and opening them at night can keep a space cool during hot seasons. Close your room off to drafts by install-ing thresholds below doors and draft guards at the base of win-dows during cold months.

(Continued on p.36)

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36 LAYOGA March 2011

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WATER (Jala): Are you able to flow from space to space freely, or are there physical obstacles in the arrangement of your furniture and home accessories? Are there surfaces that perpetually collect exces-sive items, or are all of your shelves and bookcases completely filled? Is the balance of moisture in your home right for you? Does it cre-ate too much dryness or is it too moist or humid for you?

Moisture and flow provided by water is the basis of life itself. A proper amount of water element within the body (called rasa) is re-sponsible for nourishment of all cells, proper absorption of prana, ef-ficient elimination of waste and emotional contentment. Keeping the optimum quantity of moisture flowing in an environment contributes to a healthy amount of rasa flowing throughout one’s being. Creat-ing fluidity in the structure of a living space allows for ease of mind and inspires the flow of creative juices. Visually representing the water element in a home induces a sense of softness and nourishment.

Incorporate a balance of the physical and energetic representations of water throughout your home.•Rearrangefurnituretocreatemoreflow.•Considerrearrangingorremovingbooksanddécoronshelves

and bookcases to allow for more space and visual fluidity. •Bringthewaterelementintoyourhomethroughasimplewater

feature. Consider using a small fountain, a round vase with float-ing candles or flowers, or a fish bowl or aquarium.

•Decideifyouneedtoinvestinahumidifieroradehumidifiertobalance the moisture levels in your home.

EARTH (Prithvi): What thoughts, feelings or emotions do the ob-jects you surround yourself with evoke? Are you keeping anything because you feel like you have to, even if it evokes negative memo-ries? How much nature is represented in your home? Evaluate ev-erything from furniture to décor, photos, and artwork. Earth is the grounding, stabilizing force of our natural world. Honoring this el-ement throughout our home can provide us with a sense of protec-tion, strength, and stability.

Surround yourself with objects that reflect the highest vision of you.•Removeallthingsthatarenotcontributingtothebalancethat

you are now creating. Keep in mind the subtle impact that objects hold and mindfully choose what you keep.

•Incorporateaspectsofnaturethatyoufindharmonious.Plants,clay pots, or décor made from glass, stone or wood can be excel-lent choices.

•FinishbydecoratingyourhomewithsymbolsofDivinityandspirituality that resonate with you.

•Oursensesarethegatewaytoconsciousness.Physicalwell-beingand the evolution of consciousness is dependant upon what we ab-sorb and assimilate through each of our five senses. Clearing, clean-ing, and arranging our home environment to reflect harmony and balance will enhance and expedite these aspirations. Honoring the five elements through an Ayurvedic home makeover is an inspiring and rewarding way to encourage positive change.

(Continued from p.35)

LAYOGA

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March 2011 LAYOGA 37

Mary-Alice Quinn, CAS is a Los Angeles based certified Ayurvedic practitioner and an instructor for the California College of Ayurveda. She is a Practitioner Member of both NAMA (National Ayurvedic Medical Association) and CAAM (California Association of Ayurvedic Medicine), and conducts public workshops throughout

California. Mary-Alice has an active private practice where she blends Ayurvedic lifestyle and nutritional guidelines, as well as personalized herbal remedies and body therapies, to assist her clients in achieving and maintaining healthy, satisfying, and balanced lives: maryalicequinn.com.

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38 LAYOGA March 2011

Ttom shadyacsitting down with:

hollywood’s mirth mogul and his i am mission by rob sidon

TOM SHADYAC is a Hollywood director, writer, and producer best known for work-ing with comedic geniuses such as Jim Car-rey, Eddie Murphy, Robin Williams, and Steve Carrell. As an undergraduate at the University of Virginia, Tom created the infa-mous “Are You a Preppie?” poster before migrating to Los Angeles, where he become the youngest joke writer for Bob Hope. Even-tually, he would go on to make such hits as Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, Liar Liar, The Nutty Professor, Patch Adams, Bruce Al-mighty, and Evan Almighty.

We caught up with Tom in Napa after a screening of his terrific new film, I Am, which he felt compelled to make after a severe bike accident. Fearing his own end, he decided if he could do one last thing, it would be to ex-

plore and share the truths he had come to know. The documentary is centered around two fundamental questions: What’s wrong with the world? and What can we do about it? Independently produced and distributed, I Am is a highly principled film that tackles esoteric content in a grounded and (of course) humorous way. We sincerely encourage readers to check out I Am when it opens in the LA in March. And hopefully, the film will go on to generate crossover appeal with mainstream audiences around the world.=Rob Sidon: I’ve especially enjoyed your block-buster comedies with Jim Carrey. Before dis-cussing your new film, I AM, which is a rad-ical departure from what you’re known for, might we talk a bit about your partnership with Jim? It’s like you’re brothers.

Tom Shadyac: We are brothers. When I first saw Jim perform in comedy clubs in the ear-ly ’80s, I was not only taken with his insane talent, I thought he looked like family, like one of my cousins. It was eerie, in a way. Little did I know that some 10 years later, we’d be working on Ace Ventura and would find a creative kinship, as well. I respect Jim on so many levels. He’s a brilliant artist, a true comedic genius. A genius to me is a per-son who can tap into the Creative Source, the Big Electron, as George Carlin used to call it. A genius doesn’t so much think of an idea as ideas simply arrive into his or her conscious-ness, like little gifts from divinity. That’s Jim. A team of writers could sit around all day and try to think of a topper line for a scene. Jim walks around the room a couple of

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times, opens his antennae, and boom, an idea pops in that’s unmatchable. When you work with creative geniuses like Jim, or Eddie Murphy, or Robin Williams, it can do won-ders for your belief in something cosmic, cre-ative, and orderly in the universe.RS: Success in Hollywood rewards hand-somely. In other words, you became filthy rich.TS: My films did well, so yes, I did well. But it’s funny, even in the question I see the depth of our cultural illness concerning money. The question states that I was rewarded, and the word “handsomely” is used, and then that same reward is called “filthy.” Interesting. Which is it?RS: Then something changed. What hap-pened that led you to make I Am?TS: Well, the short answer is, I got into a bike accident which left me struggling with Post Concussion Syndrome, a condition where the symptoms of a concussion don’t go away. It’s quite torturous really, and after months of isolation and pain, I simply didn’t think I was going to make it. Well, death can be a very powerful motivator, and so I asked my-self a serious question: If this was it for me, if I was going to die, what did I want to say before I went? I Am is that expression, a kind of last testament to certain truths that I had woken up to that I did not see our culture talking about, and I simply did not want to die with these ideas buried inside of me. RS: Had you been a student of metaphysics or spiritual philosophy?TS: Yes, my whole life. As early as I can re-member, I simply wanted to know what was true, and somehow I perceived at a very ear-ly age that what I was being taught was not the whole truth and nothing but the truth. And that intuitive perception led to a lifetime of questioning and searching; of stumbling and fumbling toward the light; of reading the mystics and masters like Rumi, Hafiz, Mary Oliver, Emerson, Whitman, Thoreau, Rain-er Maria Rilke, Thomas Merton, and count-less others; and of experimentation with var-ious spiritual disciplines such as prayer and contemplation, the monastic traditions of Lectio Divino, and silence and meditation.RS: You downsized your life to make I Am.TS: No, actually, my life had already been downsized. I was already living in the mobile home park and was living much more sim-ply. I think there’s a common misperception

that my bike accident caused an instanta-neous spiritual awakening that had me sell my estate, give all my money away, and move into a trailer. As dramatic and movie worthy as this sounds, I assure you it was not the case. The “awakening,” so to speak, was much more gradual, taking place over a number of years, with much consideration and contemplation.

My film crew for I Am is a different story. I went from a crew of around 400 on Evan Almighty to four on I Am. Now that’s down-sizing!RS: How would you describe the film?TS: My hope is that I Am is a window into Truth, a glimpse into the miracle, the mys-tery and magic of who we really are, and of

(Continued on p.40)

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the basic nature of the connection and unity of all things. In a way, I think of I Am as the ultimate reality show. RS: You made the film to answer two funda-mental questions. TS: Yes: What’s wrong with the world, and what can we do about it? And when I say what’s wrong with the world, I didn’t want to hear the usual answers, like war, hunger,

poverty, the environmental crisis, or even greed. These to me are not the problem; they are symptoms of a larger endemic problem. In I Am, I wanted to talk about the root cause of the ills of the world, attempt to iden-tify it, because if there is a common cause and we can talk about it, air it out in the pub-lic forum, then we have a chance to solve it. Until then, we are like doctors who keep pre-

scribing medication to treat our collective nausea when what we need is the wisdom to ask ourselves what we’re ingesting in the first place that is making us all sick. RS: One reason I enjoyed the film is that its underlying message is so positive—that hu-man beings are not hardwired as selfish crea-tures. You turn to scientists to explain. TS: Well, I was raised Catholic, so this is not exactly the message I was taught growing up. I was told I was born bad, burdened with something called “original sin,” and that all mankind was similarly infected. It was a rev-elation to me that for tens of thousands of years, indigenous cultures taught a very dif-ferent story about our inherent goodness, which is being backed by the sciences now. We are discovering a plethora of evidence about our hardwiring for connection and compassion, from the vagus nerve, which re-leases oxytocin at simply witnessing a com-passionate act, to the mirror neurons, which causes us to literally feel another person’s pain and thereby empathize. Darwin himself, who has been grossly misunderstood to be-lieve exclusively in our competitiveness (hence the famous saying, “survival of the fittest”), actually observed and noted that hu-mankind’s real power comes in its ability to perform complex tasks together—that is, to sympathize and cooperate. RS: To exemplify the essence of I Am, you set up an experiment. Can you explain it and say why it’s important? TS: The experiment in the movie’s just a demonstration and not scientific at all, but it does suggest something that is incredible if it’s true—that our thoughts and emotions af-fect the living systems around us. It’s called The Yogurt Experiment, and here’s how it works: Yogurt is a living system, and as such, will register a baseline reading when hooked up to a magnetometer. A person is then seat-ed in front of a Petri dish of yogurt and asked to recall various emotional experiences. When the person’s emotional state changes, those changes are picked up by the yogurt and in turn, register on the magnetometer. What is crucial to note is that the person is not hooked up to the yogurt at all. He’s sim-ply sitting there. But changes in his emotion-al state send out an energy signal that affects the yogurt bacteria, which moves the needle on the magnetometer.

These types of experiments are significant

(Continued from p.39)

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because they demonstrate the power each in-dividual has to affect everything around him or her. We know this intuitively. When we come home in a bad mood, our spouses can feel it and are affected by it. When we enter a room energized and upbeat, that emotion is contagious. Roland McCraty has done lots of these experiments about our effects on plants, animals, and each other. The results are overwhelming and hard to write off as chance, clearly indicating that something, some kind of connectivity is happening.RS: You also turned to spiritual figures, such as Bishop Desmond Tutu.TS: I always want to be careful with the word spiritual. It sometimes conjures up images of floating above life in a Zen-like state. I be-lieve spirit took bodily form to engage in the world of sticks and stones, meat and mar-row, flesh and blood. We are here, I believe, not to float above life but to engage in it. There’s a story in the Judaic tradition that says when the Messiah returns, he’s only go-ing to ask one question; he will want to see the soles of your feet. He’s going to want to know if you wore them out trying to make the world a better place. Desmond Tutu is a man who has worn out the soles of his feet; he has not just talked about the power of love and forgiveness, he has walked those principles and demonstrated them to a na-tion that was under the oppressive weight of racism and prejudice. His walk, his march with his people, in full reconciliation and for-giveness of the oppressor, freed the people of South Africa and those of England, as well. What a light he is, and what a blessing to have his wisdom in our film. RS: Yet you can’t deny the shadowy, greedy side of the human experience. As a Holly-wood veteran, you know we don’t live in a Pollyanna world. How do you reconcile?TS: If I say that love is more powerful than hate, I am not stating a platitude or a Polly-anna idea. It just may be that I am describing reality at its most fundamental level. Maya Angelou believes that love may be the actual force that holds the stars in the firmament; love may animate and move the very blood in our veins. Gandhi, too, believed that love is a force, not as a philosophical trope, but as a law that he saw demonstrated over and over in life and the human experience. Hate can rise for a time, he said, but it will always eventually be defeated.

Sure, humans can be greedy, and there is a shadow side to all of us. But if you look at that shadow side and trace the darkness when it manifests, you almost always see someone deprived of that powerful force talked about above—love. Who is it that sex-ually abuses children? Those who were sexu-ally abused themselves. Who become the most violent murderers and killers in our so-

ciety? Those who grew up witnessing and experiencing murder and killing as a way of life. Who become the most greedy and selfish in our society? Those who were raised in fear-based environments and taught repeat-edly to look out for number one. Emerson, St. Augustine, and others believed evil is not even a force unto itself, but rather, it is sim-

(Continued on p.42)

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(Continued from p.41)

ply the deprivation of good. I don’t believe we’re evil or bad—certainly not the vast ma-jority of people. We’re just asleep. RS: The late Howard Zinn, a major influence on you, is interviewed in the film. Was he a glass-is-half-full kind of person?TS: I don’t think Howard even saw the glass. The glass divides. Howard just saw the wa-ter, the solution. RS: Your late father was interviewed for the film. He tried to temper your optimism.TS: My father is emblematic of the malaise so prevalent in our culture. Here he was, this incredibly generous man who didn’t believe man was basically generous. He was an in-credibly compassionate man who didn’t think man was basically compassionate. He helped build the largest pediatric cancer re-search institute in America, St. Jude Chil-dren’s Research Hospital, where children with cancer are treated every day for free, yet he didn’t think man could build businesses based on values of love and compassion. My father brought to fruition the very things he believed we couldn’t or wouldn’t do because

of our supposed defective nature, but he just couldn’t see it because the cultural malaise is so insidious and all-pervasive. RS: But you are bouncing off the walls with positivity. I love it; it’s infectious. How much of it stems from your accident?TS: If there is any positivity in me, it is thanks to the Creator, the Big Electron, God, Life, Love, whatever you want to call the Divine force, that has somehow seen fit to allow me to participate in the joy of service. RS: Despite your deep Hollywood connec-tions, you’re distributing this movie in an nontraditional way.TS: The Hollywood way is to throw tons of money at advertising and distribution, and we simply don’t have that kind of money. So we’re doing it the old-fashioned way, by traveling like a circus troupe and screening it to everyone we can. The idea is to generate lots of word of mouth that hopefully will propel us into a wide, sustained theatrical run. RS: How did you decide to become a director?TS: I didn’t really decide. It was decided for

me, as I think is the case with most significant decisions in our lives. I tried on a number of different show business hats, from writing to teaching to acting and stand-up comedy, and I did my best to remain open and to listen. When I tried directing for the first time, as we rolled on our very first shot, Life shouted a loud, unmistakable, soul-searing, Yes!RS: Will you helm large-budget Hollywood projects again?TS: Sure, why not? A big budget isn’t neces-sarily a bad thing, as long as the money avail-able is spent in an effective, efficient, and conscious manner. I am much more inter-ested in what kind of energy a project puts into the world, what it stands for, and wheth-er it helps or hurts our collective healing and the evolution of consciousness.RS: Still giving away your proceeds freely? TS: St. Augustine said, “Determine what God has given you and take from it what you need; the remainder is needed by others.” I say, “Touché, St. Augustine!”RS: Do you notice Hollywood shifting to-ward films with spiritual and metaphysical

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messages?TS: Truthfully, I have been so immersed in the making and distribution of I Am, I haven’t seen that many films as of late. But I will say, what we need to concentrate on is not the transformation of media, but the transformation of the people who create me-dia. If we artists wake up and begin to see, think, and walk anew, the art we create will necessarily follow. RS: What’s next for you?TS: I’m hanging out with I Am until we see what unfolds here, but I do have two films ready to go: A drama, Planetwalker, which is the true story of John Francis, who saw an oil spill in the San Francisco Bay in 1971 and did a crazy thing—he gave up driving for 22 years and walked in silence for 17 of those years, and a comedy in the vein of Liar Liar called Doctor Sensitive. I also have a deal to host a talk show called Shift Happens, using humor to dialogue with America about how we can birth a better world. RS: Well, we think I Am has a shot of being a big crossover film that can raise human

awareness. How can our readers see I Am?TS: We hope your readers will go and check us out, and if they are so moved, will share their enthusiasm with everyone they know and even people they don’t know. One of the themes of the movie is the true power of the individual to make a difference. Our release will be a case in point—we need individuals to blog, post, talk, and text about I Am. In the meantime, anyone can stay in touch with us through our website, IAmTheDoc.com. We have a trailer up now and a place to sign in and register to be a part of our team.

RS: Anything else you’d like to share with our readers?TS: Did I mention I hope they’ll go see I Am?

For more information about Los Angeles screenings, visit: IAmTheDoc.com.

Rob Sidon publishes Common Ground Mag-azine in the San Francisco Bay Area (Com-monGroundMag.com). This interview first appeared in Common Ground Magazine and is reprinted with permission.

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ayurveda pages

by dr. jay apteQ AAyurveda has been practiced in the US for only about 30 years, yet it is one of the systems of

medicine native to India and is thousands of years old. Readers are invited to submit questions

for “Ayurveda Q & A” to [email protected].

Q: I was on birth control for six years (begin-ning at age fifteen). When I stopped, I didn’t get a period for the next seven months. I no-ticed a pain in my right lower abdomen, and my gynecologist discovered I had cysts on my ovaries and through many blood tests, diag-nosed polycystic ovaries. I was given hor-mones to induce a period (which worked) and then went back on birth control pills. I have done some research about holistic ways to heal this, most say to get off the pill, re-duce sugar intake, and go through a deep emotional clearing. here are problems with this in that I do not have the time to take a break from life and retreat into my emotion-al storage house until this is resolved, and I am afraid that if I stop taking the pill again, my cysts may come back and I will need sur-gery to remove them.

There must be a better way to address this in balance, without depending on birth con-trol hormones or taking hiatus from life. Do you have any recommendations?A: When you are on birth control pills, this causes cycles without ovulation, bringing up the old adage, “If you don’t use it you lose it.” Taking birth control pills for six straight years since the age of fifteen has caused some imbal-ance in ovaries. When taking birth control pills, the monthly period is just a withdrawal bleeding due to the hormone level dropping.

Be a little patient. Around puberty, the body transitions from kapha (earth and water ele-ments) part of the life cycle to the pitta (fire) stage of life. This is the time when hormone levels start increasing. During the pitta years, the hormones are high because it is a child-bearing period of life. Hormonal cycles in the body work on negative feedback mechanism. This means that when there are lower levels of hormones in the blood, the endocrine gland secretes more of the hormones, but when you

take artificial hormones, there is an adequate level of the hormones in the bloodstream, so the ovaries never get the message to produce more. When they have nothing to do they can become relatively dysfunctional.

So the moment you went off the pills, you didn’t get a period for some time. Ovaries need to revive to secrete hormones. Six years taking birth control pills is a prolonged period of time when your body is exposed to artificial hor-mones, so you need to give your ovaries more time to come back to normal. In this case, re-starting birth control pills is not the solution that will bring you back into balance.

Ayurveda has a different view than conven-tional medicine. When doshas (elements or en-ergetic forces, such as vata, pitta and kapha) and dhatus (body tissues) go out of balance, they manifest as disease. So the cysts on the ovary may be due to blockage of ovarian func-tion. The solution? Bring back life to ovaries.

Diet, lifestyle practices and herbs will help to restart the function of the ovaries. Along with physical balance, emotional balance is equally or more important. The mind plays an important role in healing as it controls all of the physiological functions in the body.

Following are a few suggestions for the next few months:• Stayawayfrombirthcontrolpills• Havefaithandfeelcalm(believingthat

you will get normal cycles and will con-ceive is crucial).

• Eatfreshfood,whichprovidesmoreprana (vital life force) to the body, as well as veg-gies, fruits (which both contain natural phytochemicals, including vitamins and minerals for normalizing the bodily func-tions), nuts, eggs (all seeds stimulate seed formation in the body according to the pre-cept “like increases like”), spices (ginger, chili, and many mints) increase heat and

stimulate hormones. Since I do not know your body constitution, I cannot recom-mend a constitution-specific diet, but these general principles can be helpful.

• Eatthreemealsandzipyourlipsinbe-tween. This improves metabolism thereby reviving ovarian function.

• Exercise:takeabriskwalkforthirtytoforty minutes every day. Exercise increas-es body heat, removes blockages in srotas (channels), and improves normal func-tioning of the systems.

• Herbs:Shatavari(Asparagus racemosis) and ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) are both excellent herbs to stimulate ova-ries. Aloe vera cleanses female reproduc-tive system. Haritaki (Terminalia chebula) is good as a rasayana (rejuvenative) to re-vive organs and gokshura (Tribulus ter-restris) is a wonderful herb to open up channels. Shweta musali, kavachabeeja and chikana are specific herbs to stimulate ovulation. Many of these should be rec-ommended by an Ayurvedic specialist.

The most important thing is to be very calm and happy at this stage because your happy mind is going to direct your ovaries to start functioning again.Q: I am twenty-seven years old and have been married for one year. I am currently having problems with my sex drive, not feeling in the mood and lack of stamina. Do you have any suggestions?A: At such a young age, you should be bounc-ing with energy. In Ayurveda, we ask questions to find out how the body is functioning.

These are only a few of the questions that are part of a full Ayurvedic evaluation.

If your answers are not positive, that means your body is not in balance. There may be blockages (srotorodha) in the body, which can interfere with your ability to get in the mood.

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March 2011 LAYOGA 45

Ayurvedic panchakarma (detoxifying pro-cedures) is important for rebooting the sys-tem and will be a great idea as it detoxifies the entire body, boosts the immune system, improves digestion and promotes sound sleep. With bountiful amounts of energy you will feel like you again.

If panchakarma is not an option at this point, try this minicleanse:• Takeuptofourtablespoonsofcastoroil

on empty stomach in the morning on a weekend. You will have few lose motions.

• Thenforaweekfollowing,doafastwithkhichadi (soupy mung beans and rice cooked together). Eat khichadi for lunch and dinner and warm mild cooked cereal for breakfast. Avoid eating anything else.

• Eachnightduringtheweek,takeonetea-spoon of triphala with a pinch of pippali (Piper longum) at night with water. This will regularize your system. Then at the end of the week, repeat the castor oil one more time.

Herbs such as guduchi (Tribulus terrestris), punarnava (Boerhaavia diffusa), turmeric,

amala (Embilica officinalis) and haritaki (Terminalia chebula) are called rasayana (re-juvenative) herbs. They improve the quality of tissues, thereby feeling revived.

Abhyanga (warm oil massage, with a ther-apist or via self-massage) and shirodhara (warm oil poured in a continuous stream over the forehead) are wonderful Ayurvedic oil therapies.

Regular exercise, pranayama (breathing practices), meditation and Yoga will definite-ly help restore your energy and bring you into balance.

I don’t think anything major is wrong. You just need a regular “oil check.”

Please note that these suggestions are de-pendent on the limited information I received in these questions. It is always important to

have a thorough evaluation with a well-trained healthcare provider or Ayurvedic practitioner.

The information provided here is for educa-tional purposes only. Before using any Ayurvedic sremedies, consult with a qualified Ayurvedic practitioner or healthcare provider. This article represents the opinion and rec-ommendations of the author and does not necessarily reflect the views of LA YOGA Ayurveda and Health magazine.

Dr. Jay Apte, practicing Ayurveda for more than 35 years has opened “Dr. Jay’s Health & Nature Wellness Center” in Mountain View CA offering Ayurveda, Panchakarma, Yoga, and Meditation. (650) 584 -3123, [email protected]; hnwellness.com

Positive Negative

How is your metabolism? Great Not so good

Do you sleep soundly? Yes Interrupted

Do you have regular bowel movements? Yes May get constipated

What is your stress level? Cope well Stressful

Do you feel happy or veryHappy

Anxious, Nervous, emotionally irregular? Depressed

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Page 48: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

46 LAYOGA March 2011

To Find an Ayurvedic Practitioner visit: California Association of Ayurvedic Medicine: ayurveda-caam.org or National Ayurvedic Medical Association: ayurveda-nama.org.

Ayurvedic Practitioners:

James Bailey, LAc, MATCM, MPH and Dipl Ayu. Sevanti Wellness, full service clinic with acupuncture, Oriental medicine and Ayurve-da, since 1990. Sevanti Wellness, 1502 Mon-tana Avenue, CA. (310) 393 - 4124,[email protected].

Pilar Chandler, LMT, Certified Ayurvedic Practitioner. Consultations, nutrition, stress reduction, massage, aromatherapy, classes in cooking and natural remedies at Shri Veda Wellness. 445 E. 17th Street, Suite J. Costa Mesa, CA. (949) 310 - 3226.

The Healing Gardens is a full-service Ayurvedic and Yoga Center in Orange Coun-ty under an Ayurvedic Physician and Practi-tioner. Specialize in Panchakarma detoxifi-cations, Ayurvedic Therapies, Oil Massages, Personalized Yoga therapies and Yoga and Ayurveda Retreats. Now offering, Pancha-karma Certification course. Call (949) 515 - 4855 or visit: thehealingardens.com.

Dr. Parla Jayagopal teaches at the American University of Complementary Medicine and practices in Beverly Hills, Pasadena and Up-land. For appointments: (310) 550 - 7445.

Vaidya R. K. Mishra practices and teaches at the Prana Center in Chatsworth and across the country. For more information about his schedule and consultations, call (818) 709 - 1005. Vaidyamishra.com.

Dr. Aditya Sharma, Ayurvedic consultations, detoxification, weight management, nutrition, blood pressure, cholesterol, stomach problems, pms, male/femail problems, eczema, cleansing, thyroid, and more. Geeta Ayurveda Healing Center, INC. Beverly Hills Office: (310) 623 - 4415. Simi Valley Office: (805) 584 - 9025.

Pancha karma at Blue Sage Sanctuary with Raga-ia Belovarac and a team of well-trained compas-sionate practitioners. Immersion programs, heal-ing retreats, pancha karma and individualized therapies available: bluesage-sanctuary.com.

Dr. Mark Vinick, DC, CAS, chiropractic, Ayurveda, Shakti Energy HealingTM, nutri-tion, anti-aging, marma therapy, stress re-duction techniques and meditation. Board certified in pain management, anti-aging and Ayurvedic medicine. 1860 S. Elena Ave, Suite A, Redondo Beach, CA. (310) 375 - HEAL. Drmarkvinick.com.

Andrea Emmerich, CAS, CYT, LMT, special-izes in Ayurvedic treatments, Panchakarma seasonal cleanses and detoxification programs, Thai massage and private Yoga sessions. andreaemmerich.com

Arun Deva, DASc, AYT. Practicing Ayurveda, Ayur*yoga Therapy and Vinyasa Krama Yoga, Panchakarma, Ayurvedic Lifestyle & Dietary Guidelines, Yoga Therapy, Yoga Classes. (310) 358 - 9555 [email protected], yogarasayana.wordpress.com. .

To advertise in this special advertising section listing Ayurvedic practitioners and practices, contact: [email protected].

AYURVEDIC SANGHA the California Association of Ayurvedic Medicine and LA YOGA Magazine. Open to members, practitioners, Ayurvedic students, Yoga teachers, students and anyone who is interested in meeting in person to learn more about Ayurveda and share food, fellowship, knowledge and more.

Ayurvedic Mondays Monthly Monday Morning Ayurveda Series at the Sivananda Center, 13325 Beach Ave-nue, Marina del Rey, CA 90292. Sivananda.org/la. 9:30 - 11:30 A.M. Suggested donation of $10 supports the nonprofit California As-sociation of Ayurvedic Medicine (CAAM). No one will be turned away.

Monday, March 7: Dr. Parla Jayagopal. Prana in the Yogic and Ayurvedic texts and in our daily lives. Monday, April 4: Arun Deva. Daily and Seasonal Routines of Ayurveda. Nature provides us with seasons to help guide us through our own life journeys. Of these, Ayurveda focuses on four seasons in particular: Those of day and night; the seasons of the year; and of age and of digestion. Following their rhythms can lead to seamless harmony and a state of well being known as

svasthavritta. In this workshop we will explore their significances and their interplay with our own biological forces known as doshas. By creating daily and seasonal routines that encourage us to become Nature’s dance partners in life; we too become expressions of our highest potential.Monday, May 2: Kishan Shah Dinacharya: Daily Routine. The rituals of Dinacharya which are designed to keep the body balanced, nourish the senses, and cleanse on a daily basis. Kishan will also address evening rituals to prepare the body for winding down from our day and get ready for a deep sleep as well as daily Yoga and pranayama techniques for vitality and radiant health.

California Association of Ayurvedic Medicine Members – Participate in Monthly Case Study discussions. Learn more about common con-

ditions or bring one of your cases to discuss in a group mentored by senior practitioners. Led by Dr. Parla Jayagopal. Next case study-discussion, Thursday, March 31, 5:00 – 6:00 P.M. Pacific Time by Conference Call. Num-ber: (712) 432 – 1690. Call in code: 604917#. For more information or to register, write: [email protected].

Sunday, March 12: Join the Venice Learning Garden, the Sivananda Center and the California Association of Ayurvedic Medicine for a working afternoon sharing your love of the garden and of building community. From 1:00 - 5:00 P.M., we’ll be preparing an Ayurvedic teaching garden within the vibrant space in Venice. Volunteer and participate in service and community. Write: [email protected] or [email protected] for more information.

Ayurvedic EventsAyurvedic Principles for Yoga Teachers, a mod-ule in the Santa Barbara Yoga Center teacher training program, March 4 – 6, taught by Feli-cia Marie Tomasko, RN. For more informa-tion, visit: santabarbarayogacenter.com.

All About Fat: Separating Fact from Fiction Intensive taught by Rob Talbert in Laguna Beach on March 19: jivaka.com

Free talk at the California College of Ayurveda Cerritos Campus, Aromatherapy: The Sense of Smell Applied to Healing taught by Marisa Laursen on March 17, 7:00 – 8:30 P.M. Cali-fornia College of Ayurveda, 17100 Norwalk Blvd, Cerritos, CA: ayurvedacollege.com.

Page 49: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

NATIONAL AYURVEDIC MEDICAL ASSOCIATION’S8TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE

HEALTHY BODY, HEALTHY BRAIN, HIGHER CONSCIOUSNESS THROUGH AYURVEDA

April 14-17, 2011Crowne Plaza Hotel, Cherry Hill, NJJust minutes from historic downtown Philadelphia.

AKASHA... “A Space to Heal”

Mount Madonna Institute

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FEATURED SPEAKERS Swami Chandrasekharanand Saraswati

Vaidya Rama Kant Mishra Dr. John Douillard

Dr. Sunil JoshiMukunda Stiles

Chinnamasta StilesDr. Parla Jayagopal

Marty WuttkeDr. Joanna Carmichael

Dr. Marty CottlerDr. Nita Desai

Bri. Joan Shivarpita HarriganDr. Rohini Kanniganti

Sascha KrieseDr. Diana Lurie

Michael K. MastroDr. Rammohan Rao

Dr. Dilip SarkarDr. Virender Sodhi

Register by February 28 for the Advanced Registration Discount:

www.ayurveda-nama.org

Mother Maya (Maya Tiwari)

Pandit Rajmani Tigunait

Dr. Christine Horner

Dr. Vasant Lad

Page 50: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

48 LAYOGA March 2011

Iayurveda pages

spring cleansing ayurveda styleby karta purkh singh khalsa

IN LIKE A LION, out like a lamb, or so we say. Yes, Spring is a time of changes, and the transition from Winter to Spring is one of the most stressful and challenging shifts we go through all year. In most areas, Winter, with its cold weather, gradually gives way to the increasing warmth of Summer, so we go from a time of excess kapha (water and earth) energy to the increasing heat of the pitta (fire element) season. Just like the plants that start poking through the soil in the tran-sitional springtime, we also gradually start to poke our noses out into the world

Sometimes, all this doesn’t happen quite as smoothly as we’d prefer. When the unpredict-able beginning of Spring comes around, our bodies don’t quite know who to trust, Old Man Winter or the promise of balmy Spring. Do our immune systems still have to ward off colds, or do our adrenal glands have to rev up and get us out to play softball?

Your goal in Spring will be to stabilize your metabolism after being sedentary during the cold season and to get going on your annual Spring cleansing program. Your Ayurvedic health strategy will be to stay warm, get moving, dry out, and lighten up your life- in other words, to reduce accumulated kapha and detoxify any stuck ama (toxins or undi-gested material) that is still in your tissues from the Winter.

Spring is a time for invigorating exercise, gradually getting back into shape. Add to that some invigorating massage to get the blood circulating, and nice warm baths, sau-nas and warm herb rubs to revitalize and stimulate the tissues.

Spring Cleaning with an Ayurvedic Twist

During spring, concentrate on cleansing foods and teas. After all, you’ve been hiber-nating all winter, you old bear. Now, like it or not, it’s time to get up, get cleaned out and get active. Mucus, which also answers to the name kapha dosha, tends to accumulate in the winter (remember all those miserable days at home with a cold?) and that same mucus likes to flow in the spring, like the sap rising in the trees.

Milk tends to increase mucus, so during the

Spring season, limit milk products, especial-ly in the kapha morning time. (The kapha morning is approximately sunrise until 10:00 A.M.) Instead, reach for a cup of warm wa-ter with a teaspoon of honey.

Pungent, bitter and astringent tastes reduce kapha and assist in cleaning out the tissues. Leafy green vegetables, including lettuce, pars-ley, and spinach, plus leeks and okra, are bitter cleansing foods. Consider root vegetables, such as beets, carrots and turnips – raw, cooked or juiced – to help keep the liver clean.

Enjoy split peas and navy beans for protein in this season, because they stick to the ribs but are easy enough to digest that the body continues its detoxification cycle. Mung beans and rice soup, with ghee, cilantro, and grated coconut could be a good lunch for a warm spring day. Follow that with detoxify-ing astringent foods, including berries and grapes, especially green ones. For a punchier detoxifying action, add turmeric, which also reduces inflammation.

When it comes to kitchen herbs, green tea, basil, ginger, cloves and coriander keep the chill away. Pungent onions, garlic, ginger and chilies help speed up circulation and bring cleansing blood to all the organs.

People often develop joint and muscle pain over the long winter. Detoxifying vegetarian diets have been studied in chronic muscle pain, and have shown nice results in the re-search. A Norwegian study tested the effects of a three week vegetarian diet for people with chronic muscle pain. Serum peroxide, plasma fibrinogen, total cholesterol and high density lipoprotein cholesterol all reduced.

Clean Out all the PipesUnfortunately, Spring is allergy season, and

it can bring some serious misery! Wet and heavy kapha contributes to this of springtime bane for susceptible folks.

Bring out the daily neti pot, and make it a routine. The warm saltwater and herbal na-sal rinse takes just a few seconds, but it can save days of misery from sick sinuses. Think herbal decoctions for use in the neti. Tripha-la will shrink swollen membranes, eucalyptus will thin mucus, and goldenseal will kill bac-

teria. Gotu kola, skullcap and calamus are traditional nasal application herbs for sinus conditions. For inflamed sinuses, add a tea-spoon of ghee to the neti.

Detoxify the Shrotas (the body’s channels)To treat the symptoms of excess ama, herb-

alists use a broad selection of foods to assist the body in removing the waste products from the tissues. When it comes to detoxify-ing the liver, few foods are more effective than burdock root, which is specific for erup-tions of the head, face and neck, and arti-choke, a thistle plant in the daisy family. Used mainly as an exotic vegetable, green globe is an excellent detoxifier of the liver and gallbladder that also reduces blood fats, including cholesterol, and effectively treats gallstones and obesity. One study showed a significant lowering of elevated cholesterol (12.2%), triglyceride (5.7%) levels and body weight with artichoke extract.1 The raw globe can also be juiced.

Radish, a member of the cabbage family, is known the world over for liver and gall-bladder detoxification. The black radish is regarded as a stronger remedy, but the com-mon red radish also brings results. Other radishes, including daikon (called “mooli” in India), are used in their respective cultures. Radish is a choleretic that relaxes the smooth musculature of the bile ducts, improving bile flow. Radish is also a good vegetable to in-clude in cases of chronic constipation. Use as a food, raw or cooked, or as juice, depend-ing on your preference. Mooli pranthas are popular in Ayurvedic cuisine.

In the herbal arena, dandelion root also acts to increase bile flow. Take dandelion root as tea, tincture, or capsules. Three thou-sand milligrams per day is a good dose. You might enjoy roasted dandelion root, brewed as a delicious coffee substitute.

Besides being a general balancer, the fa-mous triphala herbal formula is a light laxa-tive, skin, eye, and liver remedy, and an over-all detoxifier. Besides taking it as powder, use triphala as a cleansing throat gargle.

Bhumyamalaki is a standby for liver detox-ification. It increases bile flow in a very mild

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March 2011 LAYOGA 49

way, so is well tolerated by people for whom a stronger liver detoxifier is contraindicated. Use up to 10 grams per day in capsules.

The spring season is Nature’s time to turn over a new leaf, and just maybe we can take her advice. Just like you clean your house, make a commitment to some serious Spring cleaning for your body, and set the tone for all the action you’ll be enjoying long into the Summer.

Karta Purkh Singh Khalsa, DN-C, Yogaraj, was Yogi Bhajan’s herbal apprentice for 32 years. He is the course director of the Profes-sional Herbalists Course in Newport Beach, California (jivaka.com). Contact him at [email protected]

Endnotes:1. Wiener Medizinische Wocheschrift, 1975; 1223:705-9

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Ayurveda Resources Nourishing Oils

Golden Earth Oils:

goldenearth.net

Banyan Botanicals:

banyanbotanicals.com

TriHealth:

trihealthayurveda.com

Sarada Ayurvedic Remedies:

saradausa.com

Floracopeia:

floracopeia.com

Chandika Products for healthy

skin – real rose, brahmi and

sandalwood soaps: chandika.com

NutritionHigh potency liquid nourishing multi-vitamin and multimineral supplements which include kelp, Himalayan crystals and micronutrients that are specifically designed to support health and achieve homeostasis. Formulas for pets, people, plants and soil: ambayagold.com

Detoxification supplements, superfoods and Klamath algae by HealthForce Nutritionals: healthforce.com

Medicated GheesHerbs of Ayurveda: [email protected], (530) 273 -1103

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50 LAYOGA March 2011

yogi food

Wmung bean rasamby darshana thacker

WHEN WE FEEL TUNED IN with our body, we pay attention to what it needs to be healthy, and what is needed to heal when sick. When I am not feeling well, one of the first things that my body asks for is some-thing nurturing and grounding—such as mung beans in any form. And when I have a cold, cough or am experiencing congestion, my body asks for something hot and sooth-ingly spicy like turmeric tea or rasam soup.

When sick, we may not want to spend much time cooking, so I like to make a large pot of mung bean rasam and drink it like tea or soup as often as I like throughout the day. The

warming spices in the soup aid in opening up the sinuses and melt away the soreness in the throat and the congestion in the chest. The mung beans provide soothing nourishment.

Rasam is a traditional South Indian lentil soup with a rich blend of spices. Its pungency and sour taste stimulate the senses and open the sinuses. Since it is liquidy, it is light on the digestion, which is especially beneficial when convalescing or even cleansing. In some parts of South India, it is served as appetizer and in others its served as an after-dinner drink, in either case it is a digestive tonic.

The base ingredient is the liquid from

boiled mung with variations that include to-matoes and tamarind which add the sour taste and garlic, ginger and rasam powder for the pungent spiciness.

Rasam powder is a special combination of spices used in South India to give a dis-tinct flavor; this often includes coriander, cumin, mustard, turmeric, curry leaves, fen-ugreek, asafetida, black pepper and other spices. I have created my own blend that uses more black pepper rather than red chili pepper to create the spicy flavor which is less aggravating to pitta (the fire element) even when used frequently.

Of course we know that citrus fruits like oranges, tangerines and lemons are

high in Vitamin C, and that accordingly they help strengthen our immune system. But did you know they also help to detoxify the blood? Surprisingly colorful varieties of cit-rus provide additional health benefits and tremendous bang for your bite! Please your eyes and scintillate your taste buds with these vibrant fruits whose ripeness is currently peaking in California:

Blood oranges are tarter than the tradition-al oranges and their gorgeous deep red hue says something about their tangy taste. High in fiber, potassium, and age- and disease-fighting antioxidants, the bloods provide rich levels of the super anti-inflammatory antho-cyanins. Their juice works great as a salad dressing in place of lemon juice when paired with olive or flaxseed oil and is lovely splashed into sparkling water or champagne to make a fizzy RosaMosa.

Cara Caras, or pink navel oranges, have an intense orange flavor with underlying cherry undertones and very few seeds. They are lower in acid content than regular oranges, so folks with Blood Type A may find these more digestible. Cara Caras also provide the

super cancer-fighting carotenoid, lycopene, which is purportedly great for eye and heart health and shown to fight all types of cancer, especially prostate cancer.

Ruby red grapefruits are high in vitamins B1 and B2, as well as potassium and even calcium, and like the cara caras, are also high in lycopene. Eating grapefruits can increase the secretion of digestive enzymes and, thus, ease irritation in the stomach and intestines. I definitely reach for these when my digestion feels sluggish and irritated.

Kumquats are bite-sized orange sweet and sour fruits with the surprise that the skin is actually sweeter than the flesh. Since the rind tastes sweet, you can easily eat the whole fruit to benefit from the super cancer-fighting lim-inoids in their rinds. Liminoids have been shown to prevent and halt the spread of can-cer in lab conditions. So eat your kumquats rind and all: slice and use them in salads, in oatmeal, or over yogurt to add a zippy tang.

Pummelos (or pomelos or pommelos), the largest citrus fruit, closely resemble grapefruit but typically have green skin and deep pink flesh. Less acidic than grapefruit, they taste sweeter and more aromatic, and have similar benefits to the ruby reds.

Oro bancos, a hybrid between white grape-fruit and the pommelo, are sweeter and less bitter than grapefruit. Their yellow rind is a bit thicker than typical grapefruit and hides golden flesh inside, which tastes like grape-fruit but sweeter.

When choosing citrus, opt for fruit that weigh heavy in your hand to ensure ideal ripeness and optimal juiciness. Do your best to eat the whole fruit (instead of simply drinking the juice) in order to reap the colon-cleansing benefits of their high fiber content. To enjoy, just peel and eat them right out of your hand, or slice them into half-moons and toss them into a salad with fennel and wal-nuts or with avocado and arugula.

One of my signature dishes features the zest and juice of blood oranges mixed with sundried tomatoes and chili sauce as a simple and delicious marinade. Whichever citrus fruit you choose, enjoy a variety of colors to rev up your immune system, clean your di-gestive tract, and keep cancer and other in-flammation-related diseases at bay.

Red Jen Ford is a certified holistic health coach, Yoga instructor and manager of the Westwood Farmers’ Market, located in the Vets’ Garden Thursdays from Noon to 5:00 P.M. Jen teaches her customers and busy cli-ents the simplicity of eating local, sustainably grown food. Contact her at (917) 971 – 1941 or at: redjenford. The Westwood Farmers Market: westwoodfarmersmarket.com .

the farmers’ corner: seasonal citrus in surprising colors with spring-cleansing benefits by red jen ford

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March 2011 LAYOGA 51

1/4 cup green mung beans

1 tsp Oil (sesame)

1/4 tsp mustard seeds

1/4 tsp cumin seeds

1 pinch asafetida

1/4 tsp turmeric powder

5-6 leaves curry leaves

1 tsp ginger, grated

1/4 tsp garlic, grated

1/2 cup tomatoes, diced

1 tbsp tamarind, dried

6 tsp Darshana’s Special Blend of rasam masala powder or 2 tsp store-bought rasam masala powder

Ingredients Directions•Soakthemungbeansforabouttwoto

four hours.

•Inabowl,mixthetamarindwithwarmwater and set it aside.

•Inapot,boilthemungbeansinthreecups of water for 30-40 minutes until they are fully cooked (add more water if necessary).

•Asthemungbeansbegintosoften,addthe ginger, garlic, tomatoes, turmeric and curry leaves and cook for another five to ten minutes.

•Inasmallskillet,heattheoilandaddthemustard seeds, once they start to pop, add the cumin seeds and asafetida.Add the spice mixture to the mung dal on the stove.

•Mixthetamarindwiththewaterithasbeen soaking in, then strain it through a sieve and add the tamarind to the mung.

•Addtherasammasalapowderandcookfor another four to five minutes.

Rasam can be made as spicy or as mild as you desire based on the quantity of rasam masala powder added.

Serve this hot with rice or as a brew in a cup for relief from colds, coughs or blocked sinuses.

For people with a vata constitution (air and ether elements) or vata out of balance, this gives warmth and adds fire to the body. The mung beans are grounding.

For people with a pitta constitution (fire ele-ment) or pitta out of balance, a version that is a little diluted would be recommended.

For Kapha, a little rasam would be beneficial even in regular diet, as a digestive drink post-dinner to increase their digestive fire.

Darshana Thacker Darshana teaches the tradi-tional Ayurvedic technique of simple spice com-bining and food preparation. Her intimate, kitch-en-based classes illustrate the simple preparation of well-balanced meals planned according to sea-son. Most often the dishes are vegan variations of traditional recipes from all parts of India. New students receive a sample kit of organic spices. View the 2011 schedule at: vapikaspirit.com.

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52 LAYOGA March 2011

yogi food

Akumquat rosemary rice pilafby felicia m. tomasko, rn

A FRIEND OF MINE who lives in a canyon has a kumquat tree in his yard. I was stay-ing there when I received a last-minute invitation to a potluck dinner and looked around to see what would be easily available without a trip to the store. The decision: kumquat rosemary rice.

Since the rind of kumquats is both sweet and full of health benefits (see the Farmer’s Corner), it makes a deliciously fragrant and subtle addition to recipes. The sweet-sour taste of kumquats combines well with the aromatic and sweet pungency of rosemary; the two together pack an anti-oxidant punch. Clip a few springs of rosemary and chop fine-ly with a sharp knife or a pair of scissors.

• 2cupsbrownrice

• 5cupspurewater

• 1/4cupsesameseeds

• 3tablespoonschoppedrosemary

• 2twigsofrosemaryforgarnish

• 20kumquats,slicedintorounds

• 3-6kumquatsforgarnish

• 5stalksoflavenderleavesandflowers

• PinchofHimalayansalttotaste (added at the end)

• Freshlygroundblackpepperor crushed peppercorns

• Oliveoil

Directions•Bringwatertoaboilandthenaddbrown

rice and sesame seeds together. Simmer until rice is fully cooked (or prepare in a rice cooker until fully done).

•Whilethericeiscooking,slicethekumquatsinto thin rounds and chop the rosemary.

•Tosstherice(cookedwithsesameseeds),kumquats and rosemary together until com-pletely mixed.

•Coatacasseroledishwithathincoatofol-ive oil and then place the well-combined rice and sesame seeds, kumquats and rosemary in the dish. Drizzle some olive oil on top of the rice. On the top, arrange the five stalks of lavender in a star-shaped pattern. Bake at 350 degrees until the rice is warm all the way through and the flavors are sufficiently marinated, about 30 minutes. Serve warm as a side dish. LAYOGA

Ingredients

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March 2011 LAYOGA 53

Page 56: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

54 LAYOGA March 2011

OONE DAY OF EACH YEAR, millions ob-serve what is considered the most sacred vor-tex of time to be blessed in transformation and grace. For thousands of years, yogis, saints, sadhus, and householders in India have observed this moment, the MahaSivratri by staying up all night celebrating Lord Siva.

MahaSivratri is the night of the Eternal Yogi, Lord Siva. This year, MahaSivratri falls on March 2 – 3.

“Si” is the Spirit that we are. “Va” is the Goddess, that of experience. “SiV”a is the awake experience. This is the root understand-ing to Lord Siva, the male and female within each of us. Likewise, the word “yogi” also re-fers to the feminine counterpart yogini.

In the spiritual India, most yogis who un-dergo deep tapas (meditative penance), sel-dom coming out for months, take a break from their meditative state and come out to bless humanity during this period of Ma-haSivratri. For one on the path of Yoga, this is the night to experience and actually be-come the Eternal Yogi.

This day of Mahasivratri is calculated based on the lunar calendar when our con-sciousness easily condenses into divine aware-ness during this period. Every month, there is one Sivratri and once a year, the grand Ma-

haSivratri (maha means great) near the new moon period. From the yogic perspective, the moon directly influences the mind and our consciousness. It is during MahaSivratri pe-riod when we can easily dissolve our thoughts to surrender our past, especially karmic pat-terns to the Magic of the Now and rise above in consciousness.

Each month, the new and full Moon ener-gies uniquely shift as the Earth rotates around the Sun. Each day of the orbit of the Moon around Earth holds a specific energy and a wave of consciousness. Each full Moon and new Moon period holds a specific vortex of energy. New moons hold the consciousness of Lord Siva, the Spirit experience and full moons hold the awareness and the mind, the energies of Lord Vishnu.

Mahasivratri also holds the objective of our Yoga practice, to attain the “I Am” experi-ence and to lead a life as a Spirit having a hu-man experience. The objective of Yoga and its meaning has been described as the union of divinity with the human.

In the meditative process, as the mind of thoughts give way to the mindless mind of a single thought that holds the thoughtlessness, we experience bliss. This is the supreme bliss that yogis term as ananda, happiness for no

reason and all the reasons. Lord Siva is called “Satchidananda” which mean the experience of being bliss.

Any saint or holy man and woman in any religion or culture have the ability to bless re-ality through words. They may say, “Go home and you will soon have a baby” and remarkably, these words come true. This is because they are in touch with the higher con-scious mind that is in union with Source, the mind state of Turiya. In deeper meditation, as we journey through the states of being awake, dreaming and sleeping, we realize each of this a facet of the mind in levels of consciousness. The yogis dive beneath these layers within to go beyond the mind, the thought patterns and karmic imprints to the state of Turiya, the state of sleepless sleep. In the state of Turiya, the yogis climb into timelessness to intensify the “I Am” experience. In MahaSivratri, the key to celebrating Lord Siva is by staying awake all night long to experience the yogic state of the mind, the Turiya. This higher con-scious state of Turiya is the hidden experience that we are to be blessed with during Ma-haSivratri when staying awake through the night singing, meditating or chanting.

MahaSivratri sets our inner clock to being the timeless awareness. It is the peak of inner

the art of yoga:

mahasivratrithe night of the yogi/yogini

by nandhi

Art

: Meg

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March 2011 LAYOGA 55

realization and grace in the annual journey as our planet travels around the Sun. To cele-brate MahaSivratri observing a few yogic in-sights uplifts us to be unbound by time, kar-mic patterns and a limited mind. We become the joyful instrument of Source blessed in our daily inner journey to light, to be light.

Preparing for MahaSivratri in a Yogic Manner:•WhenapproachingMahaSivratri (March

2 – 3), we turn our mind inward and grad-ually shift our consciousness from the body into the soul. As the moon wanes and dis-solves, we dissolve our ego states of ‘me’, ‘mine’ and ‘I’ into the higher consciousness of oneness of that of Lord Siva.

•MahaSivratriisthecelebrationoftheSpiritby the Spirit. Empowered worship of Source is from the intent of wanting to be Source.

•Inourinnerjourneyofmeditation,theseare moments for detox and cleansing of mind and body through a light diet of fruits, nuts, and juice. With puja (prayer and wor-ship) we transform to be Lord Siva.

•JumpintoyourpersonalMotherGangaeach morning! By slipping into a cold wa-ter bath or shower each morning (even for just a moment), we are dissolving our pri-mal bond to the body and thus are born again. If getting into the cold water show-er in the morning is difficult, practice Yoga and through Yoga dissolve into Lord Siva of the five elements and the body becomes easier to surrender into the cold water.

•Itisnormalforhumanitytoexperienceturbulence and upheavals just before Ma-haSivratri and then after MahaSivratri, the calm and inspired realities that unfold. The mind readily plunges within whenever there is hardship in our external realities. After MahaSivratri is observed and com-plete, it is normal to witness a huge bless-ing or blessings in our external reality.

•Lightalampatleastonceadayandmed-itate, chant and pray. If this is not possible, still the mind and visualize the lamp with-in and experience Source as the joys with-in the stillness of a mind without thoughts. The stillness of mind is Lord Siva, the ex-perience of being the Self, the soul.

•Pilgrimagestosacredplacesduringthisperiod supports the inner journey. Being aware of each thought and setting the mind alight through mantra chanting cre-ates the inner lamp of awareness that gradually shines 24/7.

•Practicedharma (right action). An effective form of dharma is to feed the hungry while we are fasting. In satisfying another’s hun-ger, we are divinely fed with the subtle en-ergy of Source. Dharma done during this sacred period magnifies. Dharma done by practicing random acts of kindness take us beyond our own suffering and discomfort in order to enable the realization of One-ness and the essence of Source.

•Climbwithineachdayandgofurtherbe-yond the mind into the internal vibrant light. Lift your consciousness from the muladhara chakra (root chakra) above to the Guru chakra (above the navel).

•Shiftyourawarenesstothespaceaboveto the third eye and watch the vibrant light of the mantra dance. In bringing this light in the third eye to stillness, the mind transcends to the mindless realm of joy that Sages call the sleepless sleep, Turiya.

•Ontheday/nightofMahaSivratri, (March

2 – 3, celebrated in different areas on dif-ferent days), be the pillar of light, Lord Siva, the Eternal Yogi.

May humanity arise in the awake con-sciousness of wisdom that enables each of us to be the prophets and masters of higher con-sciousness. May each of us be instruments of Source and in our breath, the ascendance of collective consciousness.

We are the messengers of peace, love and Oneness of Source!

Nandhi was initiated into a karmic death journey through the direct teachings of his en-lightened Siddhar Gurus and Masters in In-dia, traveling in the wilderness and meditating in caves in South India as a sadhu for over two decades. Tapasyogi Kalathi Adiyen Aadi Nandhi represents the wisdom of the liber-ated. He is a visionary, yogi and a transfor-mational guide who is from the mystical path of the Siddhars of South India. The Siddhar teachings, Tantiram, represent the roots of Yoga, Tantra and Mantra. His core teachings Kalangi Yoga is based on imparting the expe-rience and guidance to attain a life of free-dom, purpose, health and inner wisdom through tools of enlightenment: nandhi.com

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56 LAYOGA March 2011

media reviews : cds

JoyrideDave StringerSpirit Voyage

The Yoga SessionsGo-Ray & DukeYoga Organix/

Black Swan Records

The Yoga Sessions is a labor of love and devotion, full of great players: Rachel

“Go-Ray” Golub (vocals, violins, tampra, sitar), David “Duke Mushroom” Schommer (drums, beats, percussion, bass, vocals) and a cast of other serious players, including Steve Gorn, MC Yogi and Idan Raichel. It is refreshing to hear musicians who have de-veloped their craft coming together to create and facilitate a vision. I’m a long-time fan of world music and I hear credibility and honesty on this album. This collective has done their homework and manages to fuse traditional sounds with a modern touch.

Track three is a cover of “Spirits in the Material World” by the Police, which sur-prised me because the track starts with a bass line that sounds just like “Bed’s Too Big Without You,” also a Police song that gave Sheila Hylton a UK hit in 1981. It’s as if Go-Ray & Duke are sending out musical messages, like tipping their hat to both songs at once or to the archetypal quality of Sting’s bass playing.

This entire album is laced with messages, musically and lyrically, and the liner notes explain the impetus behind every song. If you buy this album as a download, make a point to download the liner notes and artwork. The back cover features a photo of Go-Ray and Duke next to a tree; Go-Ray looks like she jumped straight off the pages of Glamour circa 1973 and Duke looks like he could be playing in Queens of the Stone Age. Nice. All the elements in this project make it a com-plete package, the way albums used to be in the days when giants like Keith Richards and Jimmy Page roamed the Earth.

If like me, you miss the sound of musi-cians playing music and the lost art of al-bum liner notes and cover design, Go-Ray & Duke are keeping the fires burning.

––Reviewed by Daniel Overberger, an LA-based Yoga teacher, the author of Leaving Stress Behind and founder of alt-kirtan group, Dharma Gypsys: leavingstressbehind.com.

Chanting is a spiritual practice, right along with seva (karma yoga), medita-

tion, japa (mantra repetition), contempla-tion, and swadhyaya (reading sacred texts). Dave Stringer’s aptly titled live two CD set Joyride enables listeners to delve deeply into this practice. Each of the six tracks range from fifteen to twenty minutes, allowing ample time to familiarize yourself with the melodies before diving into the experience of chanting.

Stinger’s captivating kirtans draw us in with their enticing harmonies. From the soulful “Jay Jay Ram Krishna Hari” to tra-ditional favorites like “Kali Durge” and “Krishna Govinda,” Stringer has managed to put his unique signature on each track.

“Om Namo Bhagavate” is a tribute to Bhagavan Nityananda, the beloved Indian saint. The first ten minutes of the bhajan are fairly mellow as Stringer longingly express-es his devotion; then the intensity heightens as he adds the soulful cry, “Bhagavan!” There’s the sense of wanting to merge with this great master.

The melodies evoke memories of times when I’ve lived in ashrams in India and the U.S., where an evening of chanting is the fa-vored way to wind down after a full day. Basking in the afterglow of an ecstatic ex-perience of chanting can take one into deep meditation as the chant reverberates in your being. In the ashram, the musicians are pri-marily a tabla player and harmonium play-er who convey the feel of a larger orchestra. Stringer, however, has ten other musicians here, who play everything from the electric guitar to the harmonica.

The beauty which I’ve experienced at Stringer’s concerts is that the music has the capacity to take me outside of myself into a transcendental state. You get a glimpse into this state with Joyride. davestringer.com

––Reviewed by Madhavi Rathod, an Ayurvedic practitioner and Vedic Astrologer born in India and currently residing in North-ern California: vedichealing.com (read her blog at: vedichealing.blogspot.com.)

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Emotional FreedomBy Judith Orloff, MDThree Rivers Press

media reviews : books

EMOTIONAL FREEDOM: Liberate Yourself From Negative Emotions and

Transform Your Life is the perfect book to come along at the perfect time. I couldn’t put it down.

We live in a tumultuous, fear-dominated period in history and must become masters at overcoming fear and other negative emo-tions so they don’t sabotage our power. With skill and compassion, Dr. Judith Or-loff shows us how to become heroes in our own lives by transforming anger, loneliness, and envy and more rather than simply “re-acting” when our buttons get pushed.

An Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychi-atry at UCLA and intuition expert, Dr. Or-loff shares her wealth of personal and pro-fessional knowledge to illuminate the field of emotions. She draws on wisdom from traditional medicine but goes light years be-yond it by presenting emotions as a path to spiritual, energetic, and intuitive awakening. Why is this leap so important? The intellect has restricted vision about emotions, but bringing intuition into the feeling realm lets us go deeper within. Dr. Orloff asks us to see every success, every heartbreak, every loss, every gain as vehicles for transforma-tion. She teaches readers to view emotions in a non-ordinary way, rather than simply making you happy or miserable. Everyone will benefit from the insightful instructions that continually guide us and also from the author’s intimate personal journey and well-earned life wisdom. Judith is the kind of doctor we wish we all had.

Part One of the book introduces you to the four components of emotions: their bi-ology, spirituality, energetic power, and psy-chology. Understanding each component in yourself will lead to inner breakthroughs that aren’t possible without seeing the whole picture. It offers a self-assessment test to evaluate your current level of emotional freedom so you can increase it practicing this book’s principles. Dr. Orloff invites you into her romance with sleep and dreams as revolutionary states of consciousness. She also helps readers determine their “emotion-

al type” including “the intellectual,” and “the empath. “so they can make the most of their own finest qualities. As an empath, Dr. Orloff knows the gigantic challenges of being an “emotional sponge” and teaches other empaths who’ve been labeled “overly sensitive” how to stay grounded in an often-overwhelming world.

You’ll enjoy the “emotional vampire sur-vival guide” – specific advice for dealing with emotional drainers. We’ve all met them. You’re talking to someone, when suddenly you feel anxious, depressed, or tired. She de-scribes the narcissist, the victim, the control-ler, and other types of vampires. Plus, there are quizzes to help you determine “Are you in a relationship with an emotional vam-pire?” or if you might be one yourself. Some-times, we all have the capacity to be draining, but with mindful compassion we can catch ourselves early and make a shift.

Part Two of the book offers a hands-on approach for facing the most prevalent neg-ative emotions and building positive ones. Each chapter is called a “transformation” in which you learn how to transform a neg-ative emotion into its counterpoint. For in-stance, fear is transformed with courage, frustration with patience, and jealousy with self-esteem.

You learn to do this in your life by taking a wealth of quizzes, from Dr. Orloff’s pa-tient studies, and her own intimate journey with each emotion.

Emotional Freedom is the rare book that can open your mind and your heart to more empowerment. Give yourself a gift and read it.

––Reviewed by Caroline Myss, PhD author of Anatomy of the Spirit, Sacred Contracts, and other books: myss.com.

See Judith Orloff at Unity of Tustin on March 27, 11:00 A.M. and 1:30 P.M: unitytustin.com.

Page 60: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

58 LAYOGA March 2011

l.a. ~ heaven to earth jyotish forecast: march 2011

by tamiko fischer

The astrological forecast for March is based upon the Panchanga (Vedic calendar), whose five limbs include:

1) day of the week (Vara),

2) day in the lunar cycle (Tithi),

3) half-day in the lunar cycle (Karana),

4) zodiacal position of the Moon in lunar mansion (Nakshatra) and

5) relationship between the zodiacal positions of the Sun and Moon (Yoga).

Also considered are various sidereal transits and unique Panchanga combinations also called Yogas.

Specific personal influences such as one’s date, place and time of birth are not taken into consideration, and thus the following information should be regarded as a general forecast based on traditional meanings. Times given are Pacific Standard Time before Sunday, March 13 and Pacific Daylight Time after this date.

LUNATION and ECLIPSE DAYS: The New Moon Day (Amavasya) begins the lunar month and the Full Moon Day (Poornima) shows the month’s unique qualities.

Amavasya (New Moon): Thursday, March 3 at 10:25 A.M. until Friday, March 4 at 12:45 P.M. in sidereal Aquarius in otherworldly Shatabishak Nakshatra.

Poornima (Full Moon): Friday, March 18 at 3:06 P.M. until Saturday, March 19 at 11:09 A.M. in sidereal Virgo in leisure loving Uttra Phalguni Nakshatra.

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TUESDAY, MARCH 1March begins with the Moon in Shravana Nakshatra, a moveable,

receptive and uplifting star that favors travel, studying traditional subjects, devotional rituals, healing discussions and committed lis-tening. The thirteenth lunar day occurring on a Tuesday, forms an energizing, accomplishment combination that supports steady work towards clear goals.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2Om Namah Shivaya! Tonight marks Maha Shivaratri, the festival

of Lord Shiva the Supreme Yogi who is worshipped through all night meditation and chanting vigils. This night, the Divine favors the ar-dent spiritual seeker. (Maha Shivaratri occurs on the dark-fort night of the lunar month of Magha when the Moon is in the waning four-teenth lunar day, form ing a small crescent-shaped ‘Shiva Moon.’)

SATURDAY, MARCH 5The Moon, in edgy star Poorva Bhadrapada (sometimes symbol-

ized as a two-faced head looking in opposite directions), may bring the surreal, mind-expanding experience of walking between two worlds. This influence may play-out as spending the day in two rad-ically opposite environments or crossing paths with acquaintances in an unlikely setting.

SUNDAY, MARCH 6The Moon, in steady-natured star Uttra Bhadrapada, may bring

working on a long-term, practical project motivated by hope and compassion, such as a community garden, environmental clean-up or tree planting. (The Moon and gracious Jupiter are in very close conjunction while aspected by service-oriented Saturn.)

TUESDAY, MARCH 8Today’s energizing influences fuel courage and a need for excitement,

but this is day to restrain daring driving maneuvers, to pause and read the fine print on rushed business deals and to take a few deep breaths before making ultimatums that might come back to haunt later on. (Moon in invigorating star Ashwini Nakshatra/obstructive lunar-half day Visti Karana is in effect during most of the daytime.)

FRIDAY, MARCH 11Today may bring an exercise in balancing friendly enthusiasm with

mature discernment, maybe after somebody’s playful attitude gets deemed inappropriate. (Magnetic and mischievous star Rohini Nakshatra occur-ring on a Friday forms Nasa (Loss) and Mrityu (Death) Yogas.)

SUNDAY, MARCH 13This is an ideal day to rest and seek healing comforts, such as an

Ayurvedic oil massage, a restorative Yoga class, peaceful silence, warm homemade meals or extra sleep. (Harsh star Ardra Nakshatra combined with unsettling ninth lunar day makes this a fitting time for quiet retreat.)

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March 2011 LAYOGA 59

MONDAY, MARCH 14Projects get new inspiration breathed into them as one’s diverse, hid-

den talents find outward expression today (The Moon is in versatile star Punarvasu Nakshatra/excellent and externalizing tenth lunar day.)

The Sun enters sidereal Pisces today: major official beginnings are traditionally avoided on days of solar ingress.

TUESDAY, MARCH 15Today may bring a situation where the sharing of wisdom suffers

due to the overbearing or complicating role of the messenger. There may be frustrating conversations with truly knowledgeable people or valuable information lost due to problems with complex technol-ogy. (Wise Jupiter and communicative Mercury are in exact degree, forming the adverse conjunction ‘planetary war.’ Mercury becomes the ‘conquering’ planet according to most authorities.)

SATURDAY, MARCH 19Today marks Holi, the major ‘festival of colors’ that celebrates the

triumph of good over evil, rebirth and the general let-loose energy of springtime. Before the advent of toxic, colored dyes wildly flung about in this prankish festival (similar to a messy paint-ball war), Holi powders were originally potent healing herbs like turmeric and neem. These timely rituals not only freed one’s spirits, but also were meant to fortify physical immunity during a seasonal juncture. (Holi occurs just after the Full Moon in the lunar month of Phalguna).

SUNDAY, MARCH 20Happy spring! (Today marks the Vernal Equinox.)

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23The Moon, in gentle and humanitarian star Anuradha Nakshatra

combined with the uplifting fifth lunar day is an excellent influence that makes today perhaps the most generally favorable day this week, fitting for group projects, socializing, meetings, travel, and activities characterized by tenderness and swiftness.

FRIDAY, MARCH 25 - SUNDAY, MARCH 27Four planets gather in sidereal Pisces, a conjunction likely to color

life through a Piscean lens of ‘two fish swimming in opposite direc-tions.’ Contradictory ambitions and ideals may bring up soul search-ing questions around one’s cherished highest ideals and pragmatic security, especially regarding work. (Practical work-planet Saturn is in powerful exact aspect to Jupiter in Pisces.)

THURSDAY, MARCH 31Setting a clear intention for the day may be especially beneficial

this morning. The Moon, in visionary, airy and potentially un-grounded star Shatabishak Nakshatra may make for a day of be-ing pulled into a whirlwind of mental concepts or outwardly pulled in too many directions. (Shatabishak Nakshatra on the thirteenth lunar day forms the unfavorable combination Vinasa (Annihilation) Yoga.)

Tamiko Fischer is available for Vedic astrological chart readings and welcomes your comments and queries by phone (505) 310 - 8929 or e-mail: [email protected]. tamikofischer.com

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60 LAYOGA March 2011

where to yoga: a directory of studios, teachers, and classes

Burbank/Glendale/PasadenaYoga at the Village in Northwest Glendale 200 and 500-Hour teacher training programs sanctioned by Yoga Alliance. Work toward your 500 Hour status. Yoga at the Village ca-ters to seniors, adults, kids, teens, computer geeks, the yoga challenged and the skeptical! We’re confident the above group includes you! Our principle? If you introduce your mind to your body, they just might like each other. Classes are a fusion of several styles and geared toward whomever walks in the door. Anyone is welcome to any class no matter what “level” the class is labeled. Our teachers are there to guide you. Yoga at the Village, 1306 Sonora Ave., Glendale, CA 91202. 818-265-9833; [email protected]

Yoga BlendA community studio offering a blend of yoga styles for all levels. With over 75 classes per week, unique workshops and retreats, plus an annual teacher training, there is truly something for everyone. Great teachers, great students, great vibe! 1921 West Magnolia Blvd, Bur-bank, CA. 818-954-9642; yogablend.com

Santa Barbara/Ventura/CamarilloYoga in Carpinteria with Felicia Tomasko, Beth Thomas & Rhonda Peters. Tues & Thurs, 6-7:15pm. Carpinteria Women’s Club, 1059 Vallecito Road, Carpinteria. 805-452-1319; [email protected]

Santa Monica/Brentwood/WestwoodSanta Monica YogaNew Student special: $65 for 30 days of unlim-ited yoga. For more information: santamonicayoga.com.

Sherman OaksBlack Dog Yoga Great teachers, teaching great classes! Open 7 days a week, 365 days a year, we are proud to remain a friendly, locally-owned studio where you will find the owner teaching classes too! 4454 Van Nuys Bl, Sherman Oaks 91403. 818-380-0331. blackdogyoga.com Winter 2011 Teacher Training starts January 28. Open house December 3, 2011.

when to yoga: a calendar of events

FEBRUARY5-April 23: 500 Hour Teacher Training at Yoga at the VillageYoga Alliance Sanctioned 2011. 200-Hour Yoga Teachers’ Training: A Journey to Discov-ery Expand Your Understanding/Train To Teach Hatha Yoga. (You do not need to be an aspiring yoga teacher to take this course.) Yoga at the Village is honored to once again present a unique Expanded Study and Teacher Train-ing course for enthusiastic practitioners, as well as potential instructors. 300 Hour Master Class begins September 10, 2010. Become an RYT-500. Introduce you to Your Inner Master! 300-Hour Level (to advance your 200-hour Yoga Alliance level to 500 hours or to simply deepen your practice.)

MARCH5: Ayurvedic Medicine: The Science of Life An Introduction and Guide to Health with Guy Gabriel, ERYT. Saturday, 9am-Noon. Yoga at the Village, 1306 Sonora, Glendale, CA 91201. 818-265-9833; yogaatthevillage.com

6: Kirtan Rabbi Pot Luck. Sunday 6pm. $15 pre pay/$18 door. Tickets online: urbanyoga.org, kirtanrabbi.com. Kristin Olson's Urban Yoga Center, 458 S. Palm Canyon Dr., Palm Springs, CA 92262. 760-320-7702, urbanyoga.com

12: Viniyoga Introspective:An Introduction to the Adaptation of Yoga to Those with Special Needs with Leslie Bogart. Saturday, 1-4pm. Yoga at the Village, 1306 So-nora, Glendale, CA 91201. 818-265-9833; yogaatthevillage.com

13: Deepening Students' Yoga Experience through class themeswith Shari Goodhartz, ERYT-500. Sunday, 10am-1pm. Yoga at the Village, 1306 Sonora, Glendale, CA 91201. 818-265-9833; yogaatthevillage.com

19: Spring Equinox Ceremony, Mari MendozaPotluck Follows. Saturday, 6:30pm. $20. Kris-tin Olson's Urban Yoga Center, 458 S. Palm Canyon Dr., Palm Springs, CA 92262. 760-320-7702, urbanyoga.com

20: The Introduction and Study of The Bhagavad Gitawith Nancy Goodstein. Sunday, 9am-Noon. Yoga at the Village, 1306 Sonora, Glendale, CA 91201. 818-265-9833; yogaatthevillage.com

20: Inversions with Inversion PrepPractical Ways To Practice and Teach Inversions with Scott Hobbs. Sunday, 1-4pm. Yoga at the Village, 1306 Sonora, Glendale, CA 91201. 818-265-9833; yogaatthevillage.com

26: Introduction to Therapeutic-Grade Essential OilsNon-toxic support to the nervous, digestive, respiratory and circulatory systems. They are natural antioxidants that can help oxygenate the body, elevate your mood and improve vi-tality. You will experience the 9 oils we use everyday for physical and emotional healing. Class is $10 and is from 1:45-4:30pm. West-wood area. RSVP for exact location and to reserve your space. Marilyn Kay: 310-987-1051; [email protected].

27: Ashtanga Yoga Introspectivewith Nancy Goodstein. Sunday, 1-4pm. Yoga at the Village, 1306 Sonora, Glendale, CA 91201. 818-265-9833; yogaatthevillage.com

APRIL3: Debbie Steingesser 'Afro Dance VinyasaYoga' Teens Encouraged. Sun. 1:30 - 3:30. $10/Adults $15. Kristin Olson's Urban Yoga Center, 458 S. Palm Canyon Dr., Palm Springs, CA 92262. 760-320-7702, urbanyoga.com

15-17: Bhakti Fest Spring OMmersion JTRC Kristin Olson's Urban Yoga Center, 458 S. Palm Canyon Dr., Palm Springs, CA 92262. 760-320-7702, urbanyoga.com

MAY25-June 3: Costa Rica 9 day Flower of Life Workshop and Jungle Adventure Learn the powerful and transformative Mer-Ka-Ba Med-itation during the Flower of Life workshop in the supportive environment of the Central American rainforest. Mother Nature herself will be the ultimate teacher: Indigenous wis-dom, canopy tours, elemental energies and the animals will assist us in knowing the One Law that runs through all things. Contact cert. fa-cilitator Phil Laing at: [email protected], 530-386-3983; formlessandtrue.com.

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March 2011 LAYOGA 61

classifieds: products & services to support the practice

Healing ArtsReconnective Healing and The ReconnectionBy suggested donation $35/hour with healer prac-titioner and life coach Veronica Klimenko. Include reconnective frequencies in your life and experience. Consciousness shift in your life for health, spiritual development, relationship and finance. Testimoni-als available upon request. 323-810-8108

Affordable Feng Shui ConsultationCertified Chinese consultant Master Wai Lam. Res-idential walk-through package entails: room/occu-pants/personal objective compatibility evaluation; house type/health/wealth/furniture/de-cluttering analysis. 310-854-8952;peterwailamfengshui.pcjourneyworks.com

Nutritional Counseling/Medical IntuitiveRobin Lee has had the gift of intuitive insight since she was a child. In her family this gift has been passed down from mother to daughter for genera-tions. This coupled with an extensive knowledge of health, healing, and nutrition allows Robin to find a dietary and nutritional program designed specifically for you and your body’s current needs. Robin believes the body, mind, and spirit are inti-mately connected. She taps into a person’s ener-getic field and scans each organ for both physical as well as energetic imbalances. She obtains infor-mation on exactly what types of support the body is ready for at this time and what is most appropri-

ate as far as diet, supplements, and healing modal-ities are concerned. Her individualized “program” is far more effective than one based on intellectual knowledge alone. Robin does not need to be in a person’s physical presence to access information. To schedule a consultation please contact: 760-494-0058; [email protected]

ProductsYoga Mat MadeWhere all bags are made out of yoga mats. Why make bags out of a yoga mat? Because a yoga mat understands what you need. A yoga mat will forgive and forget as you bend every which way. By nature the yoga mat is flexible, durable, cushions, protects, welcomes your touch, is friendly, frank, forgiving and bends with what is. This bag understands what you need – one less thing to take care of. Bag up your cares and belongings with yoga ease as stains roll off, bumps bounce back, you breathe easy. Be-cause we believe life is a work of Art all our bags have a touch of paint or giclee’ artwork by Kasha Ritter in their design. For this is where art and yoga willingly collide. 502-609-9699.

RetreatsCosta Rica Rainforest RetreatEnjoy Yoga & meditation classes, yoga philoso-phy group discussions and exciting explorations during this dynamic retreat. Stay in an Eco-cabin, in the tropical rain forest on a macadamia ranch. Located near some of the most active and beauti-ful volcanoes in the world. Beginner - Intermedi-ate with three styles of teaching. Join Sharla Hol-laday, Mar y Sol Barquero and Jenn Johnson for this life changing event. Empower your life with a

free private session and learn to detox your life from negativity. Leave the navigation of Costa Rica to us! All inclusive (except airfare to SJO or LIR) starts at $1,295. YogaYouCabot.com, 877-964-2968. Register now!

Yoga Family Vacations HawaiiYoga & Eco-Adventures. A Family Retreat in Ha-waii. July 10-15, 2011 This week long adventure is a wonderful opportunity to build positive family bonds, designed to nurture the parent and inspire your keiki (children ages 5 and up) to connect to nature through hands on adventure and fun! Daily yoga practices designed specifically for parents are scheduled conveniently at the same time as our kids nature explorations. Together families will explore the unique and spectacular wonders of Hawai’i’s Big Island. (Single parent families are very welcome.) yogafamilyecoadventures.com, kalani.com

Teacher TrainingPure Yoga Teacher Training at EquinoxRenowned in Asia and voted “Best Yoga” by New York Magazine in 2009 and 2010, Pure Yoga is the premier international yoga brand. In 2010, Pure Yoga launched its signature Teacher Training pro-gram at Equinox. In 2011, the program has expand-ed to 15 locations across the country all taking place in Equinox’s thoughtfully-designed yoga studios. Led by esteemed Pure Yoga and Equinox faculty and guest presenters, Pure Yoga Teacher Training offers a great way to deepen your yoga practice and learn to share yoga as a teacher or a more enlightened prac-titioner. To find a training near you, register or learn more visit equinox.com/teachertraining.

Page 64: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

Sturman is a photographer and artist who has been expressively documenting the Southern California

Yoga community. In these efforts, he has worked extensively with yogis who are gifted in the expres-

sion of the beauty of asana.

This photo of Robert Sturman was taken on Christmas Day, in East Los Angeles, by Erin Kirk (who is fea-

tured in Sturman’s soon-to-be-released coffee table book, Impressions of Yoga: The Radiant Spirits.)

Erin Kirk turned the tables on Sturman and persuaded him to be in front of the camera. As he comments

on the experience of being the model in this photo, “I had never seen a picture of myself doing Yoga and

always assumed I was kind of a clumsy Yoga guy far from worthy of being photographed. I realized after

seeing the photo that just working with so many amazing yogis in the community made me work harder.

The truth is that the artist is often making art of that which he or she is aspiring to become.”

Sturman says of his practice, “It helps me cultivate the stability and courage I need to go out and do what

I must do as an artist of our world.”

Tell us what your practice means to you. Write us at: [email protected].

Page 65: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

Dancing Shiva paint ing by Meganne Forbes: meganneforbes.com

From Words of Wisdom, published by Koa Books, 2008. koabooks.com; lamasuryadas.com

Page 66: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

64 LAYOGA March 2011

ipainting and text by sarah tomlinson

mantra, transliteration and pronunciation by dr. john casey

Dhumavati Yantra:Potential

mantra for

Dhümavaté

IT CAN SEEM RELATIVELY easy to con-nect with feminine forms that are beautiful or sensuous. Yet the pregnant possibility of the creative power of the goddess emerges from the dissolution, desolation and de-struction of the elder crone, the grandmoth-er who is the nadir or midnight of the cos-mic cycle. This is Dhumavati. Her gaunt, unfeminine, widowed, skeletal countenance is initially shocking. Dhumavati is Shakti without the Shiva, the feminine aspect with-out the masculine drive, the potential latent energy without the direction. She is often depicted in an unmounted chariot, going nowhere. In this inert form she signifies the void, that place where all and at the same time no-thing exists. She is the reminder that life is cyclical; that we constantly expe-rience change and renewal.

This cycle is far from simple, as Dhuma-vati is the cloudy smoke; she is the unknown, the void that allows change to occur and cre-

ates the potential for manifestation. This in-tensity is the dark night of the soul. If we can see the smoke for what it is, we can push through it and experience the potential that lies beyond. The void of Dhumavati can also be a refuge. She provides the opportunity for us to sit with the confusion and dares us to trust so we can reassess what is important in our lives and peel away that which is unnec-essary to unmask the deeper truths. When the outer falls short of our hopes and prom-ises we are directed inward to spend time in our inner world. Here, in the depths of a qui-et mind, we can recognize our dreams.

If you find yourself attracted to this Yantra you may need to step back from your current projects and regroup. Cultivating adoration of Dhumavati is an opportunity arises to see beneath the surface, the sacred thread of one-ness weaving its way through all things. In Yoga this is the non-dual path.

The vivid colors seen in most Yantras are

replaced here by a sheen of dull grey inducing an inward pull. The play of etheric purples and yellow ochres creates a connection to the akasha, the deep space. Dhumavati’s smoky presence can propel you to spiritual renewal, moving forward in new and innovative ways to realize your full potential.

Sarah Tomlinson is the author of Nine Designs for Inner Peace (Destiny Books, 2008) and a student of the late, great Harish Johari. She teaches Yantra Painting and Yoga worldwide. Visit: yantratecture.com.

John Casey is a teacher, educator, astrological consultant, yogin, and meditator. Dr. Casey regularly teaches Sanskrit and courses in the texts and philosophy of the Yoga and Bud-dhist traditions at the Loyola Marymount Unveristy Extenstion in the Yoga Philosophy Certification Program. Call (310) 338 - 2358 or visit: extension.lmu.edu.

LAYOGA

dhüàpronunciation guide:

dhooà

oà dhüà dhüà dhümavaté svähäpronunciation guide:

oà dhooà dhooà dhoo-ma-va-tee svah-hah(‘à’ = like ‘n’ in the French word “bon”

‘a’ = like ‘e’ in “the”)

Repeating this sound (either externally or internally) while gazing on the visual Yantra produces a sensuous inner

knowing of the Divine.

Page 67: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue
Page 68: LA Yoga March 2011 Issue

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