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Thoughts of the Day

"In whatever situation God places you, it is only for your betterment.  Kindly do not be discouraged." Sri Swami Sivananda


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This site was designed for you. Please use this blog space to share--whether about yoga happenings, a class, studio or teacher you follow, a Kirtan CD that transforms you, or something deeply personal. (Sign up at the blog log-in on the right to add your comments.)

For me, I recall that when I was a new student to yoga, the teacher gave us an article about the hardest pose. It said what was most difficult about yoga was consistency of practice. I think this is easier for some than for others, but even as a teacher, I struggle for consistency in practice. And yet, consistency, I know, is so important for receiving all the benefits we can from yoga.

Some of the struggle is discipline in general, never my strongest trait, but there also is a struggle with permission to allow myself that goodness. I feel guilty about taking a couple hours to practice. I feel guilty about taking a half-hour to do pranayama (yoga breathing exercises) and meditation. I try to remind, tell, encourage myself that it is my job to come to the practice mat daily--that I would be fired from any job I didn't report to every day. Still, I struggle. And I have to ask, what if it weren't my job?

Sometimes the hardest thing I think for many of us is having the permission to be as kind, as caring and nurturing to ourselves as we can be inclined to be to others. Even though yoga always makes me feel and function better, I sometimes avoid my mat. Sometimes it is the guilt of accepting all that good. Othertimes I wonder if it is because when we are on the mat we come face to face with ourselves. And even though yoga teaches us to accept where we are each day and that every day is different, sometimes we don't want to be face to face with ourself--for whatever reason. We are, after all, only human, and avoiding ourselves is at times as much a part of the human condition as avoiding homework.

The word namaste more or less means "from the divinity within me to the divinity within you." It also means I bow to the divine I see in you and it reflects back to the divine in me. It means we all have this spark of the divine and, a bit like clapping for Tinkerbell, it seems like we help it live when we collaboratively clap for it.

Yoga2You.us is meant to serve as a kind of yoga oasis, where yogis and non-yogis alike are invited to visit and share, to clap for that spark of the divine to grow. May our collective use of this blog space grow with time to a thunderous applause. Namaste.

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