Wednesday, May 28, 2014

The Yoga of Positive Change

by Liz Lindh

Yoga is a process of de-conditioning, of breaking down the unnecessary on a physical, mental and emotional level, to create space for true understanding.  All of us are born into families and cultures with certain habits and traditions. These habits and traditions create the lens through which we perceive our life experience. Sometimes these ideas about the way the world works are beneficial to our growth but more often they limit, restrict and hold us back. 

In yogic philosophy, we call these notions samskara. Samskara are mental impressions that result from past actions (karmas). They are unconscious reactions and inclinations that override our intuition and ability to act mindfully.  Samskaras distort our perception and cloud our ability to comprehend our own true essence and the pure nature of reality.



Each of us has our own personal collection of samskaras that we have been accumulating from the moment of our birth right up to this precise point in time. They are inherited from our ancestors and carried over from past lifetimes. Every thought and every action (conscious or not) creates a vibration which we subconsciously store as samskara. Our thoughts form the ideas that are the framework of our reality. That which we focus upon becomes stronger. Tendencies and beliefs will remain as they are until we shed some objective awareness on them. Don’t get me wrong, there are many things that our thoughts and belief systems cannot change, and there will always be things that are beyond our control. We can, however, control our relationship with what is. The sun will rise and set every day, it will rain, it will snow, there will be earthquakes and hurricanes, people will cut you off in traffic, take your parking spot and loose your luggage. How you handle it is up to you. You can change your mind at any time. 

The way that we move (or don’t move) our bodies on the yoga mat is a metaphor for how we move through life. What do you believe is possible?  Are you present?  What are you judging? Where are you restricted? What are you resisting? What are you thinking about the other people in the room? Are you acting or reacting?

Your yoga practice is an amazing tool for taking a good, honest look at yourself and observing the vibe you have created, the world that you live in. It is an opportunity to notice what patterns and attachments are actually working for you and what needs to shift. Your practice (on and off the mat) is the laboratory in which to recognize, question and change certain samskaras. Simply and deeply believing that you are strong, kind,  resilient, worthy and amazing will change your life. Giving yourself and others permission to fall and permission to soar is liberating. Make peace with the resistance by accepting the things you cannot change and make the best of them. As new beliefs and habits become established, the old ones get weaker. This is called growth and evolution.


Growth and evolution are seldom pretty, but why do things have to be pretty? The idea that life requires attractive packaging is an example of a cultural samskara that is completely fiction and detracts from the richness of life itself. Fall down, fall apart, get messy. Listen to the wise ones but question everything. This is how to discover the authentic truth as it presently exists and to create positive change in your own life. As Rumi says, “The breeze at dawn has secrets to tell you, don’t go back to sleep.”

Join us at The Sanctuary at Two Rivers for any Yoga Retreat or Yoga Teacher Training Certification Program to re-evaluate your habits and patterns. You will return home as a more vibrant, aware and alive version of yourself!




Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Taking the leap.....Are You Ready for a Yoga Teacher Training Certification Program?

By Liz Lindh

Very early on in my yoga practice, it was clear to me that I wanted to be a yoga teacher. I wanted to share with others the peace and strength that I only found through yoga. I tried different teachers, practiced at home on my own and traveled to far off places for yoga workshops and retreats.

Fast forward five years to my first yoga teacher training certification program. The year was 2000 and there weren’t nearly as many trainings being offered as there are today. It was before the time of the yoga alliance, rockstar yoga teachers, fancy yoga wear and so many “branded” yoga styles. I decided that I wanted to participate in an intensive immersion rather than a training that was taught over weekends so I chose a month long, 200 hour residential teacher training certification course in “Inter-disciplinary Yoga” at The Omega Institute in New York. I loved everything about it.

The training taught me what I needed to know in order to put a good class together, and to my pleasant surprise it also brought to light many of the answers I had been seeking on a personal and spiritual level. I also made some amazing friends and contacts from around the globe, and we all supported one another through a life-changing journey. It was great to be away from home, work, cooking and cleaning so that I could apply all of my energy to learning and practicing yoga.

Do you feel like it’s time to take the next step and participate in a yoga teacher training certification program, even if you have no intention of teaching? Here are three things that may help you make up your mind:
•          A yoga teacher training immersion is a rare opportunity to dedicate about 200 hours of full time focus to reading, studying, asking questions, discussing and practicing yoga with curious, interesting people without the inevitable distractions of life at home. It is a unique time to enjoy life while learning more about yourself.
•          This is a juicy opportunity to delve deeper into aspects of the art, science and philosophy of yoga that are too complex to explore in a regular studio class or workshop. You will discover that there is much more to yoga than just the physical practice, and you will also discover that there is much more to the physical practice than you thought.
•          Spending your time and money on something healthy you enjoy, especially an educational endeavor that promotes personal growth, is the best investment I know of! It is priceless and precious.

May your path be blessed and illuminated along the way. May your yoga teacher training experience be all that you hoped for and more. Enjoy the journey.