Creativity
/I believe summer is a wonderful time of year to go on adventures, try new things, and meet new friends.
Here are a few of my favorite creative outlets. I hope they help you discover new, fun, exciting ways to spend your summer!
- Write. Even if you don't consider yourself a 'writer,' try putting a pen to paper. You never know where the ideas will lead you! Whether you're simply journaling about your experiences, making a list of things you want to accomplish, creating fictional characters and stories, or even doodling, let yourself try something new. Don't censor yourself or edit, just write! See where it leads you.
- Cook. Look up recipes on Pinterest, buy a cookbook at your local used bookstore, or consider asking a friend or family member for a new recipe. I often find that when I give myself time to be creative in the kitchen, it yields wonderfully delicious results! It's also fun to try making a fancy breakfast or special dessert, and surprising someone you love. Cooking dinner with a glass of wine (or two) is always fun, too! :)
- Spend time in nature. Being outdoors often feels like a 'reset' for your creativity. Try going for a hike, walking on the beach, watching the sunset, or even just taking a walk around your neighborhood. Being outside can offer the breath of fresh air you need to spark a new idea. I also love taking my yoga practice outside to mix things up!
- Chant, sing, or play an instrument. Music is a wonderful way to be creative. Personally I love to sing to the radio in my car, pull out my djembe and chant in the living room, or look up new artists and songs on Spotify. Someday it would be fun to take up piano again (I took lessons as a little kid) or try playing the guitar. Do you play any instruments?
- Clean and declutter your home. Does anyone else out there feel relieved and more open to creativity after catching up on dishes, laundry, and tidying the house? :) I can't tell you how many times I've prioritized cleaning and then given myself time to be creative, and what a difference that makes. If you're short on time, you can also choose to clean just one area of the house or just around your desk, and then go from there.
- Take a single static yoga pose for 3-5 minutes. Headstand is my favorite, since it brings fresh oxygenated blood to the brain, and is a literal way to shift my perspective. Backbends are also great postures for opening your creative energy channels, or if your body is feeling fatigued, try a yin pose such as pigeon (sleeping swan) or supta baddha konasana.
- Clear your schedule. This might be my favorite item on this list :) I find that when I create empty space in my schedule-- no plans, no to-do items, nowhere to be-- this is one of the best ways I can bring more creativity. By allowing space, I'm able to let my thoughts settle, and this often leads to new ideas.
Don't Be Stinky After Yoga Class
/Do you sweat a lot in yoga? Do you practice in a heated studio?
Well, this post is for you :)
(And by the way, I do both of those things, too!)
Here are some ideas about how to refresh before and after a sweaty practice.
Use a yoga mat spray like Mat Mist. This amazing, aromatherapeutic spray comes in scents such as Sandalwood lavender geranium, Thyme Douglas fir, Lemon myrtle peppermint vetiver and Colloidal silver water.
What's especially rad about Mat Mist is that all you have to do is spray down your mat after class, roll it up, and go. The essential oils will disinfect your mat without requiring you to wipe it down, plus, next time you practice, there's a little scent there to awaken your senses and encourage deep pranayama breathing.
Sponsored yogini Kelsie recently tried the product... she took it to class and not only did she love it, but she said all the yogis around her loved it and were asking where they could find some :) She also sprays it around her house because it's that good (!!) and she loves that it is all organic and natural.
“The body is your temple. Keep it pure and clean for the soul to reside in.” – B.K.S. Iyengar
A Book for Finding Peace and Letting Go of Disappointment
/Do you find it challenging to manage your expectations? How do you react when things don't turn out the way you hoped they would?
In her book Expectation Hangover, author and life coach Christine Hassler explores these questions and other ideas related to accepting disappointment, going through life transitions, and finding emotional healing. The book is filled with useful exercises, guided meditations and personal stories.
Today on the blog sponsored yogi Yani shares her review of the book :) Enjoy!
I'm a person that fills her time with the many things she obsesses about and is passionate about. I'm also a person that is really bad at slowing down to read, drink warm lemon water, and kind of just slowing the fuck down (though sometimes I do love to relax, be a homebody, and kick it). Another note about me, I have a hard time finishing an entire book through- unless I have absolutely nothing to do, and can get lost in a new world. I read it part by part, slowly. I tend to read when it's calling me; I don't like to force a good read.
Have a Happy Monday!
/Yoga Books for Your Asana Practice
/Photo by
.
Calling all yoga junkies! :)
Do you ever read about anatomy and the function of yoga poses to help deepen your practice?
Sometimes reading about the postures can help you understand them in a completely new way.
Here are two books I'd recommend.
The Complete Guide to Yoga Inversions
by
, R.Y.T.
The Student's Manual of Yoga Anatomy
by Sally Parkes
I've been reading these books lately for new ideas about how to sequence my yoga classes leading up to a peak pose. They are filled with so much great information!
I'd recommend both of these books to any yogi, especially if you:
teach yoga
want to practice advanced poses safely
are completing a yoga teacher training and studying anatomy
I love that
The Complete Guide to Yoga Inversions
offers foundational pose alignment (ie downdog, side plank, and forward fold) before getting into the details of more challenging poses. I also love that each pose has a few tips and tricks that help make the posture more accessible-- shifting the gaze or moving the weight in the hands or feet, or an idea for what to do if you get stuck. Truly an amazing book!
The Student's Manual of Yoga Anatomy
--
this book would be a great starting place for someone in their first teacher training, or if you're a yogi who practices mostly at home and you can't usually get to a studio. I love that the beginning of the book includes information on spinal movement and types of muscle activity. Then the book details each pose with information on how to get into the pose safely, how to modify and use props, and what to be careful of. This is a very thorough, easy-to-digest manual for many poses, and a book I'd highly recommend to practitioners of all levels.
Photo by
@the_lost_portraits
.
What yoga books are you reading lately?
A big thanks to the team at The Quarto Publishing Group for offering me the opportunity to check out these books. I'll definitely be recommending them to students and teachers, and using the knowledge from each book to inform my own practice!
Namaste.
PS Four of my other favorite
yoga books
and a book featuring
yoga and poetry
.
Happy Thanksgiving!
/Excitement
/What Makes You Happy?
/Rest and Rejuvenation (Yogi Surprise January Box Review)
/Worry Later
/Go ahead; procrastinate.
Instead of freaking out, choose to become very present to what's happening around you. Notice your breath. Slow it down. Take a deep, slow inhale... the deepest inhale you've taken all day. Notice how your body is feeling.
Notice where you can soften.
Yoga, Distorted
/The Art of Conversation: Detaching from Our Smartphones
/I'll be the first to admit it: I'm attached to my smartphone. I check it often, constantly swiping the screen to see what messages have arrived and what notifications have been updated. Constantly engaging in a variety of conversations and little moments of connection.
All digital interactions: texts, emails, Facebook posts, Instagram photos.
And all distractions from what I'm doing in the present moment.
I'm encouraging my students, too. At the end of class, I'll say, "I invite you to take a break from your phone for the rest of your day, or at least for a few hours this evening. Let your practice really sink in, fully."
Yoga in Autumn
/Effortless
/The relaxing of the palm in Triangle pose.
Engaging mula bandha without strain, simply as an act of inviting prana to stay.
Witnessing as the body lights up, a graceful dance of breath swirling inside.
No Mud, No Lotus (On Suffering, Injury and Tattoos)
/Wholeness Over Happiness
/

I had an amazing conversation last night with a person who I really love. We talked about how often we see
people shy away from ‘negative’ emotions
, and how it’s so much easier to let them go when we allow ourselves to experience them.
“They wash over you like a wave,” I said. “And
if you fully embrace them and allow yourself to
feel
what you’re feeling, it’s so powerful.
If you’re sad,
be sad
. Allow it. It’s amazing what happens when you actually do that.”


He nodded, and we both smiled. “And then the fear or sadness or whatever passes,” he said.
“Yes,” I agreed.
“And it makes that moment when happiness returns
so
much better,” he said. “It’s such a
relief
and so beautiful when you feel good again.”
How powerful it is when we allow feelings to exist as they are. When we acknowledge what is. When we remember that we are never alone in our experiences, however painful they may be.


This quote I discovered on
said it brilliantly, too:
I actually attack the concept of happiness. The idea that—I don't mind people being happy—but the idea that everything we do is part of the pursuit of happiness seems to me a really dangerous idea and has led to a contemporary disease in Western society, which is fear of sadness. It's a really odd thing that we're now seeing people saying "write down three things that made you happy today before you go to sleep" and "cheer up" and "happiness is our birthright" and so on. We're kind of teaching our kids that happiness is the default position. It's rubbish.
Wholeness is what we ought to be striving for and part of that is sadness, disappointment, frustration, failure; all of those things which make us who we are.
H
appiness and victory and fulfillment are nice little things that also happen to us, but they don't teach us much.
Everyone says we grow through pain and then as soon as they experience pain they say, "Quick! Move on! Cheer up!" I'd like just for a year to have a moratorium on the word "happiness" and to replace it with the word "wholeness." Ask yourself, "Is this contributing to my wholeness?" and if you're having a bad day, it is.
—
Hugh MacKay


You were made to be real not perfect! I was too!