Tuesday, December 31, 2013

A Testimony of Yoga

My evening class is very unique, unlike my other classes the people in my evening class start coming in about ten minutes early. They get set up while they are chattering, they laugh, visit, and kid each other, enjoying one anothers company. I call them to their mats on the hour, as they place their hands on their heart, I hear everyone take a deep breath and exhale slowly, probably the first time they have enjoyed such a relaxing exhale all day. The talking continues here and there for a minute or so, and then, I hear them turn their breath inward. As I lead them through the Sun Salutations the room becomes silent, except for the music and our breathing. We flow through pose after pose as I call them out. It's exciting to synchronize our movements,  the room is filled with energy, and we in turn feel energized,  there's something magical about connecting with other people to practice, We start to sweat and our breathing becomes deeper. My instruction gives their busy minds something to focus on, keeping them in the present moment. For people with anxiety, this is a particular blessing.
My instructions also force them to tune in to the subtle shifts occurring in their body. As they become more aware of these changes, they begin to notice subtle alterations in their mind and in their mood, too. They feel in a tangible way how the body and mind are connected.

Yoga helps you be more in touch with your thoughts and feelings as they arise in the moment, which is half the battle of resolving them. In other words, when you're able to identify that something is wrong, you can address that particular issue in the moment, rather than ignoring it and unleashing it later in some painful way.

I asked my classes to write a testimonial of yoga that I might share in my blog. Natalie has been in class for 8 years and Becky has been in class for 2 years. They are very dear to me as are all my students, I want to thank them all for giving me the privilege of teaching them the amazing art of yoga.

Dear Nancy,
I was thinking today if you really want to know what yoga can do for your mind and body stop doing it for 6 months. I feel like my body has aged 5 years since I stopped. My joints hurt, I'm having issues with my hands after I have worked all day, it's harder to ward of stress because I'm not breathing fully, I have no really calming down time to myself therefore I get over stimulated very easy. I had no idea yoga impacted my life in so many was until I didn't have it. I owe you 100 thank you's for being my teacher.
Love, Natalie

Nancy,
I keep thinking about this, and it's a bit ironic that I have such a strong belief in the good yoga can do for a person but can't seem to get my body there this month….I started yoga almost 2 years ago after the suggestion from a friend who has similar athletic aspirations but lives in a different part of the country and has found that it has helped her. After years of hard physical work and play, I found myself middle aged and with bone and muscle issues,hence I started yoga. Now I can honestly say,  many of the symptoms I would normally have called a doctor for work themselves out. Not always quickly but with time and sometimes a little extra work. I know if I had had this training 20 or 30 years ago I would not be as weak or possibly have required the surgeries I have had. However I am certainly glad to know what I do and have the strength and knowledge I have gained through "yoga" class. It is never too late to start.
Thank you, Nancy

Yoga takes care of you if you stick with it. You start to sense what's right and what's wrong, and you follow a path of moral living and meditation because it feels right. The answers are in the practice, and the practice never judges you."
Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
Certified Yoga Instructor
and Ayurveda Consultant
These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.

Friday, November 29, 2013

Wake up! Elevate your Consciousness

I was talking with my oldest daughter, Judy, one day. I said “why does life have to be so hard?” she said “because Adam and Eve partook of the fruit”. I started to laugh, then I realized she is right! I have students ask me all the time, why does my body hurt all the time, even after yoga? It is true if you don’t have the bad times you can’t appreciate the good times. I ask them, you have days where they feel really good, right? then they realize they do have days where they do feel really good. We don’t notice those days so much. We only notice the days that make us uncomfortable.

It always comes back to the stress, if we could manage our stress we would always feel good, or rather,  if we could manage our thoughts we would not have stress, then we would feel good always, it’s our thoughts that cause the stress, and  it’s the stress that makes our body’s hurt, and eventually sick. Physician and Yoga Journal medical editor Timothy McCall says that “stress may fuel chronic illnesses, such as obesity, diabetes, and heart disease. If you are continually stressed, you leave the door open to a variety of health conditions." Yoga is an effective stress reducer.

The Law of Cause and Effect says: for every effect in our life there is a specific cause. Thoughts are causes, and conditions are effects. Our thoughts are always the primary causes of the conditions or effects in our lives. What is it that causes our thoughts? it’s our feelings! So, how do we fix it? First you have to get in touch with your internal dialogue. What you are saying to yourself, and what you are feeling inside. Our feelings and our thoughts are what determined where we are today. If what is happening to us now, both physically and emotionally, is undesirable, our feelings and our thoughts are what need fixing.

Last year I took my Thai mat to Judy’s house to work on some of her friends for a weekend. She made appointments for 8-10 of her friends that had been asking for me to come to Idaho and give them Thai therapy. Judy had a neighbor that she hadn’t invited because this neighbor is one of those people who has one health problem after another, maybe you know the type, these people can be found in the doctor’s office every other week, looking unsuccessfully for the answers to their problems, they then keep the aches and pains alive and well by talking about them to whomever they converse with. This neighbor saw on facebook that I was coming to town and called Judy to get in on the action. I did give this woman a Thai therapy and for the 2 hour session she didn’t stop talking about all her problems. What she doesn’t understand is that the more she talks about her aches and pains, the more energy she gives them and the more she reinforces her illness.

Too many of us have not been taught, or we have forgotten how to be aware of what is going on inside our mind and body. We are so used to turning our pain and hurt over to something (drugs) or someone else to fix that we have turned off our ability to be aware--to be sensitive or mindful. We have every ability to heal ourselves everything we are today is the sum total result of all the thinking that we have done to this moment. What are your thought? What are your feelings? If the negative conditions in your life are ongoing and the patterns are repeated over and over again, this is telling you--screaming at you--that you are definitely out of harmony with natural Laws...God’s laws…the laws of the Universe. It’s time to wake up! Elevate your consciousness and locate the cause of your effects.

Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
Certified Yoga Instructor
and Ayurveda Consultant
These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.        

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Be The Seer

In Sutra 1.3 (Yoga scriptures)Patanjali says that as a result of yoga or sustained, focused attention, the Self or Seer is established in its own form. By focusing the mind through yoga, you gain clearer perception and learn to distinguish the mind, body, and emotions from your true Self. You come to know that Self and act from that place of the Self, Thus reducing your experience of suffering.

It’s the Seer who helps you when you want to stretch deeper in a pose. The Seer does not look at the other students in the class, he stays within himself guiding the pose. Within the mind exists not only the the Seer but also the clamoring ego, the ego looks at the other students  in class and wants to do everything they are doing, so you get into reclining hero, not knowing if you have the ability, you lay all the way back. It doesn’t take long for your nervous system to literally kick you out of the pose and send you fleeing from your emotions. The Seer would have taken it a little at a time, paying attention to every little movement, taking it to the edge for a good 30 second stretch. When you are working from the ego you deny yourself the pleasure of a stretch at all.  The Seer can watch the ego mind-controlling, freaking out, calming down. If you can stop, take a breath, and step away from your panic, you can be the Seer.

You can use this same principle in everything in your life. The next time you get into an arguement, stop, take a deep breath, step away from your anger, and be the Seer. The next time you are in pain, whether it is emotional or physical, stop, take a deep breath, step away from your pain, and be the Seer. Whenever there is pain, there is fear, but if you can quiet the distractions of the mind and connect to that still, deep place within, that resource of wisdom and inner knowing, you have reached the real goal of yoga: to distinguish between the mind and the Seer, to connect with and act from that place of the Self, and, as a result, to suffer less.  

My goal is to help empower my students with tools and practices they can do anywhere, in any circumstances. As you go through this process, you begin to know the difference between your fluctuating and impermanent mind, body and emotions, and something else deep within you, the steady, quiet, knowing place of your true Self. From this place of connection, you can observe your emotions and reactions and recognize them as separate from your true nature, valid and painful though they may be.  

In this lifetime you can attain the highest rung of life, a state that is free from pain and misery. Don’t postpone this as you postpone the other joys of your life. Enlightenment, that state of freedom from pain and misery, is your birthright. It is not something acquired or new--it is already there.



Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
Certified Yoga Instructor
and Ayurveda Consultant
These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Meditation is very therapeutic

Meditation can give you that which nothing else can give you. It introduces you to yourself. From childhood onward, we are taught to examine and understand things in the external world, but nobody teaches us to look within and understand the mind. Unless you learn to know yourself and achieve inner balance, no matter how much you know about the outer world, you will fall short of your goals.

Meditation teaches you to attend to what is taking place within without reacting. I teach my clients that when they are in meditation if something comes up, to be like a fly on the wall, examine the thought but not to react to it. Just remain aware of the process,  attend to the thoughts as they arise, notice them, be open to them without reacting and they will pass. When you go through this process you really begin to know who you are.

Meditation teaches you how to deal with things that come up in your daily life. We can spend all day in a mental turmoil. Our mood depends on what comes before us and as a result, our life is like a roller coaster ride. We react before we have fully experienced what we are reacting to. We immediately interpret what we see or hear according to our expectations, fears, prejudices, or resistances.

Meditation gives you freedom from fear. Linda a woman in her late 60’s came to me last year, she had had knee surgery 5 years before and had became so scared to move she just sat in her recliner chair, and was still sitting there when she called me. I did Thai therapy one day a week for 6 weeks and got her ready for yoga class. She was doing really good, had done yoga for 3 months and was really excited she was strong enough to get up off the floor on her own, then she missed two weeks, when she came back to class her knees hurt and she had a hard time in class, she was scared to move. After class I brought to her attention that the two weeks she took off set her back, but the good news was she has been better and we will just get her there again. She called later and said she wasn’t coming to class anymore I said if you stop coming to class you will go back to the way you were before, she said she was almost there. Linda wouldn’t do her meditation at home so when fear arose she didn’t know how to handle it. It was fear that put her in her chair and it was fear that sent her back.You can  be your own physician if you learn to examine your emotions through meditation.

Meditation has taught me to fully attend to what is taking place, to attend to my initial reaction without reacting to my reaction: “Oh, look how threatened I feel by that.” we have many fears in our mind and heart that hold us back. All our life we labor under the pressure of these fears. They remain because we have never examined them. They need to be examined, so that we can be fearless. I teach my clients to be open to experiencing their reaction that way it will move through them and allow other spontaneous responses to also come forward, so they can choose the one that is most helpful in that particular situation.
Meditation is very therapeutic, the peace that it brings releases energy. Worry and preoccupation dissipate your strength. Meditation frees the energy that has been bound in your mental discord so that you can apply yourself one pointedly to whatever you decide to do. It also leads to inner balance and stability, it exposes your inner complexes, you immaturities, your unproductive reflexes and habits. Instead of living in these complexes and habits and acting them out, they are brought to your awareness and you can give them your full attention. Only then will they clear.

Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
and Ayurveda Consultant
These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Trust your inner voice and follow the light within

I came across an new mantra a few weeks ago that I can not get out of my head. Narasimha Tava Dasohum. It means to honor the protector of our spiritual path. It’s that energy that protects us from negative influences, from doubts, from judgements that we fear from the outside or that we create within, and it helps us tune in to our inner voice, trust our inner voice, and follow the light within that we all carry and that we are all  aware of. There is a voice within us that gives us the strength to rise above these negative voices, that we all carry in some form or another and that we receive from the outside world. Narasimha is our protector.

A few weeks ago Gary got a head cold, we were watching TV together one evening and I sneezed, Gary turned to me and said “are you getting sick”? my first thought was, maybe I am getting sick. I have a friend, Mishelle, that says “cancel that”whenever someone says something she doesn’t want to  internalize. To myself I said “cancel that” and to Gary I said “no I am not getting sick I am too healthy to get sick” turning a negative into a positive.

It’s not the germs from people around us that make us sick, it is our thoughts.We all have every illness in the universe in us, colds, flu, cancer, arthritis, We are the ones that decide whether or not to let the illness manifest itself.  Like when the grandkids come over with runny noses and you say, GREAT!, now I’m going to get sick, and you do. Instead, say to yourself “cancel that” and dive right in for kisses.

Sometimes we are each others negative influences. I have mentioned before that Gary and I have a house in Provo we are flipping. One day we were over at the house when my brother stopped by. He looked around the house and said “Man this is a lot of work. And you guys are no spring chickens”. “CANCEL THAT!”, Gary and I hadn't  even thought that we were too old for the project, and we are really enjoying the work and the transformation of the house. We could have gone home feeling like 90 year olds if we had internalized his words.

We should be careful we are not the ones putting negative thoughts out for others to internalize in a  negative manner. After a yoga class a few students were sitting in the tea room when I overheard one of my students ask another “ do you have fibromyalgia yet”? YET?!!! meaning what? “CANCEL THAT!”

We all have a protector, this silent ever-present witness is your true self. This goes right along with the Law of Pure Potentiality. “Your true Self, your soul, is completely free of the things your mind is telling you. Your true self is immune to criticism, fears no challenge, and feels neither beneath nor above anyone”. Gary and I remind each other to stay positive and not to listen to the negative thinking of others, or even ourselves.  

Whenever anyone asks you if you are feeling poorly,  “cancel that”, and say I feel great! I am strong! I am healthy! I am awesome!!!! This is what your protector would have you know.
Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
and Ayurveda Consultant
These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

The ayurveda way of mindful eating

Last year I read a book called “Intuitive eating” by Evelyn Tribole, and Elyse Resch. I loved the book, it was so ayurveda, I wonder if the authors knew how ayurveda it is. They talked about listening to your body while you eat, making sure the food is still tasting good while you eat because if it’s not, it is probably a sign that you are full. Also eat what you crave because your body knows what you need, and to check in with your self every once in awhile to see if you are satisfied, not full, just satisfied. They went on to say that we americans are so obsessed with dieting and its emphasis in rules and regulations that we have stopped listening to our bodies.

I am obsessed with the scales! and have been most of my life. My parents were always trying to lose weight, I had siblings that were overweight, and you know how teenage life was, all the skinny little girls going around saying “oh I am sooo fat.” My brain says “eat less, weigh less” so every day I would weigh myself and hang on that I hadn’t gained any weight. I know its not right, I just couldn’t bring myself to stop.

Last September right after I read the book we went on a week long vacation to Yellowstone, yes I get really crazy when I can’t take my scales with me, I decided to take the opportunity to put the book to the test. Every meal we ate, before I began to eat,  I would remind myself  that I was only going to eat what I craved, eat until I was satisfied and to check in during the meal to make sure the food was still tasting good. I felt good the whole trip, I never felt like I ate too much, like sometimes you do when on a vacation. I felt freed from thinking about food all day. And when I got home I had not gain any weight. That didn’t stop me from going right back to my old habit of weighing every day.

Over the last few months I keep thinking I should put the scales away. Even though I am in denial that I am on a diet, what do you call watching everything you eat, every minute of the day? Dieting had made me so preoccupied with food that sometimes I wouldn’t even eat. Dieting has definitely made food an enemy. Dieting makes me feel guilty (even when I’m not officially on a diet).. Dieting has slowed down my metabolism.

This last month when we went to Glacier National Park, again I could not take my scales with me, another opportunity to intuitive eat. I decided before we even left that if I hadn’t gained any weight when we got home I would put my scales away and only weigh on Sundays.  Intuitive eating is mindful eating which is very yoga, and yoga is a mind, body connection. I loved being free from the scales. I ate just what I wanted and payed attention to my body, when the food didn’t  taste as good as it did in the beginning of the meal I knew I was finished and being satisfied, I stopped eating. Easy!

I bring the scales out on Sunday only, just to satisfy myself that all is well. The rest of the week I am free from the worry of food. I choose to eat foods that are both pleasing to me and nourish my body, by using all my senses to explore, savor, and taste, the ayurveda way of mindful eating.  
Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
and Ayurveda Consultant
             These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Ride life’s emotional currents with faith and equanimity

I have people call about yoga all the time who want to know if it will make them stronger. Or, just recently, one of my students was attending another exercise class when everyone noticed how strong she was, she said she does yoga. That brought a student from that class to my studio seeking stronger abs. There is no doubt that when you are physically strong, you are better able to handle the demands of your day with grace and ease. But my job is to teach my students that practicing yoga can build inner strength-the kind you need to ride life’s emotional currents with faith and equanimity-even as it tones their body.

Gary and I have been getting a rental of ours ready to sell. A couple of Saturdays ago we were scraping and painting the trim, when it came time to paint the highest part, that part that is at the very peak of the roof, Gary tried to hang over from the roof thinking it would be easier than standing that high on a ladder. He realized right away that was way too scary. Our 15 foot ladder wouldn’t reach either, so we put it in the back of the truck to give it a boost, does this give you an idea of how high the roof is? Gary’s nervous system was already on edge from hanging over the roof, so I opted to go up, not because I was less scared, but because I trusted Gary holding the ladder for me more than I trusted myself holding the ladder for him. And like in a yoga pose if there is fear, you will fail. I knew that whoever went up had to ride that current of equanimity, I was terrified, but I was sure I could do it. My instruction to Gary was DO NOT TAKE YOUR HANDS OFF THE LADDER!! (That is the pitta in me)

There was a moment when the ladder started to shake, I thought Gary was being funny, I yelled at him to “STOP IT!” (that is also the pitta in me) right away I knew he wouldn’t do that, knowing how afraid I was. At that moment I realized I had lost my equanimity. I brought my awareness back to the present moment and calmed my mind and breath. It was my rapid breathing from fear that caused the ladder to shake. Once I calmed my breathing the shaking stopped.

A few days later my knee started to hurt, when your knee hurts, it means you can’t move forward emotionally. You're darn right I couldn’t move forward (up the ladder). I say it all the time. Every pain and illness we have starts with a trauma (yes I was traumatized) and the emotional stress brings on the physical pain.  

One way to build inner strength is by practicing yoga regularly, whether you're feeling inspired or not. That simple act develops your capacity for commitment and for not letting the rest of life get between you and what you know to be essential to your well-being. By being true to yourself in your yoga practice, you enhance your ability to be true to yourself in other situations as well.

Yoga is what grounds me, it is what gives me that inner strength that I need to ride life’s emotional currents with faith and equanimity.
Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
and Ayurveda Consultant
These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Just Exhale

In my work as a thai yoga therapist, I treat people struggling with a variety of issues, including depression, anxiety, sleep disturbances, chronic pain. Time and time again, I've seen simple pranayama practices (extending the breath) reduce stress and anxiety; promote restful sleep; ease pain; increase attention and focus; and, on a more subtle level, help people connect to a calm, quiet place within so that they experience greater clarity and well-being on every level.

Pranayama is a process by which you can break your unconscious breathing pattern and make the breath long, easeful, and smooth. Most people's unconscious breathing patterns are anything but easeful and smooth; they tend to be tense, shallow, and erratic. When we are afraid or hear bad news,  even bad new of tragedies we hear on the nightly news, we often gasp—inhaling and then holding the breath. These breathing patterns can activate the sympathetic nervous system (often referred to as the "fight or flight response"). This holding of our breath puts our nervous system out of kilter. You can feel yourself get out of balance when you hear of a tragedy, even  if it does not involve you. Each time this happens your nervous system becomes weaker, it will continue to get weaker until the body becomes ill unless you take the time to repair it by doing some pranayama (breath awareness).

One of the primary reasons that pranayama techniques that foster a long, smooth exhale are so beneficial is because, when practiced correctly, they can support the parasympathetic nervous system and activate what is commonly known as the "relaxation response," reducing stress and its effects on your body and mind. As a result, your resilience in the face of challenge or adversity increases, and your mind becomes more focused and still. The tornado in Oklahoma was a terrible tragedy. The people there are probably still holding their breath, but sooner or later they are going to take a deep breath and exhale. The result of the exhale will make them more resilient.

Every day we need to undo what the world has done to our nervous system. We do not realize it but the tornado in Oklahoma has affected all of us, as does all tragedy around the world. tragedy will weigh heavy on our nervous system until we exhale.  through the practice of pranayama, you can reduce all of the mental noise—the agitation, distractions, and self-doubt—that prevents you from connecting with your own inner light, your true Self. In this way, pranayama can have a profound effect on your life.

The breathing practice that follows is a good introduction to pranayama.it supports the parasympathetic nervous system, quiets the mind, and helps to bring about a state of more focused attention. As you continue to practice this technique over time, you may start to notice when you are unintentionally holding your breath or breathing shallowly. You also may begin to associate patterns of the breath with your moods or states of mind. This self awareness is the first step toward using the practices of pranayama to help shift your patterns and, through regular practice, create positive change in your life.



The Long Exhale
This 1:2 breathing practice, which involves gradually increasing your exhalation until it is twice the length of your inhalation, relaxes the nervous system.
Try it: Before bedtime to help support sleep, in the middle of the night when you're struggling with insomnia, or at any time of the day to calm stress or anxiety. (In general, it's best to avoid practicing 1:2 breathing first thing in the morning unless you're experiencing anxiety. The relaxing effects of the practice tend to make it more difficult to get up and go on with your day.)
How to: Begin by lying on your back with your knees bent and feet flat on the floor, hip-width apart. Place a palm on the abdomen and take a few relaxed breaths, feeling the abdomen expand on the inhalation and gently contract on the exhalation. With your palm on your abdomen, mentally count the length of each inhalation and exhalation for several more breaths. If the inhalation is longer than the exhalation, you can begin to make them the same length over the next few breaths.
Once your inhalation and exhalation are equal, gradually increase the length of your exhalation by 1 to 2 seconds by gently contracting the abdomen. As long as the breath feels smooth and relaxed, continue to gradually increase the exhalation by 1 to 2 seconds once every few breaths. Make sure you experience no strain as the exhalation increases and keep going until your exhalation is up to twice the length of the inhalation, but not beyond. For example, if your inhalation is comfortably 4 seconds, do not increase the length of your exhalation to more than 8 seconds.

Keep in mind that even an exhalation that is only slightly longer than the inhalation can induce a calming effect, so take care that you don't push yourself beyond your capacity. (If you do, you'll likely activate the sympathetic nervous system, or stress response, and feel agitated rather than calm.)
If your breath feels uncomfortable or short, or if you're gasping on the next inhalation, back off to a ratio that is more comfortable for 8 to 12 breaths. Then finish your practice with 6 to 8 natural, relaxed breaths.
Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
and Ayurveda Consultant
These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Your emotional health is the first place to start in successfully releasing your hips.

My husband ran the half marathon last Saturday, as I stood at the finish line watching people come in, I am a people watcher, I noticed some of them looked like they were in a lot of pain, and some of them looked great, still running strong. What is the difference in these two runner? I used to think running is the worst thing you can do to yourself, but now I say if you love it, do it. The body is resilient, it will bounce back. the difference between those runners that look great and the one that look like they are going to die, is body management. When Gary is running a lot, he stretches a lot, I give him thai therapy once a week, and we make sure when something hurts, we fix it right away by stretching it out. Most of the time a good stretch will keep injury away.

The repetitive impact of running causes compression and tightness in the overall musculoskeletal system and specifically in the pelvic muscle groups. If your knees start to hurt, it is probably your tight hips causing the problem.  If you are running multiple marathons a year, and are training long hours, get  thai therapy often,having someone stretch you works wonder, physically and emotionally, thai therapy helps your body relax overall, which allows it to release tension. Also try a vinyasa yoga class once or twice a week to heat you up. once your body is warmed up, you can focus on more muscle-specific postures based on your needs.

It’s important to remember that  your emotional life can affect the condition of your pelvis. Your life’s diary is stored in your body. Your body creates a protective cloak of armor that clings to our bones to keep the world at bay. This cloak is the buildup of thickened muscular padding primarily around the shoulders, neck, hips and legs. This armor protects against outside forces, both real and imaginary, warding off the unwanted and guarding our inner self. So your emotional health is the first place to start in successfully releasing your hips.

Thai therapy melts our armoring, increases our range of motions, and releases us from our physical and  psychological burdens. Thai therapy melts the shield that builds up around us due to genetics, cultural pressures, habits, stress, and personal history.  The same thing is true of yoga, it’s just not as deep a level. through the practice of yoga poses and breath awareness, we slowly over time, burn off the encrusted shell of our outer defenses. Today, given the fear of terrorism and the belief  that it threatens our security, our financial stability, our health, and our freedom, there is an even greater tendency to retreat into a shell of protective armor. Through the practice of yoga, we aim to free ourselves from the grip of fear by embodying inner strength and stability and by cultivating wisdom and compassion.

Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
and Ayurveda Consultant
              These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Do not get sucked into fear

For most of us, pain and suffering are so intertwined that we find it impossible to separate them. When things go wrong, we may feel like victims or assume that we're receiving karmic punishment—that we "deserve" what is happening to us. We may express our feelings or stuff them, but few of us know how to process the pain of loss or failure without getting hooked by our suffering.

There is not much that rocks my world, but once in awhile someone does something to knock me off balance. A good friend of ours was diagnosed with dementia, I offered to give Bob a Thai Therapy for free to see what he thought. I sent him and his wife, Norma, the link to my blog so they could read a little about what I do. Later I got an email from Norma saying new medications were helping Bob right now so they were going to pass on the Thai Therapy. I continued to send my emails and blog links, as I do for my students and clients. I received another email from Norma asking me to take them off my email list.  When I got the email I was embarrassed, then I was angry, then sad, then I chose to let it pass right through me, as though I were transparent, so that it would not hit that solid wall inside of me. I did not want them to have power to control my inner state.

Yoga has taught me to untie the knots that make me identify with my suffering self. yoga practice is meant to teach us how to untangle these inner knots. Often, you don't realize how much difference your  practice has made until the day that you find yourself dealing with a crisis without going into an absolute meltdown. The kids are screaming or your office mates are panicking, and yes, there's a little bit of fear and irritation in your mind too, but there's also a witnessing awareness, an inner compassionate presence that lets you stay present with what's happening without getting sucked into the fear or the anger.

I had a little sample of this a few years ago when I was showing off a handstand for a group of family members. I had looked around the room for a wall to kick up against, not finding one I chose a door instead, I pulled the door shut and stepped back to kick up. As my heels touched the door I heard the door unlatch, panic struck me for just a moment, the door started to fall away, I knew if I let fear control me I could be seriously injured. I let the door slow my fall, I stayed completely calm and straight, I brought that witnessing awareness, the compassionate presence let me stay present with what was happening so I did not get sucked into the fear. Everything slowed down as I felt my body slowly lower to the floor, at least it seemed slow to me, I was unharmed and tried again at a more solid door.

I know these examples seem small compared with what might be going on in your life right now, but the process of pain, loss or failure is the same.The great spiritual practitioners all offer the same basic prescriptions for undoing inner knots: Find out who you really are, do the practices that purify your murky mind, and discover how to work with everything that happens to you. Then difficulties become your teachers, and pain and loss become occasions for profound and positive transformation.
Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
and Ayurveda Consultant
          These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

It’s okay to figure out and eradicate the reasons why we suffer

More than 50 million Americans suffer with chronic pain, and chronic pain doesn't just hurt in the physical sense. it can also be responsible for loss of sleep, weight gain, anger, depression, despair and irritability. Yet I find people who chose not to get help for themselves because they think this is their trial in life, and they must ride it out to the end. What if, part of the test is to try to find a way to fix whatever is wrong? Patanjali states that yoga has two distinct purposes or goals. In Chapter II, verse 2 of the Yoga Sutra, he states that yoga's "purpose or goal is to cultivate the experience of equanimity  and to unravel the causes of negativity." Patanjali tells us, in effect, that yoga will help us figure out and eradicate the reasons why we suffer, even as it leads us to feel the deepest of human experiences.

We all live in the midst of forces that we do not perceive because we suffer from “Paradigm blindness”; what I mean is we do not perceive things that exist outside our currently accepted set of beliefs and experience. Let me tell you what I mean. Gary and I lived in Germany for a year and a half when we were in the army. When it came time to return to the states we could not travel together, some crazy army thing, so I flew to South Dakota with my good friend Lila, because I had three kids and I did not want to travel by myself, and then my parents were going to pick me up from there a few days later. When we landed in South Dakota we were exhausted and all three children were asleep, Lila, carried the baby, I carried our 20 month old and the pilot carried our 4 year old off the plane. We began looking for Lila’s parents when a woman came up to me wanting to take my 20 month old from my arms, I could not figure out what she was doing, who did she think she was!! It took me several, it seemed like forever, seconds to see that it was my mother.

I did not expect my mother for many more days, I could not perceive the thing that existed outside my currently accepted set of beliefs. I believe this is also why Mary did not recognise Jesus when she went to the tomb, He was dead, she could not perceive the thing that existed outside her currently accepted set of beliefs.. The scriptures teach that we are designed to go through a paradigm shift, a perception change, just as I did with my mother. We can expand our mental and spiritual context, we can get outside the confining mental structure that human language, thinking, and experience have created, and receive new knowledge and new experiences and greater consciousness. It is okay for us to figure out and eradicate the reasons why we suffer, and, it is okay for us to accept a different set of beliefs and experiences to help make ourselves whole again.

Resistance is an inner contraction, a hardening of the shell.... You are closed. Whatever action you take in a state of inner resistance (which we could also call negativity) will create more outer resistance, and the universe will not be on your side, life will not be helpful. If the shutters are closed, the sunlight cannot come in. When you yield internally, when you surrender, a new dimension of consciousness opens up. If action is possible or necessary, your action will be in alignment with that whole and supported by creative intelligence....You experience a state of inner openness. Circumstances and people then become helpful, cooperative. Coincidences happen. If no action is possible, you rest in the peace and inner stillness that come with surender. You rest in God.

Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
and Ayurveda Consultant
These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Ayurvedic treatments can heal disease

A couple of blogs ago I mentioned how our doshas compare to the three main forces of the atmosphere, air (vata), fire (pitta), and water (kapha). And how they are responsible for our well being, but they are also responsible for disease, diseases are caused by an imbalance in one or more of the doshas. Each dosha type carries positive traits and strengths when in balance, but when out of balance, may demonstrate a set of predictable negative signs or conditions.

One of the ways to balance the doshas is with thai therapy. The most important part of thai therapy is stimulating what is called the “marmas.” By stimulating these pressure points I can adjust your energy flow, release toxins and bring the doshas into balance. Toxins, stress, and negative emotions get stuck in the  marmas and are held, sometimes for years.. Disease is manifested in pain, blockage or swelling in these areas even before it may manifest outwardly in the full range of disease symptoms. Through the right use of marmas our entire physical and mental energy can be consciously increased, decreased or redirected.

The sen lines are paths that connect the marmas to one another. If the marmas become overly full with toxins, or the sen lines going in or out of the marmas gets blocked, the toxins will then flow into the sen lines. these sights are very painful to the touch. Stimulating the marmas through pressing also helps to clear the sen lines where they intersect the marmas. Ideally there is a healthy free-flow of energy through the sen lines that helps the marmas stay healthy and strong.

It is not uncommon for you to feel an almost indescribable feeling of centeredness and balance following a thai therapy. This unique feeling of peace and optimism is because all doshas have come into balance in the right way for you.

Thai therapy, a dosha balancing diet, combined with other Ayurvedic treatments can heal disease. When our energy channels are healthy and strong, we feel emotionally balanced, happy, and awakened in mind, body and spirit. In fact when all three are all in balance, they actually cease to be separate aspects, and merge into the soul. Living from the soul level makes it possible for us to live from our pure potential.



Nancy Adams Certified Thai Yoga Therapist
and Ayurveda Consultant
These are my own thoughts. I sometimes take writings from others to support my own ideas.