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Welcome to the August 2011 Newsletter

Despite what challenges we are facing in the world, there is always inspiration to be found.  Did you miss the amazing radio show with Rama Jyoti Vernon?  You'll find plenty of inspiration there, as she talked about creating world peace, dealing with anger and fear, and more:  http://www.blogtalkradio.com/thedifference/2011/07/30/awakening-self-with-connie-habash--guest-rama-jyoti-vernon
And join me for insight about the practice and path of Yoga on this Friday's show!  Plus my Yoga & Chanting workshop is Sunday the 7th in Mountain View - details below.
Blessings,
Connie

Contents:


Schedule  (Summer and Fall 2011)

CLASS SCHEDULE:

TUESDAY YOGA CLASSES AT YIY CONTINUE THE REST OF THE SUMMER
   
TUESDAYS
    9:30-11AM              Iyengar & Vinyasa, Beginning
                                       YIY, Mountain View

MEDITATION & INSPIRATION Group
AUGUST 4TH - Group resumes for the rest of summer and fall on Thursday mornings from 9:30-10:30am at SUBUD in Palo Alto.
http://www.subudpaloalto.org/

  All classes are $15 drop-in, or reduced rate for a pre-purchased series.
Meditation & INSPIRATION and Life Visioning classes are by donation

Yoga ia Youthfulness, Mountain View
http://www.yogaisyouth.com

WORKSHOPS AND EVENTS:

YOGA & CHANTING!
SUNDAY AUGUST 7th, 12:30-2:30pm at Conscious Living Center in Mountain View.  
By Heartfelt donation!
In the yogic tradition, sound (nada) plays an important role in awakening the energy body. We’ll explore sacred sound, such as the syllable OM, during our yoga practice, as well as learn mantras, chants, and bhajans, which are devotional songs that raise Bhakti, the energy of divine love and bliss. You’ll get a sense of how the sounds of Sanskrit, the ancient language of India, awaken the body, clear the mind, and uplift the spirit!
For more information and to register, see HERE

YOGA AND MOVEMENT CENTER TEACHER TRAINING in Walnut Creek
with Diane Valentine, Dennis Eagan, Connie Habash (Sanskrit), and Judith Lasater.  Starts in September!  See the website for more information: http://www.yoga-movement.com/yoga-teacher-training-walnut-creek.html

MIND-BODY ZONE TEACHER TRAINING in Fremont! 
Lynn Cheng Kaylor directs this program with Connie Habash teaching yoga philosophy and lifestyle, Sanskrit, and ethics.  Other faculty include Michelle Duguay, Setareh Moafi, and Jill Leslie. 
Starts in January - check out their website for details:
 
http://www.mindbody-zone.com/index.php?id=49

MEDITATION & INSPIRATION! Resumes on Thursday, AUGUST 25TH
a drop-in group for spiritual awakening, EVERY THURSDAY, 9:30-10:30AM in Palo Alto!  Immerse yourself in a weekly experience of returning to your center.  With a spiritual message from the new thought/ancient wisdom traditions of the world, breathwork practices, chanting, sharing, and 15-20 minute semi-guided meditation, you'll leave feeling renewed and inspired.  BY HEARTFELT DONATION.  At SUBUD House: 330 Melville, Palo Alto  http://www.subudpaloalto.org/

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This Month's Article:

"360 Degrees From Where You Are"
by Connie Habash

      Once at a spiritual talk I attended there was a man sitting in front of me with a t-shirt on that caught my eye. It was from a tropical beach somewhere, and it said "180 degrees from Everywhere." The ultimate getaway, you would think.

     A circle, of course, is 360 degrees around. Anything 180 degrees obviously is the opposite side of the circle. I thought what a funny idea - the implication was that it was as far away as you could get from wherever you are.

     We all have that feeling from time to time - I've got to get away! Get me out of here for a week, or two, away from all this insanity that I call my life. Tension at work, nasty people on the roads, demanding family, frustrating relationships, bills to be paid. I want a good escape somewhere that makes me forget it all.

     You know how it goes. You take off to this tropical destination, determined to leave it all behind. For a few days, or a week or two, it works. You find yourself in a whole other world and you let go of your stresses. But sooner or later - while on vacation, or once you've returned home - "it" catches up with you. "It" being your life... being YOU. As John Kabat-Zinn says, "wherever you go, there you are." You might as well say that you've really travelled 360 degrees - which brings you back to exactly where you started. You and your life, as it is.

     No matter how much we try to escape from ourselves and our lives, we it with us - because it's all happening inside of us, not outside. We cannot get away from our own thoughts, feelings, beliefs, or fears. Until we deal with what is here inside us, no amount of geographical movement will essentially change us.

     Zen Buddhist teacher Adyashanti asserts that the path to awakening is in This, not That. This moment, this experience, this thought, this food we're eating, this conversation we're having. Not the idea that I will become enlightened when I'm far away in That quiet ashram, or That time in my life when I'm less stressed out, or That point in the future when I've changed. It's right here, right now that we can awaken, in every moment. Until we come into This moment, we never reach That experience.

     Staying in This, whatever the experience is, tends to bring up a lot of resistance for most of us. Pema Chodron, author of "The Places That Scare You" talks about the practice of "learning to stay". Much of life is spent attempting to avoid discomfort and to regain pleasure again. Hence, the desire to get away, whether
it's on a vacation, sitting in front of the tv, or having a glass of wine at the end of the day.

     Chodron says, "Thus, we become less and less able to reside with even the most fleeting uneasiness or discomfort. We become habituated to reaching for something to ease the edginess of the moment. What begins as a slight shift of energy... escalates into addiction." Soon, we need to watch tv to wind down, we need that drink, we've got to start a new novel, we've got to jog for 10 miles in order to shake off whatever was bothering us. Even something seemingly "good" or productive, like exercise, becomes a means of escape and addictive when we're trying to avoid feelings of helplessness, frustration, anger, depression, anxiety, or boredom. Yet the path to enlightenment - or at least greater self-awareness and freedom within our own psyches - lies in dealing with those feelings and thoughts, not avoiding them. It is the ability to be with whatever is in This moment that empowers and frees us.

     Why do these things become addictive, even things that may have started out as "healthy" habits? If they are done to avoid what is really arising, then they are another attempt to subtly escape whatever is in the moment. And we know from experience that avoiding dealing with something only temporarily removes it. We eventually have to face it, and deal with the effects of avoiding it. It gets louder and worse the more it is avoided. As the volume increases, the compulsion to avoid it similarly does – and hence, the addiction or obsession is born.

     We may not feel like doing the dishes. So, that's fine, we let the dishes from dinner sit in the sink overnight. In the morning, we may get up and they're still there, but we still don't want to wash them, so we put the bowls from breakfast on top of them. Perhaps we don't get our taxes done by April 15th, so we file an extension. And then we just don't get around to it in a few months. Next year, we're a year behind on taxes, and we feel this desire to avoid, because the issue continues to get bigger. Did you ever notice in school that when a paper was due or a test was coming up, suddenly doing the laundry or cleaning house became more appealing? Until eventually the pressure of the upcoming deadline take over, and we have set ourselves up for anxiety and struggle.

     It's not often that we think of our thoughts and emotions in the very same way, but they work just like that. Whatever issue we're trying to avoid won't go away by doing something to take our mind off it. Sooner or later, it shows up again. And it will likely get a little louder each time, until we're consuming a lot of energy in trying to avoid it. We become obsessive about bringing back the feeling of pleasure or ease and escape from the pain. We can run away, and run away so far that we again end up where we are - turning around 360 degrees back to face what we've tried to escape.

     So you can see that our experience of life isn't truly about what happens to us out there. It's very much about how we choose to deal with our reactions, thoughts, and feelings in here, in this moment. Because life is always going to happen. There will always be people that cut you off on the road. There will always be something that is not the way you want it to be. So how will we continue to deal with that? Will we continue to get indignant, righteous, despairing, avoidant? How does that effect each moment - do we miss something joyful, peaceful, precious when we indulge in escaping or ranting?

     The Maitri Upanishad, a sacred yogic text, says "The mind is verily the world (samsaara). One should purify it strenuously. One assumes the form of that which is in one's mind. This is the eternal secret." Purification is the process of cleansing, healing, dealing with that which is impure. Heating the metal until its impurities melt away. This is not an easy process, but the result is gold.

     If we can't just take a vacation to find that inner peace or freedom, if we can't simply escape This by watching tv, then how do we do this process of mental purification? Well, the great teachers over the centuries have given us many tools through yoga and meditation. Any practice that has us consciously looking at, exploring, and questioning what arises in our internal experience can be helpful. It usually involves turning up the heat a little - being with and looking at exactly that which makes us uncomfortable.

     Buddhist teacher Thich Nhat Hanh suggests a type of meditation practice he calls Stopping:

"Stopping is the basic practice of meditation...When things are not going well, it is good to stop in order to prevent the unpleasant, destructive energies from continuing. Stopping does not mean repressing; it means, first of all, calming. If we want the ocean to be calm, we don't throw away its water. Without the water, nothing is left. When we notice the presence of anger, fear, and agitation in us, we don't need to throw them away. We have only to breathe in and out consciously, and that alone is enough to calm the storm. We do not need to wait for a storm to begin practice. When we are not suffering, conscious breathing will make us feel wonderful, and it is the best way to prepare ourselves to deal with troubles when they come." (from "Touching Peace: Practicing the Mindful Art of Living.")

     This is not avoidance, but rather being in This, the moment, with whatever is arising, breathing into it, and watching what results. We often find that simply being with the experience and not running away changes it.

     We gain a different perspective on something that is uncomfortable when we are able to be with it and see that it's not really as bad as we make it out to be. By trying to escape, we are buying into the idea that it's really terrible and awful. How many of us have avoided taking out the trash, vacuuming, or writing an email, and then when we finally do it we say, "well, that wasn't so bad - why didn't I get it done earlier?" Similarly, by being with and breathing through the emotions or thoughts, we realize they don't have the power we thought they did.

     It's important, though, when we're being with what is - learning to stay, stopping, being with This - that we aren't doing it from the point of view of trying to fix ourselves; that there's something wrong with us and we do this to make it right. This can subtly undermine the practice and turn it into yet another other way that you try to either punish yourself for having these feelings, or try to escape them by doing the "right" practice and therefore making things "better".

     Pema Chodron says it this way: "Trying to fix ourselves is not helpful. It implies struggle and self-denigration... Trying to change ourselves doesn't work in the long run because we're resisting our own energy. Self-improvement can have temporary results, but lasting transformation occurs only when we honor ourselves as the source of wisdom and compassion... Right here in what we'd like to throw away, in what we find repulsive and frightening, we discover the warmth and clarity of bodhicitta (the awakened heart/mind)."  

     It's right here, in whatever happens, that we find that awakened heart and mind. It's right in the worst of our problems that we can find the source of peace, love, and wisdom. Through being with whatever we experience within ourselves with presence, awareness, kindness, and compassion, we don't avoid the pain, but we see through it to a deeper truth that isn't affected by these fluctuations of thought, emotion, and circumstances. If we can get through to that place in ourselves, then it will matter less and less whatever comes up in the moment.

     360 degrees from where you are can be helpful to remember. It implies that right here where we stand, we turn around in a full circle and see what we're experiencing from all sides. Imagine making that full turn inside yourself as well as outside - seeing around behind the reactions to the place they arise from. Penetrate to what is behind the circumstance that makes you fearful or frustrated. All the searching and escaping leads us right back to where we began: the place in ourselves that is beyond the frustrations of life, and is not in reaction to them. We've never left home and we've never come back. The place we've wanted to be has always been right here, wherever we are.

Copyright © 2004, 2011 by Constance L. Habash

Announcements

TIME CHANGE BEGINS ON AUGUST 19TH!  12:30-2PM Pacific Time (3:30 Eastern) AWAKENING SELF RADIO SHOW on The Difference Radio Network - 1st, 3rd, and 5th Friday of every month from 12:30-2pm Pacific time - also available on-demand if you can't join us live).  Spend an hour and a half dedicated to awakening your true Self.  Join Connie Habash, transpersonal psychotherapist and yoga teacher, for inspiration and renewal. 

Upcoming Schedule:
August 5TH (THIS FRIDAY!) - The Secret About Yoga
8-9:30PM Pacific time

     What is Yoga, really?  Is it just doing strange poses? Most people believe so, but in reality that's just the tip of the iceberg. Discover the meaning and goal of Yoga, the various paths and the "8 limbs" of yoga.  You'll find that yoga is much more than just poses - in fact, it is an inspired way of life that supports you in whatever spiritual path you undertake.

 Click the link below to listen:
Blog Talk Radio - Connie Habash - The secret about Yoga
AUGUST 19TH - Special guest Denzal Santana, shaman
12:30-2pm Pacific time

Join Connie and Denzal Santana, a healer extraordinaire and shaman trained by elders in the Peruvian amazon and other Native American elders, to explore the nature of spiritual healing, shamanism, the energetic field of our universe, experiences in the Amazon jungle, and much more. Denzal will offer us a sacred prayer and receive your questions and phone calls. Don’t miss this special opportunity to explore the world of a modern-day shaman.
Blog Talk Radio - Connie Habash - guest Denzal Santana

Denzal Santana lives in the San Francisco Bay Area and offers integrative sacred healing with various healing modalities, individual and group limpias (spiritual blessings), and sacred ceremony across the globe. Learn more about him at his website: http://www.denzal.org

SEPTEMBER 2ND - TBA
SEPTEMBER 16TH - Special guest Lynn Fritz, MA, LMFT, minister and Native American Teacher
SEPTEMBER 30TH - TBA
OCTOBER 7TH - Scout Barlett

Did you miss some previous shows? Links to past shows can be found on the RADIO page
 
NEW COUNSELING OFFICE! 
I have created a sacred space in which to heal, transform your life, and deepen your connection to something greater.  Because I now have my own office, I have expanded daytime hours!  I am available for:
   - Counseling and Psychotherapy (holistic and spiritually oriented)
   - Spiritual Mentorship
   - Ayurvedic Yoga consultations
   - Ministry (currently available for a memorial service/funeral, baby blessings, rites of passage for teens, mothers to be, and wise elders, house blessings, and healing ceremonies for a donation.  Weddings/commitment ceremonies will be available when I am ordained). 

MEDITATION & INSPIRATION RESUMES ON AUGUST 25TH! THURSDAYS at 9:30-10:30AM in PALO ALTO! Join other like-minded individuals for a special group to support your spiritual growth. Experience weekly renewal through meditation, breathwork, chanting, an inspirational message, and community sharing. Location: SUBUD spiritual center, 330 Melville Ave (near the corner of Waverly), PALO ALTO, just off Embarcadero. By Heartfelt Donation.
http://www.subudpaloalto.org/

AUGUST TUESDAY YOGA CLASS SCHEDULE -
Connie is spontaneously taking some more time off in August (before it's Back-to-School time!). Here's the schedule, with guest teachers listed:
August 2nd - Heidi Chair
August 9th - CONNIE
August 16th - Lynn-Marie Murphy
August 23rd - Lynn-Marie Murphy
August 30th - CONNIE returns to regular schedule

CONNIE'S LEVEL 1 AND 2 YOGA CDS now available! 
Yes, I have reprinted  the "Balanced Yoga Practice" CDs for beginners (level 1) and all levels (level 2).  Special price (keeping this price indefinitely!):  $15 each, or two for $25 (plus shipping if you mail-order) Available in class, or mail me a check.  Ordering instructions are at my website:  http://www.awakeningself.com/cd.html

DID YOU ENJOY THE SERIES ON THE 5 YAMAS, OR MISS SOME CLASSES?  I have recordings of 90 minute yoga classes for each of the 5 Yamas available for download - Beginner and All-Levels classes, too!  You'll find Ahimsa - Non-Violence; Satya - Truthfulness; Asteya - Non-Stealing; Brahmacharya - Mastery of Vital Energy; and Aparigraha - Non-Greed all available on Yogi Chocolate right now, for a donation.  Follow this link to choose your classes:  http://www.yogichocolate.com/teachers-bio.php?u=1149

FREE MEDITATION CLASS on my website...  Check out the 30-minute meditation class ("Meditation Class #1") from Awakening Self!  You don't have to download it - just click, play, and listen. 
http://www.awakeningself.com/cd.html  More meditation classes are available for download on YogiChocolate.

DON'T MISS AN ISSUE OF AWAKENING SELF!  Make sure that connie@AwakeningSelf.com is on your allowed list entry on your spam filter!

Share Awakening Self with a friend!  Forward this newsletter to them, and they can subscribe at any time by clicking this link: SUBSCRIBE HERE

The Seasons of Yoga:

I Need a Nap!
      It's about 3pm, the time of day has arrived that so many of us get sleepy.  This is particularly true in the heat of summer, when the high temperatures can sap our energy, or we simply feel "burned out."  Don't you feel like having a nap right about now?  I sure do.  Many cultures have afternoon naps as part of their daily routine - they even close their businesses during this late afternoon part of the day to accommodate that.

     But of course, we all know what else goest through our heads - I don't have the time!  We're in such a rush-rush, get more and more done kind of society that we feel that resting for any period of time is lazy, even irresponsible!  Yet recent studies on sleep have suggested that almost everyone in our society is sleep deprived.  When our culture was more naturally attuned to the rhythms of nature (particularly in times when we depended on farming for our daily sustenance), people typically got 8-10 hours of sleep.  Now we're lucky if we get seven.

     The afternoon is a great time to do a restorative pose - a pose that's simple relaxation and letting go.  It's  conscious resting - letting the body relax, and the mind be peaceful, but not asleep.  It's said that 20 minutes of a restorative has the same renewing effect on the body and mind as an hour of sleep.  The simplest restorative pose that most of us are familiar with is Savasana - lying flat on your back and consciously allowing the body to relax.  Judith Lasater, author of "Relax and Renew: Restful Yoga for Stressful Times," says that we all should take 20 minutes a day and do nothing.  Nothing.  That idea can bring up a bit of anxiety - nothing?  What will I do while I'm doing nothing?!  And that's the idea - we have forgotten how to simply BE.
 
    You'd be surprised how much 20 minutes of resting can renew you.  Try this out, at home or in the office: go over to a wall and lie on your back with your legs up the wall.  If it's hard to keep the legs up the wall without bending them, you can scoot your body a little farther from the wall.  This is especially good if your'e on your feet all day, or sitting/driving for long periods, as it helps renew the circulation in the legs and nourishes the belly.  Another quick pick-me-up:  sit on your chair and put a pillow, if possible, on your lap.  Bend over the pillow and let your head and arms hang for a few minutes.  This relaxes strained back muscles, releases neck tension, and calms the body and mind.  Or rest the head on a desk or table as an alternative.  Then finish up with at least 5 minutes of Savasana, lying on your back.

     Allow the mind to be calm and very present to the sensation of relaxation, knowing that you'll have time afterwards to deal with what needs to be done.  You'll find your mind refreshed and your body renewed after taking some time to rest, leaving you more effective at whatever tasks lie ahead.  Who knows - maybe it will even be more fun!

Copyright © 2002, 2011 by Constance L. Habash


Spiritual Quotes

If you genuinely have something to say, then there's someone out there who genuinely needs to hear it.  
~Arnold Patent

Resisting a thing brings up the opposite of what we want.  Force brings about counter-force.
~Ellen Sutherland


I would not waste my life in friction when it could be turned into momentum.  ~Frances Willard

 

Blessings, Connie

Links to previous newsletters

July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010

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Constance L. Habash, MA, LMFT   •   (650) 996-2649   •   Copyright 2003 Connie Habash. All rights reserved.