Questions that lead to Surrender

This conversation is on the topic of Surrender. It is something that I have been curious about and opening myself up to more and more each day. I began my inquiry five years ago when I read The Untethered Soul by Micheal Singer. I had heard the concept of surrender several times, mostly in yoga classes and training, but had not been able to get much deeper than landing on the question I wanted to explore: Who am I who can watch thoughts coming up with a complete sense of detachment?

My journey into the concept went deeper a couple summers ago at my McCue family reunion. We have these reunions every summer, and while I only make it every few years, it is always a nourishing experience to be around a big group of people who love and support each other - despite our differences in lifestyle, religion, and massive amounts of time disconnected. My grandparents are mormon, and had seven kids, who all had at least two children, and as many as seven children (my siblings).  

McCue reunion 1993 (I've always loved overalls)

McCue reunion 1993 (I've always loved overalls)

At the reunion two summers ago, we met at UBCO campus - near Kelowna, BC. I was almost done my yoga teacher training and was excited to practice. I had offered a 7am yoga class for each morning of our family reunion schedule, and was excited to share the experience with people in my family. I was surprised to have so many show up for this early morning yoga session, including my grandma. 

We were spread out quite a bit, this image shows half the group

We were spread out quite a bit, this image shows half the group

I learned a lot from that experience. Being open to leading a group through an experience is thrilling and daunting. It's easy to allow the emotions of fear and resistance to overtake your system and either pull you away from being brave or tarnish your experience due to being too fixated on the what you lack, what doesn't feel good, or the doom-and-gloom possibilities. 

The love and support from my family was a beautiful environment to practice in. I shared my thoughts on surrendering to the experience of yoga and surrendering your mind to accept who and where you are. It felt good to be in that role. And as usual, my dad had some interesting insights and thoughts on the experience. 

In his inquisitive and fun way, he complimented my ability and shared that he enjoyed my thoughts on surrender. He then shared that he felt something was missing. While surrender is a great idea as concept, he saw the need to offer a balancing point with the need and importance of action and change. His worry was that the message was communicating that it's okay to accept your life as it is and not do anything to grow, learn, adapt and evolve. I agreed with him. And on continued my exploration of simplifying a complex concept. 

 

So, where am I at now? A few years have passed and I have been playing with this idea of surrender. While I have made progress in my understanding of surrender, I have also realized that theory is one thing, but living, breathing, and integrating theory into life is a whole other ball game. 

I knew I had to land on a working definition of surrender in order for me to integrate it into my life. The way you think about something dictates how you feel and how you show up. What's the point of living with surrender when you don't really understand what it means to you. Before you embark on a journey towards any worth while pursuit; i.e., balance, success, happiness, or surrender, it is important to truly understand what you are working towards. If you don't have an empowering and realistic perception of balance, you certainly will not be efficient or powerful in your pursuit. I have been curious to explore and understand the softer side of life. I know how to work hard, how to create structure and discipline in my life, and I have learned resiliency as I have overcome many dark and difficult moments and stages in my life. Now I am in the practice of releasing my need to control and force, and am inviting in a sense of deeper trust in what the universe is offering me moment to moment. 

What I find most interesting, and most challenging, about understanding Surrender is that while it looks different for each person based on the stage of life they're in, it is also universally the same. The way I practiced surrender three years ago looks much different than today - but I needed to go through the practice to get to where I currently am. All ways of practicing surrender are important steps in your process!

Like any concept worth understanding, you must know the complexities before you can land on the simple truths. My practice of surrender is a unique experience because of the many experiences that have brought me to this moment. My hope is that through this blog post as I explore my practice of surrender, you will be inspired to take the reigns and explore surrender in your own life. 

  • What is my current understanding of surrender?

**I just finished reading The Surrender Experiment by Micheal Singer, which inspired me to circle back and re-read The Untethered Soul, by the same author. The notes below are a mainly influenced by Singer's work, but is also pulling wisdom from many conversations, books, and experiences I have learned from.  

Surrender is a word used to signify an energetic shift from Force and Control into Receptivity and Softness. It works on many levels.

First of all, when we soften into the moment, we are present and alive to what is happening right in front of us. Your energy and focus is tuned into what is real, right now, rather than being drained and weighed down by feelings from the past or projected feelings of what the future holds.

Second, surrender serves as a reminder when you do find yourself stuck, fighting, victimizing, or anxious. It reminds us to release what we cannot control and open ourselves up to what is being presented. It creates a safe inner-environment to meet your feelings as they come up rather than simply feeling your feelings and reacting. It shuts off the fight or flight response so you have the ability and brain power to make a thoughtful choice of getting into action or letting go.

Third, surrender tunes us into the universal connection we all share. Yes you have a unique experience and your tiny grain of sand has the potential to make a huge positive impact, but you are also a part of something bigger and wiser than your individual life. The universe is unfolding in its own way and we each are a part of that unfolding. Surrender becomes the gateway into this vast and beautiful vortex that offers lessons, presents creative ideas, and connects you with the souls around you that elevate your existence. Your impact is mighty and your shared part within the Universe is something to be grateful and responsible for. Whether you believe in a God or a Supreme Consciousness of some kind, we are sharing an experience that is much bigger than each individual.  

 

  • What are some ways to practice Surrender?

First thing to do is to remind yourself daily that you are in the practice of surrender. We quickly revert back to old habits unless we keep our focus and attention on new thoughts and ideas. When you feel stuck, stagnant, in competition, in judgement, in shame, in sorrow, in defeat, in victim hood, in assumptions, or simple just too much in your head, this is the time to practice surrender.

Stop fighting the flow of life. Stop blaming others. Stop viewing yourself as a victim in your own life. Stop forcing the puzzle pieces to fit just to satisfy your need of order and external validation. Not only are these ways of being exhausting and intense to be around, but they are ways to drain your own energy and get in your own way. Life has a way of working out. We learn important lessons from failing, we meet new people or experience new levels of emotions when we lose others, we experience new ways of being when we lose the foundation beneath our feet. What if you just allowed yourself to experience and live life without trying to plan every detail and control every move along the way? Wow, imagine what that would feel like. Even our triggered reactions become fruitful when we develop the habit of pausing, noticing the reaction, letting go of our attachment to reactions, and witnessing your mind being hijacked by your over-protective ego.

There is so much going on inside your mind and body that the only sure-fire way of generating positive and sustainable momentum forward is to get balanced on the wave and ride it with as much presence, contentment, and detachment as possible. The wave will end, you will have to put some effort in to get back up, you will learn and fall and get stronger each time. Why fight, blame, or get angry if you know and trust that it is all an important part of the process? 

The best way to start this practice is to meditate. Start your day by sitting with yourself. Just your breath and your conscious mind at the wheel. Detach from the story telling and emotional pendulum swing and get to know the calm depths within. The more you do this, the more you will notice when you are reactive, that there is the calm witness behind the scenes that you can connect with as you let the reaction move through you and get released. It can become a fascinating game as your goal is to continuously release your ego - which wants you to feel good now, avoid pain at all costs, look good in front of others, and achieve your dreams at all costs. Your ego pushes you to be cynical about others and about life because it feels good when you see you were right. Your ego puts up major resistance and fear when you approach change or are engaging in something you're not well versed in, because it registers social exclusion or embarrassment as physical pain. 

 

  • How do I find a balanced pursuit of surrender?

Before we know the balance point we must know the two extremes we want to be balanced within. On one side we have passive acceptance and on the other side is extreme attachment. Neither one will be sustainable on a long-term basis, and neither one is detrimental in and of itself. As I like to remind myself, too much of anything is no longer a good thing. The problem is not that we get attached to things or that we accept things as they are. The problem is when things become a pattern, a way of operating in the world, an extreme stance that ends up holding you back in life and getting in the way of enjoying and truly living in this precious existence. 

Surrender also has an extreme counterpart to be aware of; Effort. In yoga philosophy, we are taught that effort and surrender are two wings of the same bird. I have found that my life has shifted in many positive directions as I have become efficient and powerful in my effort while honoring my down-time and self-care with just as much attention and time. 

Ultimately, Surrender embodies the energy of many other concepts and ideas, and is the balance point with its equally important counterpart of Effort. It's a dance. It's an energy fuel-up system. It's a gateway to the calm depths within. It's the deep wisdom the resides within us all.

 

With surrender, we notice when our healthy inquiry has turned into a waste land of blame, confusion, or replaying the same story until we find the answer we are looking for. Surrender brings our mind and body into a place of feeling calm, centered, and balanced. It allows us to let go of our emotional pendulum swing and relax into the moment to deal with whatever is coming up. For many of us, we have been so disconnected from our body for so long, that the world of thinking has become the main mode of existence. But with surrender, we are reminded to stop reading, talking, and thinking about the mind, and instead just get into the practice of quieting down and allow life to unfold with your highest Self at the wheel, ready to receive and give to the universal flow of life. You still can have preferences and you will still make judgments, but you will begin to see these as surface level reactions while the truest and deepest part of you surrenders to the moment and simply flows with life through our unique experience of consciousness. 

 

The art of slowing down

 

Along time ago you made a decision about life that served to protect you in that moment, and now it serves to subconsciously hold you back. You had an experience that hurt or traumatized you, which then lead you to a belief about what life is and how you need to show up and protect yourself along the way. It locked you in a false reality that is guarded by your self-protective and an incredibly strong subconscious.

Sometimes the way out is as simple as standing tall and acknowledging that you are not your patterns, you emotions, your habits, or your beliefs. From this place of seeing yourself as separate from your compulsions, reactions, or limiting thoughts, you can show love, gratitude, and appreciation for these deeply ingrained ways of being. They are there because they are trying to protect you, and we know that 'what you resists, persists.' With your hand on your heart, soft and deep breaths rolling through your body, and a gentle and compassionate mindset, we can release these patterns that may have had a grip on you for decades.

Your ego mind is constantly seeking pleasure and on the lookout to avoid pain. But YOU, you are the witness behind the scenes. You are the calm, powerful, unstoppable, connected higher-self that seeks growth and does not get caught up in the emotional pendulum swing of story telling, assumptions, judgments, cynicism, or self-doubt. 

The more you can recognize your power in your thoughtful response after your initial impulsive reaction, the more you will see that your reactions are grounded in your ego. When we learn to slow down and find our calm state of mind, suddenly there is space for our intuition to be heard and felt, and we conserve way more energy that was once lost by identifying with the constant mind-chatter and impulses of the ego. 

For the past couple of months I have been contemplating and playing with the phrase "slow down to speed up" and have seen it morph into "the art of slowing down." You may have noticed that many people talk about the need to find balance, the desire to slow down, the goal of meditating, but very few people actually achieve this. It is tough to break deeply ingrained habits and beliefs that steer us towards being busy, multi-tasking and putting others ahead of our own self care. 

What has become more clear to me is that until I embody the action of slowing down, my mind cannot be forced into being calm or slowing down. When I actually roll out of bed and head straight into a meditation to check in with myself, notice my thoughts and witness the sensations in my body, and allow my breath to be the medicine and power I desire it to be, I get access to calm depths that become my guide and my fuel for the rest of the day. 

It is that simple. Your body will follow your mind. Commit to a few minutes of meditation in the morning and you will see that your wise system will begin to make adjustments and send signals that will allow you to get to know your pathway to decreasing stress and finding joy in simplicity. Meditate with the goal of being present in your body and in this moment. Feel the sensations in your feet and your hands and open your ears to listen to your surroundings. Without judging or story-telling, just be a witness to what you notice. Practice without the desire to be perfect. Do it without the need to be the best. Be where you are without shame, judgment, or doubt. Slow your mind-chatter, and your body will follow. 

 

**Check out this short video to witness the grip of subconscious limiting beliefs and the possibility of substantial change when we recognize our own power** 

5 tips to find your way into yoga

I was the typical busy-bee with a monkey mind before I grew to love yoga. And yes, I grew to love it. My first yoga class was in Victoria - ten years ago - while I was a student there. I hated it. I remember thinking "this is so not my thing." It was exactly what I hoped it wouldn't be: slow and boring. What I didn't realize at that point was that I had just walked into a yin class, which is supposed to be slow and it's okay if I felt bored. I didn't know the complexity of yoga or the many styles and variations that can be offered based on studio, teachers, geography, and experience level. I didn't give up though.

My mental health was in a dire state and I knew I needed to explore more of what yoga had to offer. I had transferred to University of Alberta in Edmonton and was introduced to bikram yoga and fell in love. It was tough, sweaty and predictable. It was what I needed at that point in my life to be the gateway into the world of yoga. After one year of practicing bikram yoga a couple times a month, I had the foundation I needed to explore other styles and I fell in love with the creativity, the self-expression, the many teachers, and the empowering tools that came from being a witness to my mind on my mat. 

Fast forward ten years and now yoga is a huge part of my everyday life. When I am not on my mat, I am still practicing yoga. Yoga has taught me so many beautiful and important lessons in life, and I get excited to share this gift with others as I step on my mat as a teacher and fellow-student. 

Being a beginner in anything can be uncomfortable, so here are five tips to lessen the uncertainty and help you step onto your mat with an open mind and receptive heart. Yoga is for everyone!

 

1. Convenience is key.

Find a studio close to home or hop on YouTube and look up yoga for beginners. Yoga is as accessible as coffee--it's everywhere. Whether you commit to following a YouTube video or find a studio close to home or work, build it into the schedule you already keep so that you pave the way for a new habit that will fit into your current lifestyle.

 

2. You don’t have to be flexible.

I hear this all the time: "I'm not flexible enough to do yoga." To me that sounds like a great reason to do yoga. The pose is not the point-- your breath and your mindset that matters most. If you are stuck in comparisons and can't see past the fact that others are more flexible than you, it’s probably getting in your way in more areas than one. Get out of your head and step onto your mat. Rather than focusing on your lack of flexibility, bring your awareness to your breath. I like to bring micro-movements in with each breath, allowing each pose to be a process of exploring and feeling my posture and balance shift. From this perspective, it is not about how deep you go in the pose, but rather feeling your inhale lengthen and strengthen your spine and your exhale release and surrender to wherever you are right now.   

 

3. Focus on a pose.

When you choose one pose as your goal, it makes it easier to commit to your home practice. Each time you notice bits of progress you will get bursts of happy chemicals that will encourage you to keep practicing.

 

4. Start with a physical, emotional and spiritual practice.

How do you want to feel in your body? What emotional energy would support that journey? What is your higher purpose behind your actions and choices in life? Take time before your class to set your intention. It’s so important to be grounded in self-care while also expanding and embracing the impact we can have on those around us. When you bring in what you are curious to explore or what you want more of in your life, you build healthy new habits in your physicality. Everything is connected.

 

5. Ask for support!

There are so many different styles and ways of teaching yoga. If you have a negative experience at one class, don’t give up!. Tell your teacher you are a newbie so you can get the extra attention you might need. If you know you struggle with certain poses or aspects in class, ask for support or tips from your teacher or fellow students. There are also many resources online or people in your community that want to educate and have conversations in this area, so don't hold back. There is a yoga style that will suit who and where you are now, and from that space you will explore and expand and will find the wellspring of quality fuel that comes from being in tune with your mind-body connection.

 

Tools to help train your brain

One of the things that has helped me learn and grow the most is the idea that everything is a relationship. We are relational beings. What makes our existence so complex is that nothing is fixed or complete when assumed to be objective. Whether it is an intimate relationship with another, a supportive and loving relationship with friends and family, an acquaintance or stranger, or the relationship you have to your own emotions, to concepts, ideas, or systems; the depth is found in the relationship.

I don't believe there is a universal meaning to life. I think we do ourselves a disservice when we see things as black and white. I think we hold ourselves back and show lack of trust in our own powerful minds if we think there is one right way to do something or allow our emotions to lead the way. I believe we are all capable of finding a collective community of love and support while honoring our own internal guidance and structure of purpose. The beauty of life is in the quality of our relationships.

The relationship I have been most fascinated with is the one I have with myself. Around 10 years ago, I found myself in a place of deep unhappiness and a sense of not having enough control in my own life. I felt lost, confused, beaten up, angry, yet hopeful that there was a way to create the life I desired.

As I approach my 31st birthday this month and have the big upcoming moment of publishing my first book, I feel called to slow down and take stock on what it has taken to retrain my brain to develop healthy habits, heal from trauma, and find balance in my mind, body, and soul. My advocacy for mental health awareness has been a huge motivation for my internal drive. The biggest thing that has allowed me to connect with the community, create experiences and continue my studying and exploration has been the realization that we are all deeply affected my mental health struggles - if not in your own mind then in someone close to you.

I have not been hesitant to share my story because I own it, I lived it, and I see it in so many others around me. I have learned so much from who and where I have been. I am now deeply connected to my higher purpose and am happy to stumble, fall, embarrass myself, or sabotage myself, because I have the discipline to not let that get in my way. I choose to see it all as learning and practice. 

I have realized that my greatest potential is birthed from self-love. When I have my mind, body and soul all aligned in one unifying direction - fueled by habits that I have chosen and not fallen into - I step into the version of myself I want to know more and more. 

In this state of power, choice and opportunity in absolutely everything, I am tuned into the universal vibration of expansion and contraction, which feels like I am being held by something far greater than just me as I grow and fall more in love with life each day. 

I have learned that when you love the process and engage in life with purpose and play, the journey becomes the jewel and the destination becomes less finite, as I feel whole and complete in each mindful breath.

My business - dope(a)me - and my role as spin motivator and yoga teacher, are all platforms for me to share my love for life and movement. My goal each day is to follow the paradigm I have created as my goal setter mindset, and to engage in conversations that will deepen our collective connection to our inner pilot light that celebrates others' successes while carving a path that has never been carved before. While some people might say they are special, and others may think no one is special, I choose to believe that we are all special and have the capacity to create a positive impact in the world.

The environment and conditions you are born into creates the initial foundation that is programmed into your mind and body. Your duty as your grow older is to un-become what has been fed into your system so that you can become the unique and powerful YOU that you have that privilege to be. 

We all get in our own way. Our mind can be tricky and our habits dig deep. What I have experienced for myself is the awakening that sets in when you learn to calm your mind. Your mind wanders and constantly makes up stories and entertains assumptions about your reality. Your ego is seductive. It is driven by a subconscious addiction to happy chemicals and an overcompensation from a feeling of low self-worth. Your ego is the result of your over-protective system that is seeking serotonin and dopamine - which increases your feelings of worth, pleasure, and importance; a biological insurance program to improve your chances of survival. It seeks instant-gratification and grows stronger when you are tired, stressed, overworked, or lack "real" confidence. Real confidence is not a display or need to remind people of your greatness. It is internally directed and validated in results and pure contentment. 

Acknowledge your ego for what it is. We all have one. It's your initial and impulsive reaction. When you develop a relationship with your ego, rather than being victim to its allure and possession, you begin to notice it and can choose to respond from your higher-purpose and directive. 

So, enough about me and my current understanding and practice in life. It's time for you to put pen to paper and play with ways of implementing new healthy habits into your life! When you know how your mind works and see more opportunity to question what you think rather than assume you have it right, it becomes a lot easier to formulate a plan, learn and collaborate with others, and be efficient in your development. 

Here are FIVE keys to get started in retraining your brain to become the person you desire to be!

1. What you resist, persist:

Rather than resisting your current habits, choose to focus on building new ones. You can't erase habits, but you can slowly stop feeding them energy until they grow over and lose grip on your subconscious. Use the power of a morning routine while you have fresh energy. Bring in new thoughts, ideas, goals, movement, mantras, etc. Eventually, conscious doing becomes subconscious being. Although it can feel awkward and backwards at first, your compulsions need love and compassion if they are ever going to be released.

Another way to bring in the fresh energy and healthy habits you desire is to spend time with someone who has the habit you want. We have mirror neurons in our brain that fire when we observe someone else. Our brain lights up in the same manner as the person doing the activity we are witnessing. Hire a coach, go to workshops, spend time in environments with healthy and inspiring people. Your brain will begin to build the pathway so you can mirror the behavior you want more of in your life. By the same token, you can begin to create new pathways through visualization. When you take the time to fully step into a feeling, a possibility, or a desired outcome, our brain prepares for that reality and it becomes more real in our mind's eye. Just be mindful to keep the distinction between a motivating imagined future-state and the expectation that reality will be just as you visualize it to be. Intimacy without attachment. We can drain our own energy when we fall in love with our expectation and find reality to be not as sweet.

2. Integration:

Get curious about the habits you already have and find ways to add in some new happy circuits onto the roots already in place. You will create new habits with ease when you find ways to tweak or add to the habits already in rotation. Bonus: Focus on what feels good and what is fun in this process and your habit will stick even quicker. 

3. Conserve and Create:

You need energy to create new habits. Take time to fuel yourself with self-care practices, meditation, nourishing food, rest, sweat, play, novelty, and gratitude. Nourishment is not strictly what you ingest. It is your spiritual, emotional, physical, and mental well-being. So often our compulsions are triggered when we feel lack, and we look to food - or other quick hits of pleasure - for comfort or discipline. Your health and wellness is holistic and involves many facets. Perhaps your sense of lack is a signal that your mind, body and soul are craving an experience or breakthrough. 

Be mindful of where you expend a lot of energy already and practice ways to calm your mind and conserve some of that precious fuel for when you really need it. Some things are simply not worth spending energy on. Discern when to be in inquiry, when to just tell yourself what you need to hear, and when to simply be and embrace the moment for what it is. 

4. Compound Effect:

When you have big goals and changes in mind, your subconscious can be spooked into feeling like this task is too big to take on, and self-sabotage or exhaustion will set in. Do yourself a favor and break down your big tasks or goals into small steps, and make sure to celebrate along the way. Your ego needs to be fed in healthy and conscious ways if you don't want it to take over. 

5. Practice: 

Learn to embrace the space between where you are now and where you desire to. This moment is your life. It is worth practicing being in love with each moment so that you don't build a habit of only being focused on more or the idea that happiness awaits at a future destination. Once you have a rhythm and structure of learning and growth in place, it becomes that much easier to fall in love with the process and practice your trust and improvisation. Every moment is practice for the next moment. 

 

I hope you find some inspiration and tangible tools to play with from this post. I would love to engage with you if you have any questions or are ready to take on your personal development with my guidance and support. 

I want to leave you with this message I came across last night on instagram. This is from the @wildwomansisterhoodofficial account. A beautiful image of an older woman with so much peace and love in her tanned and wrinkled face. Her words speak to my hope and my practice of being guided with purpose while completely grounded and in love with the moment as it is. I saw myself in her and was drawn in to her amazing energy. Enjoy ;)

"I am no longer waiting for a special occasion; I burn the best candles on ordinary days.

I am no longer waiting for the house to be clean; I fill it with people who understand that even dust is Sacred.  

I am no longer waiting for everyone to understand me; it's just not their task.

I am no longer waiting for the perfect children; my children have their own names that burn as brightly as any star.

I am no longer waiting for the other shoe to drop; it already did, and I survived.

I am no longer waiting for the time to be right; the time is always now.

I am no longer waiting for the mate who will complete me; I am grateful to be so warmly, tenderly held.

I am no longer waiting for a quiet moment; my heart can be stilled whenever it is called.

I am no longer waiting for the world to be at peace; I unclench my grasp and breathe peace in and out.

I am no longer waiting to do something great; being awake to carry my grain of sand is enough.

I am no longer waiting to be recognized; I know I dance in a holy circle.

I am no longer waiting for Forgiveness. I believe. I Believe." 

by Mary Anne Perrone

 

A Mental Model to Serve Your Monkey Mind

photo by Mark Derry 

photo by Mark Derry 

We are programmed to compare and take notice when we perceive someone as bigger, bolder, or more of what we strive to be. This deeply ingrained impulse is an overactive survival mechanism. At one point in time it was extremely beneficial to get a surge of neurochemicals warning us when someone else did something that furthered their importance above our own. This status dance would motivate individuals to make themselves indispensable in the tribe to improve the chances of safety and procreation.  

The problem is, we now live in a society where the lives and successes of others are displayed second by second at our fingertips. We see others paving their way through life and we see a lot more of what is good rather than the not-so-good that we all struggle with yet few of us are open and willing to share.

As I continue to make bold moves and brave leaps to grow my business and create a larger platform for my message of mental health vulnerability and best practices to find balance, I see and feel the effects of comparison every single day. Whether in my own self-talk or in the struggles of my clients, we all have a tendency to lose track of the big picture and get fixated on the small-minded comparison of ourselves to the other.

I am here to remind you that although you can’t control your instinctual animalistic reactions, you do have control and power in your response after the fact. Know your mind, understand where your effort is best invested, and carve a new path of least resistance in your brain that brings you to gratitude and motivation for action. How? Keep reading.

One of my favorite reminders lately comes from a book titled, The Honeymoon Effect by Bruce Lipton. He says “there are four brains in every relationship.” We have our best-self, which comes out in the beginning of a new relationship as we are excited and we don’t have assumptions or baggage already attached to what the other person says or does. Over time, we get comfortable and our triggered state begins to show itself. The impulsive reactions, the emotional assumptions, the unfair expectations, the cruel jabs at the other. Where did that person come from?

We are programmed to seek safety, to seek companionship and a tribe that feeds our soul, and to carve out a unique impact and purpose that will leave a legacy. Along with these beautiful human wants comes the tendency to compare, judge, and constantly strive for more. We find pleasure in progress, and we feel pain at any sign of rejection or not being seen by someone we want attention from. We need to feel safe, connected, and purposeful, and until we do, there is a constant flow of energy being invested in searching for ways to meet these needs. Imagine a faucet attached to the back of your body, and while these basic primal needs are unmet, it is as though your tap is turned on and flowing energy out of your system until there is nothing left, leaving you exhausted and wondering why. There’s not much we can do about this deeply rooted operating system, other than notice when it is there and respond with words and actions that ground, support, and release the old patterns.

We tend to avoid our feelings out of confusion and shame. We tend to judge ourselves and make ourselves feel wrong for having the feelings in the first place. Yet our good intentions can lead us astray, because what you resist, persists. You think you are being wise by brushing that problem under the rug, or avoiding the nagging feeling that something is wrong, or shaming yourself for not being able to “snap out of it.” Sorry to tell you my friends, you are sending more energy down that pathway that you are trying to avoid, strengthening it’s power and building a superhighway towards the very thing you are “ignoring.”

The only way through this internal struggle, is to get to know it, love it, embrace it, get curious about it, notice your reactions and try out new responses. Open yourself up to the beauty and connections that arise from being a vulnerable and proud imperfectly perfect human being.

This is not the type of work you can rush. This is the epitome of slowing down to speed up. We need to reset our foundation and build strong roots so that we can grow and handle the waves of life with grace and resilience.

A "mental model" is a great way to begin the process of excavating and cultivating. Mental models are our unique perceptions and understanding of life. They generally help us navigate uncertainty by projecting past learnings and experiences onto the situation at hand. They provide a proven pathway towards success or a learned pattern to avoid pain or failure. We can’t do the same thing over and over and expect to get new results. We are all growing and learning in phases, and we need to continue the principle of self-study to ensure we are updating our belief system and feeding our mind and body the nourishment it needs.

So I ask you, What seeds are you planting? Consider the mental model that your mind is a garden and your thoughts and actions culminate as the gardener. Before you create the garden of your dreams, you must dig deep and remove the weeds and roots that suck the nutrients out of the dirt or strangle the progress of new growth. While we plant new seeds, we develop a rhythm of care to ensure time and attention are spent to tend to the young and vulnerable plants. We need patience and mindfulness to allow the garden to manifest and to notice issues that could halt progress and take action to create a remedy. We need the resilience and trust in the process, so even if the garden is destroyed or is not in great shape, you know no failure is a final failure and every moment is practice for the next moment. It is important to find joy and develop a passion for the work so that it doesn’t become another mindless chore to check off your list. Surround yourself with other passionate gardeners and continue opening yourself up to new ideas and tips that could serve your journey.

 

Reflection Questions:

What change challenge are you facing in your life right now?

What is your mental model to approach this challenge with as much empowerment and trust in your ability as possible?

What are the key steps to take on this challenge?

What is your motivating reason WHY to take on this challenge?

What reminder do you need to repeat when the going gets tough?

A well timed and thought-provoking question can be the difference between standing proud in the face of your challenge rather than avoiding or hiding yourself from the possible pain of rejection. Know your mind. Know what you truly want. And set yourself up with the support, thoughts, mental models, and motivation you need to make the change. You are so much more capable than you realize. Tell yourself what you need to hear.

 

The WHY and HOW of Wellness

The Wellness Journey Heals Us All

I am so honored to be a part of the team at Evolve Retreat co. We are a group of passionate individuals who are striving to spread health and wellness through education, motivation, action, and support. Because of my fascination with words and the understanding that we often use words without knowing what they truly mean, I want to play with this word 'wellness.'

 

Wellness is a buzz word that has been growing in popularity. It is a reminder that as a society we are beginning to truly see the benefits in viewing our health and happiness as a by-product of many facets, and not a simple single ingredient as being more important than all the others. We are complex and unique beings, and we collectively share a desire for growth; it’s a biological imperative. We are all on a journey, and while we are all at different points and phases, when we come together to share in the experience and learn tools for motivation and resilience, we create an environment that heals us all.

To “heal” simply means to become “more whole.” This is a beautiful shift in our culture as more conversations are gearing towards healing rather than the fixed concept of “curing” which connotes a sense of something being wrong with you that needs to be fixed. To heal, you first need to tune in to the feeling of alignment based on your core values and goals. We need awareness of the energy and stories that have either been hidden or become attached to who you think you are. To heal, we need to let go of beliefs and patterns that no longer serve who you are or where you desire to be headed. It is a conscious and deliberate choice to shift your self-talk into a language of empowerment and elevation. We also need a sense and trust in balance, this looks like the occasional push outside your comfort zone followed by time to ground down and regain stability. From this new space, you then can expand and reach further. Imagine what is possible when you engage in that balance dance over the course of a year?? And finally, although you may want to rush and push your way through this, the best way to grow through the healing process is to embrace the journey with patience, love and compassion, as you realize that every animal (including our animalistic nature) responds best to being heard, loved, and respected.

Now, you may be sick of hearing that you need to be patient and take this journey with an open heart and a calm mind, but perhaps a deeper understanding of how and why will support you. 

HOW?

Seek more ways to bring high quality energy into your mind and body. Eat to nourish. Laugh to generate healing vibrations. Go on adventures and try new things. Engage in conversations about ideas, goals, successes, and struggles that create learnings. Put pen to paper and explore your thoughts and insights. Get the sleep you need to function and be just as passionate about your self care and "me-time" as you are about your action and effort. 

Too often we look at what is in the mirror to determine our self worth or health. But the inside is much more indicative of your picture of wellness. If you are on a strict diet but are miserable or have tension and anxiety built up around your diet or desired habit, you actually are doing more harm than good. Your mindset and mood need to be tended to just as much as the attention you put into your food choices and actions.

Rather than seeing nourishment as solely the foods you eat, follow the wise words of Marc David in his book “Nourishing Wisdom”:

“Biologically, nourishment is encoded in our genes as the body’s longing for perpetuation of itself through food and procreation. Psychologically, nourishment is encoded as our longing for perpetuation through creativity, relationships, community, work and the exchange of ideas. Spiritually, nourishment is encoded as our longing for self-realization. Whether it is a warm meal, a warm fire, a warm friend, or a warm feeling, the metaphoric mind interprets each as nourishment and will substitute food whenever other sources of nourishment run low.” 

What area of your life are you lacking nourishment? Don’t judge, shame, or regret your choices. Right now is all you’ve got and you need all that precious energy to be in action and to enjoy the ride.

WHY?

This one is up to you. We all have a deeper why behind our goals and change challenges. What is your bigger why? For example, to lose weight is a goal, but the deeper why is most likely driven by a desire to feel confident, energetic, and capable in as many situations as possible. Sure a diet will help, but when you are grounded in your deeper why you will see there are many ways to practice and bring this sense of wellness into your life. The goal is not the point - it is important and necessary to give yourself direction - but it is not the only point! Your reward is not waiting at the end of this journey, it is a practice and deliverance based on the daily work. Life is right now, in this moment, so the work is in tuning into the present and finding contentment and gratitude along the way. 

I leave you with this, what are you doing today to engage in the healing process? We all have old wounds that need mending. We all have parts of our past that are sitting in our psyche and body undigested or misunderstood. What are the first few steps to health and wellness in your life? Trust that when you are aligned in your core values, engaging in activities and with people you love and are inspired by, and are taking incremental steps towards your goals, you will tap into a reservoir of energy you didn’t realize was available.

 

*If you are searching for professional help, try starting here...

Everything is an offer

To live in the world of personal development means to be constantly face to face with your hypocrisy and your own areas of improvement. It's not easy. But, it also means a lot of excitement and pleasure as you see positive change in your life and feel the result of your hard work paying dividends. I have found that the concept of "intimacy without attachment" is a great reminder to find the balance point and contentment with the moment while in pursuit of betterment. It reminds me to be passionate and desire for more while embracing this moment as it is because I cannot control what the future holds. It also reminds me to conserve energy by expecting the unexpected and to behave in a way that allows others to also have freedom and space for growth. "Intimacy without attachment" is one of many concepts and mantras I use to create and conserve quality energy for my journey.  

I am mindful of the fact that my work, currently, is in playing with the balance between pragmatism and compassion. I have found that a way to conserve energy is to be picky with where I allow myself to be influenced by others, more specifically, who and where I invest my emotions. It's become a dance as I notice my energy getting pulled into someone else's struggle, I allow myself to feel it and send some love and empathy, but then I re-center myself with the reminder that it doesn't do us any good if I turn "your struggle" into "our struggle."

I have witnessed that I am much better at supporting a shift in perspective or leading by example when I allow myself to stay open and rise above the momentary struggle. While this is an efficient way to operate, the shadow side is that at times when emotional investment and a compassionate shoulder to cry on is needed, I will choose curiosity and protect my energy from being drained by other people's "problems." This is not good or bad, right or wrong, it is just something to notice and play with so that I can lay my head down each night and feel confident, proud and aligned in my decisions as I reflect on my day. I want to be felt as a compassionate, vulnerable, and supportive person. And I need to continually check in with myself to ensure that my intentions are showing up strong and true in my actions. 

 

What I find most interesting about this recent realization is that my response is to see it as an offer to open up a bit more and trust my own strength and capabilities. I rarely feel guilt or feel a loss of power when I see my intentions are not aligned with my actions, because I know that that takes time and energy. I see the error in my ways, I learn what I need to learn, I readjust my aim, and then I get back into the practice of living life.

I see these insights as an opportunity to practice being a better coach, a better friend, a better daughter and sister, and a better partner. Because I am far from perfect and I would love for my family and friends to see that I am trying hard to be the person they deserve to have in their life. 

Everything is an offer, if you let it be. Perspective can always be shifted to see what you may have missed or what you have not been habituated to see. It becomes an offer when you can choose to respond in ways that invite connection, acceptance and creativity. You spread this offer wide when you start your response to a situation with "YES, AND...." Perspective expands when you can see the potential all around you and open your mind to receive the feather into your calm soft palm rather than grasping and forcing. 

This blog post is inspired by this book. An amazing title and an even more amazing read. This book plays with the beautiful lessons we can take from the world of improvisation and how that can open your mind and life in ways you may not see as possi…

This blog post is inspired by this book. An amazing title and an even more amazing read. This book plays with the beautiful lessons we can take from the world of improvisation and how that can open your mind and life in ways you may not see as possible.

I would love to have an impact in this world that leads us towards mindful and balanced living. I would love to see everyone unplug more often and take their down-time seriously. I would love to see more people create some space in between their initial impulsive reaction and their thoughtful and grounded pragmatic response. I would love to see more people crack open and share what keeps them up at night and what fears creep into their minds during the day. I want to see more bold and brave creativity as people get out of their self-doubting heads and allow themselves to show up and make their passions known. I want to see people setting goals and achieving them, making bold requests and standing tall in their higher purpose, stretching the limits of what's possible and seeing beauty and life-affirming magic in stepping outside their comfort zone. 

That is why I lead by example and do my best to share what tools and conversations can support the process. I want you to create and conserve more quality energy so you can experience bliss, passion, excitement, pleasure and purpose in a balanced and sustainable way. 

So cheers to balance. Cheers to practice and play. And cheers to embracing our imperfections so that we can create space and conserve energy for the journey towards our best self. 

;)

photo by Mark Derry

photo by Mark Derry

The journey to self-worth

*photo by Mark Derry

I used to obsess about my body. I used to label myself as fat and ugly and unworthy of sustainable happiness. I used to rely on others' feedback - and of course, make up stories about others' non-verbal communication - to determine my self-worth. I used to spend the majority of my day dreading one thing after the next and would sit in blame and victim-hood anytime anything didn't go as I wanted or hoped it would go (during my hours of daydreaming about the future rather than being in the present).

I didn't feel truth in many of my choices and steered myself towards calamity simply to feel more alive for a few moments. I intentionally harmed myself because I was angry and lost and wanted a tangible reason to cry. 

My triggered state still often leads to disordered thoughts around food, body-image and self-worth; albeit, the intensity has considerably diminished. It is now a rare occurrence rather than a daily consistent state. 

I still have the personality that makes addiction a very real possibility to be mindful of, and have found it to be humorous when I notice the oxy-moronic nature of noticing addiction to personal development. Because I am prone to go to the extremes, I strive to focus on balance and moderation in all things. And when I do allow myself to do something a little more extreme, I need to make time for recovery and intentional self-care to ensure I don't burn out or do something out of alignment with my best-self. When you are tired or stressed, you are more likely to make impulsive decisions that feel good now, rather than sticking to the tried and true delayed gratification.

What is said about most addictions; even when you overcome it, you will always have the "disease." That sounds so damning and judgmental. While you could see it as a limitation, notice the shift in perspective if you choose to see it as an opportunity rather than a burden.

I have flipped the script and brought myself to a place of self-love, confidence and calm. I have developed the ability to truly tap into the spaces in between the sequence of events that leads to external action. I notice the impulse and know that compassion, curiosity and acceptance are the best first steps. I tell myself what I need to hear. I focus on my breath. I do what I can to conserve energy and create quality fuel so I can make an aligned and grounded choice in my thoughts and actions. 

We all get triggered into impulsive action or inaction. Isn't that why self-development is such a lucrative business to be in? While there are generally always going to be some outliers, mostly everyone wants to overcome perceived limitations. To notice where you feel a lack of lust for life and immense imbalance, to develop awareness and compassion while building sustainable traction with purpose and direction in your actions, and to overall create new habits in place of the ones that aren't serving you. We all have this shared struggle and subsequent desire, yet it manifests from a time when we had little control or input in how we lived or what we experienced; our childhood. 

What works for one person won't necessarily be what works for another. The best way to create the life of your dreams is to become the instigator, creator and facilitator. My goal is not to start my own tribe. My goal is to empower others to develop their unique capabilities and be guided by their own internal compass. 

Everything that I do at this point in my career is focused on empowering others. I teach yoga and spin and infuse strength and overcoming into the words I choose to use. I focus on music and experience to take people on a journey, to get out of their head and into their body. I host workshops and write blogs to share tools and ideas that worked well for me, and to support others in developing an internal conversation that will lead to breakthroughs. I coach people one on one, leading by example in how I live my life and create challenges and conversations that will meet my clients where they are at and direct them to their desired destination. And my book, a tell-all tale about my life and the many hard lessons I have learned. I found my biggest growth spurts by reading books, and am so excited to be close to launching my book out into the world. A book that will take the reader on a journey and will land on a road map that will support the reader long after that final page is turned. 

From desperation, I found my way. Life can be enjoyable and purposeful. The best part is, once you feel a sense of structure and have built in new habits, it is your moral and ethical code that guides you. You build your own road map and edit as you go. You have the creative power to design your life within the boundaries of your current existence, and with time and deliberate action (and intentional non-action), we see the beauty of cultivating a life manifested through balance, health, passion, and purpose.  

Self-worth is a journey to alignment. It is the feeling of being internally directed and motivated, while still being focused on others and your part in the overall well-being of human kind. We are unique beings with a personalized purpose, but we are also a part of the collective. Relationships are what makes the world prosper. Choose more love, compassion and curiosity. The path will unfold when you stop getting in your own way. 

xoxo

 

Set & Flow

I am so excited to be creating an ongoing collaboration with my friend Jordan Smuszko at his space The Village (4039 Brentwood Road NW). Our goal is to host a simple event that is focused on mindful movement and building forward momentum as I guide you through a journal session at the end to reflect on the past month and create actions and good vibes for the month ahead. 

Every first Sunday of each month, we will meet from 7 to 815pm, and we ask that you arrive 15 minutes early to sign a waiver and have some time to chill on your mat before we begin. We also want to make this as accessible and sustainable as possible, so we are asking for only a $10 cash drop-in (or $12 on credit card). If there is a good turn out and there is a want for more of these classes, we will be happy to add more. So show up and be a part of this movement!

This is an amazing way to build in some accountability and spend your Sunday evening with power, intention, and some inspiring people. 

Here are the dates for the summer. No need to register before hand, just show up and be ready to flow. All levels welcome!

Sunday June 4, 7pm

Sunday July 2, 7pm

Sunday August 6, 7pm

Meet Andrea Saliba

 

Andrea Saliba is a powerhouse. We met online, as she leads a busy and beautiful life in Vancouver BC. As many of you know, I struggled for many years with an eating disorder, depression and anxiety, and I am so inspired by people like Andrea who aim to encourage others to lead the healthiest life possible both mentally and physically.

Mother to three beautiful kids and a boss-babe running her own nutrition and health coaching business, you got to check this chick out ;)

 

1. What gets you up in the morning?

  •  My kids are a huge motivation for me. What I do, how I act and how I start my day is setting the tone for them and leading an example. 

 

2. What is your morning routine to tap into your ideal mindset?

  •  Every morning, I wake up at 5:30am before anyone else and I meditate for 10-15 min. I focus on what I am grateful for, how I want my day to go and on my future goals.

It really has been life changing for me and something I tell all my clients to do also.

 

3. What was your biggest failure that turned into the best thing that ever happened to you?

  •  I prefer to call them bumps along the road. Each mistake has made me stronger and actually has brought me closer to my spiritual side to which I can now use in my practice.

 

4. What are three things most people don’t know about you?

  •   I have a crazy sweet tooth; that YES, I do occasionally indulge!
  •   I have suffered from anxiety in the past 
  •   I am very direct and to the point. No beating around the bushes.

 

5. What are your goals this year?

  • My goals this year is meet new people who need my service. Id love to reach out and help more people towards getting their health on track. 

 

6. What is your current struggle?

  • I have been finding it difficult to balance my work, education and being a Mom/Wife. I feel pulled into many directions but ultimately, my family always comes first. 

 

7. What reminder do YOU need to keep yourself motivated this week?

  • A beautiful quote I saw the other day reminds me to keep moving forward, it goes; “That beautiful flower was once a tiny seed dropped in dirt, covered in darkness, & struggled to reach the light. Don’t give up. Keep growing.” -unknown 

 

8. Where can we find you throughout the week?

  • Usually at the gym either workout for myself or instructing others and coaching clients.

 

9. What do you specialize in as a coach? 

  • I specialize in creating meal and lifestyle plans for clients that want to see real change in their lives. This is a customized plan and not a 'Fad' diet. This is learning to incorporate the tools needed to see real results that are life long. 

 

10. What does your coaching program entail (whatever details you would like to share)?

  • I offer meal plans, 1-on-1 coaching, guided grocery shopping and hosting events. 

 

11. What is one of the coolest things you have learned about nutrition recently?

  • I have found that how the mind and body are connected very interesting and empowering. 

Deliberately Developmental

I am reading a fascinating book right now called An Everyone Culture: Becoming a Deliberately Development Organization, by Robert Kegan and Lisa Lahey (any quotes below are from this book). In my own pursuit of continuing my development and being a catalyst for positive change in others, I have found many books that I deem to be game changers in my own thinking. This has become one of them.

 

What does it mean to be deliberately developmental? It is a commitment to growth at the expense of comfort and ease. It is an "investment in loss" - a phrase coined by performance coach Josh Waitzkin - which refers to the premium awarded to those who look at their weaknesses as untapped potential and see their "failures" as opportunities for growth. It is a mindset that trains our brain to be on the lookout for growth opportunities and excited by challenges. It is a belief that growth is a passionate and valuable pursuit that brings purpose and excitement into every single day. And it is the understanding that, even in big business, a focus on personal development will improve and strengthen culture, progress, and success for everyone involved. 

While this book is speaking to the amazing qualities of companies that are able to develop a culture of growth and betterment, it also sparked my curiosity in what it looks like to be an individual who wants to be deliberate in their development regardless of where they work. In an attempt to simplify this work and assist myself in integrating this knowledge into my current repertoire, I have broken this down into the five steps to become deliberately developmental. Here goes...

1. Surround yourself with others who are invested in personal development. 

We all have weaknesses. We all have blind spots. We all have shadows and parts of ourselves that are under-developed or not fully understood. When you can find a community of people who are all willing and ready to pursue excellence in themselves and who see the value in supporting the pursuit of excellence in others, suddenly a world of possibility opens up. Imagine what could happen when you engage in a culture that makes you feel safe and open to make mistakes yet a steadfast rule that makes it unacceptable not to identify, analyze, and learn from them.

"A Better Me + A Better You = A Better Us"  

 

2. Look for thought-cycles that are wasting your energy and remove them from your mind. 

In the book, they say "winning is less valuable than what we learn by losing in the pursuit of excellence." When you can shift your perception so to not waste energy feeling bad about yourself when you fail, you can then use that energy to love what you learned without losing momentum. 

"Pain + Reflection (in a safe environment) = Progress"

One of the biggest transformations I have made in my life is the ability to step back and be pragmatic with my assessment of my thoughts or emotions. Whatever you focus on you create more of. Your attention focuses on small aspects of reality and can exaggerate with stories based on the emotions we are feeling. Notice what you are focusing on, and recognize that a simple shift in perspective can make the difference between running from fear versus standing tall in the face of fear. Whatever you pay attention to, that is what you experience. So acknowledge that whatever is on your mind now, is just one point within a limitless number of possible points, connections, or perspectives that are available. The way you talk to yourself and what you allow your mind to focus on are the keys to creating and sustaining positive change. Just because you habitually think a certain way, doesn't make it any more true or real than a possible new habit. 

 

3. Know the Three Adult Plateaus, where you are, and how to progress to the next level.

The Socialized Mind: This is the first level where most adults stay for their entire existence. At this phase, "we are shaped by the definitions and expectations of our personal environment." What we consider to be our "self" is aligned and loyal to that which it identifies. This is a simple and binding contract that coheres in the expectations we perceive in our relationships. You are more likely to get stuck in negative comparisons, sit in judgments, or waste energy in shame or embarrassment. 

For example, someone at this level will know their role and will operate mainly with the assumptions of what they believe others want to hear. They will be highly sensitive to what they hear or see others do, and are more likely to "read between the lines" and be effected by nonverbal communication without an understanding of what is intentional versus accidental.

Someone at this level is more prone to gossip, more prone to being offended, and more likely to toe the line rather than be creative and open to assessing the situation. 

To begin growing out of this phase, one must develop the ability to see what they were once subject to," or controlled by, and gradually become aware of the "object" something that can also be looked at rather than only looked through. This is done with practicing awareness. Taking a step back to notice as you make decisions or feel emotional shifts in your body. Notice what your patterns are and where you get in your own way. Once you have developed the ability to stop before you respond, you suddenly have the choice-point to shift the direction of your energy and thoughts to pave a new connection towards questioning what you have done on auto-pilot for years. Get curious.

 

4. The Self-Authoring Mind: At this phase you "are able to step back enough from the social environment to generate an internal seat of judgement, or personal authority, that evaluates and makes choices about external expectations." Rather than being fixated on the expectations of your environment, you operate based on your alignment with your own own belief systems, ideology, or personal code. You are still abiding by the expectations of your role, but you see more flexibility and room for creative thinking, knowing that you can do this while being self-directed and guided by your own moral-compass. 

In regards to communication, at this level, you are more likely to relay what you think others need or ought to hear, while grounded in the bigger picture of the mission at hand. "Consciously or unconsciously, I have a direction, an agenda, a stance, a strategy, or an analysis of what is needed - a prior context from which my communication arises." This is less about fitting in and more about expressing yourself and adding value to a project or situation. It is the recognition that you can be uniquely you, driven by your own values and objectives, while contributing to the greater whole and being a part of the larger machine. 

  

5. The Self-Transforming Mind: Few people are at this level, which makes it that much more of a valuable commodity in the workplace. With this mindset and capability, you "can step back from and reflect on the limits of your own ideology or personal authority; see that any one system or self-organization is in some way partial or incomplete; be friendlier toward contradiction and opposites; seek to hold on to multiple systems rather than project all except one onto the other." While you know your role and your part to play in the greater machine, you also recognize the fallibility of every system and practice an ongoing assessment of "what's missing?", "what are my blind-spots here?", "how can this be wrong?", "what is true here?", "what could make this better?"

 

Understanding these three levels of mental complexity is crucial when we address the importance of communication and development in any system. Imagine a workplace where everyone was operating at the self-authoring or self-transforming level. The efficiency, the growth, the self-leadership, and the ease of connecting and maintaining relationships would save so much time in the long run. 

As is the case with anything I am curious about, consider this to be another seed planted in that beautiful brain of yours. Get curious about ways to build development into whatever culture you are a part of. Get curious about ways you can take on your own development. Our mind's are capable of so much more than whatever your current state is. Keep learning. Keep asking yourself quality questions and create empowering thought patterns that bring quality fuel into your system. We all want more control in our life, and I have found that when I understand more about how my mind and body works, I gain more and more control over the direction and design of my own life. Get curious xoxo

Understanding these three levels of mental complexity is crucial when we address the importance of communication and development in any system. Imagine a workplace where everyone was operating at the self-authoring or self-transforming level. The efficiency, the growth, the self-leadership, and the ease of connecting and maintaining relationships would save so much time in the long run. 

As is the case with anything I am curious about, consider this to be another seed planted in that beautiful brain of yours. Get curious about ways to build development into whatever culture you are a part of. Get curious about ways you can take on your own development. Our mind's are capable of so much more than whatever your current state is. Keep learning. Keep asking yourself quality questions and create empowering thought patterns that bring quality fuel into your system. We all want more control in our life, and I have found that when I understand more about how my mind and body works, I gain more and more control over the direction and design of my own life. Get curious xoxo

Sneak Peak into my book Be The Change......

Hey everyone, 

The last ten days have been fascinating as my kickstarter campaign has been public and I am witnessing my own cycles of self-talk through this process. The day I launched this campaign I was full of excitement and possibility. It felt so good to finally be at the point of reaching out for support and hiring a couple professionals to support me in getting this book into the best shape possible. Day 2 rolled around and I was struck with the possibility of such a public failure if this campaign doesn't work. I had a few moments of self-doubt as I wondered what made me think this is something I could get hundreds of people on board with supporting. I got through that because of the kind and wise words of many friends who reminded me that this project is not about me, but about the many people I am inspired to support and share my story with. And, when it comes down to it, I need to practice what I preach. A failure does not mean a final failure unless I let it. Everything is learning. If this campaign doesn't work, then I am back to the drawing board, adjusting my aim, and then back to it. Suddenly I felt the weight of the world roll off my shoulders.

A few more days in and I got into a groove of ensuring I talk about the campaign everyday and send off emails with ideas and enrolling others in supporting the project. I am happy to say that I am 11 days in and 24% of the way to my goal! I have 28 days left to get to my goal, otherwise the money pledged goes back to the generous and supportive people who have opted in to support this project so far. I need momentum to reach my goal. And that means I need an army of people alongside me, excited for the potential of this book, and eager to help me spread the word. 

So, today's strategy: As I sat down to do some edits this morning, I decided it is time to share more of what this book looks like. Below I have pasted Chapter 9. There is still some work to be done, but this is where it is for now. Feel free to let me know what you think or if you have suggestions to make it even better - keeping in mind that there are eight chapters leading up to it and two chapters after. 

Thanks for your time and consideration. I would be thrilled and forever grateful to have YOU help me share this link and spread my message of vulnerability, strength, and road-map to creating your best life possible. We are all heroes and full of potential. It's time to get out of your own way. 

 

Chapter 9: Transformation

“Your brain responds with the strategies it has learned.” Loretta Breuning

“It is always darkest before the dawn.” This iconic phrase speaks volumes of truths when I look back on my life. Although I felt broken again, this was my chance to rebuild my life, my beliefs, my habits, and my neural pathways, to support the person I truly was deep down. The complete loss of the foundation beneath your feet is a terrible opportunity to waste. I knew it wouldn’t be easy but I also knew that I couldn’t go back to the belief system I had before. My journey as a philosopher had truly begun. I had my big question: “Is radical change truly possible and sustainable? If so, how do I make it happen?” 

 

Relationship with Death

One thing was clear: I needed to change my relationship with death. But how? Although it is terribly painful and difficult at first, I have developed a habit of thinking about death daily. I contemplate my mortality. I express gratitude for another day of health and connections. I stay real with this tumultuous fact of life: death is coming for us all.

In an article written on the BBC travel website[1], writer Eric Weiner depicts his lessons learned on his recent trip to Thimphu, the capital of Bhutan. Titled “Bhutan’s Dark Secret to Happiness,” the article paints a picture of the Bhutan culture and their tradition of thinking about death five times a day. Known for its policy on Gross National Happiness, this society emphasizes the importance of sustainable development through non-economic aspects of well-being. To them, they have found a correlation between happiness and contemplating death. Weiner points out that, “as Buddhists say, you shouldn’t fear dying any more than you fear discarding old clothes.”

Other than retraining your brain to contemplate and dance with the uncertainty that arises with death, how else can we start to curb our body’s overactive fight or flight response and tap into the energy of balance? It is exhausting and frustrating to feel stressed, anxious, and fearful throughout your day. We all have so much going on in our lives and at times the responsibilities on our shoulders can feel like a weight too heavy to carry. It is important to find time every day to reconnect with yourself. Slow down and connect with your breath and shine light on the benefits of wherever you are in this moment.

We have goals. We strive to be better, smarter, more successful, more experienced, more attractive, and more respected but that doesn’t have to be a trade-off for joy and contentment in the moment at hand. Challenge yourself to spend ten minutes each day (I find it best to do this in the morning) to take a step back and notice how you feel and what habits you are engaging in that no longer serve who you want to be. A consistent yoga practice with a teacher who reminds you of the jewel of being present will help a lot as well.

The moment you feel stress, anxiety, or fear reaching for the wheel, you can implement the techniques of mindfulness to redirect energy away from the fight or flight response and towards the problem-solving area of your brain by asking yourself quality introspective questions. The quality of your question will determine the quality of your answer and, ultimately, the quality of your mindset. Avoid bringing in judgement and unnecessary victimizing by asking “why does this always happen to me?” or “what’s wrong with me?” or “why does everybody else have it easier than me?” Rather, spark curiosity and a desire to understand by asking “how do I want to show up here?” or “what do I really want out of this?” or “how do I want to feel at the end of today?” or “what reminders do I need here to ensure I lean into this struggle?”

 

Future Fear

Much of the fear we fall victim to can be categorized as "future fear." When we are in actual immediate danger, we react and our body does the job of getting us out of danger's way, without much thought or deliberation. The sensation of fear that is generally spoken about is the fear of potential danger in the future. Fear of death. Fear that we won't get what we want. Fear that something is lurking around the next corner. Fear that we aren't strong enough or capable enough to handle what life throws at us. Fear that life won't turn out the way we want it to.

When we talk about fear, the real question to ask is: “how do we overcome the fear of the future and go on living life in present?”

Our fear of the future is a result of our over-protective system that sees uncertainty and assumes the worst will happen. The goal is to understand that the feeling of fear is simply energy flowing down a neural pathway, a finger pointing at what needs to be healed in your life, or a made-up prediction of what's to come that gives us a sensation of uneasiness. 

For example: why do you fear making the wrong choice? You may have a limiting belief telling you that bad things happen when you make the wrong choice. This may have been true once, at one time, in one situation, but as a blanketed "rule of thumb" it does not allow for the complexity of the human condition or the importance of learning by making mistakes.

As I engaged in this conversation of life and death, I learned to approach my health differently. Working out was no longer about looking good, it was about keeping my brain and body in shape to handle life’s curve balls. Although I had not had a near-death experience, this intense contemplation of death felt like an opportunity to reshape my modus operandi. Death turned into a beautiful aspect of life that allowed me to relearn how I wanted to show up and how I wanted to feel moment to moment. I don’t want to be blindsided by death's grip. I don’t want to be on my death bed and wonder why I didn’t live more fully and enjoy life while I had the chance. I don’t want to lose a loved one and then realize I never fully expressed my love or admiration for who they were. I think about death every day as a reminder that life is happening right now and I want to drink up every ounce of experience and beauty within this magical thing called life. And I know that movement, sweat, and challenges are actually what build resilience and keep my Elephant and Rider working harmoniously.

 

Motion is Lotion

While working to create these new habits and build new relationships with these complex concepts of our psyche, you have got to keep your body moving! There is something about a good sweat session that seems to make life’s struggles a little more digestible. I can be in a rotten mood with a heavy heart due to various struggles in my day or life. But when I get moving, connect with my breath, and get some sweat rolling down my back, suddenly I realize I have been taking life a little too seriously. With each bead of sweat I can feel my worries melting off my shoulders.

Too much stress can begin to erode the connections you have worked hard to create and, over time, certain parts of your brain can actually begin to shrink. Luckily, we now know regeneration is a skill we can harness as we recover from life’s traumas and exercise is one sure-fire way to promote that process. Exercise can cause our neurons to actually grow and create new connections that enhance our brain’s functionality exponentially.

The act of getting your heart rate up and engaging with your breath in a mindful and intentional manner brings your bodily system back to equilibrium. It also releases a few growth hormones in your brain to aid in mood balancing, memory, learning, coping with future stress, and an overall sense of happiness and control. 

Whether you make time in the morning as part of your routine or get a sweat in at lunch or after work, it is important to make this a priority. Don’t think of this just as time to work on your body but rather as a pivotal ingredient in keeping your mind healthy, stable, and open.

As my yoga teacher Nora Maskey says: “motion is lotion.” Exercise creates the biological changes and conditions necessary for growth but what you do with that potential is up to you.

 

“To keep our brains at peak performance, our bodies need to work hard.”

John Ratey

 

Birth of dope(a)me

With my ever-increasing collection of knowledge and passion for the mind-body connection, I was able to begin the process of coaching myself out of depressive states. I was making huge strides but I still felt like something was missing. In a fun-filled weekend in the summer of 2011, I finally had the paradigm shift moment I so badly craved. I branded my business — dope(a)me — from this experience as it was a vital piece to this ever-expanding puzzle.

I was in Vancouver visiting friends. The sun was shining and I was in the mood for a new experience and adventure. My friend had some MDMA and I was excited to let loose. For those of you who do not know, MDMA acts as a serotonin-norepinephrine-dopamine releasing agent and reuptake inhibitor. This means that not only does it release these happy chemicals that produce a feeling of euphoria, extreme empathy, connection, and motivation, but it also blocks the reuptake so your system is swimming in these high-vibes. This drug is not for everyone and my intention here is to not glamorize or encourage experimentation because my anecdotal experience does not ensure yours would be the same. I was warned that I would most likely have a rough “down period” as the drugs left my system, leaving me depleted until my body could recover from the experience. “Reality just isn’t as sweet after you have experienced life on ‘dizzles’ (one of many slang terms for MDMA),” I was told. For me, life became sweeter.

An hour after I ingested the magic pill, I found myself walking through downtown Vancouver on my own, smiling at everyone I passed by and dialling up one friend after another to tell them how much I loved them. I felt superb, free, detached from stress or worry, excited about whatever my future held, and so in tune with the present moment. This experience compounded into a revelation — I have felt like this before. When I eat a mindful, balanced and nourishing diet, get the sleep that I need, sweat, push outside my comfort zone, engage with inspiring and empowering people, create and actively support people around me…I feel a natural high.

I was sick and tired of feeling like I was missing the key ingredients to a happy life. I had been searching for passion and purpose yet I had neglected the wisdom and power that I already had within me. My MDMA experience made me realize that I am full and complete already and that, when I shift my perspective and mindset, I experience a different reality. This is the way I wanted to live my life. I had known moments with this feeling before but I wanted sustainable happiness and fewer (if any) depressive episodes. I did not want to depend on drugs, outside validation, or place my future happiness in the hands of a goal or accomplishment that would only bring me fleeting rewards. I wanted that internal, deep-rooted sense of happiness and freedom. I was ready and committed to turn my life around and live in a way that would produce this feeling of euphoria and contentment.

That pivotal moment sparked a curiosity to understand these happy chemicals and what it takes to create a natural high on a daily basis in a real, healthy, and sustainable way. I explored, researched, conversed with experts, and practiced with tools and ideas that I found or created. I realized that knowing about this mind-body connection could open my mind to a new way of thinking. I began to see my emotions as by-products of my thoughts and actions. I was no longer a victim of circumstance. I found my treasure. I began to lean into my fears and struggles as opportunities to grow and understand myself even more. I created a system that supported me in retraining my brain into healthier and more fun habits of thought and action which, consequentially, increased my overall happiness.

Knowing about these happy chemicals, how to create them, how to keep them in balance, and how to recognize when time and attention needed to be spent to elevate them, has been life changing for me and my clients. When we actively and mindfully engage in activities that boost our happy chemicals on a daily basis, consciously let go of stale habits, thoughts and actions that are deflating, and create a mindset that focuses on growth and progress versus perfection and comparisons, we can increase our happiness baseline.

 

Happy Chemicals

“The feeling we call ‘happiness’ comes from four special brain chemicals: dopamine, endorphin, oxytocin, and serotonin. These ‘happy chemicals’ spurt when your brain sees something good for your survival. Then they turn off, so they’re ready to spurt again when something good crosses your path.”

Meet Your Happy Chemicals by Loretta Breuning

 

What are these magical happy chemicals? Where do they come from? What do you need to know about them? To be the change you want to see in yourself and in the world, you need the motivation, the tools, the path and the support. Once you are clear on your core values, your goals and the daily and incremental steps needed to align yourself with who you truly want to be, getting those happy chemicals pumping daily will make the journey so much smoother and a lot more fun.

 

Here are the basics you need to know about your happy chemicals:

 

Dopamine

From an evolutionary perspective, as hunters and gatherers, life was strenuous and required the exertion of a lot of energy to find the basics for living. Dopamine is the happy chemical that spurts when you find something you have learned promotes your survival, and in turn, creates momentum in productivity, motivation for action, and an overall feeling of pleasure. Our deeply rooted programming rewards us with this pleasurable chemical which gives us energy to complete our task and feel a sense of accomplishment.

It is the feeling of a second-wind when you hear your spin motivator announce the last track of the playlist. The feeling of pride when you pull that banana bread out of the oven. The feeling of satisfaction when you guess what your partner will say next and you are right. It is the feeling of motivation when you check items off your to-do list. Dopamine feels good! You feel jazzed on life and brave in your actions. Nothing beats the motivating feeling of dopamine.

             But as we know, too much of a good thing is no longer a good thing. Dopamine is a tricky chemical because, although it releases good feelings, it feels so good that we can easily fall into the trap of more, more, more. This is the chemical of addiction. We fall in love with that first high and spend the rest of our life in search of that same feeling. The problem is, our body craves novelty and you will not find that same good feeling by doing the same thing over and over.

A good practice to be in is to be consistent in noticing your own patterns and habits. When you get attached or addicted to a sensation, it no longer is serving you, rather, you are serving it.

Although we want to be mindful to not get addicted to our pursuit of more dopamine, there are some ways to produce this naturally and mindfully in your daily routine. Dopamine is released when you work up a sweat, set goals and take incremental steps to get there, create a to-do list and check things off as you go, practice yoga or mindful movement with intentional and focused breathing, eat a healthy and well-rounded diet including foods rich in tyrosine (i.e. bananas, avocado, almonds, green tea, chocolate, eggs, yogurt, etc.), and create a constant reason to seek as you collect experiences, resources, or knowledge. This chemical of motivation aids in sleep, memory, efficient action, mood, and overall cognitive ability and flexibility.

John Ratey tells us, in his brilliant book SPARK, that “[dopamine] works like transmission fluid: if there’s not enough…attention can’t easily be shifted or can only be shifted all the way into high gear.”

This makes it extremely important to find ways to elevate your dopamine levels daily and fuel the reserve tank that allows for balanced action as opposed to extreme swings from total exertion to complete lack of motivation.

 

Serotonin

Our ancestors learned quickly that we are stronger and more capable when we work together as a tribe. We adapted to strive for acknowledgement and to crave the feeling of importance, as it signaled higher chances of safety. Serotonin is the happy chemical that spurts when you do something that furthers your (real or perceived) integral role within a group. It enhances our desire for social dominance, respect, and status. It is also the reason we are in a constant state of one-upmanship and comparison. When serotonin is low, we naturally see the lives and accomplishments of others with a golden hue. We inherited a brain that seeks status and we lose serotonin and get the buzz of cortisol when we find ourselves in a low-status position, which can occur several times throughout your day.

Serotonin feels like safety, respect and confidence. It aids in emotional balancing, bowel regulation, and cognitive flexibility. John Ratey refers to serotonin as “the policeman of the brain because it helps keep brain activity under control. It influences mood, impulsivity, anger, and aggressiveness (2008).” Serotonin is a powerful antidote to fear and anxiety as it targets the brainstem and amygdala directly, the areas of the brain where our programmed and habitual reactions come from.

When you are in a low serotonin state it can feel like something is wrong with the world. Your subconscious mind does not care about being rational: it views a low-status position as a survival threat. Putting others down or being a cynic about life in general is a common reaction — and safeguard — to this feeling of low-status (Breuning…). You get a boost of serotonin when you knit-pick at others to momentarily make yourself feel like the better person. It can also feel good to be a cynic about life, because every time something “bad” happens, this confirms that you were “right.” A met expectation, regardless of whether it is anabolic or catabolic, feels good.

       What do we do with this information? Once you can recognize these reactions and impulses as your subconscious doing its very best to promote your survival, it becomes easier to love yourself for trying and then choosing a new way to respond. If your mind is seeking status, take some time to write out a gratitude journal or acknowledge yourself for what is going well in your life. Take time daily to acknowledge what you are proud of, allowing yourself to see the advantages and beauty in where you are now. Note that your status will naturally go up and down throughout your day, and develop the ability to notice when you feel low-status so you can practice doing something healthy about it, rather than show-boating or simply posting a selfie on your social media. This is a conversation to get into with friends, family and partners. In any healthy relationship, there is a dance and ebb and flow between high and low status. We all need to feel that high-status position occasionally and can find it more often when you are in a partnership that honours that need.

You also get some of this happy chemical by engaging in mindful movement and aerobic exercise, getting sunshine and fresh air, working on a hobby or something you feel skilled at, letting go of comparisons, and opening yourself to new opportunities.

With too much serotonin we experience lack of impulse control, depression, and seasonal affective disorder (Ratey 2008). Think of our bodies like machines. With too much or too little of the oil needed to function, problems arise.  

Through this practice, we need to continue reminding ourselves to seek balance. We are not meant to feel the high-vibes of happy chemicals all day, every day. Can you breathe in contentment even when you are aware that you are currently in a low-status position? Can you breathe in gratitude even when you are not thrilled with the way your day is going? Can you breathe in trust and courage even when you feel the uncertainty and unpredictability of life all around you? Ultimately, serotonin courses through your system when you tap into your unique purpose, allowing your light to shine in this world. Carve your own path and remind yourself daily of what makes your life a gift: serotonin will come along for the ride.

 

Oxytocin

This is the “love chemical.” We have survived and prospered because we reproduce. This chemical promotes survival with the desire for heartfelt social bonds, loving relationships, and positive interactions. From an evolutionary perspective, those who could create trusting and loving relationships had a better chance of survival as well as the opportunity to create and sustain offspring. Although we have a strong impulse for independence and a personalized experience of reality, we also recognize the need for social support and connection. We are powerful on our own but we are limitless when we come together.

Oxytocin is released when you receive or deliver tender love and care. It feels like safety, trust, love, and connection. It is an amnestic hormone which means it has the ability to wipe out previous neural pathways that lead to past lovers, as well as the ability to store faint memories of the pain of childbirth. When you reach out to give and receive support, this actually protects your cardiovascular system from the harmful effects of stress, anxiety, and fear. It works as a natural anti-inflammatory, and helps signal a state of relaxation and calm, even during stressful life events.

There are also oxytocin receptors in your heart which help heal and regenerate cells from damage. Which means that even in the face of fear or the grips of stress, if we can focus on love and get some oxytocin flowing, we will recover quicker both emotionally and physically (Rankin 2015).

The iconic saying is true: “love is the answer.” But of course, too much of this chemical can lead to undesirable outcomes as well. Because of its emphasis on bonds and connection, it can lead to “othering” as we are wary to connect with someone we just met or trust someone we consider to not be in our “tribe.” Be mindful of the tendency of creating an “us” versus “them” mentality for no other reason than the sense of safety and belonging we get from this othering. I have found that when I focus on inclusivity as a core value, I am not sucked into the exclusive impulse this “othering” can create.

You can create oxytocin naturally — although you should still be mindful of the urge to swim in this all day, every day — by listening to soothing music, focusing on love and compassion in your responses, engaging in meditative breath, laughing, having sex, getting a twenty second hug, connecting with friends and family, or working up a sweat while laughing and connecting with those around you.

 

These chemicals are all interconnected and somewhat complicated. If you engage in an activity expecting to get a happy chemical boost, your strategic formula might not get the same result you might have gotten in the past. It is best to understand how to create a lifestyle that keeps these chemicals flowing but it is equally important to pay attention to what unique quantities your bodily system requires for balance.

Chemicals are released by our subconscious and target different areas of our body, not just our mind. As we have discussed, while we engage in self-talk in our conscious mind, this powerful chemical communication is governed by our habitual and pleasure-seeking subconscious system. While we can cognitively know that we do not want to eat five donuts, have a one night stand, or let our partner or boss walk all over us, our subconscious wants to feel good and will keep fighting to get you to feel pleasure now. It takes time, patience and a whole lot of love to retrain our subconscious mind to see pleasure in growth, good vibes in standing up for ourselves, and comfort in self-love and healthy food choices. It simply is a matter of perception, a shift in your expectations of your own actions, and a change in your mental model of how you view your will power and discipline. 

Again, we did not evolve to feel good all the time. It is important to note that you need to have the basic building blocks of a healthy and balanced life in order to get the full range of benefits from these chemicals. As I often state while teaching yoga, we first need stability, then mobility, then look to add strength. Without the steady foundation of nourishing food, nourishing thoughts, nourishing relationships, hydration, sleep, sweat, and the practice of learning, we cannot generate a stable lifestyle and healthy mindset.

Know that everyone is different. What works for me is not what will necessarily work for you. As you get used to an activity that once produced a huge spurt of juicy happy chemicals, the effects begin to diminish as your mind and body craves novelty to keep these chemicals flowing. Stay open and curious to what you are feeling and allow each day to be an adventure.

We now know that our brain is flexible and resilient. Our brain is adaptable and capable of much more than we realize. Use it or lose it. The more you use it and the more you understand it, the stronger and more flexible it will be.

As you develop a new routine of actively engaging in activities that produce happy chemicals, remember that creating new habits takes time and patience.

 

“Building new circuits in adulthood is like trying to slash a new trail through dense rainforest. Every step takes huge effort, and the new trail disappears into the undergrowth if you don’t use it again soon. Such trailblazing feels inefficient and downright unsafe when a nice superhighway [i.e. habit] is nearby. That’s why people tend to stick with the pathways they have.”

Meet Your Happy Chemicals by Loretta Breuning, PHD

 

Reflect, Learn, Grow:

 

1.      What do you really want out of life?

 

2.      How do you need to show up each day to create momentum towards what you really want?

 

3.      What does your ideal morning routine look like to tap into your ideal state of mind?

 

4.      What are key reminders for you to ensure you are actively engaging in activities and thoughts that produce happy chemicals?

 

[1] http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/20150408-bhutans-dark-secret-to-happiness, April 8, 2015

Kickstarter

I launched my kickstarter for my book on April 4 and am ready for an exciting and nerve-racking 39 days left on the campaign. Check it out here....

The past couple of months I have made a lot of progress in getting this book ready for the world. It still needs some professional help with final edits and I am hiring a graphic designer to support me in making a cover and high-quality images and diagrams for inside the book. The process of writing this book has been therapeutic and expansive. It has evolved to become so much more than I originally envisioned. 

I have had several moments of self-doubt over the past couple of weeks which has been really fascinating to sit with. I write a lot about fear and resistance and it becomes an interesting experience to deal with it while attempting to write about it in a simple and tangible way. I am working through some of my deepest ingrained limiting beliefs due to this project and I am so thankful for that. It is instilling the confidence in me I need to speak powerfully about this book.

In an attempt to share more about what this book is and why I am encouraging a movement, I want to share a blurb from the final chapter. My goal is to talk openly about my past struggles (some current struggles) in order to change the way many of us approach mental health in our own minds and in our attempts to support others. If you do not personally struggle with mental health imbalances, then you know someone who does. When we are able to know more about how our mind and body works we are much better equipped to make the changes necessary to grow out of the darkness and stand tall in our light. I want to lead by example in this and motivate as many people as I can to trust in their own ability to rise above the dark or negative patterns they have become accustomed to. 

*From Chapter 11: My Gift...

"With all of this work in your back pocket, we come back to where we started. Is there an objective truth or goal that we are all striving for? Once we have the foundation set, is there one concept that keeps us on track? Is it balance? Contentment? Living life with purpose? What’s the most important thing? What is my gift to the world? What is yours?

Perhaps the wisdom we are seeking is in the questions themselves. In our day and age, progress and change is happening at an exponential rate. What makes sense today is not necessarily going to be accepted as cutting-edge or relevant tomorrow.

In the fascinating book But What if We’re Wrong? by Chuck Klosterman, the author takes us on a journey of anecdotes to summarize the impossibility of knowing what the future will deem as important and from this we must acknowledge that within our predictions we need the assumption that we are wrong. He notes that it is not that we are failing to make coherent and reasoned conclusions, but rather the problem arises in our lack of asking the right questions or seeing the full picture.

In order to accept our potential wrongness as an inherent part of planning for our future, what we need is a mindset that emphasizes the importance of adaptability and mindfulness to see more importance in our chosen response after our programmed reaction. What we need is to be receptive to our ever-changing environment and allow our inner-evolution to be one guided by love (self-love included), compassion (including towards ourselves), and curiosity (including noticing and being curious about your own patterns of thought and action). What we need is the ability to find contentment in each moment because this present moment is where the magic of life awaits.  

Being open and flexible to what the future holds is clearly a valuable quality to practice. How can we build a strong foundation of meaning and purpose while entertaining the possibilities of an unpredictable future?

In Victor E. Frankl’s classic book, Man’s Search for Meaning, Frankl displays his determined spirit and resilient mind while enduring the brutality of the holocaust. He says that

“[e]verything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms—to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way. . . When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves.”

Frankl reminds us that there is a lot in life that we cannot control, and when we are face-to-face with the question of “what is life’s purpose,” it is up to each one of us to answer this call from within our own being. We can only respond by being fully responsible for our energy. He urges us to “[l]ive as if you were living a second time, and as though you had acted wrongly the first time. . . Those who have a 'why' to live, can bear with almost any 'how'.”

Whether you are seeking a purpose or meaning to live up to or simply want to feel the rapture of being fully alive and present, it is up to you to create the life you want to live.

While it is helpful to understand the neuroscience of happiness and habits, it is not the be all end all. Meaning, joy, contentment, and purpose are fluid and cannot be boxed and contained like a formula. As soon as I think I have life figured out, my heart cracks open and I am overwhelmed with comparisons, shoulds, what-ifs, worries, and sadness. “How can I be here again?” I ask myself. “I thought I had overcome this darkness” I tell myself. But then I remember that our universe is ever-expanding and full of stark contrasts. We must dance with the balance and sometimes that means falling below our power to heal and rebuilding a stronger foundation and pathway towards our higher purpose and contentment with what is."

 

Let me know what you think! And if you feel compelled to support or share this project with your circle of influence, I will be forever grateful. xoxoxox

 

 

 

Get to know Nora Maskey

I met Nora Maskey just over two years ago, and she has taught, supported and uplifted me so much that I feel we have known each other for a lifetime. She was one of my teachers who I was trained as a Yoga Teacher from, she has opened herself up to my coaching services, she has mentored me in my own teaching, and she continues to be my teacher and friend. 

I asked Nora a few questions to dig a little deeper in who she is and I am privileged and excited to share what she had to say. If you know Nora, this will be a nice treat to hear her words. If you have not met Nora, I hope to inspire you to check out one of her many classes throughout the week and open yourself up to the years of wisdom and bountiful energy of love and passion she so generously shares with others. 

Check out her website here....

1. What gets you up in the morning?

I get excited by the opportunity to learn and grow. Each day offers renewed possibilities to learn more about those things I am passionate about, not to mention learning more about life and myself, too!

 

 2. What is your morning routine to tap into your ideal mindset?

Having a tendency towards introversion, I spend a couple of hours by myself in the mornings. I sit and contemplate, read, journal what I'm grateful for and have my breakfast in silence. This routine helps me feel grounded and present. Then I'm ready for my day! 

 

3. What was your biggest failure that turned into the best thing that ever happened to you?

This is a tough one and I would say it was not getting into grad school. It was a blow to my ego at the time, and a blessing because it led me down the path of teaching yoga instead of academics.  

 

4. What are three things most people don't know about you?

  • Just how introverted I truly am. All of my social awkwardness is really about being introverted. :-) I am in no way misanthropic. I do, however, require lots of quiet time or my social skills go off the rails!
  • I love live music and enjoy most genres, unless there is a peddle steel guitar in it (the sound of which sets my teeth on edge).
  • I love Scandinavian television series even though I'm not Scandinavian. Thanks, Netflix!

 

5. What are your goals this year?

My word of the year is "thrive", and that is my big picture goal - to explore all the ways I can thrive in body, mind and heart. I am also exploring ways in which I can better help others thrive as well. I hope to graduate this year from the biomechanics program I have been taking since Jan. 2016. Another goal this year is to create and launch online yoga and movement content for my website. Oh, and I also want to travel to Europe and/or the Arctic this year! 

 

6. What is your current struggle?

It's not very original! I struggle with balancing all the things I say "yes" to with my need for quiet time and I often over-schedule myself. See question 4 about my social awkwardness. :-) 

 

7. What reminder do YOU need to keep yourself motivated this week?

I remind myself to focus on who or what is in front of me. We only have the present moment, and when I remember this, I am a lot more focused and grounded! 

 

8. Where can we find you throughout your week?

I teach a number of yoga classes throughout the week and many weekends I have the privilege of leading yoga teacher trainings. I post my weekly schedule on my web site and FB. http://www.noramaskeyyoga.com/

 

9. Any big events this year you want to share about?

I'm looking forward to offering a weekend yoga retreat at Cross River Wilderness Centre, June 23-25. http://www.noramaskeyyoga.com/special-events/.

THANKS NORA. So much love for you xoxoxo

**Picture: My group of yoga teacher graduates who spent one year together being taught, inspired, and guided by Nora Maskey and Alice Hong. 

 

 

 

Free or low-cost yoga and fitness classes/groups around yyc

Hey all,

This list was created in 2017, and most likely is not aligned with current schedules at these studios. While there may be some inaccuracies now, the list still points to the fact that most studios offer low cost, community, karma, and free classes. Find the studios convenient for you, and then check out their schedule. Call the studios to get clear on which classes are free or low cost, and you will get the current information you need to make your choice. ;)

Enjoy xoxo

 

Monday

-Tuxedo Park Community Centre (202-29 ave NE), Yoga at 6pm, **free for now. http://www.tuxedoparkcommunity.ca/classes-and-programs/

-UNDRCARD boxing, 730pm $15 donation class (to local charity)

Tuesday

*Summertime -The East Village, 12pm, Free Yoga

-The Outsiders Run Club – 630pm, free, Run and bootcamp (locations alternate, facebook)

Wednesday

-November Project, 613am, free at Memorial Stairs

*Summertime -Outdoor Yoga Calgary, 630pm, by donation, Riley Park

Thursday

*Summertime -Mamakarma (prenatal/postnatal), 1130am in Riley Park, by donation

Friday

-LIV yoga & wellness, $10 drop-in at 430pm (Power Flow) and 545pm (Yang/Yin)

-Yoga Santosha (Mission), 545pm, $5 Yoga Groove

-Barre Body Ramsay, 6pm, $10 drop-in for charity

-The Yogis Den, 615pm, Gentle Flow $5 donation (11540 24th St SE)

-Yoga Dot Calm, 615pm $5 Funky Flow

-YYC Cycle 630pm (Kensington and marda loop), 650pm Avenida, $10 Give’r drop-in

-Breathe Hot Yoga, $10 drop-in, Avenida (flow) at 7pm, Nolan Hill (Hatha) at 730pm, McKenzie Towne (Flow) at 730pm

-Hot Shop Victoria Park (downtown), 745pm (min. $5 karma drop-in)

-Moksha Yoga North 8pm, min. $5 karma drop-in

-My Yoga Calgary, 8pm, $7 karma drop-in

Saturday

-LIV yoga & wellness, $10 drop-in at 930am (Hips & Shoulders) and 1045am (flow)

-Yoga and Beyond, $5 min. karma flow, 11am (Kensington studio)

-LIV yoga & Wellness, $10 drop-in at 1230pm (Restorative)

-Barre Body Studio (Bow Trail) 1pm, Free Class

-Yoga in Bowness, 130pm *donation (intro to yoga)

-Yoga Santosha, 2pm free class sponsored by luluemon (Yoga 4 the People)

-Yoga Dot Calm, Foundation karma class by donation, 415pm

-Pure Hot Yoga (West End), 430pm karma class by donation

Sunday

-My Yoga Calgary, 8am, $7 community class (9152 Macleod Trail SE)

-The Daily Method (Barre), Free 830am – taught by new, and in training, teachers

-Breathe Hot Yoga $10 drop-in, Avenida (Hatha) 830am, McKenzie Towne (flow) at 830am, Airdrie (flow) at 10am, Nolan Hill (flow) at 10am.

-Yoga and Beyond, $5 min. karma YIN, 1030am (Center Street Studio)

-Yoga Mandala, *by donation (karma), 1130am

-Outdoor Yoga Calgary, by donation at 1pm, Riley Park, *May 1-Oct 9 (http://www.outdooryoga.ca/)

-Yoga Passage, 1230pm, Flow Karma class by donation

-Union Athletica, 130pm for $5, Warm Flow

-Rumble Boxing, 2pm FREE lululemon sponsored class

-Yoga Passage, 4-530pm, $5 Traditional Yin

-Hot Shop (Victoria park), 6pm Flow, $5 min. drop-in

  

Non-Attachment

I like to think about any concept or idea as a seed. I often don't come up with brilliant ideas the moment a seed is planted. The same way we would tend to any seed, I take time to water it, spend time keeping it balanced and healthy, and allow it to grow into its full expression. Some seeds die off and are forgotten about after they are planted, but that's the nature of learning how to be a skilled gardener. That is what I LOVE about the first two limbs of Yoga, which prescribe to list the 10 concepts (or tools) that will assist you in your journey to your best-self.

One such concept that I would like to dive deeper into today, is Non-Possessiveness, or Non-Attachment. I had a conversation with a client yesterday about the phrase, "Intimacy without Attachment," and I was re-struck with the beauty and depth of that wisdom. As I sit here and write out my thoughts this morning, I invite you to grab a notebook and allow some free-writing to go along with these words. Plant a seed of Non-Attachment and allow it to grow. 

I witnessed an example of someone who got caught in their ego this morning, and how it was a an honest misstep in the pursuit of greatness. It made me reflect on the moments, days, or years that I was driven by my ego. It wasn't a malicious or purposeful way to live. But it was my habit and all I knew. Our subconscious is powerful, actually 1 million times more powerful than our conscious mind. Our conscious mind is wise and displays different talents and abilities that the subconscious appears to not be capable of. These attributes of the conscious mind allows it to outsmart and build a functioning relationship with the subconscious, but only if we have the basic building blocks of health in place, i.e., nourishing food, enough sleep and recovery time, sweat or mindful movement, and healthy relationships. Our subconscious needs its fuel otherwise it is more volatile, quick to anger, and more easily tangles up in the distractions and mind-chatter versus being present to the moment. 

So what is the key to ensuring this lack of balance does not become a pattern in your life? Don't attach to any emotion. Even when you are feeling good, I mean 'really good', you set yourself up for a crash if you allow yourself to be seduced into the pathway of pleasure. It's not that we must avoid feeling good. What I notice in myself and others is a tendency to feel really good about feeling good, and an expectation is created (subconsciously), that this is the feeling to expect from now on. Granted you can realistically experience that feeling many more times in your lifetime. But when we become attached to the pleasure and goodness in that moment (however long the "moment" lasts), our journey back to equilibrium can feel like we are taking steps back rather than simply re-calibrating to your happiness baseline (for more on Happiness Baseline, check out The Happiness Hypothesis by Jonathan Haidt). We all have a set point of happiness, and to actually elevate that, you have to develop a new perception of existence and open your mind to the beauty and well-spring of Mindset awareness.   

Whether you mean to or not, we are biologically programmed to LOVE the feeling of happy chemicals. They steer us towards wanting more, because it is necessary in order to live a successful life. I believe that to have a successful life, we can simplify the search to one basic component, to have an IMPACT. We are biologically programmed to desire to leave a legacy in some way. Deep down we all know our time on earth is limited. We have a short window to live life as it is and leave a mark on that existence. Some of us can be driven to do disastrous and evil things because it does satisfy that basic craving of creating a legacy. 

While it is a gift of nature to have this drive to develop a pattern of success, in all it's definitions, it can also lead to the opposite extreme. Which is why the pursuit and understanding of Balance becomes the most important tool to work with. We can go from living stagnant and lost to living with a spiritual EGO, fast-paced growth, and aloof to the example you are truly leading. With balance as your daily practice, you get to each new phase of development and allow time to adjust, explore, get feedback, detach from the expectations you have created and get to know your new-environment, before rushing forward to the next phase. 

That is what Intimacy without attachment eludes to, for me. I see the reminder to be open and receptive with love, desire and growth in mind, while also acknowledging the passing of time and the importance to flow with life and stay connected to what is here and now. It is so easy to get addicted to growth and become consumed by thoughts and effort without much recovery time. When you seek the balance point in each moment, you find an inner-gps that signals when it's time to JUST BE and live life with open arms, and when it is time to amp up to your next gear. 

I am reminded of the way I was taught to develop my basketball skills as a child. Myself, and most of the girls I played with, were in love with the game and continued to push to learn more and shoot from further distances. My dad was one of my coaches, and he emphasized the importance of building the best form you possibly can at each distance, before attempting to step back. Without the proper form, strength and consistency, stepping further back was the equivalent of building a house on shaky foundation. This meant we had to practice our shooting a lot! We had to study our own body mechanics and how we each had unique habits that needed to be corrected. It took patience and curiosity, and had I had a more positive and growth oriented Mindset back then, I would've enjoyed the process and developed even quicker. Which is why I take that as a lesson learned and implement that tool in life daily.

Non-Attachment has become one of the most fueling and fascinating concepts for me to explore and have conversations about. If you are interested to learn more about the wisdom and seeds to plant from the Yamas and Niyamas - the first two limbs of yoga - register for my Workshop on April 8, at LIV yoga & wellness. We will do some yoga while plating the seeds of these principles, and you will leave with ideas and structure in how to practice and grow this garden of new neural connections leading to a Mindset shift. 

Happy Trail Blazing xoxo

As seen on itsdatenight.com - ENERGY: Woo woo magic or a simple fact of life?

 

Energy: Woo woo magic or a simple fact of life?

Do you believe in the power of your energy? Do you understand what that even means? 

We are all capable of creating immense positive change in this world. When we believe in our own capabilities and are not derailed with every bump, trip or failure, almost anything is possible. What I continue to notice in myself and in others is our tendency to be our own worst critic and this is the largest obstacle to overcome. A bump in the road becomes a tragedy because of our shame, self-doubt and habitual negative self-talk. I am curious to know more about this self-sabotage cycle we fall victim to. There is a big difference between reflecting and learning with compassion versus ruminating and stewing with regret or anger.

Whatever you focus on, you create more of. Where your mind goes, energy flows. I am committed to empowering my mind and body to focus on the good, to learn from mistakes and find motivation in missteps, and to spend the majority of my day in gratitude and creativity. This takes practice and self-discipline, and I want to share this roadmap with all of you.

Do you believe in the power of your energy? Do you understand what that even means? The conversation around energy has picked up in frequency lately. As is the case with mostly everything, it can be easily misunderstood.

I had someone ask me recently, “Do you believe in energy healing?” My short answer, YES. However, it is worth expanding on because energy healing can be many different things, and it is not necessarily mystical or out of reach for the average person. Your breath is energy, and when in a state of calm, your deep belly breath has the ability to heal you – as it calms your nervous system and decreases the stress hormone, Cortisol. Your connection with your loved ones is held and fostered with energy, and a heartfelt embrace or offer of support can heal you – as the chemical Oxytocin strengthens your heart. We are surrounded by energy, we are made up of energy, and we emit energy based on what we think, say and do. You are communicating inwardly and externally with your body language, whether you realize it or not.

“Atoms are made out of vortices of energy. That means molecules, which are made up of atoms, are vortices of energy as well; so cells, which are made up of molecules, are also vortices of energy; and finally, human beings, each of whom is made up of trillions of cells, are…vortices of energy” Bruce Lipton, The Honeymoon Effect.

Energy is a powerful tool to pay attention to. The Law of Attraction states that our energy is contagious, and we attract more of what we put out into the world. A simple truth that brings purpose and intention into daily life. But what do we do with this information? And how do we shift our energy when we realize we are not emitting the vibes we want to receive back?

“Everything is energy. Your thought begins it, your emotion amplifies it and your action increases the momentum.” – unknown

The biggest shift in my own energy happened once I began to notice and build awareness around the connection between my self-talk, my body language and how I felt. When I am in a state of limitation; telling myself I am not good enough, judging myself harshly, or shaming myself for something I did or didn’t do, my body language becomes closed and I feel heavy and powerless. Naturally, the energy I am emit in this state does not attract powerful gamechangers into my life. When I am in a state of power and confidence; my thoughts are focused on gratitude, creativity and possibility, while my body language is open, relaxed and receptive to my environment. The energy I emit in this state is empowering, inviting and supportive, and I attract more powerful, positive and influential people into my world.

The beautiful thing about this is that we all have moments of greatness. We all have experienced moments of high-vibration, confident and empowering energy. Each time we do, we leave a bread crumb trail to make our way back. The difference between those who experience this state more and more versus those who stay victim to low-vibration energy and living, is simple: practice and intention.

To clarify, I am not advocating for naivety or to ignore reality with a constant goofy smile. Rather, high-vibration energy is the ability to rise above the momentary struggle, to see possibility, growth and beauty even in the darkest moments. It is the confidence to show up strong with pure intent, without blame and without the need to be perfect. It is the ability to tap into contentment and gratitude while still acknowledging that there is (always) room for more.  

How do we do this?

1.  Take time each morning (or at least at some point in your day), to slow down and check in with yourself. Notice how you are feeling. Tune into the sensations happening inside and outside of you. What kind of energy are you emitting? Observe your thought patterns and ask yourself if what you are saying is serving you to the best of your ability. Choose a direction for your thoughts and energy to go and create some actions to stand strong in your power, creating momentum. This simple act of grounding, connecting and re-directing your mind towards power and balance will create a noticeable shift. Do this daily for three weeks and you will never turn back.

2.  Practice being in flow. Ideally, we want a strong beginning (a morning routine and Intention set), a strong ending (an evening routine of reflection, learning, gratitude and surrender), and a flexible and flowing middle. We need time to just be, to live, love, experience, play, push and pull, otherwise, we lose sight of what it is to be alive. Too much of anything is not a good thing. Build structure in your self-study process so that you have a sustainable and balanced approach to your day.

The Law of Attraction is one of the most powerful concepts I have adopted as a core belief in my life. I choose to trust in divine timing, to make leaps and have confidence in my ability to build and fly, and to focus on my own energy as a catalyst for positive change in this world. Energy is contagious. By focusing on my own self-love, passions, purpose and play, my energy heals the world, as will yours! So yes, I believe in Energy Healing, because I am energy, and I have the ability to heal.

Mindfulness: The Treasure and the Tool-Belt

Mindfulness is a concept that has built deep roots within my way of living. My learning and understanding of this concept has developed from my practice and playfulness, through experiences and conversations, and trial and error. While we are complex beings in search of simplicity, mindfulness is the gateway to the calm and steady balance of mind and body that we all crave to settle into. To me, mindfulness is the key to creating and conserving optimal fuel for healthy living.

In the book Mind, by Daniel Siegal, MD, he explores the territory of the mind versus the brain, and how well-being may be the result of the “...linkage of differentiated parts that maximize the complexity of the system” (p.78). What does this mean? Through a process of self-organization, accessed through Mindfulness, we create links and integration of the many important facets of our existence, to piece together our unique representation of reality, and well-being is a result of the quality of those linkages.  

While we may know intuitively that meditation, mindful living, and methodical problem-solving is the way to our mind-body connection and optimal health, it continues to be a difficult target and overwhelming habit to foster. Why? What is it about human nature that we can “know” what we need to do, yet struggle immensely in actually doing it?

We are creatures of habit. We have a certain amount of energy to be used each day, and there are ways we cyclically drain our energy, as well as ways we can create and conserve energy. Meditation and mindful living requires focus, action (and non-action), and ultimately, energy. If you are tired, stressed, distracted, or in a negative (catabolic) mindset, building new habits feels like a stubborn 6-ton Elephant being pushed and dragged on a leash. In fact, when we are low-energy, we revert back to all old patterns and habits simply as a way to save energy. We can spin our wheels and judge our “lack of discipline”, which burns a lot of energy without making any progress forward.

Meditation is simple, and it does not require a still, calm, quiet mind. The result eventually will be a stiller, calmer, quieter mind, but the real tool of meditation is noticing and not engaging in the conversation in your mind. It is the development of our ability to witness and observe without judgement and storytelling. It is the process of limiting distractions, sitting (or walking or lying down), connecting with breath, and allowing your breath to be the most interesting thing happening inside of you. From this calm position, we connect with our body and witness our mind. In other words, we feel grounded. To be ‘grounded’ is to feel an increasingly unwavering connection to the moment and your current body state, as it is. When grounded, there is a state of flow, trust, and intuitive knowing/belief that you can let go of wherever your mind is taking you, and come back to this peaceful, anabolic (positive, creative, constructive), energy and space that is always waiting for you to tap into. When we are grounded, we catch our thoughts before they become rabbit roles, we reflect and learn with grace, and we are present and capable of making the most of each juicy and opportune moment.

The more we do this, the easier it is to tap into this ideal state throughout your day. From this place, we notice how often our mind-chatter goes off on tangents that are not serving who we are and where we are headed. Meditation is a practice that builds a pathway to presence and contentment, which is accessible whenever you need it, want it, or choose it.

We know why meditation is healthy. We know why mindful living is ideal. Now, I propose, when we stop wasting energy on things that do not serve our direction, we can more easily step in, and tune in, to our ideal state.

Before we dive into the five energy wasters to eliminate from your existence, let’s talk energy. We are relational and energetic beings. The way you show up (i.e. mindset, attitude, adaptability, receptivity, connected to self and other, etc.) has a direct impact on how others will show up for you and what you perceive and believe as a result. The treasure of mindful living is the realization that we create and project a lot of assumed meaning into the constant Story we dictate as we go through life. When we have energy and understanding in mindfulness, we have the ability to see our initial reactions as deep-rooted programming while our conscious response (after the reaction) is where we get to choose and create the flow of life we live in.

The mindset we have going into a situation has a direct correlation to the energy we embody, which is a large proportion of how we communicate with our surroundings. How we show up in every interaction, with ourselves and with others, creates a ripple effect. We attract more of whatever we put out into the world, and whatever you focus on, you create more of (internally and externally).

Our thoughts, (how we talk to ourselves and what we focus on), are the ultimate tools in our mindfulness toolbelt. It’s important to consider that certain emotional reactions (we all have) are programmed into you; some biologically and some environmentally learned. We tend to give our compulsive and fear-based initial thoughts much more attention and credit than they warrant.

With that in mind, here are five thought cycles that get more air-time than necessary, and are the keys to conserving your precious energy and creating space and direction for growth and mindful living.

 

1. Comparison

We are all programmed to constantly assess our status or position of relevance in our immediate perception of reality. This leads to a common sensation that “I am the center of the Universe,” which leads to time and energy wasted as we assess, put others down, one-up others, or devise plans to get the one-up position. It serves us well, from an evolutionary perspective, to desire a position of importance. This elevates our chances of survival, and our subconscious is hardwired with a survival mechanism, over-riding our conscious and pragmatic understanding that “I am not the center of the Universe.”

There are many other more efficient and grounding ways to have a positive impact on the world around us, creating the sense of importance we seek. We have a dualistic, and often contradictory, belief in what is needed for well-being and survival. When we compare and judge ourselves and others in negative and one-upmanship energy, it is the animalistic and deepest programmed reaction in our relational systems. Knowing that this is simply a programmed, good-intentioned yet inefficient and old-school way of operating, this is where you have your choice-point. Will you continue sending energy down that pathway towards comparison and judgment, or will you choose a new pathway towards mind-body connection and healing ourselves and others through leading by example in love and compassion? That is the pathway mindful living creates; an open heart, a forgiving and passionate energy, and a growth oriented and passionate mindset.

We naturally judge and compare, but you do get to choose whether or not you send more energy down that pathway and engage with the inner (and outer) dialogue it creates. Be responsible. Be capable. Focus on you and how your creation of more high-vibration conversations heals our gossipy and status-hungry nature.

 

2. Regret

Yes, we make mistakes. Even when we know better, we make big mistakes. Regret in itself is a waste of time and energy. It is a state of mind that shackles you to your mistakes, reliving it and re-examining a hypothetical existence where that mistake no longer plagues you. It is important to address where you made a mistake. It is vital to stand tall and admit wrong-doing. It is healing to learn and hop back into the rhythm and flow of life where new opportunities and connections are waiting to be discovered. If you are stewing in or making decisions from the energy of regret, you are simply sending more energy down that pathway that is leading to where you do not want to go. Reflect, learn, and commit to doing better next time. This is the way of the efficient, grounded, growth-minded, and compassionate individual. Relationships are reborn and nourished each day. Why bring old stagnant energy of regret into the new and fresh opportunities in front of you? By allowing yourself to stew in regret, you are simply creating a stronger neural pathway towards regret, which will flare up as a seductive pathway every time you do anything imperfectly.

When you are grounded in purpose, and choose to learn and grow from absolutely everything you do in life, regret loses its luster quickly. There’s no need for regret when you view each moment as practice for the next moment. Let go of regret.

 

3. Dieting

We can waste a lot of energy thinking about what to eat, what we should or should not eat, and what we did eat that we think we shouldn’t have. We spend time and money restricting ourselves and then waste energy indulging and feeling shame or judgement that we lacked the discipline to do what we said we would do. Your ideal “diet” is a lifestyle and it is sustainable, balanced, and will adjust day to day based on your energy output and your mind and body's needs for that day. It is not just about calories in and calories out, but rather the quality of the fuel you ingest and the quality of your thoughts and presence as you ingest.

Mindful Eating (or Soulful Eating as Eating Psychology expert Marc David refers to it) is an ideal way to approach food. It is about experiencing and being present with the food you eat. It is the realization that no food is inherently good or bad, but rather your mindset and portion matters more than anything. It reminds us to slow down and pay attention to each bite, each chew, the smells, the texture, and the taste. When we approach our food with a desire for nourishment and gratitude for its creation and presentation, you are more likely to stop when full and move on to something engaging and nourishing away from the table afterwards. Change the way you perceive your food and look for a sustainable lifestyle instead of a quick-fix.

 

4. Background Noise

We are addicted to noise and distraction. We seek stimulation and constant entertainment in an attempt to avoid the quiet or disengage from mind-chatter. Your mind-chatter is not the enemy, it just needs more positive ideas and nourishing energy to fuel a direction towards high-vibration. When we leave the tv on for background noise, have the radio playing constantly, or keep ourselves busy at all costs, it is as if we have attached a tap to our energy system and left it open to drain all day long. The classic mindful saying, “Don’t just do something, sit there” is one of my favorite reminders when I am feeling the buzz of busy-work. I choose to shut off all distractions I can and take a few moments in silence. Just breath. Just feeling and witnessing my inner-state and the sensations in my physical body.

Meditation can be many things and can look many different ways. The key is to recognize meditation as your system’s favorite and most delicious and energizing fuel. A few moments to yourself in the elevator? Rather than pulling your phone out of your pocket, how about you breathe five deep belly breaths? Rather than having the tv playing in the background while you are home puttering around, how about silence, the sound of your breath and the awareness in your thoughts to fuel yourself for your next interaction. Rather than the radio or MTV playing while making dinner, why not listen to soulful sounds and vibrations of drums, instruments, or mantras that resonate deep within your mind and body. Put pen to paper, mindfully draw out your reminders for the day. Move and stretch your body to the rhythm and music of your breath. Rather than looking up articles for inspiration, why not challenge yourself to write one? We have a habit of looking outward for what we need, to fill a void or to distract from that buzz telling us to “do something.” Be still. Let your breath fuel your mind and body. Find some softness in your effort.

 

5. Shame

We are our worst critic. Brene Brown says, “shame...is this web of unobtainable, conflicting, competing expectations about who we’re supposed to be. And it’s a straight-jacket.” Just imagine how much energy you would have if it was not wasted and held hostage by your own negative self-talk. We are not setting ourselves up for greatness when we bully, berate, and belittle ourselves. Shame tells us we are not good enough and never will be. It is a habit and it is strengthened each time we allow our attention to go down that rabbit-hole.

You have a choice. When you feel the seduction of shame entering your mind, put your hand on your heart and thank yourself for having such high expectations and standards, and gently remind yourself that progress and power is waiting on the other side of this compulsion. Sometimes we need to sit and get stuck in certain mindsets and emotions to learn from experience that that is not where you want to continue sending your energy. Live, learn, and let that shit go.

Stop worrying about what others might be thinking about you. You can’t control others thoughts. It is best to focus on you, and practice your own ability to moderate, guide, encourage, inspire, and balance yourself, rather than throwing the baby out with the bathwater. The more you step into your high-vibration state, the more you will attract others who do the same. These are the people who will not encourage or continue the pattern of bullying, berating, or belittling. They are the people who will support your new habits and lead by example in this high-vibration mindful way of living. There will always be people who try to take you down and who quickly judge what you are capable of, but you have a choice in who you listen to and who you give your power to.


Now that you have freed up some space, time, and energy. What will you invest in instead? Your thoughts create an Empire that is your experience of life. What kind of Empire will you consciously choose to construct?

Here are other ways to get the boost of Happy Chemicals we crave in our addiction to comparing, our striving for perfection, and our limiting belief that we must regret and shame ourselves to learn:

 

  • Align your life to be grounded in your Core Values. Be proud of who you are and how you compose yourself. Think and act in alignment with your unique beat of the drum.
  • Eat well, sweat daily. And connect with yourself through deep belly breaths and a content grin
  • Do what you say you’ll do, and if you can’t, say what you will do instead and do that.
  • Be in conversation with people about ideas, books, goals, struggles and learnings, and improvise with what the moment presents. Treat everything as an offer and you have choice.
  • Meditate to Ground yourself.

 

Try this Meditation:

With your hands gently on your knees, sit up tall and feel the connection between your sit bones and the floor. Feel the root of your spine pointing down and inviting energy from the earth up through your spine and out the top of your head. Visualize your breath moving with this energy, up and down.

The Root Chakra is at the base of the spine. It is our root to the earth beneath us and the deep connection to all things. Focus on the qualities of your root chakra and allow yourself to be held and supported by the same space and energy that is holding and supporting our planet.

As you breathe, repeat the following phrase three times...

"I am Grounded. I am Secure. I am Safe. I embody Passion and am full of Possibilities. I surround myself with people who are open, driven, and compassionate. I am Content and trust that good things come when I believe in myself."

Today is a new day, what will you do differently to begin paving new pathways in that beautiful brain of yours?

xo

Meet Sally - get to know her wholistic ways

Meet my friend Sally ;). She is a passionate, hard-working, creative, loving, wholistic and medically educated, and a modern-day mama. A committed practice to leading by example, she makes a living educating and supporting others to live their best lives. Read below to get to know what makes this chick so successful and full of life. xoxox

 

1. What gets you up in the morning?

Literally speaking, my son or the sun :-) 

I have always been a morning person. I'm so eager to start the day. Where I used to wake up and hit the ground running, as a mama I've seen how my kids and I all benefit from grounding before the day starts. And it's that routine - breath work, gratitude practice, mindfully preparing and mindfully eating nourishing food and beverages -- that I so look forward to sharing with them and myself every morning!

 

2. What is your morning routine to tap into your ideal mindset?

Wake to a natural alarm clock around 5:30/6am. NEVER to a cell phone. In fact they aren't allowed on the second floor of our home where the bedrooms are. I wake early to have time to practice mindfulness meditation (often a body scan in bed, or a seated meditation in my meditation space, using essential oils to serve the mood and body sensations of the morning) before my 2 toddlers are up. If my toddler son has snuck into the bed and wakes when I do, I guide our body scan aloud in the bed, stretch out of bed, get dressed. Then we go to the kitchen to mindfully prepare a nourishing mood+food therapy based meal (having good quality fats, plant based protein, and carbs) represented on a plate or in the blender! We have dimmer lights on in the morning to gently adjust to the start of a new day.

 

3. What was your biggest failure that turned into the best thing that ever happened to you?

Hmmmm, in my third year of undergrad I had to drop out. I developed a panic disorder and depression. It was the best thing that ever happened to me as it led me to a closer relationship to my dad -- a life long meditator and martial arts instructor who started a masters in psychology but left it to return to the family farm. I had been very grounded just from being in the same environment as him growing up. After all, groundedness is contagious! But I didn't have a meditation practice. So when I moved away for university, I didn't have his presence - literally and figuratively. It was tough, and I didn't have the coping mechanisms of breath work and mindfulness meditation in my tool box of skills. Over the phone, he guided me through breath work exercises and visualizations and meditations. I felt empowered -- I was able to no longer rely on medication after a period of meditation practice. I returned to school the following semester after failing out feeling I had made a major win by overcoming a massive obstacle. When I look back today, I literally would not have come to the field of psychology and the specialization of mindfulness based interventions if it had not been for that semester of dropping out of university.

 

4. What are three things most people don't know about you?

I was a TV reporter, my dad was a farmer, I have advanced education in wine and spirits. 

 

5. What are your goals this year?

Complete my books to help families be more playful AND mindful! 

 

6. What is your current struggle?

Not getting caught up in the keeping up with the insta-jones' online. I'm a mom, a writer, a yoga teacher, a competitive athlete, psychologist, etc, etc, you get, I got a lot going on. Spending precious time perusing instagram thinking "I should be doing this" or "Oh I'm missing out on that" or "why aren't I involved in that project" just doesn't serve me. But I too need reminding of that. Not every event and get together needs to be posted about! There's magic in the unshared/unknown!

 

7. What reminder do YOU need to keep yourself motivated this week?

That I'm helping people help themselves, even when I can't manage to see them all in the course of a week like I'd like to! 

 

8. Where can we find you throughout your week?

Aside from running my private practice out of my home and out of the space that will be opening below Junction 9, I help with a research study at the Alberta Children's Hospital. I also spend a lot of my time in the community, connecting and creating relationships and events. From food spots to fitness spots. 

FOOD SPOTS: Definitely in the kitchen with my kiddos and local farmer's markets or organic grocers, and trying out new cafes!

MINDBODY SPOTS: On my bench in my home meditation space or teaching at a local meditation centre (modern+mindful YYC), teaching and running my practice at Wymbin below Junction 9 (opening March 2017), on my mat at Pure Hot Yoga, on the turf at my husband's gym (2110 Fitness), on the track at the local recreation centre by my house, or on a trail in the local area or our home in Montana.

 

Find more about Sally by checking out her instagram and website.....

@wholistichealthyyc

 www.wholistichealthYYC.com 

 

Sally Powis-Campbell, Registered Psychologist

Wholistic Health YYC Psychology Services Inc.

Whole Mind // Whole Foods // Whole Body

sally@wholistichealthyyc.com 

The Goal-Setter Mindset

Our biggest obstacle is ourselves. On average, 77% of what you think on a daily basis is negative, self-defeating, or self-deflating. And 95% of what you think today, you also thought yesterday. We are creatures of habit, for good reason. It saves a lot of precious energy so that we can be mindful and open to our current surroundings. But we are only in the seat of our conscious mind, on average, 5% of our day. That leave 95% of our day with our subconscious mind at the helm. This is great news for anyone who has a well balanced relationship between the conscious and subconscious, or for those who have retrained their subconscious so that their best-self is their past of least resistance. But for most of us, this can be a startling realization. 

Personally, I have struggled with mental health issues for most of my life. Although I am now way healthier, happier and more aware of my balance than I ever have been, I still struggle occasionally. What I have realized is, so does everyone! We are not alone in our struggles. 

When we know what we are working with in our mind and body, it becomes much easier to carve out the path to sustainable and enjoyable change. For example, we often assume that we can increase our overall happiness by achieving more or getting more of what we want. Wishful thinking. We have a set point or baseline of happiness that is a combination of our DNA, experience, mindset, experiences and upbringing. When we experience something amazing, our happiness increases for a few hours or days. But it settles back down to our baseline, and that can be jarring and frightening if we had an expectation otherwise. And inversely, we can experience trauma, defeat and tragedy, and our happiness dips way down below our "normal." Good news, it is short-lived. You will bounce back up and settle back into your baseline. Happiness is an inside job. If you are not satisfied with your average experience of happiness, or your baseline, then your work is in the way you talk to yourself. When you change the way you perceive the world, aka your mindset, you change the way you experience the world. 

While I see the importance of setting goals as a catalyst for bold living and making necessary changes to align with core values, I have also realized that the act of setting goals is not enough. Through my history, I have set some big goals. I have accomplished enough of these goals to recognize that my happiness is not waiting in the hands of an external reward. 

More than goals, we need to adopt a goal-setter mindset. What is a MIndset exactly? It is what you focus on, the energy you emit, and your perception of failure, growth and success which shapes your experience of reality. The ultimate goal here is to conserve and create quality positive energy to fuel the journey of your life. If your mindset is draining your energy, than you can set all the goals in the world and have the very best intention, but that won't be enough to keep you motivated and bring you peace and joy along the way. The journey is your life, not the destination. 

With this is mind, how do we get our subconscious and conscious mind to work together?

In the book Switch, by Dan and Chip Heath, they tackle what it takes to lead change while knowing the complexity of the two minds we all have in our head. First, we need to create a road-map of sorts so our conscious mind knows what steps to take. Second, we need a deep sense of Purpose and Why behind the desired change or action. And third, we need to be mindful of our environment and surround ourselves with support and inspiration, edit as we go, and find our flow.

Your road-map will evolve as you get moving and become more clear on where you're headed. That is the fun of the journey. A little bit of uncertainty is what turns an ordinary old day into an adventure.

As I put together my current 5 key steps to a Goal-Setter Mindset, I noted how 6 months ago my steps looked different. And I am aware that when I go through this process 6 months from now, again my wording will most likely change. It is important to allow ourselves to be inspired and guided by others, but it is even more important to learn to be our own inner-motivator. My 5 key steps may serve you well, and you may be able to adjust, tweak and evolve to create a list more on par with who you are now and where you are headed. 

1. CONNECT

Take time each morning to connect with yourself.  Let this be a new experience, focused on being present and mindful versus just going through the motions of a "routine." Connect with your breath, tell yourself what you need to hear, set an Intention based on what you need to keep in mind to honor your growth and your balance. Choose to surround yourself and connect with inspiring people throughout your day who will support you in keeping your fire lit and your heart open. We need to lean on each other occasionally, but we also need to know it is up to us to keep ourselves motivated, moving and grooving. 

 

2. LEARN

Be a student of life. Let yourself be a beginner. Enjoy the process of trying something new and being open to the perceptions of others. We crave routine but we also need novelty. Switch things up throughout your day to ensure you are bringing in new sensations and stimuli that will support you in your mindfulness. We are creatures of habit. We learn a lot as we step back and notice our reactions and choose to respond instead. Be fascinated by what you notice in your patterns. Be interested, not interesting. Lastly, motion is lotion. When we sweat and move our bodies, we release growth hormones in our brain that will help us learn, adapt and evolve into the wise and best-self creatures that we have the privilege to be. Sweat is for our brain, not just our body. 

 

3. LET GO

What we think we own, actually owns us. Find freedom in your life by acknowledging that everything is fleeting and temporary. Enjoy the moment for what it is and then let it go. Tap into your flow throughout your day. There are activities/hobbies that you already have and love in your life that bring you into a state of flow. Yoga, painting, creating, cooking, running, meditating, researching something that lights you up, walking and smiling at strangers, etc. There are many ways to find your flow and this is where you will fill your tank with quality fuel for your day. We can't be all effort, strategy and force. We need to let go. We need to let ourselves be and find joy in the simple things. Let go of limiting beliefs. Let go of thoughts that make you feel small, incapable, stagnant or unworthy of what you desire. You get to choose what you focus on and what you tell yourself. So tell yourself what you need to hear and let yourself be. 

"When you give something space to be, you allow it to move and change" Mary O'Malley

4. REFLECT

There is a time and a place for reflection, and it is not all day everyday. Carve out five minutes each night to reflect on your day, acknowledge where you showed strength, what you are proud of, what you are grateful for and what you need to focus on tomorrow to keep your growth and momentum rolling. Notice if you are carrying anything with you from your day. Write down what you need to remember and then let go and allow yourself to tap into self-love and balance to finish your day. 

 

5. GROW

Growth is not a straight and upward trajectory. It dips, dives, circles, ebbs and flows. In a snapshot of time it easy to beat ourselves up when we perceive ourselves as taking steps backward. But really, it is all forward progress as we learn and grow the most from our darkness, our missteps and our "failures." Let yourself be in process. Let yourself be imperfect. Let yourself be vulnerable and open to your depth and your struggles. When you can learn to smile through your challenges and rise above the momentary shadows, we bounce back quicker and with more resilience each time. This work is not about avoiding failure, it is about learning and loving our imperfections. No failure is a final failure. It is all experience and it is all an important part of the journey. Let your cracks show and others will find the strength and courage to let their cracks show too. 

"It is all forward progress, even when it seems like everything is falling apart" Mary O'Malley

 

What are your steps to the Goal-Setter Mindset? In other words, what are your steps to Happiness? I would love to hear what you create.

Keep in mind....

1. Create your road-map. Keep it simple and adaptive so there is room to flow and grow.

2. Be grounded in your Why and your Purpose. It is the journey, not the destination, that matters in the end. Find your fuel. 

3. Be mindful of your environment and tweak as needed to ensure it is conducive and inspiring for the change you are creating in your life. 

Happy Trail Blazing xoxo

 

 

Whatever you focus on, you create more of

Where your mind goes, energy flows