Afleveringen

  • Put your earbuds in and take a walk. A pleasure walk. A self-compassion walk. We do this walk today, not just for ourselves but for all people. No need to get ready, this is a short, go as you are walk. Ideally go outside, but if the conditions are unsuitable for that, by all means, stay inside and walk in circles.

    This podcast is a companion to my newsletter on loss and liberation called Songs of Forgiveness. I invite you to click through to the show notes and check out my writing. I post my letters with the phases of the moon and I invite you to subscribe and travel time along with me.



    This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.tinalaurellee.com/subscribe
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  • **Update 10/27/23: Yoga’s breath of joy practice has three inhales and then the long slow exhale and somehow I forgot and taught it with just two when recording this episode. For now, no worries, it still works. And I will redo this someday. In the meantime, wake-up and feel the joy of regular breathing.**

    Welcome to yoga poetry radio. I am your host Tina Laurel Lee and this podcast is a companion to my newsletter on loss and liberation called Songs of Forgiveness. I post my letters with the phases of the moon and I invite you to subscribe and travel time along with me.

    This episode’s breath practice is inspired by a study that took place during the pandemic and was published earlier this year. In the study the participants were instructed to use different daily practices for only 5 minutes a day. The study results found “cyclic sighing” led to the most improvements in mood. If you want to read more, find the full report in Cell Reports Medicine and linked here.

    “Cyclic sighs” are very similar to an ancient yoga breathing and movement practice called Breath of Joy, which includes an accompanying body movement, while cyclic sighing encompasses breathing alone. Do it first thing everyday and find yourself to be happier, to have a reduction in anxiety levels and have slowed your resting heart rate.

    “Cyclic hyperventilation” which has been found to reduce inflammation and we’ve practiced in a previous episode and I have discussed here.

    The study that inspired this practice: https://www.cell.com/cell-reports-medicine/fulltext/S2666-3791(22)00474-8?_returnURL=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S2666379122004748%3Fshowall%3Dtrue



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  • Welcome to Yoga Poetry Radio. Today’s episode is yoga movement meditation for coming home, followed by some writing prompts. It’s the new moon today and a true completion of any lunation. Today, October 25th, at 5 am, we complete the container of the last lunation and begin one anew. We will do this with a simple 10 breath practice. So put on something comfortable, put in your earbuds, get out your writing from lunation and some blank pages to write on, grab your pen.

    If you find this practice useful and know someone else who may benefit, please share. Like and subscribe so the algorithm will help others find it. Follow the show notes back to Songs of Forgiveness, my newsletter, and check out my writing.

    This will be sent out as a link via my regular Songs of Forgiveness newsletter as most podcast episodes of Yoga Poetry Radio are. Please subscribe to get moon reminders right in your inbox with each post and stay connected to the moon’s constant rotation. If you are already subscribed, you have my gratitude.



    This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.tinalaurellee.com/subscribe
  • Hello and welcome to Yoga Poetry Radio. In today’s episode we will explore down dog. This is a floor practice. But as an exploration, you make this your own. Let my voice be a guide, and your body be your teacher. If down dog has not been your friend in the past, do this class near a wall, a chair, or any raised surface as a prop beneath your hands for the variation that lets you observe your body with interested curiosity. Some of my favorite places to do down dog are on a grassy hillside, or the rocky shoreline of Lake Superior, where the sloping surface can be used to take pressure off wrists, shoulders and hamstrings. It is important you do you here, so pop in some earbuds and make this dog your own.

    Start by brining yourself to a comfortable seat. Close your eyes and turn your gaze inward. Welcome whatever you find. Bring your attention to your ground, where your body makes contact with the surface beneath you. Make note of how sturdy that support is.

    Lets take a breath together. Exhale all the air from your lungs. Inhale through your nose. Open mouth exhale. Seal your lips and let your breath fall into its natural rhythm. Stay connected with your breath.

    Pause here while you breathe and imagine yourself in this quintessential yoga posture. The inverted V. Hands planted, hips lifted, heels reaching down. Down dog is a posture in yoga that requires a lot of length along the back side of the body and strong core in order to hold your weight evenly and not dump it all in the hands or the feet. Do an imaginary body scan. From palms spread wide, up your wrists and forearms, because it is an inversion, elbows straight but not locked, shoulders relaxed away from ears, head and neck in line with the whole of your spine. This is one long line. Then sharp flexion at hips, both tailbone and pubic bone reaching back, bent knees, heels reaching towards the floor. Over time and with experience this posture is a resting posture. I know, right. It is a transition between poses, a return to baseline. To get there requires trust in the incremental change of returning to the limits of your range of motion again and again, and finding joy in the process.

    On your next inhale bring awareness to your seat even as you draw both arms overhead and hold. Continue to breathe. Let your arms originate at the center of your body, lifting from your solar plexus, find lightness and space around your heart. Roll your wrists and wiggle your fingers. Inhale and on your exhale lower your arms down. Inhale just right arm high and lengthen your side body. Exhale lower. Inhale left arm high. Exhale lower. Continue back and forth connecting breath to movement and expanding your chest and ribcage with each breath. The repetition to warms up shoulders and lungs, observe with this toggling back and forth to see how you are made. Find gratitude for your shoulders in whatever state they are in. Whatever range of motion they have.

    In May of 2021 I had a shoulder injury that took over a year to fully heal and to this day I still experience signs of it. It took me away from yoga for many months. My return taught me how to observe my limits and trust in the change. Our connective tissue is responsive to forming new shapes, but we have to approach that change with an interested curiosity and compassion which will allow us to let go of tension and our natural barriers to expand.

    Let go of the movement and bring your arms to your side. Roll onto your back and lift legs straight up so that the soles of your feet face the ceiling. This is flexion at your hips and brings length into the backside of your body. Stretch your arms out long above your head and you are essentially in downward dog’s L shape. Point and flex your toes here. Roll your ankles one direction and then another. Return to pointing and flexing. Make fists with your hands. Feel your energy extend to your farthest extremities.

    Draw right knee in. Left leg lengthens out long. Give yourself a little massage on your left hip crease. Switch and draw left knee in. Give yourself a massage on the right hip crease. Toggle legs back and forth, drawing one knee and then the next. Belly button to your spine to keep your lower back flush with the mat and floor. Bring both knees in, rock a little bit to get a lovely lower back massage. Bring your knees to the right for a spinal twist. Use your muscles here and honor your barriers. We are just warming up here and just coaxing a juicy limberness into our tissues with our care and kind attention. Draw your knees up and over and let them fall to the left. Use your muscles on this side and let the length come naturally. Make sure you are still breathing. Bring knees back to center and find your way to seated, and then to table top. Firm your foundation. Spreading the fingers wide. Shoulders over wrists and hips over knees. On your next inhale, find your way to cow dropping your chest and belly towards the floor. Gaze up, tailbone up. On your exhale, cat pose. Tummy into spine, tailbone down, head down. Continue on your own breath for two rounds.

    The next time you get to cow, slowly and carefully turn your toes under and press into your feet to lift your tail to down dog. Take your time. Keep a deep bend in your knees. Experiment with going slow. Hands and feet generally stay where they are. Or maybe not, pedal them out, open the soles of your feet. Keep your heels high and move to explore your limits. Let go of your opinions of down dog and allow the wordlessness of experience take over. What barriers are you noticing at your armpits, shoulders, hamstrings? Be gentle with them. This is where a chair is your friend. Or the couch or a wall. Can you use a prop to stay at your edge with more enjoyment. You know what you need, give it to yourself.

    Experiment with bringing weight forward and then back, then distribute your weight evenly. Can this feel boyant, the lift coming from hips and core rather than your arms and legs?

    On your next inhale come forward to high plank. Take your time and lower your own way to belly on the mat. Find cobra pose. Keeping hands where they are and lifting head and shoulders. Pubic bone down and tops of feet down. Draw your Brest bone forward, small tuck of your chin so that your head is in line with your spine. Bring nose back down and lengthen through your legs. First right and then left. Inhale to cobra and exhale to lower. Continue on your own breath twice more. Full inhale, full exhale. back to all fours. Bring your seat back to your heels for Childs pose, keep arms out long or rest your forehead on stacked fists. Breathe into your back body for a moment and let your head be heavy. When you’re ready rise back to table top, toes turn under, return to down dog.

    Can you enjoy this entry to Down Dog? Once you arrive, keep moving. Keep bend and straighten knees. Wag your tail. Pedal out the feet, massaging through the soles of your feet as you do the walking motion, back and forth. Let shoulders and head sink down. How does this feel on hands and wrists? Would you benefit from bringing your weight more towards your heels? The goal isn’t to get your heels down to the mat, the goal is to keep your spine straight and long. You can sink your weight back into your heels without sinking them all the way to the floor. Down dog is a weight bearing exercise and really strengthens arms and wrists. Balance the weight front and back and explore the difference. Use your fingers and thumb and don’t let all the weight fall into the heel of your hand. With time and returning, connective tissues will lengthen, muscles strengthen, and you find rest in this posture. I know from experience and you will too, after returning again and again, with interested curiosity and the eyes of an objective observer.

    Bring your torso forward to high plank. Lower yourself to the mat. Lift to a final cobra Pubic bone grounded, breast bone forward, spine in one long line through the crown of your head. Breathe.

    Find your way to table top. Sink hips back for one more Childs pose. Breath into your back body and ground yourself here. Floor solid beneath you. Inquire here: How do you feel now at the end of practice? Thank yourself for the time you just took attending to your body. Expanding your limits. Think forward to the time you can come back and do this for yourself again.

    Rise to find a comfortable seat. We will close with the sound of OM. Listen along or join me. Bring your hands together at your heart. May all the benefits we just created be vibrationally sent out with this sound and shared with all other beings, known or unknown, nearby or far away.

    If you chant along with me, or even if you don’t, feel the way the sound begins in your chest and moves up your throat across the back of your scull to forehead, and ends in your nose. The breath following will be for a silent om. Exhale. Inhale through the nose. Om.

    Thank you for listening. If you find this practice useful and know someone else who may benefit, please share. Like and subscribe to help others can find it. Follow the show notes back to Songs of Forgiveness, my newsletter, to check out what else I share. At the home page to this episode there are resources for further study, if you want to take your exploration deeper.

    Resources for Further Study:

    Yoga Journal: https://www.yogajournal.com/poses/downward-facing-dog/

    Eckart Yoga is a good channel. Here is their breakdown of down dog: https://www.ekhartyoga.com/resources/yoga-poses/downward-facing-dog-pose

    I am a big fan of Yoga with Adriene. This is an early video of hers. She has been doing yoga videos for years and you can search and find yoga for anything you are interested in. Her take on Dawn Dog is very compelling so if you are interested to discover more. Watch this. Linked in her blog post was this article about Down Dog Posture and its relationship to acupuncture: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/acupuncture-points_b_1531601.



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  • Welcome to Yoga Poetry Radio. Today’s episode is a breathing practice for better sleep. Nadi Shodhana is a common yoga breath that is intended to balance and cleanse. It calms with the slight breath hold after the inhale. The simple process gives you a concrete activity to focus on and let your mind rest. This easy breath is typically done a seated posture with a mudra, or energy seal of the right hand, to guide the nostril switching. But if it serves your rest, try this breath without the mudra, just lying down and following your awareness between nostrils as you draw the breath in one nostril and out the other. Lying down, with visualization and awareness is an effective way to practice this breath for calming the mind and the onset of sleep. Try it in different locales and locations in order to support your needs. This breath with beneficially impact sleep no matter what time of day you practice it.

    You may want tissues nearby.

    Lets begin wherever you are by grounding. Notice where your body makes contact with the surface beneath you. Make note of how solid and supportive that surface is right now. Explore that pressure between you and the surface with your awareness. Let your body be heavy. Relax and spread out as you breathe into that contact. Start deepening your awareness of the breath. Stay with the movement, expansion and lift on the inhale, sink on the exhale. Let’s take one breath together, exhale all the air from your lungs, inhale through your nose, open mouth exhale. Seal your lips and let your breath be natural.

    If your nose is plugged, or you find this difficult in anyway, use your awareness to explore each nostril. Remember how you are relating to the experience is important, so if you are experiencing any difficulty, back away from the specifics and take a global view of the breathing and the amazing organ of your nose.

    Your nose is made up of erectile tissue that engorges and shrinks in biological rhythm. One nostril swells and limits the air coming in, to let the other be dominant. With special attention on your nose, can you tell which nostril is dominant right now? The right nostril is connected to the sympathetic nervous system, thinking intellect, reason, heat and is considered to be the sun nostril. And the left is associated with para-sympathetic nervous system, or rest and digest part of your nervous system, also coolness, intuition, feeling, and the moon. Our nostrils naturally switch dominance frequently during the day depending depending on time of day, state of mind, activity level, and temperature.

    If you are seated and want to continue with the mudra, let your left hand rest comfortably in your lap. With your right hand open fold your pointer finger and second finger down towards your palm. This leaves your thumb, ring finger, and pinky finger raised. To begin, exhale fully. Bring your thumb to press your right nostril closed. Inhale through your left nostril. Hold on the inhale and switch to ring finger closing left nostril. Gently press the air all the way out. Inhale same side, when you get to the top, hold and carefully switch nostrils, thumb closing right. Gently and slowly exhale. Inhale and when you get to the top, hold and switch nostrils. We will continue this way for 3 minutes.

    Exhale, inhale, switch. Exhale, inhale, switch.

    Do this awhile.

    When we a minute left.

    Continue on your own. If this feels natural and comfortable to you, explore matching the length of your inhale to your exhale and the slight breath retention at the hold. If this has felt awkward or uncomfortable, be gentle with it. Your experience will change with repeated practice. The tissue of your nose is worthy of your care. It produces nasal nitrous oxide that is essential for your heart. The cilia in your nose warms and humidifies the air that comes into your body. The tissues at your nose and throat are the same as your genitals, to me that means they should not be taken for granted. Take out your neti pot, fill it with a saline tears-like solution, it will clear out allergens and viruses and bacteria, bring in moisture and help you during this change in season.

    Finsh the breath with the exhale on the right nostril. If you are in seated posture with the mudra, let your hand come down to rest in your lap.

    We will close with the sound of OM. Listen along or join me. As Shakespeare is want to say, And palm to palm is holy palmer’s kiss, bring your hands together at your heart. May all the benefits we just created in this practice be vibrationally sent out with this sound and shared with all other beings, known or unknown, nearby or far away.

    Exhale. Inhale through the nose. Om.

    The practice is always followed with time for your silent om. Can you feel the way the sound begins in your chest and moves up your throat across the back of your scull to forehead, and ends in your nose. It’s its own kind of cleansing vibration.

    Thank you for listening and if you find this information and practice helpful please share it with anyone else you think may benefit. Like and subscribe so others can find it. Follow the show notes back to my newsletter to see what else I share. At the page there are resources for further study where I link to other writings and videos that have more information.

    Resources for further study:

    Breath by James Nestor. This book was my first in depth encounter to the importance of the nose. This read is highly recommended if you have any interest.

    This article is about how Hillary Clinton used Nadi Shodhana or Alternate Nostril Breathing to recover after the loss of the 2016 election. It was fun to find this and sharing it here because mom would have truly loved it: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/inspired-life/wp/2017/09/15/hillary-clinton-used-alternate-nostril-breathing-after-her-election-loss-heres-why-you-really-should-too/

    Follow the link to where Hillary Clinton shows Anderson Cooper how to do Alternate Nostril Breathing: https://www.cnn.com/videos/health/2017/09/14/clinton-alternate-nostril-breathing-sot-ac-intv.cnn

    This article from Kripalu has some great Ayurvedic tips for dealing with insomnia, including the recommendation of Nadi Shodhana. https://kripalu.org/resources/yoga-and-ayurveda-insomnia

    This article discusses in further detail right and left nostril dominance https://yogainternational.com/article/view/self-study-nostril-dominance



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  • Resource: Cyndi Lee from Yoga International: https://yogainternational.com/article/view/satya-vrksasana-learn-the-truth-about-your-tree-pose



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  • This practice leads you through the 6 directions of the spine and two balancing postures. Use a wall if you wish.



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  • Let go of the confusion that is inevitable when obsessive squirrel gathers too much. Gather your energy and store some for later. Honor a pause so that your untroubled mind can be a safe place to keep your gatherings.

    Resources: https://medicinecards.com

    Songs of Forgiveness is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.



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  • Thanks to Renae for bringing this practice to me and letting me study it with her. Hope this Monday finds you well and taking good care of your body.



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  • This sun salute is in honor of the lengthening days as we head into spring here where I write in North America. The sun salute was created in the early 20th century as much of postural yoga was as it expanded to the west, so it is relatively new in the history of yoga. Before that yoga was a sitting and breathing practice, a system for calming and understanding the mind and movement, a system designed to bring us to wholeness. As Patañjali said, “Practice and all is coming.” To me, it makes sense that yoga would find its way to the west through the body practice, as we have been all mind divided from our bodies for so very long. Nature exists in the body. This gentle variation is meant to open the pathways in the body so you can stay connected to your best intentions all day long. Put care for the body on a solar schedule. Let me know what you discover.



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  • In honor of the upcoming full moon (Friday 3/18/22), this week’s practice is an easy Moon Salute. It is a standing only practice that you can do anywhere. Put in your earbuds and greet the moon.

    Resources: https://kripalu.org/resources/chandra-namaskar-honoring-moon-salute



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  • Welcome to Monday! I have created two versions of this care for your feet yoga class. The one I am sending here takes place on the floor with a yoga mat and includes down dog and warrior two, the other is a chair yoga version for those who do not want to get down on the floor. Find the chair version here.

    I have watched both my grandma and my mom fall prey to bunions as they become more fearful on their feet the last couple years. Bunions are caused by hereditary factors, but can also be exacerbated by neglect and poor shoes and the gripping through the feet that comes from fear of falling. Yoga can help you stay connected to the earth and aware of the muscles that need to relax and the ones that need to be activated. Resources: Article by Doug Keller published on Yoga International.

    These two feet classes are not as short as I intended them to be. I will get better at timing with some practice! Please reach out if you have questions or concerns.

    Thanks for listening. More soon.

    Much Love, Tina



    This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.tinalaurellee.com/subscribe
  • I have watched both my grandma and my mom fall prey to bunions as they have aged and become more fearful on their feet the last couple years. Bunions are caused by hereditary factors, but can also be exacerbated by neglect and poor shoes. Yoga can help you stay connected to the earth and aware of the muscles that need to relax and the ones that need to be activated. Resources: Article by Doug Keller published on Yoga International.



    This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.tinalaurellee.com/subscribe
  • In this first podcast I share my intention and format. Beginnings and endings will remain the same.

    Thank you for listening to the Yoga Poetry Podcast. Share it with friends who may enjoy.



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