Friday, July 29, 2011

07.29.11

Hey kids,

As promised, Part 4 of 7 in my ROY G. BIV Treasury series, Green with Envy! Because I'm envious of people that have money to buy everything in this Treasury! This one is tough to pick just one or two favorite items, so I'm gonna pick 3 today (uh oh!)

RW2 Gallery

First is this lovely mermaid painting by Robert Walker of RW2 Gallery (really gorgeous oil paintings, check out the store) I just love the depth of space and color in these paintings. He has some really gory art in the store as well, but, even that work is beautiful in it's own way. Great oil paintings are like great rock songs, if the music is good, the lyrics could completely contradict my core beliefs, and I'm still going to love the song. Likewise, if the subject matter of a painting isn't my thing, if it's a beautiful painting, I'm still going to appreciate it for it's beauty anyway.



Studio Tuesday
I'm also really digging this sweet little watercolor by Studio Tuesday. In stark contrast to the mermaid painting, I just like how simple it is, plus it's just so cute in it's simplicity. Watercolor is such an awesome (and forgiving) medium like that.


I realize a lot of the art I'm putting in these treasuries is really.... "watery" or somehow related to water. Not sure why it is that I'm attracted to the ocean, water, and animals that live in the ocean/water. Usually one or all of those things are present in my art. I've always lived by water, but I never had some kind of harrowing experience with it. I have had nightmares of tidal waves my whole life, could that be it? I don't know, I would love a Jungian psychologist to analyze this all for me.

Erin Crawford
That said I'm going to refrain from choosing another water-like one for my third favorite, which is this acrylic on wood painting by Erin Crawford. She has a really cool graffiti-like style, I actually dig her elephant paintings even more but they didn't fit in with my Green Treasury hehe. I just like the shapes, very feminine despite being abstracted. Also I'm a sucker for spirals, anyone that knows me knows this!

Stay tuned next week for part 5! Aw...it's almost over already, only 3 more after this one! Well, I'll continue to post new, themed Treasuries every week, I love supporting fellow artists so, this ain't over!

Monday, July 25, 2011

07.25.11- Look What I Made Monday Volume 4!


Woot! I sketched a froggy and colored him in Photoshop. I'm not sure if I'm going to simplify the colors and do some screenprints or maybe leave the colors and make Epson prints. I was flicking channels and saw some poisonous frogs and their colors are just so bright and mesmerizing (colors on a computer screen don't do it justice)...it's weird to me, and I'm sort of obsessed with the fact, that so many animals in nature can be so beautiful and so deadly at the same time. So, yeah I just felt like drawing one of my own. He's smiling teehee!

Also thanks to Erica, the artistic mastermind at Lemondrop Land for including my Seahorse prints in her Treasury this week! Check out her store, she makes really cool paper cut away art, I don't know how she does it, at first I thought they were screenprints until I read that they were cut outs. That takes some serious talent, dexterity and patience!

Namasté you guys!

Friday, July 22, 2011

07.22.11 - Serenity NOW!

Many of you may know exactly what I'm referencing when I say "Serenity NOW!" but for those of you that don't, I have one word: Seinfeld. Just watch the video:


The days that I feel my blood boiling when I'm at work and it's 5pm and we've had nothing to do all day and then someone comes down with a heap of work that will keep us here until 11pm (and this is at least a 3 day per week occurrence)...I have to watch this video. Because, it's so true, that all you can do is laugh or cry!

I know I'm not the only one with a job that's frustrating. What can be done to make us feel better, especially when there's no way you can do yoga (or workout or whatever you do to release) regularly if all your time is spent at work and then going home to sleep so you can do it all over again? Well, Elephant Journal have a few non-spiritual suggestions. "Laugh" is the first one, and for a really, really good reason. They also include a quote from Mark Twain that I'd not heard before I read that blog: "Against the assault of laughter nothing can stand." How profoundly true! New favorite quote!

I've grown up with a tendency to lean toward negative, pessimistic thinking, but my whole life I've always found a way to take the darkness and add humor to it. Sometimes people don't get my "dark" humor or sarcasm and believe that I really am truly a negative pit of despair (which I was, at one point in my life). Thankfully, my friends and loved ones understand me and I keep those people close. They laugh at my jokes instead of telling me they think I need therapy. They were the ones that stuck with me when I was an angry, loud, incorrigible teenager, an angsty 20-something and now a happier-late-20-something. They're the ones that make me laugh the most, and for that I'm so grateful.

Just a friendly reminder, even when you're feeling like you don't think you could even muster a smile, you can make yourself laugh. Just put on a funny movie, read comics, read your friend's awesomely hilarious blogs, go outside, go to a dog park and play with pups (even if you don't own a dog, just go, being around animals is so therapeutic when you're feeling bad), listen to music that lights you up, go for a drive and sing your favorite song at the top of your lungs. Yes, sometimes when you're in a funk you need to let yourself listen to sad music, cry, kick, scream, maybe break some shit, but when you're all done with that, go get yourself some laughs!

Enjoy your weekend, kids! Be sure to come back for "Look What I Made Monday!" Namasté! 

Thursday, July 21, 2011

07.21.11

Good morrow!

In keeping with last week's promise of more Etsy Treasuries, here is my "Blue" Treasury, part 3 of my 7 part ROY G. BIV series! This one it was hard to pick a favorite so I have to pick a few. "Jelly Romance" by nutandbee is adorable!!!! Everything in the shop is equally heart wrenchingly cute and I want everything!
Jelly Romance




I also really dug this up-cycled vinyl record by Benny and the Jet. They make some pretty cool jewelry using guitar strings and records, I like!

up-cycled painted record


I was also lucky enough to have USewWhat feel compelled to include my Sanskrit Seahorse Book in their Treasury this week, thank you!

Short 'n' sweet for today. Namasté!

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

07.20.11 Rock The Mat!—Tips for creating a kick-ass yoga playlist.

Hey Yogis!


Last week I wrote about some things that really chap my asana, and one of them was when teachers have lame music (or no music) going on during class. I totally promised that I would share my own personal playlist. Okay, I've actually made quite a lot of them depending on theme/genre/mood...but, today, you guys get just one. Don't worry, I'll be sharing more in the future, you'll just have to keep checking back for more ;)


I know it's not possible (unless you have unlimited free-time) to create a unique playlist to cater to every yoga class/theme, as a teacher. There aren't enough hours in the day and even if there were it's just not practical. I just like to create playlists when I have the chance if I'm feeling really strongly about an intention or if I'm really in a mood to get myself into some other mood through the music. When I'm not using one of my kick-ass playlists, I have another playlist with about a hundred or so songs in no order that I know I like to hear while I'm practicing (be it "regular" music or "yoga" music like Jai Uttal, etc.), and I just put that on random.


I'm going to break down the playlist in 3 parts...Warm Up, Peak, and Cool-down. I'm actually making this playlist as I write this so it's more updated to my current mood (and I can use it later yaayy!) Again, this is my personal playlist, as a teacher I don't think I would ever play "Closer" by NIN in class...unless I was having a class with people that I knew would be into it. However, yesterday I was in an anti-gravity yoga class and the teacher was playing club music (like the kind that the Jersey Shore kids pump their fists to), and he didn't seem to think twice about it. I found that really strange, and I think if it had been a regular vinyasa class I would've been hyper-fixated on how bad the music was. But, I was able to tune it out because the novelty of doing yoga in a hammock was occupying my mind more than anything else. Also if you haven't tried anti-gravity yoga (and you don't have glaucoma and are not pregnant or trying to get pregnant), RUN, don't walk, to Om Factory as soon as possible.


Anyhow lets get to it!


WARM UP
Elevator Music - Beck
Working for Vacation - Cibo Matto
Heartbeats - The Knife
W.F.L. - Happy Mondays
Closer - Nine Inch Nails


PEAK
Close To Me - The Cure (the kick ass mix, though, the one with the horns, yeah! Love love LOVE!)
This Must Be The Place (Naive Melody) - Talking Heads
Sound and Vision - David Bowie (by the way, one of my favorite songs, and yes, I wonder about sound and vision ALL THE TIME)
Tomorrow Never Knows - The Beatles
Some Velvet Morning - Primal Scream
Girls & Boys - Blur
Give it to Me - Rick James
Jungle Lion - Lee "Scratch" Perry & The Upsetters
Revolution Rock - The Clash
Monkey Ska - Derrick Harriot


COOL-DOWN
Dreadlock Holiday - 10cc
Above the Clouds -Gang Starr
Redemption Song - Toots and The Maytals
World of Two - Cake
Pets - Porno for Pyros
Frosti - Björk


Warm-up
Here you'll want to pick songs that kind of have a driving, inciting beat, and start off with something that makes you feel like "Okay, here we go!". I started off this one with Elevator Music, great lyrics, my favorite being "No dead flower's gonna grow til the dirt gets wet"...plus it starts off with a "One...Two...you know what to do!", it's got everything you need for your first yoga playlist track! I like the songs to follow to build to a more faster, upbeat/funky tempo as each song passes, to bring you seamlessly into the "peak" part of your session.


Peak
At this point in the practice I want to hear songs that make me feel uplifted, motivated, happy, excited, empowered, whatever-I-need, so that when I'm holding Down Dog for 5 breaths after a challenging sequence, I don't feel compelled to collapse on my mat. Toward the end of the "peak" section I go with more chilled-out songs, (I lean toward Reggae at this point in the playlist usually) to lead into the "cool-down". I also like to put in more light-hearted songs toward the end of my "peak", as that's when I get into my inversion practice, where I like to keep an open mind and not get all frusty when I can't get into handstand (which is why "Monkey Ska" is at the end of this one, if that song doesn't make you smile, nothing will).


Cool-down
It's pretty self-explanatory, here I pick songs that help me to feel more calm and quiet. But this is subjective and of course, some people would be perplexed, and not calmed, if they had to hear some Gang Starr while they were cooling down during yoga, even if the song is really subdue in comparison to other songs by them. But you want to pick songs that soothe you and don't take your mind into a state of heightened emotion, negative or positive.




I'll have to post another playlist that's a bit more class-friendly; without songs that are really an indulgence for me and probably very distracting for most (For example I think I'd take out Happy Mondays, NIN and possibly Primal Scream and/or Rick James...I don't know if I need to explain why, do I?).


Everybody is different, and when you're picking songs for a class, it's probably best to go with what you like personally, but just editing tracks that may be somewhat offensive lyrically or sonically to other people (in this case, I would take out NIN, Happy Mondays and Gang Starr, I think most people wouldn't be into that in a yoga class). You can always show your playlist to some fellow teachers, or students you have a relationship with, and get their feedback. Remember, you can't please all the people all the time so, don't take these opinions as the direction you should go in, it's just good to hear from your audience and then edit from there without totally compromising yourself.


So with that, I hope you found this helpful, and if you feel compelled to make your own playlist, please share it! I would love to see what you've come up with for yourself, and it would give other readers ideas for their own playlist, too :)


Namasté!

Monday, July 18, 2011

07.18.11 - Look What I Made Monday Vol. 3

Happy Monday!

So, this weekend my brain was all over the place. I have a bunch of ideas going on but they're not complete so, I will show one of part of those ideas today. Basically, I was just playing with my oil paints trying to make backgrounds to screen print onto. But now I like this watercolory-oil-painting so much that I don't know what to put on it without ruining it yet so this week I'll be brainstorming!


I may just do a series of these kinds of paintings, I love to just paint and zone out and just enjoy what I'm doing.

Also USewWhat at Etsy added my Sanskrit Seahorse sketchbook to her Treasury this weekend! Sweet deal! Thank you, kind lady! :)

That's all for today kids, check back Wednesday, I'll be sharing my own personal yoga playlist, and how I integrate it with the sequences and theme of my practice, and how you can do it with your favorite songs, too!

xo!

Friday, July 15, 2011

7.15.11

Having a late lunch break and I feel like I need to vent a little.


But first, let's talk about my grandma. She's the most amazing woman ever. Having gone through some of life's most harrowing human experiences from childhood into adulthood, she is still the most positive, graceful, and kind person I've ever met.


She's never had a "why me?" attitude, considering everything that she's experienced, she has a resilience that a lot of people wish they could cultivate themselves, but they're too entrenched in their "stuff" to get past it.


She has never once set foot in a therapist's office, let alone in a Yoga studio, and my grandmother has the Zen-like attitude of someone that's been living in a Buddhist monastery for decades.


I don't know what I would do without her, I talk to her every day, and she's a saint because she listens to me rant and rave about pretty much the same thing(s) every day. Okay, well, I don't rant and rave anymore...now I can discuss it like an adult. It's more like I'm examining what happens and she's always there to help me find the positive aspect about what's going on.


I had a particularly rough week this week when it came to dealing with the stress of my job, I worked over 10 hours every day (14 hours was the longest day, if you're wondering) and that doesn't include the hour and ten minute commute (in both directions, so that's over 2 hours each day on the train alone). So, I felt so trapped having so very little time to work on my art or practice yoga.


It really wouldn't feel so-beyond-articulation frustrating if I didn't have designs on being my own boss making a living from selling my art and being a yoga teacher. My job isn't that bad, I knew what I was getting into (they warned me in my interviews that it would be "dysfunctional", I paid that no mind since every single agency I've worked is "dysfunctional"...that was a warning I should have heeded!). I get paid overtime so I should be okay with it when I have to work three 17-hour-long days in a row. But, I'm not okay with it. Not when it means that I have no time to devote to doing what I need to do so that I don't have to work here (or for any other employer that believes humans don't need sleep or personal time) anymore. 


All the money in the world is worthless (well, technically money is and always has been worthless, it's just paper, and, now that it's only backed by our "faith" because it's not backed by gold, it's really worthless, but we have to pretend and base our lives around it anyway, what can we do?) when all you do every day is wake up, commute, work, go home with only 7 or 8 hours before you have to go back to work the next day, and sleep and do it all over again. That is not life. That is just animated death. I don't know what the numbers are but I'd venture to guess that's like 90% of people's lives. No wonder why so many people feel depressed, anxious, tired, angry, and trapped. I don't need to point out the obvious, but with the economy being what it is, people now more than ever feel the pressure to work-work-work, and feel like they can't say "no" to their employer lest they lose their job and have to wait 6 months or more to find another.


I was telling my grandmother all of this last night, almost on the verge of tears, because I was so frustrated. My grandmother had one simple thing to say, and we've all heard it before: "Just take it one day at a time."




The thing to remember is you are never stuck. There is always another way to do everything in life. You just have to keep your mind and heart open to the opportunities as they present themselves, and you have to do the work to create those opportunities as well. Just because you've hit a brick wall on your path, doesn't mean that you can't get around it, or search hard enough and find a secret doorway.


Sometimes the brick walls in life are opportunities in and of themselves, you have to remember to look at the bigger picture when you're in a myopic state of mind. Instead of "Why does this always happen me?" versus, "I'm not alone, people have gotten through the same thing and much worse, and so will I."

Patience (bolded to remind myself!) and persistence are what will get you through that process with grace and agility.


It also helps to remember is that we are not our bodies, our jobs, our cars, our beliefs..."we're pure consciousness", and we have the option to change the quality of that consciousness at any time. This awesome Elephant Journal article I read today helped to remind me of that.


So, as I get back to work, and try not to focus on wondering "How late will I be here tonight? Will I have to work this weekend?" I'm just going to remember another thing my grandmother always says: "Be happy. Be thankful. You are lucky!"

Thursday, July 14, 2011

07.14.11

Aloha artists, yogis, friends, movers n' shakers!

I've recently been introduced to the concept of Etsy Treasuries. If you don't know what they are, they are basically items from other Etsy sellers/artists that you can hand-pick and then post the list publicly for all to see. It's a really cool way to promote other sellers and it also allows the sellers whose items you've picked to see that you've added their item to your Treasury. Oftentimes they comment on the Treasury or send a message thanking you, sometimes they pay it forward and feature one of your items in one of their Treasuries. Pretty sweet deal!

Anyone that knows me knows that I love rainbows, I like to arrange things in rainbow order, I like to stare at pools of oil on water...I probably love and appreciate the beauty of rainbows almost as much as this guy. I love them so much that last year, I was staring at a rainbow and thought that my cause of death probably would be some unfortunate accident caused by my being distracted by a rainbow, so right away I registered the domain name deathbyrainbow.com. I never used it as my portfolio site or anything because I realized that the word "death" in my business name may not be the greatest idea. Yeah, so, I'm stuck with that until 2014...anyway!

I decided I'm going to create 7 Treasuries dedicated to my obsession with refracted and reflected light. I've already shared with you guys earlier this week my Violet Treasury, my favorite one is Wherever the March Winds Blow by Stephanie Fizer. Her store is really cute, her work is bright and sweet and I want to buy everything!

So, today you can check out Indigo! My favorite this week is Walrus as Totem by ravensdreaming. That walrus is just so adorable, plus I'm mesmerized by spirals as much as I am by rainbows so this piece just rocks!

Each week I'll post a new Treasury on my blog, so stay tuned, for the next five weeks it will be all about ROY G. BIV! 

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

07.13.11 - Top 3 Yoga Class Faux Pas That Really "Chap My Asana"

Hi Yogis!!! Hope you enjoyed "Look What I Made Monday", you can get your own fresh screenprint at my Etsy Store now! </shameless self-promotion> Okay, getting to it...

I've been hitting up a lot of "new" studios lately. Mostly because I didn't even know some of these places existed (which is ridiculous, how could I have missed Virayoga?! Or Yogamaya for that matter, considering Laughing Lotus was the first studio I ever went to and the lovely Bryn Chrisman whom used to work at LL is now the Studio Director Yogamaya. Also, Revolution Yoga in Rockville Centre, near where I live in Long Island, how did I miss that place!?) but really I've been going to different studios so that I can learn from all kinds of teachers so it can help me cultivate my teaching style.

I'm really glad I found these places, despite it being a little late, now I have all these options after work; in case I'm too late for a class at one studio, there's another class at another studio nearby. Once it's past 7 or 8 I'm kind of S.O.L. but, it's nice to know I have options if I do get out of work on time!

It's been cool to get to experience all these different teachers and different styles and I've had all good experiences at all of the aforementioned studios. But, since I've been out of my comfort zone going to new studios, I guess I've been more hyper-aware of things I like and don't like concerning the way different teachers like to work.

Sadie Nardini recently asked her students on her Facebook Fan page to list some things that some Yoga teachers have done that they didn't like in class. Everything from "the Yoga Voice" (you know, when they speak in a low, soft tone, in an attempt to make you feel calm, in a completely unnatural way that only makes you kind of nervous?) to mentions of teachers trying to push them into "deeper" versions of poses when their bodies aren't ready for it, came up.

It wasn't a question merely to let us air our grievances about bad Yoga classes, so much as an opportunity for students to understand that these annoyances can be lessons for them. Not only that, the responses to Sadie's question hopefully helped some teachers to see that some of the things they are doing are universally damaging to students (like pushing them into a twist or a backbend that their body is not ready for, or getting way too deep into personal troubles when talking in class to the point that it is putting negative energy on the students). And hopefully it helped students gain perspective on where teachers are coming from, and will help have a little more patience when they find themselves trapped in a studio with a teacher that makes them feel like they want to punch something or someone (really, yeah, it's happened to me, I'll tell you about it in a minute.)

I want to keep reminding myself of these things as I begin to practice teaching to different groups of people, every class is different and within the classes the students are wildly different. Knowing I can't please all the people all the time, I have to be myself, just like all the other Yoga teachers.

So, with that, and with the utmost compassion and understanding for the teachers guilty of these things:

(**also, please note, none of the studios I mentioned earlier are guilty of these things, so, get your booties to those studios as soon as you can because they all were great!**)


Top 3 Yoga Class Faux Pas That Really "Chap My Asana"


1. Teach a generic class. It's always disappointing to be stuck in a class with a teacher that you can tell is, for whatever reason, not giving their all. Sometimes it's the physical practice that they've put together is boring, redundant or not challenging/too challenging. Sometimes their "intention" seems to be uninspired, sometimes the "intention" is just a quote from The Yoga Sutra uttered in the beginning and at the end of class in a soft "yoga voice", but they've made no practical connection so their students can take that wisdom and use it in their life. Sometimes there is no intention at all, sometimes teachers just have us get right into Down Dog and act like it isn't really upsetting for our not-warmed-up-at-all shoulders.

Whenever I'm in a class with a teacher that seems to be phoning it in, or seems to be just plain phony, I just try to remember to have compassion. Maybe they've just had a really bad day/week/month. Maybe they're just a new teacher and don't know how to communicate or are scared to communicate authentically lest they offend someone. Yoga teachers are just people, they are not these all-knowing, always centered, super-human beings that some people assume they must be. The idea of Guru vs. Student relationship always perplexed me, because I think we should all be striving to expand our minds and learn and grow, from everyone and every situation, I don't think learning ever ceases, and I think that teachers can learn from students their entire careers.



2. Fail to have a mindful playlist/mix CD for their class. Let me just preface by saying that I know the breath and Yoga are the most important aspects of a class, but if you're going to bother to play music, I think you need to be aware of how the music and the mood/tones of the songs can either be integrated into the theme of the class (sonically or lyrically), or just be jarring and distracting.

I have a very eclectic, varied taste in music. Just before on the train I was listening to Marilyn Manson's Portrait of an American Family, then I got the sudden urge to listen to some P-Funk. But I know that I can't teach a class and have a song like Cake and Sodomy on my playlist unless I am holding a class called "Metal Yoga" (hmmm...I should definitely do that one day...anyway...) and then everyone knows what to expect. I think it's possible to have very different genres in the same playlist if you create a flow between songs and the tempo of the songs build with the energy of the class (Creating a kick-ass Yoga Playlist is another entry, don't worry, it's coming soon!)

But what bothers me more than a song that seems out of place, studios that use the same iPod and play the same exact songs. Every. Single. Class. I would rather them play nothing at all then feel like I'm experiencing my own real-life Groundhog Day. 

Also, be mindful of what you play while students are in Savasana, especially. I really, really love the song Songbird by Fleetwood Mac, but there was a teacher (who happens to be one of my favorites despite this!) that I had that would play it sometimes in Savasana, and it always made me tear up a little (and if I was already emotional it was more than just tearing up), that song is just so sweet. But I wasn't able to enjoy Savasana because I was having this deep emotional response to hearing Christine McVie's lovely voice sing these heart-wrenching lyrics. It's probably best to play songs without any lyrics in Savasana, or just have total silence, either one will be less distracting than a song with lyrics.



3. Threaten to keep the entire class in a difficult pose until every last person gets into the full pose. (or, basically, any form of aggression when it comes to getting students to do challenging poses)
Maybe it was just a joke, but, I once went to a class with a teacher that liked to do opposite elbow-to-knee Navasana (boat pose) crunches (which I like to do too, actually!). But before we got into the reps, the teacher had us hold full Navasana for what seemed like a million years. The teacher demanded that everyone's legs be straight and that they "won't start doing the reps until everyone's legs are perfectly straight". While they may have been just kidding (which, I don't think they were since they literally stared down everyone with bent knees until they straightened their legs) it is beyond off-putting, and seems to go against everything Yoga stands for, to me, to force students to do something that might hurt them. I just think if you're going to joke like that, then you should also mention the variations of the pose for people that aren't able to do the full pose. As a teacher you should encourage students to push and challenge themselves, but not to do anything for which their bodies are not prepared.

I'm assuming this teacher forgot about the fact that Navasana requires a very strong core to hold without placing the hands on the floor by the hips and/or bending the knees for extra low-back support. If one's core is not strong enough to hold the full pose, then the weight of the pose is transferred to the low back, and that is not healthy for anyone no matter what kind of shape they're in.



Thankfully I don't experience these issues too often anymore, I'm lucky enough to live and work near some really great studios with some really caring, fun, unique, and intuitive teachers. 

The best advice I have for anyone that finds themselves in a class that just isn't right for them, is to just keep a positive, compassionate attitude about it. If the teacher is boring you or not mentally engaging, do what you need to do to make the class more fun for you. If the teacher had no theme or intention for the class, set one yourself. You bring to the mat all the things you love about Yoga. If you get on the mat with a negative attitude, you won't have a fun class, and you'll probably leave more frustrated than when you came in. If you keep your mind open to the possibilities and challenges, it'll be way more rewarding.


I took this picture, someone drew this on the wall in the lobby where I work last week :) 


If the poses are too much (or not enough) of a challenge for you, do what you have to do physically to adjust the class to your needs. If a teacher singles you out or is downright abusive because you're making the practice work for your body, ignore them and do what you need to do. And, if you have a choice (which I often don't, as I just have to take whatever class is happening whenever I get off from work, if I get out of work early enough to make any of the classes at the studios nearby) don't go to that teacher's classes anymore. But, what might really serve the teacher, rather than allowing them to go on the rest of their careers being pushy teachers, is either speaking to the teacher directly, or talk to the studio owner if you really don't feel comfortable approaching the teacher. 

If the music is distracting or just plain unlistenable to you, you might just have to tune it out, or you can just ask the teacher if they can lower the volume. You can always kindly suggest to the teacher or the studio owner (a lot of places have comment boxes so you don't have to feel awkward about saying anything) after class that they consider changing the music. Also, if you're going to complain about anything in a studio (or anything ever!), make sure you have a suggestion for an alternative :)

So, have fun in class guys! Namasté!

P.S.
What really chaps your asana? I'd love to know, especially because I love helping people whip a negative into a positive ;)

Monday, July 11, 2011

07.11.11 - Look What I Made Monday Volume 2!

I hope everyone had a great weekend!

I've got a cure for your Monday-blues, retail therapy! Check out my newest Etsy listings featuring my illustration from last weeks' "Look What I Made Monday". I did a bunch of prints on cardstock as well as printed on a couple of Moleskine sketchbooks. The silver ink on the sketchbook didn't come out as vividly as I had hoped, but I kind of like that it disappears and then reappears in certain light.




You can find the limited-edition hand-pulled screen print and the brand-new pretty sketchbook, in my Etsy store today! Yay!

I also put together my first Etsy Treasury, featuring eye-catching items from the Etsy Entrepreneur Team members. It was really fun to put together (also this was a challenge posed on the Etsy Forums to create the Treasury in 10 minutes. It took me 15 because I had to color-coordinate how I ordered the listings I liked the most haha) and I can see myself getting really addicted to making them so, I'll have to restrain myself a little!

xoxo!

Friday, July 8, 2011

07.08.11

Happy Friday Everyone!

Just wanted to take this opportunity to bring your attention to another fellow artist, and longtime friend, Derrick Kennelty-Cohen (aka: Sanskrit. And yeah, Sanskrit is his legal middle name given at birth.) He is the creative mastermind behind online magazine, The Pop Aesthetic. Derrick writes opinion pieces on contemporary literature (mostly comics and graphic novels), film & T.V., music, art, and video games. A genius graphic designer by trade, (having produced critically-acclaimed work as both a writer and artist for NerveBabblePitchfork, Upright Citizens Brigade and the Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art.) Derrick put together this online magazine all by his lonesome. 



You can tell Derrick really puts in a lot of work when researching his pieces. Namely, "You'll Pay for This, Captain Planet!—Five of the most mixed-message moments in Captain Planet history.", where I know for a fact he spent days on end watching every. single. episode of Captain Planet. If that's not dedication to your craft, I don't know what is. Also, it's hilarious and you should read it. Right now, just leave, who cares about finishing reading this entry...it's got episode clips!


Derrick is on the up-and-up when it comes to new artists and bands and makes sure he keeps it that way. He's always going to some art festival or a concert, (and he kindly invites me to these events and I pretty much always have to decline because of work unfortunately) and he takes tons of pictures and videos, check out his piece on Blip Festival 2011 to see what I mean.


So, be sure to become a fan of The Pop Aesthetic on Facebook and tell your friends! Derrick posts lots of fun links there all the time. And thank the guy for all his hard work keeping you entertained!


Have a great weekend, kids!

Thursday, July 7, 2011

07.07.11 - Foundation>Core>Expression = Truth>Reflection>Action

I recently had the honor of getting certified by Sadie Nardini as a Core-Strength Vinyasa Yoga Instructor (yaaayy!!). I found Sadie in Spring of 2009 because I was looking for Yoga videos to follow on YouTube (as it was hard to catch a class after work due to crazy hours). I found Sadie's YouTube Channel and I was so surprised how she could make me feel like I was right in the studio with her videos, not to mention that she had(s) over a hundred videos to offer (and a ton of other free information on her blogs/website)!


After a few weeks of following her videos, I bothered to look at her information on YouTube and realized that she owned a Yoga studio less than a mile from where I worked in Manhattan (the now defunct Fierce Club, which I miss terribly, but still I know I'm blessed that I had the opportunity to be a student there, to be in the right place at the right time.) The next day I went to her class and couldn't believe that she was just as kind and nurturing (yet hilarious and entertaining) as she appeared to be in her videos.  


What attracted me to Sadie's classes, and ultimately inspired me to want to teach yoga, was her ability to explain the poses and philosophy so succinctly that my practice immediately changed and I felt stronger (physically and emotionally) within the first few days of practicing CSV. Sadie has this amazing knack for drawing parallels between the challenges of the physical Yoga practice, and the challenges of every day life, so that you can take that "warm-fuzzy-Namasté-feeling" off the matt with you into the world. Not to mention, she doesn't take herself too seriously, I don't think there was ever a class that went by without the students giggling in unison multiple times. The practice can be mindful while still being joyful, and that's how I like to roll in my own practice.


I've found a way to articulate these parallels for myself, maybe they can be of assistance to you in your practice and your life. So, shall I break it down? Too bad, I'm going to anyway!


In Core-Strength Vinyasa, there are three main aspects to every pose:


1. Foundation: First find your foundation, find your breath. For example, if you wanted to lift into Half-Moon Pose from a Twisted Chair pose (hey, coincidentally, I found a picture of Sadie looking for an image of that pose!), you would inhale, ground down into the standing foot which would organically start to lift the other foot…

2. Core:…you would then engage Mula Bandha, this is done by "hugging-in" the pelvic floor muscles in and up (The superficial way to explain it is engaging the muscles like you have to go to the bathroom but you're holding it in; but the muscles you're trying to access are deeper than that. Sadie has her own way of explaining it with her "Golden Egg" method, which really made the concept "click" for me), and on the exhale, use your core to lift the other leg up and out and to open your heart and hips to the side…


3. Expression: ...once you feel grounded, inhale and feel your ribs expanding in all directions, then reach the arms in opposite directions between the ground and sky, and fully straighten the lifted leg (and keep the toes of that leg pointed, like a Barbie’s foot, to keep that leg strong in it’s position) while also reaching the head in the opposite direction that the lifted leg is reaching, to elongate the spine. That would be the pose in full expression.



Getting to the full Expression of the pose isn't going to happen unless your Foundation and your Core are strong first.


My way of translating this concept to every day life is: Truth>Reflection>Action.



An example of when this thought process can be helpful: You’re on the train with a migraine and someone is talking loudly on their cell phone. This person is totally oblivious to everyone angrily staring at them as though their eyes have laser beams that if they concentrate hard enough the lasers will deploy and burn a hole in this person's cell phone. 


In this situation, instead of immediately screaming at them to shut the hell up (and possibly starting a physical tussle, which I have seen happen on the train over cell phone disputes!), or just sitting in your seat stewing and building up negative energy, wishing they would shut up already, you can stop for a second, and go back to your truth and realize you can change how you’re feeling, and figure out how you can get what you need, right now.

1. Truth: The Truth is your core-belief system or the Foundation for your actions/thought process. One way to figure out what your Truth is, is to consider what you might say if you had a billboard the whole world could read. When all of your actions are based in this Truth, you reduce emotional suffering because thought and action are aligned seamlessly. 


So, at least at this point in my life, my truth is: "Radiate love and compassion to all humanity". Okay, if that's my Truth, and I'm stuck on this train with this rude person, then I need to think about what I'm going to do next, which brings me to...


2. Reflection: Here is where you consider your Core Truths, and figure out what step to take next. We do this by taking a breath, "hugging-in" our reactionary emotions for a minute, and reminding ourselves what we're really about. 


So, if I'm on the train and this person on their cell phone is grating my nerves like a fine cheese, I have to stop and breathe for a second. I remind myself to have humanity (as that's my Truth) and consider that this person is just another person, living their life, probably oblivious to how their actions are affecting everyone around them and surely their behavior isn't malicious. So, considering all this, what am I going to do now?


3. Action: This is where you take your thoughts and put them into action (or inaction, depending on what's necessary in the moment). Whatever  your Expression, it will not have integrity if you don't act according to your Truth and "hug-in" for a moment before you allow yourself to react.


Getting back to the cell phone monster on the train: If my Truth is to have humanity, screaming at this person to shut the hell up is not maintaining my integrity. I need to think of ways I can make this situation better for me with minimal to no harm to myself or the people around me. In this situation, I could ask the Conductor to please have the woman quiet down, or, the even easier route, would be to go into another train car and avoid confrontation altogether. Either way, I won't be sitting there and stewing anymore, and I'll have maintained integrity and will have avoided showering negativity on top of already existing negativity.


It's not possible to be 100% positive and aligned 100% of the time every single day, (and that's fine, we're humans! Life is crazy and we're emotional beings, hardwired by evolution to have a reaction to negative stimuli for survival.) but it is possible to strive for that kind of mindfulness in our every day lives (and anyone that knows me personally knows I'm working on this). The way I do this is by remembering Truth>Reflection>Action as much as possible when faced with adversity, epic or trifling as it may be. If you practice this in mundane situations (like when you're stuck in traffic, or at work and frustrated, etc) it prepares you for dealing with the real scary stuff that can happen in life (a loved one passes away, you lose your job or your home, you find out you have a terminal illness, the list goes on) so you can react gracefully and as your best self possible.


Namasté!

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

07.06.11 - Four Easy Steps to Cultivating Self-discipline from a (formerly) Self-professed "Lazybone"

This past holiday weekend had an oddly great balance between work and play. I got my blog, website, Etsy store and Facebook Fanpage up and managed to get a lot of other work done; and I still had time to hang out all day with my family for my cousin's birthday at my Uncles house, I got to spend time with my grandmother, and finally on The 4th I got to spend the entire day with my boyfriend and have a barbeque with his family.

Which begs the question: How does one keep this work/play balance during the unpredictable workweek? (At the end of this blog I'll leave you with 4 pieces of advice to help you stay on track. But first, some back-story about me so I can further prove my point that if I can do this, anyone can do this.)

The obvious answer to that question is self-discipline. I've told myself for many years that I wasn't born with self-discipline and that structure had to be created for me in order for me to be productive. Which is the reason why, years before I graduated from SVA with my Illustration degree, I had already told myself that when I was out of college I would be working as a designer in an Advertising agency because that would be the only way I would survive financially living in NY. I already made up my mind that there was no way I would ever make it as an illustrator/artist/entrepreneur because I didn't have the self-discipline gene to be my own boss. This is what I told myself. I never even gave myself a chance to prove myself to myself! How ridiculous is that? 



Some of us may have been blessed with jobs that actually start at 9am and end at 5pm, but, I'd say a good 85% of people have a 1-3 hour window after 5pm as to what time they will be heading home from work every day. I fall into the latter category, and that window of time varies day-to-day. On top of this crazy schedule, I also have an hour-and-a-half commute in both directions. The fact that I don't know when I will be home day-to-day, while at the mercy of a fixed train schedule, can be quite frustrating and I've spent a lot of time blaming the inconsistent schedule on my inability to get some of my artwork out there (I've also blamed it for having no time for my yoga practice, which is also a lame excuse). 


I realized and decided I can't do that anymore, people have done much, much more, with far less time and resources.


So if people have done more with less, then how does one cultivate self-discipline and get things done? This doesn't have a short answer, and I'm still working on it myself, but two things happened that kicked me into high gear this past week, incidentally, these realizations came to me while I was educating myself about my Yoga practice:

1) Last week I listened to Elena Brower's Yoga Teacher Telesummit 
telecast with Tal Rachleff (whom organized The Yoga Teacher Telesummit which features free live interviews with respected Yoga/alternative health practitioners and conscious business owners.) If you are a Yoga teacher or serious about your Yoga practice, it is well worth the $97 to download all the mp3s plus transcripts of the interviews (for mp3's only it's $67. I like to have transcripts though, sometimes I can't focus on audio interviews, for the same strange reason that I can't focus on audiobooks) You'll have the recordings forever and I've only listened to about 8 so far while on my commute,  I'm not half-way through all the calls and I've been so inspired by every single call I've heard. I highly, highly, highly recommend purchasing/downloading the interviews if you are not available for the live calls. 

Anyway, Elena Brower is a huge advocate of The Handel Group which is a group that offers business and personal coaching. Without getting too deep into the Handel Method, Elena mentioned during her interview (which, if you get the download package, listen to Elena's call first, it's called "Teaching from Your Heart: Finding the Real Love in Your Teaching", it will blow your mind.) one aspect of it that really resonated with me. She mentioned that, according to The Handel Group, everybody has two destructive voices inside them: "The Chicken" (coward) and "The Brat" (obvious what that is). These voices work in tandem, almost seamlessly, to keep us down. The idea is to self-examine and notice when you're allowing these voices to govern your life, and then quickly change your mindset and your actions to quiet these voices and "do the work".



I realized that "The Brat" in me was so out-of-control I wasn't doing anything toward what I said I really wanted to do in life: "If I didn't get home so late/knew when I was coming home every night I could get something done.", "I can't start doing work at 11pm because I have workaholic tendencies and I'll stay up 'til 4am and will only have 3 hours of sleep before work.", the list goes on. Even worse than "The Brat", "The Chicken" was (is) also freaking out too: "Well, I can't start a business because I don't know the first thing about structuring it", "I can't create/follow a schedule for myself.", "It won't work unless I sacrifice all my free time and sleep, so what's the point in trying?", "The Etsy community is so big and intimidating, I don't know where to begin with making contacts so that I could become a valuable part of it.", "What will I do about health insurance? What about having an inconsistent income? How will I survive in NY?"

As you can see, "The Chicken" had taken over my brain more than anything else and was taking me further and further away from my goals.



I decided that now my force of will is like a jackhammer drowning out the sound of "The Chicken". As cheesy as that may sound, it's working for me.

2) I was lucky enough to be contacted by Racheal Cook, founder of The Yogipreneur and I filled out an application to get a free phone-consultation with Racheal, and lucky me, I was chosen as one of the people to get a free call! Yay! The 40-minute phone call helped me see things more clearly and inspired me that I have the faculties and resources to do this on my own if I really put forth the effort. Not only that, Racheal started from similar beginnings, (although my workweek hasn't been more than 65 hours, thankfully) she was working 80-hour work weeks, and the stress was so bad that she developed health problems and had to take a leave of absence. During that time she took Yoga classes and benefitted so much from them that she decided she wanted to help teachers get more students in classes so more people could reap all the benefits of Yoga. If she could get through that, I have no excuse why I can't change my situation for myself. I'm so grateful I had the opportunity to speak with Racheal directly (and can't thank her enough for her time), because I was so inspired after the call that I was able to do so much this weekend, and get way more done than I had thought I would.

Racheal asked me a series of questions for her to better get to know me, that actually helped me to better articulate what my ultimate goals were/are. One question she posed: "What would be your ideal situation if you were doing exactly what you want to do?"...I never tried to crystallize that answer into one sentence before, and I realized that was a big part of my problem: I wasn't perfectly clear about what I wanted. So, after Racheal posed this question, this is what it came down to:



I want to make art and teach yoga for a living, and through those avenues I want to spread positivity, love, inspiration and compassion to as many people as humanly possible while I'm on this planet.

So I'll leave you with three pieces of advice, as simple as they may be, are tough to implement when "The Brat" and "The Chicken" are running amok in your mind. The first step addresses this, so here we go!



Four Easy Steps to Cultivating Self-discipline from a (formerly) Self-professed "Lazybone":


1 - Do not be discouraged by setbacks, especially the ones you create for yourself. Nobody's buying your items in your Etsy shop, someone left a snarky comment on your blog...so what? If you allow a negative, defeated attitude to take over, it will lead to inaction, and thusly, disappointment. There will be so many challenges in managing your own business, you'll have ups and downs and you have to stay positive when things are at the bottom of the curve. Your attitude and your actions/reactions are the only thing you can control in life, so stay enthusiastic about what you're doing even if The Universe doesn't seem to care at the moment. Life has a way of balancing itself out, so keep doing the work and the rest will follow. "The Chicken" and "The Brat" voices will no longer plague your mind when you practice this positive mindset, keep an "attitude of gratitude", and stay honest with yourself and others.


2 - Know exactly what you want. This needs no real explanation. If you don't know what you want or have no real goal in mind, how are you going to have any success? Once you know what you want, you can then start making lists of precise tasks for yourself every day toward your goal(s). Once you start "doing the work", the opportunities that usually go unnoticed will open themselves up to you. You'll remember that your boyfriend's aunt is a CPA and can offer legal/business advice; you remember your best friend's sister is really good at web design and can help you make a kick-ass website; or while writing a blog referring to a fellow Etsy artist you admire, a new client finds you.


3 - Make lists and schedules for yourself and follow them. Sounds easy enough, but for people like myself this concept was beyond me until recently (mostly because I told myself I wouldn't be able to follow my own lists since there was no real consequence for not doing the work...other than the sting of regret of having done nothing productive). Since there is only chaos governing my work hours, I've created my own sense of order. What I do is, every week at the beginning of the week, I create a list of tasks for each day of the week for me to complete when I get home from work every night. I worked it out so that the list of things I need to do should only take me 1-3 hours to complete. And since I'm involved in two different fields/industries, I organize it so I focus on tasks for either Art or Yoga every other day. This way, I don't feel so overwhelmed by all the things I need to do, everything is organized, in bite-sized pieces and easy to check off (and it feels good to check off things as I do them, it gives me a sense of accomplishment). You can organize your tasks however it works best for you.


4 - No excuses! You've made a commitment to yourself, so keep it. Sometimes life happens and you're literally unable to do what you need to do toward reaching your goals (working until 2am would be a good example of a setback for me). That's okay, tomorrow is a new day, you will get back to it, make your list and check it twice, and give a thousand percent effort.


xo!