Twists and Turns

May
those who love us, love us;
and those who don't love us,
may God turn their hearts;
and if He doesn't turn their hearts,
may he turn their ankles
so we'll know them by their limping.
- Irish Blessing
I must admit that I
have spent considerable life force - as so many of
us have - reaching eagerly for the love of those
around me. Nevertheless, I can't say that I relate
to this blessing as it applies to others. I find
that the love that matters most is not that which
we receive. It is the love that we give that later
comes back to us. And that love we give is what is
reflected in the number of hearts that turn our
way.
And, paradoxically, many times it is the love and
tenderness we give unto ourselves that is most
medicinal over time.
Only a few days ago I stumbled upon a strange turn
of events (puns intended). The week began with a
trip on the stairs and turned left ankle that left
me with a small limp. Luckily, I yielded to the
fall; thus, the injury was minor and discomfort
passed rather quickly. Oddly, it was less than 16
hours later that I fell
again - this time not so
gracefully. My right ankle was rocked to the core -
a severe sprain that left my skin purple and
swollen. For three days I have been resting, icing,
compressing, and elevating. Only yesterday was I
able to put pressure on my right foot...today a
limp is the evidence that lingers.
When I read the Irish Blessing above, I couldn't
help but smile. The blessing has been in turning my
attention to
my own heart... and the limp
is helping me to see better how often I turn away
from that which nurtures me and the direction I
wish to move in.
In my life experience - and in my professional life
- I have seen again and again how the body acts as
a metaphor. After discovering this through my own
personal experience, I stumbled upon teachers such
as Louise Hay (and her epic book
Heal Your Body, Heal Your
Life). The joints of the
body are all about mobility... and the ability
to move forward. They are about flow and right
direction, if you will. And so this week I take
stock of my choices and how they align with the
direction of my dreams. And I am grateful for
the message my body sends me.
BTW, here is my edited
version of the old Irish Blessing
May
I be at one with the Flow of Divine Love
and when I am not,
may the Beloved turn my heart towards It once
again;
and if It doesn't succeed in turning my heart,
may It sweep my feet in Its direction
and I'll remember Love by my limping.
-
Irish Blessing [edited]
The Body Condition

To
be in harmony with the Oneness of things is
to be without anxiety about
imperfection.
Zen
Master Dogen
I have been thinking a lot about body conditioning.
You might think that I am referring to the many
actions that we take to bring the physical body to
its optimal state of performance. No, today I speak
of something closer to my heart. I am in awe of our
cultural conditioning and our
conditional acceptance of the body
as whole, functional, and perfect.
Last night, I stood in front of the mirror and
witnessed my ego lash out venemously at my body.
All in all, the winter months have been very good
to me. I have a beautiful and cozy new home, a
loving relationship of renewed balance, and a
feeling of contentment I have never known. And, I
have gained 10-15 pounds.
Our new home has only a very small mirror in the
upstairs bathroom where I shower and primp each
day. As a result, I rarely see my full reflection
naked. I have certainly noticed the shift in my
activity level (a common cycle for me in the cold
months, while also a function of some professional
shifts). My clothes fit differently, for sure. But
I was, nevertheless, a bit shocked when I stood on
the bed to catch a glimpse of my new fullness in
the mirror above my dresser. Now I don't mean to
place value judgments. The truth is, I really do
see beauty in many different body shapes and sizes
in women all around me. So why is it that the ruler
against which I measure myself is so different?!
In 2001, I was miserable in my body. I had been
managing a restaurant 60 hours a week for far too
long. I was eating poorly, and had little to no
physical stamina. I was fed up, and hungry in the
spirit. I left my job and moved to Boulder,
Colorado. It was there that I stepped into my first
Nia class. I was completely hooked from the get-go.
For over a year, I did Nia every single day. I
couldn't move enough. I obtained my white belt,
began teaching, and soon added regular qigong and
yoga practice to the mix. I was suddenly addicted
to movement and the flow of chi through my body. I
was a physical machine.
Naturally, my body changed dramatically. At the
height of this athletic phase in my development my
body was thin, taunt, and very strong. While this
may have been my initial aim, I was oddly
unaffected by it. I just wanted to move, plain and
simple. The new shape my movement took was just a
convenient by-product. I took it completely for
granted. It was easy to rarely think about it given
that the
conditions for my conditional
body-love were more ideal at that time than they
had every been. My body condition was such that,
most of the time, I could conditionally accept it.
No problem.
It wasn't until I moved to Oregon that everything
changed. Over the past 4 years, life conditions
have gradually led to less to less movement. As the
Coach in me has become more activated, the Athlete
has grown disinterested. For months upon months, I
forced myself to teach Nia, even though I feel in
my heart I have outgrown it as a teaching practice.
In mid-December of 2007, I finally left my regular
teaching practice.
In the summer of 2006, when the hoop entered my
life, I experienced another burst of the physical.
I rode the wave of newness and performance for a
time, yet the hooping world - full of amazing
individuals whom I love! - is, quite simply, a
unique culture that I don't always resonate with as
a lifestyle. I have yet to fully find my place in
it outside of the classroom. Teaching Hoopdance has
given me a new vehicle to explore via the body, yet
still, I am called to do it less and less over
time.
I am coming to accept that I am teacher above all
else. My mediums are likely to shift and change
throughout my life, that this I must allow. And so,
my body condition has changed with the seasons of
my heart.
Ironically, at this new weight, I am more grounded
and stable than ever. Eating meat and honoring my
body's natural rhythms (no longer pushing it to its
edge every day) has been the greatest act of
self-love. It has occurred to me that
perhaps
my ego's ideal body shape is not
that which my body and spirit responds to best. At
least at this moment in time. And my heart - the
mediator between body and mind - is meant to foster
the unity of self-acceptance.
I want to reiterate the recommended reading for
July 2007, Radical
Acceptance by Tara Brach. I am
revisiting it now. It is a beautifully-crafted
book that teaches us how to embrace each moment
in time with love and gratitude. Read it again
and again.
May your most important body condition be
acceptance.
Namaste.
My Heart Speaks to Me
Since mid-June, I have
shared so much on my blog regarding my recent path
of healing. And in the last few weeks have I taken
some time to journey inward without you all as a
witness.
I suppose much of my absence was sparked by a
recent healing session with Kyle Cline. In addition to his
skill in Chinese Medicine, he offers a powerful
receptivity as a counselor and healer. Our
session, on that day in early August, delivered
to me many insights. During a traditional Chi
Nei Tsang (organ massage) treatment, he invite
me to dialogue with my organs one at a time. At
first - as we moved from organ to organ - I
heard only my skeptic brain firing away with
doubt... yet in the space that grew around it, I
finally became empty enough to hear.
It was a message from my heart that stood out.
Among other things, it said to me via word and
imagery:
"My skin and the skin of your body are one and the
same."
I shared this with Kyle after my treatment. He said
it reminded him of the saying... "you wear your
heart on your sleeve." I was struck by this
parallel, as these words have been spoken to me on
more than one occasion in my life. Ever since then,
I have been pondering this aspect of how I have
navigated my emotions in recent years. Ironically,
I have spent the last decade of my life
undoing the tendency to hide
what I was feeling behind a facade that lasted
through my early-twenties. I carried a thick
membrane of protection - a buffer around me - to
keep the world out... and me in! Since I began
shedding the skin of days old, I have become more
vulnerable and have developed the courage to share
what is in my heart with greater ease. Yet it seems
that I may have pushed my heart to far to the
surface, it could use a bit more of a buffer
between it and the conditions that surround.
The skin of the body IS our most largest and most
vulnerable organ. It stands in the face of any
number of elements that can scathe, penetrate, or
scar upon contact. In some cases, trauma to the
skin leaves a scar behind that stands as a
testament to the pain for a lifetime. What is it to
say that my heart feels a similar vastness and
vulnerability?
For me, it is to say that I am discovering the
power and freedom of the feminine as a blessing
that must be honored as sacred.

So much has shifted in
recent weeks, since I have last opened the door to
my heart so publicly. I fearlessly allowed you all
to bear witness as my most intimate relationship
carried me through a tempest of change. Over the
past month, the winds of emotion have calmed, and I
have accepted an opportunity to grow and evolve in
relationship with another who is willing to do the
same.
The potency of this moment in my life is palpable.
I rode the pendulum - at times holding on for dear
life, or so it seemed - as it swung me from
stark-naked open heartedness to the
matter-of-factedness of survival mode. Somehow, I
have found my way to the middle. I am being invited
to embrace my Feminine power and love myself enough
to face the reflections of love in my life.
My heart is finding its way in the world. It is not
popular to live with an open-heart in a society
that tells us we are weak to live alongside
vulnerability. Nevertheless, I desire to become
intimate with love as it reveals itself to me and
through me... the shedding of old skin making way
for more brilliant layers to shine through.
Never Always

Today was the first day of Daniel's Taiji/Qigong
series here at thePortal. It was such a joy for me
to see him - my soul partner and day-to-day
companion - sharing his brilliance with us. His
teaching style is so different from my own,
offering me an avenue to grow and observe a new way
of facilitation that I have much to learn from.
It has been over three years since I studied an
energy art. There was a time when I practiced
qigong daily... and I had a reservoir of power
inside of me that supported me in all else. It was
an ideal combination. I didn't realize at the time
that my Nia practice was rooted by my study of
martial arts and inner traditions.
Even when I walked away from my energy practice,
the power that I had cultivated stayed with me for
a good year or so before I noticed a slowly
developing shift in my way of being. Suddenly, I
suffered from a paradox of desire. I yearned for
stillness more and more; yet my body craved
movement when it went without. The dancer in me
waged a war with the subtle intelligence of my
spirit that said something about what I was doing
was not grounded and nurturing to my longevity. I
did what I could to bring the purity of the
principles and foundations of all that I had
learned into my Nia practice... and was successful
in some regards. Nevertheless, an emptiness still
began to develop within. Most notably, my roots
became noticeably more shallow over time. I lost
center more often... and my mind began to reign
over my reality again, returned to something
resembling its once unbroken state.
I managed all of these things using the tools I
developed in my path through Nia - the principles
and practice of my belts offered me numerous
tactics to work with these shifts. Nevertheless, it
seems that having too many tools to call upon can
easily become a liability.
I did my best and became very strong in Nia as a
lifestyle practice. And when my body continued to
send me these mixed energetic messages, I ignored
them. That is, until I ended up in the emergency
room.
Suddenly, I was forced to listen to the emptiness
of my well. It echoed with hunger. And so, I must
fill it once more. Hence, my choice to
reintroducing the potency and richness of Qigong
back into my life. And as if by divine
intervention, I have been simultaneously paired
with a partner who is wealthy in the ways of
abundant waters.
One of the things that I have learned from
observing Daniel (I say observing
as his way of
teaching is in his way of being and is much less
overt than my own) is his ability to take a vast
amount knowledge and distill it down to the wisdom
at its very core. I realize after taking class with
him today that this comes from his years of
experience with the eastern arts... this is at the
heart of these traditions that go back before
modern man measured time and compared truths.
As an example: Today during class, I asked a simple
question regarding hand placement in a movement
that we were doing as a group. I said something to
the effect of, "should my palm always be up when
doing such and such?"
"Never
always," he
said. (His
response, in two words, said more than I often say
in a three-minute monologue.) From there, he came over...
redirected my movement... and no more was needed.
Never
Always.
Today I was reminded how the purest truths come in
small packages.
In the same way Qigong reminds me that powerful
changes come in subtle shifts. If you have ever
practiced, held a seemingly simple posture, and
noticed the heat generated in the body, you know
exactly what I mean.
It is my dream to one day develop a practice that
brings together my love of dance/movement as
metaphor, subtle truths, and energy alchemy
together as one. That is the intention of SHiNE
BODY. May this blog help to reveal more of how that
shall come to be. In the meantime, may we all find
ways to fill ourselves so that the waters in our
wells flow abundant and free.