Is It an Underwater Phantasmagoria?
Nope, Just Another Fabulous Day as a Cell.

This is an utterly amazing animated video of cellular processes made by the biology folks at Harvard University. As much as I enjoyed “Avatar,” this rendering of the incredible inner life of our cells far surpasses that action flick. Check out the motor protein as it “walks.” So cool!

What a fantastic world it is that moves within our bodies.

(This is the music video version. If you are interested in knowing what’s going on, there is a version with narration, though I did find the vocabulary a little beyond my scope of comprehension.)

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Weighted Comfort

The other day I lay down on the floor, my favorite napping place. I like to feel the pressure of weight against my body, so I laid a folded-up blanket and two yoga blocks on my belly and chest. I was quickly soothed into dreamland.

This nap-time set up reminded me of an article in Yoga Journal about a teacher who uses a variety of bolsters, blankets and yoga straps to support people who have experienced trauma. The support and containment of the props would allow her clients to deeply relax.

Why does this work? There are many reasons, but I will offer the following:

Our bodies can tighten from both functional use and emotional flow. Fascial and muscular tissues hold our structure together. To varying degrees they contract and expand as we move throughout our day. However, rarely are the tissues in a state of ease, either during activity or rest.

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I am in a Quiet Forest, I am in a Quiet Forest . . .
Not a Jam-Packed L Train

By the time the L train had reached the Bedford Avenue stop on its way to Manhattan yesterday morning, I was pressed up against the exit doors by a mass of fellow commuters. My nerves began to get excited, but not in a good way. I could feel the tremors of panic starting in. So I did four things:

1) I closed my eyes.

2) I brought awareness to my legs. I felt down into the length of my legs into my feet to find grounding. The onset of anxiety was moving through my belly, chest and head, so feeling into my legs helped redirect my energy and attention away from my alarmed upper body.

3) I inhaled through my nose and exhaled though my nose, sending the breath up against the roof of my mouth, particularly towards the back. Keeping my lips closed, I created space inside my mouth as if gently holding a soft boiled egg. In Continuum Movement, this is called the Lunar breath. It is also similar to Yoga’s ujjayi breath, but softer.

This breath can be very effective in calming the nervous system. As soon as I began to think of the crowd or I dared open my eyes, I returned my focus to my breath (and kept my eyes closed!).


4) I imagined that I was in a wet green forest, much like the one I had recently visited in the Pacific Northwest. I saw and felt the broad leaves of a plant and the needles of the pine trees; I heard bird song; I saw a sparkling small stream.

I continued to explore the forest until we reached Union Square. I spilled out onto the platform with everyone else, calmer and  pleased that I was able to stave off an anxiety attack. My endorphins probably got a nice a little boost as well, since, frankly, for me a quiet forest is way more pleasant than a jam-packed L train.

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Autumn’s Energies at Play

We are now deep into autumn, a seasonal phase of contraction. The sun is drawing itself away from New York, closing each day earlier with seemingly great rapidity. Despite the occasional outburst of heat and humidity, the air is cooling and the leaves in our parks are turning.

Our bodies are contracting from the summertime’s warmth and expansiveness, and many of us are now much busier with work, school or both. All the while, we are surrounded by a higher degree of commotion.

The city is once again in its full state of excitation with its famous caffeinated-like buzz. The streets are now thrumming with traffic, the city’s circulatory transportation system is churning with the full flood of the workforce, children are zing-zanging and jing-jangling into schools, and theaters and museums are throwing open their doors for their first big shows of the season.

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Intuit Your Way into a Richer Life

A week ago I found myself in the basement of the Mulberry Street Library, seeking a new book. My previous read had been abruptly called back, so I arrived at the library rather blank-minded for my next book.

Standing in front of the stacks, my eyes aimlessly wandered down the book spines when I felt a call to my left. This call is difficult to describe specifically, since it was both felt and sensed. It was like an audible buzz or a small flurry of commotion, as if someone was waving to get my attention. With nothing to lose, I walked to the other side of the room. Though I had to awkwardly squeeze myself behind a man reading a newspaper, I felt and listened my way to the specific location of the call.

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Wind Blow, Water Flow, Muscles Fire

Recently I had the rare pleasure of a leafy-green weekend on the South Fork of Long Island. As my city-toughened hide softened, I felt the brush of the wind against my skin. The body of air felt constantly fresh and alive. In the ocean, I reveled in the push-pull-drag of the surf. The churn of the waves challenged and invigorated my body and spirit.

This was not a land of stale air and stagnant water. There was a great vitality in this dance of nature.

That same weekend I read an article in the New York Times Magazine, “The Men Who Stare at Screens.” It concerns scientific studies of people who regularly exercise and sit for many hours throughout their day. We all know that the prevalence of computers and electronic devices, as well as increased tv watching and driving have all contributed to our progressively sedentary lives. Even low-effort activities like cooking–not to mention getting up to the change the television channel–have diminished.

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Electrolyte Your Life

With this summer’s onslaught of heat and humidity, it’s super important to be hydrated and flush with electrolytes. Try this recipe from the magazine Conscious Dancer: 1 qt H2O, 1 qt fruit juice, 3 tbs lemon juice, 1 tsp Himalayan or sea salt, 1 tsp baking soda, 1 tsp cream of tartar (potassium!). Or imbibe some canned coconut water, it’s cheap and tasty. Another option, though neon-colored and loaded with sugar and corn syrup, is Gatorade. Whatever your choice, drink up!

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Keep the Grounding Force of Kapha from Weighing You Down

One day in April I lay on the lawn of Madison Square Park and gloried in a sunlit day clear of humidity and haze. Great washes of rains had recently cleansed the city’s buildings and streets and spectacularly revived its urban backyards and parks.

Soaking up the sunshine, I recalled late winter and early spring when two of my clients were complaining of lethargy and staying at home seemed like an excellent idea. This was not surprising to me because according to Ayurveda, that seasonal period is dominated by the dosha kapha.

A dosha is a particular state of matter and energy. A dosha that is kapha has a weighty density to it. It is a combination of the elements earth and water. The other doshas are pitta which is a combination of fire and water, and vata, the pairing of air and ether.

Children’s bodies are predominantly kapha. Our bones and bodily fluids are kapha. New York City’s infamous humidity is kapha. The sludge in our sewers is kapha. The oil in our French fries is kapha. Fiorello LaGuardia had a kapha body-type. (In comparison, RuPaul would fit nicely in the the pitta category and Anna Wintour in the vata category.) In our emotional environment, melancholy and depression are kapha.

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