Get set for a good night’s sleep

Blanket, bolster, and timer for savasanaThat’s exactly what I did on Day Two of the Reach Out Challenge. I was so energized by opening blocked channels in my body from the previous two yoga sessions from My Yoga Online that I didn’t sleep well the night before. So last night I chose a class called Get Set for a Good Sleep. And the class delivered as promised!

I liked the teacher, Marla Waal. Her voice was very clear and light, but also matter of fact. The sound of her voice seemed to support me to have a very gentle practice. And this was definitely the easiest of the classes I’ve tried so far. It began with a lot of seated poses, including some great neck stretches. We did get onto our feet eventually, for some easy down dog, transitioning into a simple kneeling position rather than the typical arm-straining plank pose to the floor.

With yoga, the breath and physcial movement is one thing, and the shift in inner state is another. It is remarkable to me how the physical aspects of yoga transform the emotional, mental, and spiritual experience. At the end of the class I felt calm, quiet, and in a deeper, more present state. It was a wonderful way to end the day. Since it was a 25-minute class, I finished with 5 minutes of sivasana with a long bolster under my back and head, creating a gentle chest-opening position.

The folks at Yoga Outreach had recommended focusing on ahimsa for Day Two. Ahimsa is sometimes translated as non-harming, though they focused on the positive act of having compassion rather than the negative act of refraining from harm. So I used the attitude of having compassion towards myself in the poses, and found this increased the feeling of gentleness during the practice, including during the savasana at the end. It is a wonderful gift to deliberately treat oneself with tenderness. I recommend you try this at home!

Thanks to my friends and family who have pledged 50 cents or a dollar a day for the 30 day Reach Out Challenge. If you haven’t done so and would like to sponsor me to raise money for Yoga Outreach, you can use the online donation link. Or phone me at 604.251.6337 or send an email to kyrempel@gmail.com. Thanks!

P.S. If you have donated through Canada Helps before, the site might recognize you and behave a little differently. If you get the message that your session has timed out, click the Home link in the message. Then click on my donation link, above, again. Please let me know if you have any problems making a donation.

Sara Ivanhoe inspired me to teach yoga & quit smoking

Basic Yoga Workout for DummiesI did the official Day One of the Reach Out Challenge yesterday, with a 27-minute class from My Yoga Online. I searched for classes by Sara Ivanhoe, and found one called Yoga on the Edge: Sunset.

Sara is the teacher who inspired me to become a yoga teacher to begin with. When I first moved to Monkey Valley, I found her Basic Yoga Workout for Dummies video at the local grocery store, and started doing it at home. The benefits I found from doing the yoga were incredible. I experienced a natural high from the ujjayi breathing, and an overall feeling of well-being from the total-body stretching and re-alignment. Having this positive experience of breathing helped me to quit smoking once and for all. Over the years I have bought the video for family members, and it forms the foundation of the classes I teach.

A few years ago I was fortunate to have the opportunity to take a live class with Sara at the Vancouver Yoga Conference. Afterwards I spoke to her and told her of the impact she had on my life. She asked where I taught, and I felt very proud to be able to tell her that I taught to youth in prison through Yoga Outreach. It was a Wow moment in my life.

Yoga on the Edge: Sunset is from another DVD that Sara has recorded. It is a gentle, flowing practice, which is the style I do most often (of course, since my regular practice comes from Sara to begin with!). I liked the flowing sequence from the wide-legged forward bend pose into triangle and warrior variations. As with the previous class I wrote about, the yoga was harder than I am used to. I have definitely gotten into a rut with my practice, and doing the challenge is exposing new parts of my body to exercise. I must say, my butt was very sore yesterday from the yin yoga class the day before! Today I am feeling the challenge in my upper back. It feels great.

Yesterday the folks at Yoga Outreach suggested that the people taking the challenge spend a few moments thinking about what motivates us to do this. What is my intention? I am finding that as I speak to people about the challenge and ask them to pledge me, I feel re-inspired by the work that Yoga Outreach does. It opens my heart to serve the people that we bring yoga to. I am also finding that my personal practice is really opening up, and my body along with it. My intention at the beginning was really just to support Yoga Outreach. But I am discovering the personal benefits are much greater than I anticipated.

P.S. I received a report of a problem with the online donation link. If anyone else has a problem, can you please let me know? Thanks. If you haven’t pledged me yet but want to, you can do so online, or phone or email me.


Get Out of Jail Free card for Reach Out Challenge

Get Out of Jail Free cardToday is the first day of the Reach Out Challenge for Yoga Outreach, and I’ve already got a Get Out of Jail Free card! I did a 30-minute yoga session last night, and will count this for one day of yoga if it so happens that during the October 10 – November 10 period I have to miss a day of doing yoga. It’s not cheating, it’s working the system.

Knowing how life brings surprises, and things rarely go exactly as planned, this seems like a good way to support my success in the month to come.

I went online last night to try out My Yoga Online, and I have to tell you, this site rocks! There are hundreds of yoga classes, in every style imaginable. You can sort the possibilities by teacher, style of yoga, length of class, level, or yoga studio. I am so excited about learning from a slew of world-class yoga teachers over the month to come.

Last night I did the Yin Yoga for Winter class. I’ve never done Yin yoga before, so it was a great learning experience. Since I was doing it right before bed, I wanted something relaxing, and this was just the ticket. It was a short series of pretty easy poses (I chose the Gentle tag), each held for a few minutes:

  • Child’s Pose
  • Sphinx – actually amazingly hard when sustained for a few minutes, with the option to transition to a more difficult arms straight version
  • Low Lunge
  • Seated Forward Bend
  • Cross-Legged Meditation

The class was 25 minutes, and I finished with 5 minutes of Legs Up the Wall. The teacher, Melina Meza, allows plenty of time for silent awareness, but also includes an inspiring story of the winter season and how this influences our bodies and spirit.

It was a great start to the month to come. I thank all of you who have already pledged me, and invite you to join in the challenge, even if you don’t have time to do it every day.

Embrace the aliveness of fall with 30 days of yoga

De-zombify with Yoga OutreachHas working full-time got you feeling like a zombie? Are you turning into your computer? Have you noticed that the year has turned once again, the trees are turning yellow and red, and the air is getting crisp and fresh?

Align with the season and come back to life with the Reach Out Challenge for Yoga Outreach! Starting October 10, do 30 minutes of yoga a day for 30 days to come alive and to support Yoga Outreach programs.

You can do yoga at home on your own, grab a yoga video from your library, or go to a class at your local community centre or yoga studio. Do it for you! To help others too, get pledges from your friends for each day that you meet the challenge.

Take the 30-day Yoga Outreach challenge and help Yoga Outreach raise funds and friends. Their mission is to identify, develop, and deliver healing and life-affirming yoga programs to people who can not directly access these resources. Yoga Outreach is a Vancouver-based registered charity. Yoga Outreach partners with volunteer teachers and facilities and organizations to provide free yoga.

Support me by pledging 50¢ or $1 a day for 30 days

If you don’t want to take the challenge yourself, I hope you will support me by pledging an amount per day or a set dollar amount. Click here to make a pledge online. Or, call me at 604.251.6337 to make a pledge on my form. Receipts will be issued for pledges over $25. My goal is to raise $300 for Yoga Outreach. Thanks for your support!

Your pledge will support me to do 30 minutes of yoga a day, and it will help bring yoga to people who normally wouldn’t have access to it—people in prison, people with addictions, people with mental health challenges, and so on. Thank you!

ChiRunning and Yoga at BC Wilderness Visions

July 16-17, 2011 – CANCELLED

$349 includes teaching fees and delicious organic vegetarian lunch, snacks, and teaAngela ChiRunning at Hastings Park

Location: Lower Seymour Conservation Reserve, North Vancouver

9:30 – 4:30, Saturday & Sunday

Guides: Angela and Karen are teaming up for the second year in a row. For a glimpse into the awesome time had by all at last year’s ChiRunning and yoga retreat, see here.

  • Learn to run free of injury!
  • Learn to run effortlessly!
  • Learn to be energy efficient!
  • Learn how to create Chi Energy Flow!

Angela no longer has Achilles tendonitis since using the ChiRunning form, which combines the inner focus and flow of T’ai Chi with the power and energy of running to create a revolutionary running form and philosophy that takes the pounding, pain, and potential damage out of the sport of running. The ChiRunning program increases mental clarity and focus, enhances the joy of running, and turns running into a safe and effective life-long program for health, fitness, and well-being. Angela has run 20 marathons and completed Iron Man Canada in 2008.

Karen has developed a yoga practice that supports long distance running. Combining yoga with running helped her overcome knee pain and IT band problems, to cross the threshold from the 10K distance to the half-marathon! Her most adventurous race was the Klondike Road Relay from Skagway, Alaska to Whitehorse, Yukon. Yoga is a millenia-old discipline that provides the perfect complement to your running practice. It brings suppleness to the entire body, builds core strength, and safely releases the lactic acid that builds up in the muscles during a run. The relaxation that yoga brings allows your body to run for longer distances with ease.

This 2-day non-residential retreat in the beautiful North Shore mountains will teach you the fundamentals of the ChiRunning form as well as a post-run yoga practice that is more fun than the old stretches you learned in gym class!

Mornings will begin with a group check-in in the crystal-clear mountain air, followed by running and yoga. In the afternoon we’ll teach you methods for connecting with the Chi energy in nature, and then give you a chance to practice what you’ve learned with more ChiRunning. The days will end with a final yoga session to send you home feeling relaxed and connected with nature and yourself.

This weekend retreat will give you time and space to connect with your body and with nature, and you’ll return to the city feeling refreshed and enlivened.

Optional reading: ChiRunning: A Revolutionary Approach to Effortless, Injury-Free Running, by Danny Dreyer and Katherine Dreyer

To register, please fill in the online Registration Form. For payment information, see Fees. We’ll send you directions and a suggested gear list when you register.



The ultimate 15-minute yoga class

The most refreshing 15 minutes of the week!Yoga in a meeting room; photo by Paul McFadden.

For the past 8 months I offered a free 15-minute yoga class at lunch time. The participants were my colleagues at Coast Capital Savings. This was an adaptation of the 60-minute class I developed for the Society for Technical Communication, following the same principles of being accessible to people of every fitness level, with poses suitable for all of us while wearing office attire, and not requiring any special equipment.

Weather permitting, we did the class in the parking lot, and later on a grassy lawn across the street. When the weather was cool or wet, we did the class in a large meeting room, with lots of windows and light coming in on two sides. When indoors, I encouraged people to kick off their shoes. Outdoors, people often felt more comfortable keeping their shoes on. Sometimes the women did this class in their high heels! How’s that for adaptability!

Over this period of time I perfected a series of poses to loosen all the tension from the neck, shoulders, and upper back. It is mostly standing poses, though when indoors I like to include Cat.

Karen’s 15-minute yoga for the office class

  • Horse (Qigong) – loosens shoulder joints
  • Bear (Qigong) – loosens joints from ankles to shoulders, and softens neck
  • Carnival (Kundalini) – loosens upper back
  • Little wings (Kundalini) – pulverizes remaining tension in upper back
  • Mountain with side bends (Hatha) – uses breath to loosen ribs, open sides
  • Tree (Hatha) – brings balance and resilient strength
  • Cat – a final stretch to open space in the spine and chest

Crane pose is a little advanced for this class! Drawing from 1001 Pearls of Yoga Wisdom, by Liz Lark.I guarantee that you will feel lighter, looser, rejuvenated, and refreshed after this class! Many times I was amazed at how the tension and pain in my shoulder (which I injured long ago with 15-hour days at the computer) vanished from doing this class. The participants also reported feeling benefits such as improved mood and reduced physical tension. But more than the physical results, the benefits of sharing this special time with my colleagues was the most uplifting aspect of this class. Namaste.

Kath running and pre-emptive forgiveness

The kath is the belly centre, also known as the hara (in some Buddhist traditions) and Post-run yoga viewthe don tien (in martial arts) or dantien. In the Diamond Approach we use the term kath, and one of the foundational practices is the kath meditation. The kath centre is also known as the moving centre, so on my run in the mountains by the Seymour River yesterday, I experimented with doing the kath meditation while running. Running is definitely a form of movement!

A while ago on a vision fast in Colorado, Ann Debaldo, a student of the Diamond Approach and apprentice on that vision fast, told me that focusing on the kath would help my feet find their way in the dark. I have certainly found this to be true on night runs when I can’t see the path. But yesterday I tried it in broad daylight, and what a revelation! First, I could see so much more of my surroundings by looking straight ahead rather than at the path. My eyes and soul could take in the magnificent greenness of the forest and the purity and freshness of the snowy mountain peaks ahead. Also, by focusing on the kath, my mind was much more still, which meant I could absorb the impact of the surroundings more. This is what I long for when I run in the forest; to be impacted by the beauty of nature, and have that freshness enliven the dead, stale spaces of my soul that get trapped in endless dry thought patterns. It was so refreshing!

And finally, I find it very difficult to rest in the kath centre when I do my sitting meditation each morning. But resting in the kath while running was very easy! I felt a fullness there, like a thick liquid, resilient and substantial. It actually seemed motionless, though my body was in movement. It was a wonderful way to experience the kath. And my feet did indeed find their way, over stones and sticks, potholes and lumps, with speed and agility. I recommend that you try this the next time you go for a run. Just bring your awareness into your belly, below the belly button. And keep bringing it back there when the mind wanders away. I’d love to hear about your experience after you’ve tried it!

By the way, the other thing that I did was to keep my eyes focused straight ahead or looking around at the mountains, trees, and river, rather than on the path. Keeping the eyes focused straight ahead is one of the techniques of ChiRunning. Angela James told me that she had one of her best race times ever when she focused on this technique. If you are interested in learning more about ChiRunning, check out the ChiRunning and yoga retreat at Monkey Valley in July!

And finally, I want to mention an interesting idea I came across in the Winter 2009 issue of Circles on the Mountain, the publication of the Wilderness Guides Council. The Hawaiian Maoli people have an ideal of Mihikala—the act of giving and receiving forgiveness before it is needed. Imagine the freedom of being able to forgive someone, rather than get upset, even before they do the thing that would upset you! The longing for freedom from reactivity is very strong in me these days, so this idea has much appeal. I will try to practice it on the other drivers during the drive in to work this morning!


Remarkable meditation retreat in Vancouver in May

Dan Brown is coming to Vancouver to lead a meditation retreat on May 14 – 21. His Pointing Out the Great Waygradual approach allows us to learn to meditate effectively, with step-by-step descriptions of the ways to practice, precise descriptions of the various stages and their intended realizations, and the typical problems that arise along with their remedies. Although this event is not being advertised to the general public, I’d like to let readers of my blog know about it, because I believe that for those looking for an introduction to meditation, this is a remarkable opportunity. There are still one or two spaces available. If you are interested, please call me at 604.251.6337 and I’ll give you more details.

Students and teachers of the Diamond Approach have attended Dan’s retreat in the US, and one of our local DA students found it to be so valuable that she invited Dan to come here.  Dan co-wrote, with Ken Wilber and Jack Engler, the book Transformations in Consciousness, and he teaches an annual seminar on mahamudra meditation at the Esalen Institute. His book Pointing Out the Great Way describes his method for learning meditation. This will be the subject of the retreat.

I signed up last year, and as the date draws nearer I am very excited about this chance to receive world-class teaching right here in Vancouver. If you want to learn to be more intimate with your direct lived experience, with gentleness for yourself and others, daily meditation is a vital foundation practice. It is in the spirit of sincere good wishes for our mutual awakening that I invite you to consider participating in this retreat.


Yoga for the New Year

Speaking of bears, I’d like to invite you to a yoga class I am teaching on Bear poseTuesday, January 19. It’s free for members of the Society for Technical Communication. If you’re not a member, it’s $15 to pre-register online, or $20 at the door.

One of the poses I’ll be teaching is called the bear pose! This class is a gentle class intended for people with any level of experience with yoga. No special equipment or clothing is necessary, as the poses are chosen so that you can do them at the office during your workday.

I teach four short sets of poses that you can do at work while taking a five-minute break, bringing energy and suppleness into your body, focusing your mind, and easing tension from your eyes and neck.

If you’ve never done yoga before, this class is a great way to experience first-hand the joy that yoga breath and movement can bring. Participants who came to the class last year were amazed at the states of pleasure they experienced from these simple techniques. If you’re already a regular yoga practitioner, you may still learn something new as the class draws on poses from Qigong and Kundalini yoga, which may be new forms to you, as well as the more familiar Hatha yoga. You’ll feel great whether you are new to yoga or have been practicing for years! 

P.S. If you couldn’t make it to the class, but would like to experience the benefits of yoga in your workplace, check out the info at www.karenrempel.com. I would be happy to bring this workshop to you!

Returning from the retreat: innocence, security, anger, and a good burger

Nature and the Human SoulAs I mentioned previously, I just returned from the Diamond Approach 10-day summer retreat in California, and I’d like to share some of the learnings from that, because they tie in with the summer part of the wheel. Summer is the time of childhood innocence. In fact, Bill Plotkin writes in Nature and the Human Soul that innocence is one of the gifts children give to the world. And it is the parents’ job to maintain the safety of the home-nest in the early years, to allow this innocence to flourish. Unfortunately, this often doesn’t happen. But we all are innocent at the core of our nature. Even George Bush, Hitler, and Charles Manson. Although innocence wasn’t directly the theme of the retreat, I found that when I was working with people, and being a very allowing, clear space of openness for witnessing their work, their innocence is something I kept seeing, over and over. And I also felt in touch with my own innocence. This is part of the radiant preciousness of who we are. I felt it was a gift from the universe to be able to experience this and know it directly, in myself and others.

 

Childlike innocenceSo when I left the retreat, I was in quite an expansive, open state, after 10 days of working in a deep way with people during the exercises, meditating, and having many satisfying connections with friends that I only get to see once a year. I arrived at the Air Canada security line at San Francisco airport in this open, friendly state. Although the line was quite long, and only one belt was open, and they kept letting people in first class go around the side and to the front of the line, I was in my open state, had four hours before my flight, and didn’t want to get caught up in my usual reactive judgement about this situation. I spoke to the woman behind me, who was from Calgary, and we shared some airport security experiences. When I got close to the front of the line, a man asked if he could cut in. I asked if he was crew, and he was, so I said sure, and we had a nice conversation too. He was from Montreal, and we talked about different cities. It was very pleasant, and I was pleased to be enjoying this potentially frustrating situation.

 

I guess this is where the universe wanted to test how grounded and connected to being I really was, because suddenly my bag was halted, brought out, and the security guy asked who it belonged to. I said it was mine, and he said there was a liquid in the bag. I had thought my water bottle was empty, but it wasn’t, and that was why it had been flagged. I pulled it out and dumped the water in the bin, and put my bag back through. Then my laptop was halted, and the security guy asked who it belonged to. I admitted it was mine, and a jerk in the line who was late for his flight said “Have you got anything else in your luggage that doesn’t belong there?”

 

Huh! Snap! I was totally out of my open spacious peaceful place and into a defensive response that came to the fore automatically. I said “It’s not my fault security is so fucking anal.” Luckily for me, they weren’t actually that anal, because they let me go through and didn’t say anything about this statement. But the passenger continued to heckle me as I collected my belongings at the other end of the belt, and I lost it again and said “It’s not my fault you’re late for your flight.” And he said “It’s not my fault you’re a stupid *&%&!” I said “I didn’t call you names and I would appreciate if you don’t call me names.” He called me another name, and then took off down the hallway.

 

So that’s it, huh? That’s the limit of my capacity to stay open and nonreactive. Less than an hour from arriving at the airport. Altercation. Irritation. Feeling caught up in reactivity, which is very familiar, and feeling hopeless about being a slave to it. Why am I getting triggered so easily, all the time? Here I’ve just finished a 10-day retreat and I’m totally A ball of frustrationcaught up in what some idiot stranger said to me. It was an attack, but I got caught in it. Where is the benefit of the practice? The openness and spaciousness? If you are familiar with the entity known as the superego, you will notice it at work, making the situation even worse by attacking me for not being more equanimous.

 

But I have learned something after these many years of various practices, so the next part of the story is how I worked with the stew of anger and reactivity I was caught up in. And, no coincidence, anger is also one of the qualities connected with the red of the south part of the wheel. It is a form of the red essential aspect which can be experienced as strength, and the heat, fire, and aliveness of it can help us to protect ourselves and others. It has often motivated me to take action in the world. But in its less purely flowing form it can be felt as irritation, frustration, rage, and so on. Which is one of the things I worked with over and over at the retreat. The movement, like here at the airport, from openness to frustration or rage.

 

As I walked down the corridor toward my gate, pulling my well-examined luggage behind me, I saw how I get caught in this uncomfortable place all the time. I felt the discomfort of it and the desire to move away from it. It feels so awful to be caught in this reactivity. And it happens to me all the time. This made me wonder what I’m doing to keep getting caught in this. Is this a familiar, comfortable pattern from childhood? (Well, yes.) Is that why it seems to happen over and over? Am I creating it? And I noticed how much I wanted to escape from the discomfort of it. I don’t want to feel this way. I want to control reality so I never have to feel this way. I wished I’d said something even more annihilating to completely shut the stranger up and stop him from making me feel this way. I spent a moment or two trying to think of what that might have been—what I could have said. I noticed again how the feeling was so uncomfortable that I wanted to move away from it. But it was inside me and I couldn’t. So I went to have a pee, and tried to remember to sense my belly center—the Kath meditation—a practice I had been doing for the past ten days (and nine years). As I was sitting on the toilet, sensing my belly, I suddenly flashed on my spiritual teacher, and how she probably doesn’t get caught up in this kind of reactivity.

 

The feeling was as if I’d done something wrong and the passenger who attacked me had told everyone about it, so I guess a kind of shame. I am normally very together, and follow all the procedures for passing through security correctly, but this time I was still in a somewhat expanded state from the retreat, floating along a bit, and didn’t realize there was still some water in my water bottle. Also I didn’t know I had to take the laptop out of its case. I had already taken it out of the suitcase, and put it in a separate bin, and I thought that was all I had to do.

 

So the shame I noticed mainly by the reaction to it—defending myself, as if I hadn’t done anything wrong. In my head telling him my IQ was higher than his, because he had called me stupid. But just seeing that my superego was involved didn’t really shift the experience of discomfort and an inner, red irritation that felt very difficult to be with. But as I was sitting on the toilet, I realized that the difficulty was that I was trying to maintain a self-image. My teacher wouldn’t care what her image was—what people thought of her (or so I imagined). But I was feeling so bothered because my self-image of being together and doing things right was challenged.

 

Seeing this started to bring me more of a sense of relief, inner space. I still noticed some superego activity as I went on to a bar & grill to have some dinner while waiting for the flight. Feeling sensitive and raw, seeing how many times I’d been reactive in the retreat and carried away by anger. But I noticed the table I was given by a window facing the sunshine was very nice, and the food was quite good, and I felt very fortunate to be in this amazingly quiet place in an international airport. Feeling some sense of the surroundings being safe and supportive helped me relax into my true nature, and the awareness of myself as an innocent and precious being. The reactivity dissolved completely and I enjoyed my meal.

 

Anger is a very potent doorway for learning for me. In this instance, seeing how it was working to maintain a self-image is what allowed the whole experience to shift from the almost unbearable heat and irritation to shame (which the anger was protecting me from feeling) to a sense of inner spaciousness and quiet enjoyment of my veggie burger.

 

P.S. The exploration I just described is an example of the practice of inquiry—the main practice of the Diamond Approach. Staying with our experience, being curious about it, and letting it unfold. The movement of the unfoldment, when we allow it to just happen, can go anywhere. In this instance, it went to spaciousness and a good burger.