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What is ‘Grow Your Yoga’ and how can I get involved?

This is our ninth annual “Grow Your Yoga” 30-day on-and-off the mat challenge.

Every year, we share a “Grow Your Yoga” intention for our 30-day challenge.

This year, our focus is water; last year it was climate change.

We seek to connect our practice with positive change.

The essence of “Grow Your Yoga” is to make the broader tones of our six pillars heard right down deep, so that we can not only support our shared intention, but support our own.

We are after all, only as strong in community as we are as the individuals that make it up.

Our six pillars are:

  • Be Healthy
  • Be Accessible
  • Live Green
  • Be Community
  • Live to Learn
  • Be Peace

The six pillars were created with the guidance of yoga philosophy.

Although the words are not in Sanskrit, each pillar is a salute to the teachings of the Buddha, the fundamental ethical guidelines outlined by Patanjali in the Yoga Sutra, and the vastness of yoga teachings in general.

The six pillars keep us true to the fact that yoga as a tradition is a vast sea, and the postures are merely a drop in that sea.

The six pillars are our way to be sure we are always honouring the breadth of yoga, rather than simply taking the posture, or asana, part out and saying, “OK, I’m done here.”

One thing every Modo Yoga teacher shares is a vigorous 500-hour, 11-month training.

One of the core teachings of this training is providing anatomy and physiology learning that allows for each teacher to bring repetition and variation (and healthy accessibility) to each and every class.

One of the key lessons in Live to learn is to explore, first in our own anatomy, how every posture looks a little different for everyone.

Teachers lead students to listen to their own bodies and make decisions for themselves on the mat.

You’ve probably heard a teacher say “listen to your body.” Have you ever broken the norm and just lay down on your mat because you had a killer long day?

It feels strange at first, but then it feels kind of awesome, right?

During “Grow Your Yoga,” we take this listening a step deeper as a collective.

We encourage each other to ask ourselves – am I shaping the life I want to live? Is my life reflecting who I want to be as a person, or as a yogi?

During “Grow Your Yoga,” we use our 30-days of dedicated practice to ask ourselves: “Am I listening to myself?” “How Can I be healthier?” “How can I reach out and create a change that I know I am capable of creating?”

We open a dialogue to challenge ourselves in community to be, all cliché aside, all that we can be.

So, that’s what we mean by “Grow Your Yoga.”

We’re talking on Instagram and Facebook; we’re gathering at studios; we’re fundraising on CrowdRise and we’re having a lot of fun along the way.

If you’re not near a studio, you are welcome to join the Modo International team.

Thank you for broadening our collective practice of this amazing tradition! If you are participating, have a great challenge. Maybe we’ll surpass $150,000 in community!

— Hope to see you around, Jess

How you can infuse gratitude into your yoga practice

Remember that time, back in 2015 when we were all so young, so full of life, ability and creativity?

Those were good times. I wish, looking back, that I had been more grateful for what I had around me.

I wish that I could have the abilities that I had back then – the clear eyesight, the ability to walk freely, the ability to drive, and the precious gift of watching my children grow.

I play a trick on myself sometimes to check-in and see if I am aware of how awesome things are in the present.

We all get caught up with what might be, and sometimes we create nostalgia for things as they were.

The fact is that things never were what we thought they were, nor will they be like we want them to be in the future.

All the more reason to deeply see and feel how awesome it is that we have our life right now.

That awareness is much bigger than any cliché or slogan, as it brings us back to the humility of being alive and awake.

There is one technique in savasana that is incredibly powerful, and perhaps we can all try it at some point this month.

When doing your body scan at the start of your savasana, take some time to infuse each body part with gratitude for what it does and what it allows us to do.

If there is anything that our yoga practice brings, it is insight into how amazing the human body is.

How to infuse gratitude into your yoga practice:

  • Infuse your arms with gratitude for hugging, writing, the ability to give high fives, carrying children, for reaching, for protecting yourself and for picking up things that have fallen.
  • Give thanks to your legs for walking, kicking, running, balancing, jumping and dancing.
  • Bring awareness to your senses and know that they have kept you alive, allowed you to eat chocolate, see a technicolour sunset, hear a powerful song, touch the skin of your lover and smell freshly-baked bread.
  • Be humbled by the greatness of the brain — its ability to process massive amounts of stimuli, the way in which it figures out how to solve a puzzle, how it stores precious memories and how it gives you ideas, dreams and visions.

You are filled with epic creations of a universe that has tested and tried out trillions of permutations of a few base elements, and has come to the conclusion that you are it’s finest creation yet, and so it has provided you with a million gifts and ways in which to connect with everything in the whole cosmos.

I hope for you great savasanas, where you feel yourself profoundly alive and present, because time passes swiftly and opportunity is lost.

Very soon you will be old and your children grown. Let yourself be filled with gratitude for what is, so that you do not find yourself wishing you had paid more attention when you were young.

Remember that time, back in 2015, when we were all so young, so full of life, ability and creativity?

— Sincerely, Ted Grand