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10 tips to ace your New Year’s Resolutions

 

I’m guessing that statistically we’re more likely to be hit by lightning than we are to stick to our New Year’s resolution, yet the ritual of reviewing and renewing our resolve is so great.

I started a new tradition for my own resolutions. I’m renaming them practices.

We can’t fail at practicing, right? But we can fail at a resolution.

Basically, I’m hoping to increase the odds. But for real, framing a resolution as something we have to do is always a disastrous set up.

Practice is something we can pick up any time without threading it through self-judgement or the limited pinhole dichotomy of accomplished or unaccomplished.

My practice in 2018 is asking questions about things I care about deeply. By asking questions to myself, and others, I hope to open new dialogue and learn.

My first question is: How can I practice community?

There are unlimited articles on how to improve our practice of yoga postures, or asanas.

Why not magnify our focus on community? I’ve seen over the years in my own asana practice that learning is more rich and meaningful when I am actively engaged in community.

Here are 10 ways to practice community support this year:

1. Receiving

Oh, we sure know how to give, right? We’re givers. We’re yoga lovers and we’re chasing peace.

We’re the first to call “back middle” instead of “shotgun” just to, you know, be a giver.

I’m wondering why it’s easier to give so freely and yet so hard to receive.

Can we practice humility and recognize that all good teachers and students, ask for help.

2. Listen carefully

Author Tim Ferris developed his interview technique by watching his favourite journalists conduct interviews.

He noticed that all of the best, Oprah included I noticed, waited a seemingly unbearable time after a question was answered.

Three or four full seconds would lapse, and then miraculously a gem seemed to emerge.

After hearing this I tried it and watched it work while teaching philosophy at the teacher trainings, or even in conversations with friends.

When we give the speaker a little more space, the thesis arrives, brainstormed at the source, edited internally.

Wisdom is polished by silence.

3. Commitment

New York Times writer and author Anand Giridharadas once said:

“I think what’s happened to us is that we’re not committed to each other as a people, so it’s almost like we are in this kind of situation where any disappointment that we encounter in our fellow citizens is like a reason to break up, and any deviation from deeply fulfilling each other as fellow citizens is like a tragedy.

“And part of commitment as a citizen is embracing other people’s dysfunction, and embracing other people’s incompleteness, because you know you have your own.”

Community isn’t only developed in our yoga families, we cultivate it in our school groups, at the water cooler at work, in relationships — anywhere we want to say “‘F’ you, I’m, out of here” if something doesn’t go our way.

I’d like to practice community support unceasingly, and weed my assumptions about others before they take seed and overpower the growth of the good stuff.

4. Forgiveness

I’m Canadian so I wait for a sorry when I feel a sorry is due. But it is so empowering to claim the processing that we need to do on our own instead of waiting for an external pardon.

It’s so damn liberating I wish I had figured it out earlier, and wish I could remember it more readily.

I’m still a fan of “I’m sorry,” but I’m not going to wait for it for a change in my own mental or emotional well being.

And I will always — and only when it is safe of course — give a second and third chance.

Also, the more I see anger or stubbornness arise in myself or students, friends, or family, the more I see that anger traces a straight line back to hurt, usually, especially when anger is habitual, it’s old hurt.

Remembering unseen wounds from mothers, fathers or whomever sure does make it easier to forgive.

5. Believe in magic

Sometimes we practice yoga in its wholeness. Yoga has eight limbs: yama, niyama, asana, pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, dhyana, aamadhi.

Sometimes we practice its parts, like breathing consciously (pranayama), sitting in meditation (dharana) or exploring in postures (asana).

In yoga’s wholeness or in its parts, we bear witness to healing, a feeling of deep union, magnificent positive change, vulnerability and other such magic.

Glimpses of understanding our connection with all things, samadhi, arises as an exhausted single mother walks out of the studio renewed knowing she is not alone.

Cultivating magic means cultivating a don’t-know mind, knowing that mystery abounds and magic is happening around us.

When I’m doubting magic or mystery I’ll schedule myself for a walk in the densest forest I can find, with a quiet mind, and notifications off.

6. Groundedness

Community, especially in a highly caffeinated, overworked, digital age, requires grounding. Full stop.

As you become popular or successful in any somewhat public way, we become vulnerable to projection.

Projection starts with great love but can darken at the speed of light if the slightest misstep or unintentionally hurtful word is offered directly or in passing; a completely innocent email/Facebook comment can turn into viral vitriol.

We were called out publicly on social media on a very well “liked” post for using the word “Moksha,” a sacred concept and turning it into a “corporate giant business.”

It threw Ted and I for a huge loop. First, for having potentially hurt anyone with our choice of the name “Moksha” (our name before Modo) as it came from a place of deep honouring and respect, and second for being called a corporate giant.

It would be easy to get defensive. Instead we sat quietly and took it all in. We are still taking it in.

We grounded down rather than acting out.

I want to do that more.

In community, something you say will be misinterpreted at some point, and if this misunderstanding happens publicly and/or in the digital realm, it can be incredibly destabilizing if you let it be.

But, if you know who you are, and you are grounded in your ideals, and you are living in truth your roots will hold you.

In the yoga tradition living in truth is called satya.

When was I was growing up learning from my teacher Baba Hari Das I always thought of satya as “telling the truth” or listening for the truth. It is this as well.

But Satya is also living in truth. It is a very grounding practice. Let’s support each other in finding our roots and nourishing them.

7. Compassion

Trauma is multifaceted, complex and for the most part invisible.

I tell a story at the Modo Yoga teacher trainings to illustrate that “you never know.”

I share a poignant moment when I was teaching a class and a student seemed to roll his eyes at everything I’d say.

I kept thinking, “Man, why does he hate me so much?” At the end of the class I took a breath, conjured up compassion and asked him if I could give him a hug.

He said yes.

After the hug he said, “Thanks. Right before this class I cremated my mother.”

Yes, he looked bitter and angry. Yes, he wasn’t “nice” at the sign-in. He was so very sad. And his lack of friendliness sure had nothing to do with me.

Making assumptions is so human, so easy, and so dangerous.

There is no better place to source our habitual illusory assumptions than in community.

Knowing that hurt is hidden and appears in unlimited ways seems to help me find compassion.

8. Change

Every Wednesday for the past six years or so, I’ve met with our Modo International team.

We’re a group of eight 500-hour certified yoga teachers who all wear about 10 hat a week.

Last month, Angela, our communications leader, wisely suggested that we change the colours that represent our personal agenda cells in our team meeting spreadsheet.

I found the change so hard, even though I loved the idea of change.

I was used to my old colour, and for the record it wasn’t even a colour I liked all that much. And yet, after another week, poof, change forgotten.

For some, all change is difficult, and for others change is just plain fun.

Change is hard, and yet it is constant. And in community we get to practice change.

We get to witness change as we practice it in every aspect of the yoga. We see change as the start of every transformation.

9. Take action

If you’re pissed off about something, one great place to take action is here, in community.

If you don’t like something about your work community, this community, the global community, then take action to make it change.

If I don’t like the way people plant trees in most carbon offset communities, then it’s my responsibility to find or create something better.

Any time I hinge into blame I see an opportunity to claim, take a breath, act, and change.

The best news is that we’re all here to support each other. We are only activists if we act, and there are unlimited ways to act.

Unlimited ways to call for justice, speak for peace, and act for the health of the earth.

10. Make the circle bigger

We can always be more inclusive. I attend a bi-weekly women’s circle with my neighbours.

When a mom who was putting her kids to bed at the start time, arrived late last week, the circle just naturally opened.

When I witnessed this a couple nights ago, while thinking about you all, this big sweaty community, and this list letter, I thought, “this is what we get to practice in community: making the circle bigger.”

I recall the first studio that created a gender neutral washroom and change space.

I remember the student that first arrived to a class with a prosthetic foot, or speaking American Sign Language.

Welcome we say as we lean in, adjust, learn and shift to engender access.

Diversity arrives, and we shift left, shift right to make the circle bigger.

I hope to practice into the best year we’ve had as a community. Want to do that together?

Let’s practice community support as a way to remember that there is no change too large when support arrives from all directions in sangha.

Let’s rock 2018 for the earth and those whose voices remain on the margins.

Let’s practice and learn and share support in every community we inhabit and share.

Let’s take it all back onto our mats with love and respect for our bodies, our minds, and our spirits.

— so grateful to share this practice, Jess

Modo Yoga fighting for access to clean water for everyone

Modo Yoga’s ninth annual “Grow Your Yoga” campaign is happening April 1-30, 2017.

This year, we’re raising funds and awareness for those who lack access to clean water, something we believe should be a basic human right for all.

One of the organizations we’re working with is 350.org who work around the world to prevent disastrous climate change.

This is what they had to say:

Our name signifies the safe level of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere, 350 parts per million, but we are now over 400 ppm.

350.org has helped build a global movement behind the goal of transitioning the world beyond fossil fuels and embracing a renewable energy future.

At heart of so much of our work is the need to protect our valuable water resources.

2016 was the hottest year on record, and in 2017 we’ve already seen disastrous impacts around the world because of climate change — mudslides in Peru, sea level rise in the Pacific islands, droughts throughout eastern and southern Africa and in Saudi Arabia, three months worth of rain fell in 24 hours.

Everywhere we look people’s communities are at risk because their water is threatened by increasing climate change.

Extreme energy projects, like the Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines in North America, also threaten to poison our climate, air, water, land, and violate Indigenous rights.

That’s why 350.org has partnered with Indigenous allies and water protectors to stop these pipelines, because we know water is life.

We’ve supported the fight against the Dakota Access Pipeline on the ground and across the country.

Our team members went to North Dakota to support actions against the Dakota Access Pipeline throughout the fight.

On Sept. 13, we held a national day of action to stand with Standing Rock.

Thousands around the world stood in solidarity with Standing Rock in over 200 actions, with 3,000 people mobilized in Washington, D.C. alone.

On Nov. 15, we helped organize tens of thousands to join over 300 rallies across all 50 states to urge U.S. President Barack Obama and the Army Corps of Engineers to permanently reject the Dakota Access Pipeline.

While we succeeded in halting the pipeline under President Obama, our work continues under Donald Trump’s administration.

We can’t thank Modo Yoga and their “Grow Your Yoga” campaign enough for supporting 350.org’s work, pushing back against the fossil fuel industry and helping keep our water clean.

Together, we can build a renewable energy future for all.

— Matt Hillsberg and Thelma Young, 350.org

(Photo credit: Eman Mohammed: “Water protectors march in Washington D.C. on Nov. 11, 2016 during the #NODAPL day of action.”)

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