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Yoga, health, wellness, and recipes from YogaDownload.com


Karmic Action
Karmic Action

I still couldn’t sit with karma just being a “do-gooder”.  It got me thinking a lot about karma and what it means besides that.  I had to ask first off, when you “do” that right action, what’s your thought behind it?  Are you doing it to get noticed?  To make sure your karmic debt is in the green?  Are you doing it because you want people to think you are a yogi?  What’s your reasoning behind this karmic action?  Is there one?

When you “do” something for someone else, it needs to be for no reason at all.  It needs to be … just to be.  That is all.  If there is any agenda or wanting from this action, it’s not karmic action.  It’s ego intention. 

And honestly, it’s not even your actions that start the whole ball of karma wax moving.  It’s actually your thoughts.  When you think a thought, immediately the transmitters in your brain speak to your chakras and you can feel expanded or contracted in one thought and one breath.  So it all starts with your thoughts and your thoughts never lie.  Ever.  How you choose to act on and manifest those thoughts is a much bigger topic. 

But the main thing to remember is:  you are karmically creating your path just with your thoughts.  It’s not just what you do, it’s what you are thinking.  Truly.  So what are you thinking?  Is it aligned with your thoughts?  Make sure … because if not, there could be a bit of a mix up in what messages you are sending to the Universe.

And then another thought came to me.  Your karma is not just something you pay forward in order to be in right action.  It is also the integrity with which you clean up what is behind you. 

And I completely believe this. 

I’m not sure if our “negative karmic debt” negates the positive “paying it forward” random acts of kindness, however I do know that there is a balance between the two that has to happen.  AND I believe it is happening in more moments than we realize. 

Noticing those piles of unresolved business is the first step in cleaning up your karma.  The second step is recognizing it as your “work” and it will always be there.

As long as we are alive, we have karma. 

We come in with it, we leave with it.  Hopefully we leave with less than we came in with but again, that’s another story.  It doesn’t really matter how many coffees you buy for the people behind you; what matters is how clean is your side of the street when you get in line to get those coffees.

One bit of insight as you move through your karmic action, intention and debt.  Tune into compassion along this journey, with yourself that is.  If we really do create our life with our thoughts, a lot of those thoughts are unconscious.  But when we awaken to that knowledge, as well as the accepting of our “debt”, our only job is to clean up our karma with love, grace and responsibility. 

By Dana Damara

“My passion on the mat is proper alignment, powerful breath and effortless flow so you feel that off your mat. Your practice becomes sacred space where you arrive to find more meaning, depth, authenticity and integrity in your life."

- Dana Damara: mother, author, yoga instructor, speaker and yogini.

Visit DanaDamara.com for more inspiration from Dana.

Click here to download or stream one of Dana's YogaDownload classes!


Yoga for Knee Pain
Yoga for Knee Pain

Anywho, within the last few weeks, I’ve seen private clients complaining of knee pain, met friends with bad knees, and even started suffering knee discomfort myself. So, I had to figure it out.

Why it’s hard to do yoga for knee pain

Our knees are tricky, complex structures that are influenced from a wide variety of our daily activities. Your feet and hips have huge sway over the health of your knees.

For example, if you carry more weight on the inside or the outside edge of your foot when you walk, then  this will affect how your knee tracks over your foot.

Have you ever seen somebody who has shoes that warp to match their weight distribution patterns? I remember having a teacher in high school who carried so much weight in the outside edges of his feet that his shoes actually changed shape and hung over the outside edge of the sole.

Most yoga poses involve some kind of knee use, and the more therapeutic or gentle poses often have people on their hands and knees, which can be insufferable for someone experiencing knee pain.

Train your happy, healthy knees

Knee pain is annoying. It affects almost everything we do since we use our knee joint to walk, sit, and stand.

Today, I’m sharing with you a new video with 4 exercises you can do to help prevent future knee issues, maintain the health of your knees,and even rehabilitate knee pain.

Healthy knees depend on healthy use of muscles in your feet, calves, hamstrings, quads, and hips. The exercises today include both weight and non-weight bearing exercises and are great for helping you isolate different muscles in your body.

Even if you aren’t experiencing any knee problems right now, I love the way the third exercise pumps blood into my legs and makes me feel.

Here’s to happy, healthy knees!

Click here to watch Ashley's video to alleviate knee pain!

By Ashley Josephine

I started practicing yoga to stay in shape and release stress. What I learned was how to love my life. How to have faith. How to find your community of people who support you and love you unconditionally. How to get back control. Today, it is my mission to help busy Type-A overachiever women like me gain back control of their lives, live pain-free, and love the life they want to live through yoga lifestyle practices. Visit www.ashleyjosephine.com to get free yoga lifestyle tips to help live healthier, happier, and pain-free.

 


YogaDownload Thanksgiving Poem
YogaDownload Thanksgiving Poem

Thank your eyes, for viewing YogaDownload anywhere

Seeing beauty, joy and kindness from this special pair.

To your communication for letting you breathe originality,

The throat chakra that makes your thoughts a reality.

Open Your Heart to Gratitude, to new experiences, compassion.

A Great Full Heart to help you love more, with passion.

Your core that stabilizes, twists and detoxes,

Enhancing your power to break out of our boxes.

Your incredible spine that stands you upright,

Your long and strong back for hugging so tight.

Traveling down to your hands that grip, wave and soothe,

Sending love to your Wrists, Shoulders and Neck – it’s the truth.

Your hips that carry a lot of sensation,

Giving your emotions creative narration.

Your root that sends you down Earthly bound,

Giving you that important connection to ground.

Hugging those legs, the strongest muscles in you’ve got,

For strutting and running and lifting a lot.

Applaud those inversions that help your hardworking feet.

And sigh it out for savasana that is ever so sweet!

Your body can do so many wonderful things,

Now give it some yoga to help it grow wings. 


Creamy Pumpkin Sage Soup
Creamy Pumpkin Sage Soup

Pumpkins boast the antioxidant, beta-carotene because of their orange color, which has been shown to play a role in cancer prevention and glowing skin (say goodbye to those unsightly blemishes). According to the National Institute of Health, food sources of beta-carotene are even more effective than supplements. So grab yourself a spoon and enjoy!

Do you have a pumpkin recipe you’d like us to makeover? Please post on our facebook page or in the comments section below and we’ll wave our magic Conscious Cleanse veggie wand to make it healthy and delicious for you.

With sweet pumpkin goodness,

 

I bought two sweet pumpkin pie specific pumpkins at my natural grocery store. These pumpkins will be much smaller than your typical carving or decorative pumpkins.

Creamy Pumpkin Sage Soup

Yield: 8 servings

Ingredients:

2 pumpkin pie pumpkins or 5 cups canned pumpkin
1 TB. coconut oil
¾ cup shallots, diced
3 garlic cloves, chopped
4 cups organic vegetable broth
1 TB. fresh sage, chopped
Sea salt and pepper to taste

Directions:
Pre-heat oven to 400°F. Using a sharp knife, cut the pumpkins in half. Scoop out seeds and place on a baking sheet. Bake for 1-1/2 hours until pumpkin edges are slightly brown. Using a large metal spoon, scoop cooked pumpkin flesh into a bowl.

In a large pot over medium heat, sauté coconut oil and shallots for 4-5 minutes until tender. Stir in garlic and cook an additional minute. Stir in pumpkin flesh, vegetable broth, sage, salt and pepper, bring to a boil, reduce heat to low, and simmer covered for 15 minutes. In a blender, and working in batches of no more 2 cups, purée soup. Return soup to the pot, and heat through. Season with additional sea salt and pepper as needed. Sprinkle with sage. Enjoy!

Jo SchaalmanJo Schaalman is the co-founder of the Conscious Cleanse and a yoga instructor at the Yoga Pod located in Boulder, CO. She is passionate about working with people to find their best health. The Conscious Cleanse is a 14-day program designed to guide health-seekers on a supportive journey of deep healing and whole body cleansing. The results have the power to ignite an entirely new level of health for participants – one of vibrancy and longevity. The Conscious Cleanse will be published as a book by Alpha Penguin and made available at all major bookstores and online retailers in Fall 2012.

Check out Jo's awesome Forrest Yoga classes available for download or stream that you can take anywhere!


Why I Talk to My Body
Why I Talk to My Body

This is a pretty typical conversation between me and my body. It’s a casual chat in gratitude for all the parts that keep me going how I’m going. 

I just recently hit a point where I can feel my body getting older. Until this, it was all fun and games and “oh, I can get a new ACL if this one blows out.” But I’m realizing that this is really truly the only body I’ll get to occupy in this lifetime. I should take care of her. 

The more I learn about anatomy and humans, the more impressed I am with the physical human design. How do my kidneys even know what vitamins and minerals I need? How does my blood know how to clot? How am I able to fight off a flu? I’m very impressed, body. Nice work. 

I’m also sometimes terrified that my body will forget how to do these basic functions. “Hey heart, you know to keep beating even when I’m sleeping, right?”

With the intention of balancing out my awe and fear of my own body’s capacities, I show it gratitude. I thank my kidneys for filtering out the sometimes less than optimal fuel I offer. I give respect to my feet for carrying me around all day. I send mad props to my lungs for letting me manipulate my breath during a pranayama practice, and then they go back to breathing quietly without my attention, like it’s no big deal.

I talk to my body because I care for it greatly. Sometimes I think it’s funny that my soul is trapped in this fleshy, carbon-based, fat-filled meat container. But for whatever reason, this meat container is mine, and mine alone. And I love every freckle, wrinkle, and scar. 

I love the lines that form near my eyes when I smile. I love that my hands can scratch a dog’s belly. I love that my feet will let my brain tell them to keep going, long after they’ve tired. I love that my arms are weirdly too short for my torso, like a T-Rex. I love that just touching my skin to someone else’s can help them heal. I love that my muscles respond to my activities by creating micro tears that grow into stronger muscle. I love that my skin will take permanent ink to remind me of important moments in my life. I love that I have eyebrows, even if I don’t understand why they’re there. I love that my spine moves in so many directions, even if it doesn’t look like the healthy spines in anatomy books. 

And even if my body doesn’t look how someone else thinks it should look, I’m really grateful for all the things it lets me do in this lifetime. I know this body is temporary, like everything else, and that’s okay. I will love her as much as I can in the time we have together. 

Katrina Kopeck is a yoga instructor, writer, food enthusiast and dog hugger in Boulder, Colorado. She loves all puppies, most books and a great deal of music. She teaches yoga at the Boulder Veterans Center and public classes at Core Power Yoga. Find her full schedule and connect at www.katrinakopeckyoga.com. Photo: Nickolai Kashirin

 

 

 

Click here for inspirational yoga classes that allow you to talk to and LOVE your body!

 

 


The Funny In Mommy
The Funny In Mommy

I first discovered yoga during fertility treatments when my doctor wanted me to slow down and “take it easy” from usual exercise routines. So I gave it a try. It turned out to be just what I needed then and during many other times along my mommy path the last five years. I’ve come to practice and study on a regular basis, at home in the early kid-less morning hours and a Thursday evening class each week.

Yoga has played a key role in loving and accepting my body, even the twin skin I carry (what the hell is twin skin? Read this). Throughout my teens and early twenties I had the tendency to mistreat my body with a low calorie diet and a rigorous workout regimen. It wasn’t until the age of 26 that I started practicing yoga on a regular basis and came to embrace my body for all it was.

My practice carried through my pregnancies. My babies rolling inside me as I eased my mind and body through the flow of breath and movement. My OB encouraged my practice and said it would provide grounding for an easy delivery. Her prediction proved true as I was able to have all three babies quickly and naturally. I believe yoga was a big part of that.

Postpartum, yoga poses healed my body, strengthened my limbs for the caring of a newborn and gave my mind peaceful refuge from long nights and early mornings of being a mommy. Having this release has always kept my mind and heart in balance. Being in balance allows for my interactions with my kids to be loving and calm even faced with a shitty Wednesday or epic meltdowns.

Being a mommy of three, I am an easy target for tension headaches. As my husband can attest, these headaches make me somewhat of a psycho. For me these headaches start at my back and radiate through my neck into my head. I can’t even think straight. As I’ve researched it turns out that we all carry our stress in our hips. When I started working on the release and yoga poses to work the hips, the headaches eased away and so did bitchy mommy.

During yoga, the strength I feel in each of my muscles and through my mind radiates through my whole being leaving me humming for days afterward. My personality is always on overdrive, always needs to be kept busy. This hum brings me back to earth and allows me to live more slowly and fully with my family.

If you’re a worn out, stressed out, psychotic mommy and you’ve never tried yoga or have only slightly dabbled, I encourage you to give it a full hearted whirl. It doesn’t matter your shape, size, age or class anyone can do it. Even my husband will hit the mat with me sometimes (maybe for hidden agenda reasons but he does anyhow).

Brooke HalperinBrooke Halperin is mommy, wife, woman and blogger of The Funny In Mommy. Finding the humor and gratitude in the not so glamorous moments.

 

 

 

 

Be sure to check out our selection of mommy yoga classes you can download or stream anytime!

 

 


Your Resilient Spirit
Your Resilient Spirit

If you wrote a story about your life, would you play the hero or the victim?

It’s true that we don’t always have control over negative circumstances. These situations are especially frustrating, as there’s not always an explicit lesson to be learned. However, even though you can’t always be in control of your circumstances, you can always be in control of how you respond to them. No one but you is responsible for your happiness or sadness. Victims become whatever happens to them. Heroes are what they choose to become. Empower yourself by becoming the author of your life story. Rather than trying to fix your past, which cannot be changed, use your experiences to build a brighter future. Become the type of hero you would want to read about.

Adopt an attitude of gratitude.

It’s easy to get caught up in one aspect of your life that isn’t going well. When this happens, look at your life like a pizza pie. You wouldn’t eat flour, yeast, or salt by themselves. But when you add them together and bake them into a crust, you create something truly delicious that’s equipped to receive boundless, desirable toppings. Similarly, while there may be a component in your life that leaves a bitter taste in your mouth, life as a whole can still be great. Take stock of all the ingredients in your life you’re grateful to have and remind yourself not to take them for granted. Family, friends, good health, financial security, passions, and self-worth are all key ingredients in the recipe to a rich, satisfying life.

Believe that when life takes one thing away, it’s creating space for you to receive something bigger and better. 

The trade-off likely won’t be immediate, nor will it necessarily feel the same. For example, material items, technology, and even jobs are relatively replaceable, but relationships and loved ones are not. Being resilient doesn’t mean forcing yourself to try to fill that void; it means finding peace with today and having faith in tomorrow. Generally speaking, good things happen to good people. When bad things happen to good people, they view them as opportunities for growth and potential for better things to come.

And when all else fails, remember that tough times don’t last; tough people do.

By Kayla Mantegazza

Kayla Mantegazza is the author of a blog called "Yoganna Love This" who works as a program management professional at a corporate health engagement company. Her degree is in Health Behavior Science with a background in diabetes management, weight management, and bariatric surgical interventions. She is an active member of the National Wellness Institute, the National Business Group on Health, and the Obesity Action Coalition.

Visit her blog at YogannaLoveThis for more inspiration!


This is 40: My Sankalpa Statement
This is 40: My Sankalpa Statement

I don’t want to admit the halo of gray hair encroaching on my roots. I don’t want to have to get mammograms and get sun spots removed.   I don’t want to wear both readers and progressive lenses for driving. I have three daughters ages 13, 10, and 2 - the youngest, a huge surprise born in my advanced maternal years.  I don’t want to admit my complete and utter exhaustion running a household with issues concerning both Tampax and Pull-Ups at the same time.

I have spent the greater part of 2015 trying to identify my “calling.”  Apparently, I’m looking for a direct hit to the bulls-eye so that I can somehow leave a greater impact on this earth!  I admit that this constant striving and inevitably comparing sometimes with others, can get exhausting.  There are many things I am embracing about turning 40.  I know myself and I like myself.  I care less about trying to please others to have them like me more and feel more grounded and authentic in trying to be the very best version of me.  I think that’s all that the world can ask of each of us.  I have taught thousands of yoga classes over the past 12 years, and every January I encourage my students to write a sankalpa statement, which translates to “divinely inspired intention.” I wanted to highlight my sankalpa statement for the next 40 years.

Have Courage.  Did anyone else ball their eyes out at Disney’s latest rendition of Cinderella? It’s one of my favs! This brave young woman was tested and ridiculed and stayed so deeply true to herself (and to her deceased mother’s advice to “Have Courage, and Be Kind”). Marianne Williamson writes, “There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.” I feel like applauding every time I read that quote.  I am the biggest cheerleader to everyone else’s dreams and have a history of shrinking when it comes to acknowledging my gifts and the power of my light.  I can tell you that it’s freeing to identify with your God-given gifts - because it makes you appreciate and not compete with the beautiful gifts that others have.  It’s like lighting a candle from another flame.  You don’t reduce the light by sharing it, you multiply it. In my next forty years, I may not land my “calling” per se, but I do plan to show up and burn brightly being me, and will continue to encourage others to do the same.

Be Kind.  This is Part II of the Cinderella story.  Cinderella recognized that the evil ways of her step-mother and step-sisters were merely a reflection of their own unhappiness, and enabled her to have empathy and to extend forgiveness to them in the end. We can spin over the assumption that people in our lives should know the impact of their unloving actions; however, we all know what they say about assuming.... I teach hundreds of students each week and have learned from watching people’s emotional reactions on the mat and having conversations before and after class that everyone is coming from somewhere.  “Do not judge a book by it’s cover “ is an understatement.  I’ve seen heavy set women float effortlessly into handstand and muscle men shake in plank.  I’ve experienced a woman weeping on her mat for an entire class and a not-so-gentle man yell out in a raging fit that my music was too loud.  I’ve learned that I can’t assume anything, but I can be kind.  We’ve grown up around different dinner tables, experienced different cultures and traditions, formed opinions from influences on our paths and have thoughts reflecting our own story.   In The Four Agreements, Don Miguel Ruiz writes, “We make the assumption that everyone sees life the way we do. We assume that others think the way we think, feel the way we feel, judge the way we judge...”  This is what gets us in trouble.  The very definition of kindness to “being gentle and considerate.”  Everyone is coming from somewhere. Be kind.

Love One Another. Childs pose is usually where I find my gravity again.  My life can feel like a spinning top, and the act of bowing my head, turning to the present moment, and lifting my palms upward helps me remember the many blessings in my life.  When we live in gratitude, things like competition with others, critical gossip, “poor me” syndrome, and insecurity fade away.  Melody Beattie wrote, “Gratitude turns what we have into enough, and more. It turns denial into acceptance, chaos into order, confusion into clarity...it makes sense of our past, brings peace for today, and creates a vision for tomorrow.”  In other words, we get our heads out of our butts and are free to love one another. Gratitude allows us to break free from the bondage of worldly judgement and cultivate a true love-interest in others  - wherever they may be in life.  This freedom allows us to love our neighbor regardless of the diversity in our opinions, backgrounds and choices.  In my next 40 years, I want to live authentically and gratefully and hope that you would know my God by the way I love. 


When preparing one year for my New Year’s Resolution (or sankalpa) yoga class, I found this beautiful translation of the Sanskrit chant, Om Namah Shivaya.  It said,  “Salutations to the person I am becoming.”   With grace and mercy in the forefront, cheers to the humans we are becoming on and off the mat!  Cheers to 40!

 

By Kristin Magill Gibowicz

Kristin started practicing yoga after a doctor told her she should expect a second back surgery on her lumbar spine. An outdoor enthusiast and a young mom, she refused to accept the diagnosis. She stepped into CorePower Yoga and committed to practicing to see if she’d see any improvements in her condition. With a consistent practice, yoga healed her by strengthening her core physically, giving her body awareness, and reducing stress in her mind and body. Kristin started teaching yoga in 2003 and knowing that 80% of Americans suffer from back problems, felt moved to learn everything she could about the anatomy, breathing techniques to reduce stress and how to transform other’s lives through teaching yoga. “Power yoga brings this exhilarating, cardiovascular yoga practice to “everyday Joes” like me. My goal as a teacher is to share my passion and improve the quality of people’s lives. In each class I hope to help liberate my students both mentally and physically, and leave them in a better place.”

Click here to download or stream one of Kristin's YogaDownload classes!


A Thank You Note to My Bod
A Thank You Note to My Bod

But my whole cancer experience has reset my priorities, which means that my time on the mat is now nonnegotiable. And so, I’ve been spending a lot of time feeling all the great things that my body can do and these are the things I want to focus on.

 

 

Before I begin my thank you note, I’m going to apologize formy past transgressions. In part because, despite what my writing might portray, I want you to know, dear readers, that I’m really not all hearts and flowers all the time. And also, by acknowledging the crappy stuff I’ve done to my body, I’m hoping that I can let it go (and my cells can, too) forever.

Dear Bod,
Ahem. Where do I begin? It seems like I have to begin loooong ago, back in my late teens and early twenties since that seems to be when my poorest choices were made. So here goes: Sorry about all those French fries (although the jury’s still out, I feel twinges of guilt for those high school McDonald’s runs). Sorry for drinking alcohol. Like ever. I’ve never been a big drinker, but that doesn’t seem to matter with the type of breast cancer I had. Sorry for bumming cigarettes at college parties and for my (past) love of cakes, cookies, ice cream, and cannolis. Do I need to atone for that tanning booth experiment that one time? Let’s just say it was the 80s and we were pulling out all the stops for prom. And we didn’t know any better.

In spite of all that—through fat times and thin times, good hair days and bad, you’ve continued to be there for me. So, I thought I’d thank you, publicly. Here goes:

Thank you to my heart for beating and reminding me that I’m alive

Thank you to my belly for moving up and down when I breathe in Savasana

Thanks to my toes for feeling the sand squoosh beneath them

Thanks to my face for feeling the sun shine on it

Thanks to my arms for being so great at hugging

Thanks to my legs for running and skipping and hopping

Thanks to my hips for wiggling and having dance parties with my two year old

Thanks to my vocal chords for making it possible to sing

Thanks to my ears for being able to hear music

Thanks to my wrinkles. If I’m being really honest, I have to admit I don’t like looking at you. But, you remind me that I’ve lived and and that I have gained some wisdom since the tanning booth incident.

Thanks to my blood and lymph and all of those other elements that come together and make sure that my body keeps on keepin’ on each day

Thanks to my musculo-skeletal system for firing up so that I can do yoga and feel what it means to be embodied

Thanks to my taste buds for giving me so much pleasure

Thanks to my brain for being able to process all of this. Sometimes you are too clever for your own good and you make things far too complicated. But all in all, I’m impressed by your hard work.

And finally, a big shout out to my eyebrows. Because, have you seen my eyebrows? I just really love the shape of my eyebrows.

Thank you. Thank you. Just thank you.

By Andrea Ferretti

Andrea Ferretti and Jason Crandell are a husband and wife team who have been teaching, writing about, and living their yoga for nearly two decades. Andrea is the former executive editor of Yoga Journal and is now creative director for Jason Crandell Yoga Method. Jason is an internationally recognized teacher known for his precise, empowering, down-to-earth approach to vinyasa yoga. They live together in San Francisco with their full-time boss, Sofia-Rose Crandell, age 3. To read their blog or to learn more about Jason's upcoming teacher trainings, please visit their web site www.jasonyoga.com


Zeal's Bomber Broccoli Slaw
Zeal's Bomber Broccoli Slaw

Zeal’s Bomber Broccoli Slaw is a great salad that you can make ahead of time because it keeps really well all week.

As we embark on another supported Conscious Cleanse I’m reminded of the importance of having a plan and a handful of cleanse staples at the ready when hunger strikes. Zeal’s Bomber Broccoli Slaw is definitely one that I’m adding to my staples list.

For other cleanse staples ideas, be sure to check out 5 Staples for a Successful Cleanse here.

 

 

Happy cleansing everyone! Be sure to leave us a comment below and let me know if you’ll be bookmarking this yummy slaw for your Thanksgiving dinner. I know I am!

 

With love and Fall salads,

Zeal’s Bomber Broccoli Slaw

Yield: 4-6 servings

Ingredients for Slaw:

2 heads broccoli, stems shredded, tops chopped into small pieces
½ head red cabbage, shredded
2 carrots, peeled and shredded
6 radishes, sliced
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
½ cup sliced almonds, for garnish


Ingredients for Tahini Dressing:

1 cup water
1 cup tahini
¾ cups freshly squeezed lemon juice
2 cloves garlic, peeled and chopped
½ bunch parsley, chopped
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste


Instructions:
To make the salad combine broccoli, cabbage, carrots and radishes in a large mixing bowl. Set aside.

To make the dressing, combine water, tahini, lemon juice, garlic, parsley, sea salt and pepper in a mini-food processor or high-speed blender until well incorporated.

Pour half of the dressing onto the slaw and mix with a spoon until well combined. Add more dressing until creamy and the consistency is to your liking. Season with sea salt and pepper to taste. Cover and refrigerate for 3-4 hours to allow flavors to develop. Before serving, garnish with sliced almonds.

 

Jo Schaalman and Julie Peláez are co-authors of the book The Conscious Cleanse: Lose Weight, Heal Your Body, and Transform Your Life in 14 Days, a best-selling, step-by-step guide to help you live your most vibrant life. Together they've lead thousands of people through their online supported cleanse through their accessible and light-hearted approach. They've been dubbed “the real deal” by founder and chief creative director Bobbi Brown, of Bobbi Brown Cosmetics, beauty editor of the TODAY show. 

To learn more about “Jo and Jules” and to download a free e-cookbook for a sampling of the delicious food served up on the Conscious Cleanse, please visit their website. 

 


Am I Misappropriating Yoga
Am I Misappropriating Yoga

 

 

I traveled to India in 1998. I spent three months there. I did not go to study or stay in an ashram. I went with no plan. Just a backpack, a Let’s Go travel guide, and the hope that somewhere along the journey I might gain insight enough to decide whether or not to continue Yoga as a life path or seek another direction for my livelihood. I had only one condition: stay off of the tourist track. And I definitely learned something important about Yoga from my time in India. Things I could never have learned from my previous two years of practice and training in New York City.

Aspects of yoga seemed to pervade the culture of India, in stark contrast to Yoga’s obscure status back home in the US. I remember a conversation with a rare English-speaking local and the realization that many of my friends in NY who were attending Kirtan regularly and, on some level considered themselves devotees of Kali, would never be permitted in the Kali temple in India. No amount of chanting or sari and bindi-wearing can get around the fact of one’s birth or the view commonly held in India that one cannot convert to Hinduism. I also remember how many times I sought out the local teacher of a small village only to discover a string of frauds and touts, capitalizing on the naivete of tourists.

There is a renewed and legitimate debate happening over whether or not westerners have a right to take ownership of yoga in the ways that we have.

Even among westerners, there is a feeling that something is not right about a twenty-something blond girl with a large Instagram following saying “Namaste” to promote her lifestyle brand. Then, you have folks like David Gordon White and other scholars who, in response to all the hype and co-opting, are uncovering untold truths about the history of yoga that have previously been shrouded in lore and mystery. Throw in the rampant commercialization and use of yoga as a marketing demographic across the globe and we end up with a whole lot of questions and sour grapes.

I’m having conversations with talented yoga teachers who are questioning whether to abandon teaching altogether. They are feeling like they don’t fit into what “yoga” has become. They are even embarrassed to tell people that they are yoga teachers because they don’t want to be associated with what people think of yoga teachers outside inner yoga circles. I am also being confronted with a storm of comments on Facebook calling into question my associations and accusing me of being part of an imperialist takeover of Yoga’s indigenous roots.

Truth is, yoga was first marketed and sold to the west by the same venerated teachers that are now cited as the only vestiges of authentic tradition.

The use of yoga to promote or sell things is nothing new. Mr. Iyengar had students perform on Martha Stewart to promote his book sales. Mr. Pattabhi Jois travelled around the world conducting large-scale yoga events, same as the yoga celebrities of today. These guys were selling yoga just as much as they were practicing and teaching it. Granted, they were of Indian descent. Maybe that gives them more of a right to monetize yoga. But is it really that different? Or are we merely experiencing the results of macro changes in technology and economics?

I was taught that in order for my yoga to be authentic it needs to adapt to my individual needs and be specific to my cultural background. But perhaps there is a point where the practice is taken so far away from its origins that it ceases to be true to what it is. When does something become true to you but not to where you got it from? Unless, of course, you are of the view that the intention is for it to be true to the individual and not to any particular teacher, tradition or ideal.

Krishnamacharya did what he had to do to make a way for himself and his family. This takes nothing away from the gifts he has given to countless human beings.

Regardless of where we might land on the cultural appropriation and commercialization of yoga, there are people across the world who, by themselves and gathering in small and big groups, are doing breathing and moving exercises. They are doing this not as merely a form of fitness, but as a vital part of their self-care. The experiences they are having are genuinely helpful. These practices are often pivotal in people making changes in themselves and their lives that are deeply meaningful and important.

Another remembrance from my time in India is that some things are universal and transcend cultures. The gesture of placing my hands together in prayer at my chest, sometimes referred to as “Namaste”, was like an express-pass to shared humanity. I’ve found this true in other parts of the world I have traveled to as well. Simple and undeniable is the thread of wonder that runs through all beings.  No amount of capitalism or appropriation can touch the warmth and love we know in our hearts.

By J. Brown

J. Brown is a yoga teacher, writer and founder of Abhyasa Yoga Center in Brooklyn, NY.  His writing has been featured in Yoga Therapy Today, the International Journal of Yoga Therapy, and across the yoga blogosphere.  Visit his website at jbrownyoga.com


 


What Every Soccer Coach Should Know about Yoga
What Every Soccer Coach Should Know about Yoga

So I get it, well not the third one he is simply a fellow I will never understand. But here’s the thing, you know your players need yoga to balance out all the strength, agility and endurance training you are putting them through in pre-season conditioning. And frankly, if you are being completely honest, you could use some mat time yourself.

So here's what I’m going to do. I am going to give you three poses you can teach players all by yourself. I promise they will be easy, no snapped tendons or sprained ligaments, just three simple poses that will benefit your players and not intrude into your already overloaded practice schedule. Pretty nice of me, right? Well, I’m a giver.

FIRST POSE- Hero’s Pose set. 
If you are averse to using yoga names, please feel free to call it ankle extension and flexion series, I don’t care (but you should really work on these hang ups, I feel they are holding you back). While you are going over scheduling, or just chatting after practice, have your players take off their shoes, kneel down and sit on their heels with their toes un-tucked.

You may find they really struggle with this, so suggest they fold up a towel, sweatshirt or jacket on top their shoes and place the shoe lump under their tailbones to take some of the weight off their ankles. Be sure their toes are tracking backwards and not to either side. And just make them sit there. 

Three to five minutes would be ideal, but they will probably start chirping at you after about 30 seconds, so make good choices and build them up slowly.

After the toes un-tucked version, have them tuck their toes and sit on their heels, this is a far more intense pose as it opens up the soles of very tight and probably tired feet. Two to three minutes would be great, but you are probably only going to get to the 30 second mark before you have a full scale mutiny on your hands. 

Don’t force them to stay in this pose if they have an active case of plantar fascitis, as you really can do some damage, so again, make good choices. Hero’s pose is great to loosen up tight ankles and feet. It can help avoid shin splints and plantar fascitis (inflammation in the sole of the foot).

SECOND POSE-Reclined Figure 4. 
After Hero’s pose, your players may or may not be speaking to you anymore, but after this next pose you will be (dare I say ) their hero.

Have them lie on their backs with bent knees, feet on the ground. Place one ankle on the top of the other knee, similar to how you sit in a chair with loosely crossed legs. Raise the foot on the floor, maintaining a right angle in the leg. Reach through the triangle that is created by the legs and grasp the back of the thigh and draw the leg towards the chest. 

Have them hold this pose for 60-90 seconds on each side. Reclined Figure 4 is a fantastic pose to release the low back, hip, glutes and, to a lesser degree, the hip flexors and hamstrings.

THIRD POSE- Legs Up Wall. 
Now this one may be a little tricky if you are outside and it may take a little prior planning, but it may also get you nominated for coach of the year.

Have your players lie down near something they can put their legs up on. Ideally a wall, hence the name. If that is not available other things that work which may be available include, vehicles, goal posts, buildings, concession stands, bleachers, get creative. 

Tell them to wriggle in and try to get your backside as close to the wall as possible. The closer the glutes are to the wall, the hamstring stretch will be more intense. Don’t go crazy, find the edge of your resistance and stay there, this should feel good.

If you absolutely have no support structures, you can use some sort of strap. Sure a yoga strap would be awesome, and if you had hired me I would have brought them, but lets not quibble about that now. Other things that work include, neckties, jump ropes, tube socks tied together, you get the jist. 

If using a strap have your players lie on their backs, extend their legs up in the air, soles of the feet to the sky. Wrap the strap around the soles of the feet and pull down to help stabilize the pose. Let them stay here 3-5 minutes.

Legs up a wall is great to deal with that feeling of heaviness that comes from lymph drainage in the lower body after long periods of running. Your players will roll out with fresh legs, ready to go.

Hopefully this will help you and your team take your performance to the next level. If not, give me a call and we will see what we can do. Good Talk.

By Tara Kestner

Previously published on Next Level Yoga's Blog

Tara Kestner is a registered yoga instructor who specializes in working with athletes of all levels. She designs programs based on specific sport requirements and challenges. Utilizing the principle that strength plus flexibility equals power, her classes give athletes the tools they need to enhance their performance. Tara is the owner of Next Level Yoga, Ltd., in Toledo, Ohio.

 

 


Yoga is the Exact Same as Football: The Proof
Yoga is the Exact Same as Football: The Proof

1. Lycra: Tight, stretchy football attire is the original yoga pant.

2. Starpower: What do Tom Brady, Russell Wilson, Ray Lewis, and Shiva Rea all have in common? They hit the mat to enhance their stamina, strength, flexibility and mental clarity.

3. Teachers: guidance through challenges, holds, gains, and whenever possible, avoiding the tendency to rush. Sound familiar? 

4. Presence: On the field and on the mat, we have to silence all doubt, spectators, and distractions. Going from play-to-play, detaching ourselves from fumbles and projections to see clearly. It’s no fantasy.

5. Breath and Balance: The QB takes that deep breath before throwing that game-winning pass. The wide receiver uses his core to stay in bounds. There’s fluidity in the practice of getting oxygen through the body, calming the nervous system and powering from the center.

6. Going Beyond Limits: What’s stopping you from achieving that first down? Are the linemen in your mind blocking your progress? The breakthrough isn’t always in the end zone – sometimes it’s at the line of scrimmage.

7. Touchdowns: No penalty for excessively celebrating the body’s achievements with final relaxation, Detroit Lion’s breath, and laughter –give some applause to the magnificent body, mind and spirit!

Are you ready for some football yoga? Our new Yoga for Football Players and other additions are designed to rev up your inner-athlete-attitude and support your mental and physical performance. We are all champiOMs.

Yoga is an ideal supplement to any sport! Be sure to check out our other Yoga for Athletes classes!


Meditation for Athletes
Meditation for Athletes


 

The important thing is I have come around and now understand a regular meditation practice has very tangible physical and mental benefits. Specifically for athletes who are used to being cranked up for competition, it is necessary to stimulate the para-sympathetic nervous system to ground them or eventually they are going to find their tank is empty. Meditation also helps gain control over the breath which can be vitally important when hand-eye control is required like making a free throw, catching a pass or throwing a strike.

Finally, I can't really explain why, but meditation helps athletes find and maintain occupancy in "the zone." You know "the zone," that phenomena when the goal or basket seems to be a mile wide, or your opponents seem to be moving in slow motion. All athletes seek time in the zone and meditation can help get them there.

At this point, you are convinced I am right, and can't wait to get started. Right... I know that look, I've cracked tougher nuts than you. Just try this short "focus exercise" for five days in a row. If you hate it, give up, go ahead you big quitter. (Dropping some old school coaching on you there). Really, just try it I sincerely believe you will find it beneficial.

 

  • First, sit in a comfortable, semi-quiet place. A car is a great place to start. Close your eyes and just settle in. Don't try to control anything, just sit there letting your thoughts bounce around. Feel free to think this is stupid if you want, I know I did when I first started.
  •  
  • After about a minute, start to take control of your breath. Inhale, counting 1-2-3 pause, then exhale 1-2-3. Try to visualize the actual numbers 1-2-3 in your mind's eye as you breath. Do 10 rounds of this 3/3 breath pattern.
  •  
  • After the 3/3 breath pattern you are going to start lengthening you exhales. Continue counting, this time inhaling 1-2-3-4 pause, then exhale 1-2-3-4-5-6 pause, and repeat this 4/6 pattern for 10 rounds.

 

  • After the 4/6 breath, come back to an even 5/5 breath. Inhale 1-2-3-4-5 pause, exhale 1-2-3-4-5 pause. Repeat this 5/5 pattern for 10 rounds. Don't be surprised if you find this a little exhausting, it can be at first.

 

  • After you complete the 5/5 breath pattern, just let your breath go back to normal, sit there quietly, eyes closed for about a minute, longer if you want, and then softly open the eyes. See that wasn't so hard, or weird.


Now, just like one set of sit-ups won't give you ripped abs, one meditation, sorry focus exercise, won't bring you enlightenment, but keep it up for 5 days in a row (maybe twice a day if you can hack it) and see what it does for your performance. I bet you will notice something you can't quite put you finger on, you'll feel sharper, clearer, more in control. In short, better.

Here is a cheat sheet for that focus exercise:

  • 1 minute eyes closed, sitting still.
  • 10 rounds 3/3 breath pattern.
  • 10 rounds 4/6 breath pattern.
  • 10 rounds 5/5 breath pattern.
  • 1 minute eyes closed, sitting still.

 

By Tara Kestner

Previously published on Next Level Yoga's Blog

Tara Kestner is a registered yoga instructor who specializes in working with athletes of all levels. She designs programs based on specific sport requirements and challenges. Utilizing the principle that strength plus flexibility equals power, her classes give athletes the tools they need to enhance their performance. Tara is the owner of Next Level Yoga, Ltd., in Toledo, Ohio.

 

Start down the road to enlightenment with the following YogaDownload "focus exercise" Classes: 


Yoga Nidra - Celest Pereira 


Arrive in the Present Moment - Jackie Casal Mahrou 


 


How Taking a Yoga Retreat Cultivates Contentment
How Taking a Yoga Retreat Cultivates Contentment

In yoga, contentment is defined as Santosha. In nearly every translation of Yoga Sutra II.42, Santosha is interpreted as the greatest happiness, the underlying joy that cannot be eradicated despite life's challenges.

 

Cultivating gratitude for life, as it is exactly in this moment, is a true path to finding contentment. We cannot control the curveballs that life throws our way; we can only control our reaction to them. When life feels overwhelming, staying focused on the present and being grateful for what we have in this moment can seem out of reach. Often, we wish we were somewhere else, doing something else, instead of experiencing what is actually happening. Seeking comfort in the past, dreaming of the future: anywhere but present. How can we shift our perspective?

An easy way would be to step into paradise for a few days and literally turn off the buzz of Smart phones, television, computers, traffic and the rest of those modern conveniences that over stimulate us and keep us anticipating that next download. When I led my first international yoga retreat to Mexico three years ago, I confess that until the moment I set foot on the grounds, I was anxious about providing a sublime experience for my students. 

Until I felt the whisper of the Pacific Ocean caressing my skin through the lush foliage, I wasn’t fully present. Upon arrival, a profound peace permeated my being as the external and internal noise was silenced. At last, I felt quiet enough that I heard my thoughts, experienced my feelings, savored delicious food so fresh that my palate sang, lost myself in panoramic views, and felt inspired for each yoga and meditation session that I led. Each of my students created their own Santosha:  some spent hours basking on the white sand beach, some surfed and hiked, some simply meditated and slept. In this setting, finding true contentment and gratitude for the present moment was as natural as breathing. 

Stepping away for a few days to several weeks is an effective way to remind yourself that you can be happy anywhere. The profound relaxation and joy established while disconnected from “real life” definitely embody the niyama of Santosha. Taking these lessons and applying them to the other 51 weeks of the year is possible. For me, the week served as a gentle reminder of how blessed I truly am. By creating an active practice of gratitude, rather than a reactive attitude to external events, you can find an enjoyment for what each day provides. Of course it is easy to feel gratitude in a setting like Napa Valley or Bali. But, if we can take the time to establish the mindset, we can learn to be content despite whatever is happening.

Take time to cultivate Santosha and join me at Mayacamas Ranch in Calistoga, California, March 3-6, 2016 for a long weekend of yoga, meditation, wine tasting, hiking and relaxing in nature. Or, if you’re craving the exotic, join me in Ubud, Bali May 29-June 4, 2016. 
$50 off for YogaDownload members if you place your deposit by November 30, 2016. www.oceansoulyoga.com/retreats.html to sign up today!

 

Claire Petretti-Marti has been practicing, studying, and teaching yoga since 1999. Like many fitness enthusiasts, she was initially drawn to yoga for its physical benefits of strength, balance, and flexibility. Once Claire realized that serenity, peace of mind, and a general sense of happiness were predominant results of the practice, she was hooked. 

A RYT-500 Yoga Alliance instructor, Claire teaches a dynamic vinyasa flow with the intention of creating a moving meditation. She encourages students to find the lightness and the joy in their own practice, both on and off the mat. She is a certified Pilates instructor, a Reiki Level 2 Practitioner and also holds a NASM-certification for personal training. She has significant experience with spinal injuries and frequently works with students recuperating from injuries. She leads international yoga retreats every year. Mind-body fitness is her passion. 

Check out Claire's YogaDownload classes as well as our Yoga for Runners classes and packages!


Quinoa Beet Arugula Salad
Quinoa Beet Arugula Salad

Quinoa (pronounced ken-no-ah or KEEN-wah), has quickly become a household alternative to rice in America in recent years. We tend to classify it as a “non-gluten grain” but technically it’s a seed.

Hailed as “the Gold of the Incas” and the “Supergrain of the Future,” quinoa has been a main staple in South America, especially Peru, for a few millennia. With its mild, nutty flavor, and vast versatility, it’s no wonder. But the best part about quinoa, is the fact that it contains all eight essential amino acids, making it a complete protein.

 

It also has anti-inflammatory properties and is a great source of calcium and fiber.

All this from one tiny little seed!

Below is one of my favorite, go-to salads. It’s especially delicious right now because beets are bursting out of the garden!

If you’ve never cooked quinoa, be sure to soak (and then rinse) for at least 20 minutes before cooking. I usually make one big batch of quinoa a week and use the leftovers as a way to bulk up a salad or as a quick and easy dinner.

What are you thoughts on quinoa? Try it and let me know. Do you agree? Is it “shockingly delicious?”

Enjoy!

With love and quinoa,

Quinoa Beet Arugula Salad

Yields 2 large salads

Ingredients for the salad:

  • 3 to 4 medium beets, trimmed
  • 4 cups arugula
  • 2 pickling cucumbers, chopped
  • 1 cup quinoa (I used tricolor quinoa but any will do)
  • 2 cups water
  • Optional toppers: Kim Chi or avocado slices

Ingredients for the dressing:

  • 2 TB. extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 1/2 TB. white balsamic vinegar
  • 1/2 tsp. honey
  • Sea salt and freshly ground pepper to taste


Directions:

  1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
  2. Peel beets with vegetable peeler and cut into 1/2 inch cubes. Place beets in a shallow glass baking dish, toss with a drizzle of olive oil, pinch of sea salt and some freshly ground black pepper. Cover and bake until tender, 25 to 30 minutes.
  3. To cook quinoa, soak first for at least 20 minutes. Using a fine mesh strainer, drain and rinse with cold water. Transfer to a bowl. In a medium-sized pot add 2 cups water and a pinch of sea salt. Cover and bring to a boil. Turn heat down to a simmer and cook for 10 to 12 minutes. Remove quinoa from heat and allow to sit for 5 minutes with the lid on. Fluff quinoa with a fork and serve. Leftover quinoa stores well in the refrigerator for several days.
  4. To make dressing, whisk together olive oil, white balsamic vinegar, honey, sea salt and pepper to taste.
  5. Toss arugula with a light coating of dressing. To assemble your salad, layer arugula, 1/4 to 1/2 cup warm quinoa (or more to your liking) and warm beets. Drizzle with salad dressing to taste before serving.

*Optional: Top with kim chi or avocado. Salad can be enjoyed warm or cold.

 

Jo Schaalman and Julie Peláez are co-authors of the book The Conscious Cleanse: Lose Weight, Heal Your Body, and Transform Your Life in 14 Days, a best-selling, step-by-step guide to help you live your most vibrant life. Together they've lead thousands of people through their online supported cleanse through their accessible and light-hearted approach. They've been dubbed “the real deal” by founder and chief creative director Bobbi Brown, of Bobbi Brown Cosmetics, beauty editor of the TODAY show. 

To learn more about “Jo and Jules” and to download a free e-cookbook for a sampling of the delicious food served up on the Conscious Cleanse, please visit their website. 

 


Yoga for Firefighters and Physically Demanding Jobs - Shoulder Edition Part 1
Yoga for Firefighters and Physically Demanding Jobs - Shoulder Edition Part 1

First up, the shoulder. In order to understand which yoga postures are helpful to prevent shoulder injuries, and in the event that fails, promote recovery of shoulder issues, you have to know a little about the shoulder structure.

In short, the shoulder is built for mobility, not stability or strength. The shoulder joint (glenoid socket) is a wide, shallow joint which has a large range of motion. Because of this huge range, injuries happen fairly easily. The supporting cast of the back side of the shoulder are the four rotator cuff muscles, the trapezius, the levator scapulae and the rhomboids. The pectorals support from the front, and the deltoids form the end caps.

Common issues include, tendonitis, bursitis and impingement (often vaguely called "rotator cuff injuries"). Cumulative stress on the shoulder is caused by repetitive movements, compression (being forced to bear weight) and sustained, awkward positional use. Any of this sounding familiar?

So how can yoga help? Well first of all, thanks for asking, good to see you are still reading, yoga can help a couple of ways. Yoga increases flexibility and range of motion, allowing you to move more freely avoiding impingement issues. Yoga poses which strengthen and condition the rotator cuff muscles add support to the shoulder structure. Finally, you can expect increased circulation to the shoulder to help avoid inflammation issues, and speed recovery should an injury occur.

Three of my favorite shoulder poses include Thread the Needle, Prone Anterior Shoulder opener and Puppy pose. First, Thread the Needle, great for opening that space between the shoulder blades.

Thread the Needle Pose
Come to hands and knees, extend your right arm out to the side lining up the wrist, elbow and shoulder. Then feed the right arm (palm facing up) behind the left arm and lower down on the right outer shoulder, adjust yourself until you find a place where your head and neck are comfortable.

Start to walk the fingers on the left hand up towards the top of the mat, until you can gently press into the palm causing a little more sensation and rotation in the upper back. Hold for 5-10 long breaths and then switch sides.

Second, Prone Anterior Shoulder opener, is a fantastic pose to open the front of the shoulder. This is an easy pose to overdo so show some restraint.

Anterior Shoulder Opener
Lie on your belly, turn your head to the right (resting on your left cheek). Extend your right arm out and line up your index finger with your sight-line. Then turn your head to the left, so you are resting on your right cheek.

Start to roll onto your right side and bend your knees, bringing your left palm to the floor, close to your chest. If you are feeling a lot of sensation in the front of the shoulder stay here. If you need a little more, straighten your right leg and place your left foot on the floor behind you. Stay here for about 30-60 seconds, and then take it to the other side.

Finally, Puppy pose for an overall shoulders and the spinal stretch.

Puppy Pose
Come to hands and knees, keeping the hips over the knees walk the hands forward, lowering the chest towards the floor. Lower your forehead, (or possibly your chin) to the mat, draw your shoulder blades back and down into the spine and reach your hips for the ceiling. Hold for 5-10 slow breaths.

These three poses can help improve your shoulder health. In part 2 of shoulder edition, I will address the specific problem of labrum injuries, a craze that seems to be sweeping the nation.

By Tara Kestner

Previously published on Next Level Yoga's Blog

Tara Kestner is a registered yoga instructor who specializes in working with athletes of all levels. She designs programs based on specific sport requirements and challenges. Utilizing the principle that strength plus flexibility equals power, her classes give athletes the tools they need to enhance their performance. Tara is the owner of Next Level Yoga, Ltd., in Toledo, Ohio.

 


Intuition
Intuition

I have always been one to follow my intuition.  Not a strategic plan … an intuitive knowing.  

 

And to be honest, it’s drove a lot of people close to me crazy and in some cases, away from me.  And that’s fine by me because honestly, I can’t live any other way.

I’ve tried and it hurts, it physically hurts to live outside of my intuition. 

I must drop in every single day otherwise … well, it’s not pretty to be honest.   And when I say “drop in”, I mean really dropping in and listening … intently.  Not questioning, not wondering, but actually following through with what you hear.

I find that it’s really easy to “drop in” when there isn’t anything happening out of the ordinary, you know, like life!  But you know, the reality is, life is always happening and it’s really easy to get tossed off your game of connection if you’re not paying attention!

There’s all these various ways to tap into your intuition and each of us has a sense of what works.  Here’s a few:

  • Visionary experience . .you may use your third eye and literally vision things.
  • Audio experience – you may hear things, almost like whispers from the Divine.  You can hear it in nature, in waves, wind and the birds.
  • Feeling with entire body – the truth is that we feel other people’s energy all the time; the trick is to notice how you feel. 
  • Gut reaction – you just know it in your gut or in our heart
  • Download from the crown chakra – you experience guidance in a complete statement or sentence.
  • Dream time – sometimes your intuition speaks in your dreams

Personally I use them all on various occasions and when I find them hard to locate, meaning I am scattered, confused or in my head, I get on my mat and plug in.  Literally plug into the energy that vibrates with my every step.  Tap into the energy that swirls around my head with messages of Divine love and guidance.  Connect to the internal guidance system that can’t wait to assist me in following my heart.

Intuition is something we feel, it’s not something we do.  It’s a nudge, a push, an energy that when cultivated can guide us along our most divine path of Being. It’s the synchronicity of events that links together to create a bigger picture of what is. 

The problem is we aren’t in our feeling body all that often.  And we miss events that actually mean something.  In fact we spend more time in our head trying to figure things out.  The ironic thing is, if we let go of the grip and allow the breadcrumbs to lead us along the path, all would flow in an intuitive way.

Here’s a mantra for you … I amplify in stillness.  Does that mean you have to sit still to amplify your awareness?  Well no, not really. Messages come in clearer if you do, for sure!  But the intention is to find that connection in movement, in chaos, in discomfort, so you can move from a place that is guided and not reactionary.

It’s a practice .. a life long practice. Don’t rush but please, start listening today.  The time is now to get on your path and I’m thinking that if you don’t, something is going to push you onto it, whether you like it or not.

By Dana Damara

“My passion on the mat is proper alignment, powerful breath and effortless flow so you feel that off your mat. Your practice becomes sacred space where you arrive to find more meaning, depth, authenticity and integrity in your life."

- Dana Damara: mother, author, yoga instructor, speaker and yogini.

Visit DanaDamara.com for more inspiration from Dana.

Click here to download or stream one of Dana's YogaDownload classes!


The Difference Between Fear and Anxiety
The Difference Between Fear and Anxiety

Teaching on this powerful distinction reminded me of a section from my book The OUTLAW Protocol that explores this topic further:

That we spend so much time worrying is a product of our programming, not a natural process of a productive mind. While any mind is naturally inclined to respond to threats and rewards in kind, our current level of sympathetic nervous system activation (fight or flight) is both an indication and result of our programmed inclination to worry.
   
We’re addicted to worrying.
   
The greatest irony in this relationship to constant anxiety is that most of us — myself included — live marshmallow soft lives. Lives where real fear — caused by imminent danger — is farther away by far, than the fantasy of the possibility of future fear is. Most people don’t experience fear as such. What most of us experience can better be described as anxiety — the fear of the future experience of fear.   
           
The distinct difference is that fear is real and seldom experienced, while anxiety is imaginary and often experienced.  
 
When we allow the small self to play with the possibility of crisis, we create imaginary fear for the possible events of the future. Anxiety turns our otherwise tranquil inner landscape into a war zone creating a negative energetic state in our body-minds, despite and irrespective of what is actually happening around us. Part of the allure of harboring a state of anxiety is the planning that must accompany it in preparing for the events of the imagined future. The result, however, is the pollution of our presence with its pull to the future, the blocking of our thoughts from accessing an actionable plan in the now.

Trapped in a place that is not here but there, a state of frustration sets in due to our inability to do anything about the fantasy currently playing itself out in our heads — both responsible for this state and perpetuating it, our anxieties distract us from performing anything productive in the now. When we lack presence, anxiety creates a split between us and the present moment, robbing us of the ability to make an actionable choice. The longer we spend in this state, the more powerful the anxiety becomes as it carries within it an ability to multiply itself and feed off of our lack of presence. 

Our anxiety, and the small self that stokes it, will even go so far as to create the conditions that produce the events we supposedly fear so much, events that when they occur will then seem to have been productively preordained, fueling a destructive and confusing loop that the small self is all too happy to help perpetuate in order to make itself seem right after the fact.
   
In this light, anxiety can be seen for what it often is — the root cause of calamity, not just a byproduct of it.

Fear, on the other hand, is a useful tool in the evolutionary sense, one that fuels the body to excellent heights in response to real threats.

I’ve experienced this distinct difference between real fear and imagined anxiety both during my time spent in war zones and during my time training as a mixed martial artist. In both, a healthy amount of fear propelled me to safety during intense periods of training, evading and fighting where danger was real and imminent, compared to times of relative tranquility wasted fearing fear immersed in the imagination of negative events to come. When we encounter a threat, real or imagined, the body-mind prepares itself appropriately by flooding itself with helpful chemicals and hormones like adrenaline, noradrenaline and cortisol — called to fight, our mind prepares our body to respond accordingly. 
     
If fear is the acute need to adapt, then anxiety, by contrast, is the fantasy that we will not be able to adapt when called to…
   
Whether real or imagined, the result in the body is the same.

Anxiety ravages our physical body, while rewiring the physical circuitry of our minds, bundling neurons in such a way as to predispose the mind towards feeling this particular feeling more often than a positive, present state in the future.

This isn’t Eastern hokum. This is Western science.

This prevalence of anxiety in our minds contributes to a distinct way of being whether we are walking the streets in a war zone or in a peaceful city — one comes with real threats, the other with real worries. 

Despite being deeply imbedded in this cycle, neither the reality of fear nor the delusion of anxiety can withstand the sustained discipline of our mindfulness practice. Notwithstanding real threats, our state of mind ultimately depends solely on one factor — whether or not we have developed a greater discipline than our small self has. An Outlaw knows that regardless of action on the street, there is at each and every moment a very real war going on for their minds, a battle between the chain smoking small self and the enlightenment seeking big self.
  

At some point the Outlaw has to look past the anxiety and ask themselves, “What’s wrong right now?”

Employ this tool…I dare you. Ask the voice inside you, is this a real threat? Should I honor this feeling? Or is this a fantasy, some anxiety that I’m cultivating?

Namaste and Happy Halloween, Yogis!

By Justin Kaliszewski

Justin Kaliszewski is a reformed meat-head and former amateur cage fighter. He brings a lifetime of travel and world's worth of experience in battling the ego to the mat. An avid student, artist, and treasure hunter, he infuses a creativity and perseverance into his teachings, along with a distinct blend of humor and wisdom that redefines what it means to be an Outlaw and a yogi...He teaches Outlaw Yoga across the country and is happy to call Denver home for now. Author of Outlaw Protocol: how to live as an outlaw without becoming a criminal, you can find him at www.outlawyoga.com. 

 

 


7 Healthy Snacks you Will Love
7 Healthy Snacks you Will Love

Ready to take a break from all the social engagements that revolve around eating and drinking somewhat less than vibrant foods!

We’re ready!

Part of this back to school, back to health preparation has been recommitting to menu planning!

 

Admittedly not one of my favorite things to do, but having even a vague idea of what I might be making for kids’ school lunches, my lunches and family dinners, sure does take the edge off.

And I have to say, anything that can ease the “excitement” (read: stress and anxiety) that this time of year is bringing to my household is most welcome!

One thing I’ve found for myself, our cleansers, and my kiddos alike is the importance of not forgetting to include quick and easy-to-grab snacks in my meal plan.

Who doesn’t love a good snack?

The problem is when a good snack turns into a snack attack…And the definition of a snack attack is that it’s a creeper! Before you know it, boom! You’re hangry, your thinking brain goes completely offline, and you find yourself standing in front of the vending machine. And I have to say, there’s nothing vibrant about the vending machine!

This week I’ve rounded up my favorite 7 snacks that you’re going to love! These are family and office friendly, so share them and beat the snack attack at it’s own game!

With love and healthy snacks,

7 Healthy Snacks You Will Love

Enjoy a small piece of leftover salmon from last night’s dinner. Get our recipe for Ginger Broiled Salmon when you sign up for our email list here.

Romaine Banana Wrap – My all-time favorite raw snack. Preparation is simple. Just take one large romaine leaf, smear it with your favorite raw nut butter (I love cashew butter) and roll it up with a banana (peeled, of course!) inside.

Green Pea Hummus – Forget the store-bought hummus that can be loaded with unhealthy preservatives, this hummus is super easy to whip up. Plus kids love it with carrot sticks and cucumber wheels.

Roasted Curried Chickpeas – Move over potato chips. If you’re looking for a crunch, this is the ultimate snack for you. Chickpeas are a great source of fiber and protein and these little guys are loaded with flavor.

Nut-Free Joy Balls – Have a nut allergy? Switch to pumpkin and sunflower seeds with these protein packed Joy Balls. Loaded with healthy fats, these treats are loved and coveted by all.

Creamy Banana Chia Pudding – Looking for something a bit decadent and naughty? Try this rich and creamy chia pudding and you’ll never miss those vending machine Junior Mints.

Homemade Trail Mix – It doesn’t get any easier than this. Just toss everything into a bag or glass container, shake, and you’re out the door. Filling and satisfying, this is one of my go-to’s. Just don’t forget the cacao nibs (when not cleansing, of course!).

 

Jo Schaalman and Julie Peláez are co-authors of the book The Conscious Cleanse: Lose Weight, Heal Your Body, and Transform Your Life in 14 Days, a best-selling, step-by-step guide to help you live your most vibrant life. Together they've lead thousands of people through their online supported cleanse through their accessible and light-hearted approach. They've been dubbed “the real deal” by founder and chief creative director Bobbi Brown, of Bobbi Brown Cosmetics, beauty editor of the TODAY show. 

To learn more about “Jo and Jules” and to download a free e-cookbook for a sampling of the delicious food served up on the Conscious Cleanse, please visit their website. 

 


A Simple Way to Cope With Fear
A Simple Way to Cope With Fear

I’m not going to lie. I still have moments, hours, or even days when I’m consumed with fear about cancer. Despite the campaigns that have played out over the past 20 years, early detection does not guarantee a cure for breast cancer. (Laurie Becklund, a well-known reporter for the LA Times, faced this reality and wrote about it just before she died from metastatic breast cancer in March.)

I never used to be afraid to go to the doctor. But that’s different now. My fear arises with a vengeance when it’s time for a check-up. There are lots of them at this point. For all kinds of whacked out lady-related things that I won’t go into here. (You’re welcome.)

Last week, before one of these check-ups, I spent 24 hours moving through what I am now referring to as my Seven Stages of Coping with Fear. I am now intimately familiar with these stages because last fall they were on a repeat loop while I was constantly awaiting test results. This means that I:


1. Feel completely disconnected from my current reality and feign normal interactions with my loved ones while my mind works up as many worst-case scenarios as it can muster.

2. Google these worst case scenarios while pretending to watch The Amazing Race with my husband until my thumbs go numb.

3. Practice yoga. Moving the energy does make me feel better and it gets me out of my head. For a short period of time. But if the fear is great enough, it rears its ugly head again.

4. Feel nauseated. Which means that I either can’t eat or all I want to eat is chocolate and potatoes.

5. Blast Megan Trainor and dance around the living room. (This makes my poor husband feel nauseated.)

6. When all of those things don’t work….I cry. These days I try to cry when my husband is around because I know that nothing good comes from crying about cancer when I’m all by myself.

7. Finally, I do what my yoga teacher friend Deb Burkman (who also happens to be a breast cancer survivor) advised after I pleaded via email last year to share how she got through the diagnosis phase. Her answer was simple: She said she remembers what the Dalai Lama once said, which is that he tries to make friends with the fear. This sage bit of wisdom has helped me tremendously.

You see, most of the time when we feel fearful, we instinctively take some helpful action to mitigate the fear. But…what do you do when you can’t take action to make things better? When you can’t just take control of the situation? In my situation, the question is, how do I “sit” with the fear of facing my mortality head on?

It’s times like these when we’re really called upon to do yoga. We take all of those hours that we’ve logged on our mats—breathing and moving, watching and responding—and put them into practice. The technique of making friends with fear has served as a little bridge to help me do that.

Here’s the internal map of why it helps me so much: For starters, it puts me in the role of observer, or what’s known in yoga as witness consciousness. I can see the fear as a separate entity from me and observe it, just like I watch my body during asana practice. I can see that it has an energy just like all my other emotions have different energies and effects. And I can witness how it’s causing me some pain. But I don’t have to be sucked into the loud screaming drama of fear just like I don’t have to put all of my focus and attention on the most difficult aspect of a pose. I can stand back and watch myself move through the challenging experience, whether physical or mental.

From that place of witnessing, I can start making friends with fear by acknowledging that it exists. The simple act of acknowledgment immediately defuses some of fear’s power. Instead of bracing myself and pushing against fear with my full body weight, I can stand and greet it eye to eye.

From acknowledgment comes acceptance. I allow the fear to be there. I don’t have to feel guilty or weak for my vulnerabilities. I don’t have to “warrior up” and conquer my fear. Fear is allowed to have its place in my consciousness from time to time. It’s allowed a seat at the table. I may not like the way it feels, but I can allow it to be there. And once I do that, I realize that I can handle it. Fear is not going to suffocate or drown me.

At this point – and this is the best part — I’m able to soften – inside and out. When I see fear as a something that I can make friends with, the energy of the emotion subsides a bit. It loosens its noose-like grip around my neck. My shoulders relax. My breath deepens. The fear itself is not so scary and angry and strange. It’s no longer an adversary, a scary black cat skulking around behind me – it’s actually quite sweet and scared and timid and normal. And I can feel that it needs what I need as I’m going through all of this – some love, some attention. A hug. A deep breath. A pat on the back. It needs some comfort. It knows that it’s got a crappy role in life, but it’s just doing its job, right?

When I soften, I’m in the true yoga space again. I’m present with the current reality – which is that I’m well. I’m not living in a hospital. And none of us knows how long we will live.

Now, I’m armed with a technique for when fear visits me again. I can repeat the inner mantra, “witness, acknowledge, allow, soften.” And you can, too. I hope it helps you with whatever fear you’re facing right now.

By Andrea Ferretti

Andrea Ferretti and Jason Crandell are a husband and wife team who have been teaching, writing about, and living their yoga for nearly two decades. Andrea is the former executive editor of Yoga Journal and is now creative director for Jason Crandell Yoga Method. Jason is an internationally recognized teacher known for his precise, empowering, down-to-earth approach to vinyasa yoga. They live together in San Francisco with their full-time boss, Sofia-Rose Crandell, age 3. To read their blog or to learn more about Jason's upcoming teacher trainings, please visit their web site www.jasonyoga.com

 


Balance
Balance

During this time that began in August (before Burning Man for me personally and I’m sure for others at that gathering), I’ve been witness to a huge cleanse, epic transformations, upheavals, intense realizations, and brave leaps forward by so many. And for me personally, well let’s just say that there have been radical shifts that would put an earthquake to shame. 

There are many places I’m sure we could go after all that, but really, we must choose balance. 

Let me say that again … We must choose balance.  I say that deliberately because it is your choice and you know that, I know you do. 

When I reviewed the astrological orchestra and then realized, (as if it could be any other way), that Navratri began just after the New Moon, I literally dropped to my knees and gave thanks. 

 

Let me start here: 

This New Moon in Libra is all about balance; specifically balance in relationships.  And in case you forgot, you have relationships all over the place:  with others, with your past, with your parents, with your job, with yourself, with money, with the Earth, and even with your choices.  Name it, you’re in relationship all the time.  And this New Moon is asking you to bring into balance what has been off “karmic kilter” for quite some time.  All that shakedown that came before this moment, what was that all about? It’s all been preparing you for this moment.

The one where truth resides, where compassion lives, where abundance is obvious, where love wins, and where you exhale and listen to your intuitive knowing; feeling that deep resonance with all that is.  

Sounds very prophetic doesn’t it? Well it’s true. 

 

Now follow me here, let me take this to the next step: 

For a moment, think about all the people on this planet now, celebrating Navratri, the worship of the Divine Feminine in all her forms.  They are praying, fasting, celebrating, chanting, yoga-ing, talking about, and maybe for the first time, recognizing the radiance of the Divine Feminine.  They are receiving the energy of the Great Mother by bowing to her greatness. So even if none of this resonates with you personally, it’s happening and it’s powerful beyond our thinking mind. 

Trust me on this one please.

The truth is that our world has been out of balance for a very, very long time.  The story, as it is told in many traditions and lineages, has talked about patriarchal rule and how it has created our now seemingly insurmountable issues. 

I personally love the story about Shiva and Sati and how she promises to marry Shiva and help create the World, but only if she is always honored and respected for her power.  The moment the “powers that be” forget who she is and disregard her power and try to take over, she leaves her body.  Shiva is pissed off and begins careening through the world, with her broken physical form, spewing obscenities and everywhere he goes, major earth tragedies begin happening. 

Saturn comes in and begins dropping pieces of Sati’s body to the Earth in the hopes of stopping Shiva from complete destruction.  According to this story, which I love, where Sati’s body landed, we now experience major vortexes, magical geography, and deep connection with the Divine Feminine because this is where She resides.

So I ask you now … how has that changed from whatever lineage you believe in, whatever text you want to read from, how has that changed?  Have we not been overruled by old, out dated, patriarchal ideals and concepts?  Has the feminine not been disrespected, under valued, and in many cases, manipulated for some type of consumption or greed? 

The answer is yes, yes it has.  And the time is now to stop.  The time is now to make changes, big or small, it doesn’t matter, just make a change. 

Now.

Admittedly, change is happening and it’s happening at a pretty quick rate, which makes me so happy.  I see it mostly in amazing, vulnerable, authentic, available men who recognize the beauty of the Divine and are excited to talk about it.  I see it in women coming together in circle and supporting each other.  I see it in an overall sense of receiving … allowing … accepting … unconditional loving. 

And now, in this moment, the planets, the stars, the Moon, and the energy of the Divine Feminine herself is asking us to please find balance.  And to please do it now.

And to some, that sounds and feels overwhelming.  I mean, with all the “issues” we are currently experiencing, how can one person possibly bring anything into balance.  It’s seemingly too much. 

 

Now let me take you here:

What if you could, for a moment, believe in the truth of a holographic Universe?  Meaning that every single thing you were experiencing and witnessing was a mere reflection of yourself and how you “relate” in the world?  What if that were true?

Which it is.

Then can you maybe just take a moment in silence and truly recognize the truth of what is imbalance in your own life?  Can you really look at the dark shadows of your life and admit that you have the power to create balance for yourself?  See and begin to shift the ways in which you push and force, and disallow love, harmony, spirit to create FOR you? 

Can you sit in receptivity for a hot minute and drink in the beauty of what is occurring?  Can you welcome the idea that change is necessary and that maybe we needn’t be doing so much and maybe we should be okay with receiving?  And heart knowing?  And intuitive guidance?

That’s what it’s going to take.  A swift turn to the heart to experience this balance.  By all of us.  Together as one. 

How … you ask?  Well first off, we needn’t ever ask how.  But if you need something, a check list of sorts …. Here you go:   

Sit

Breathe

Revel in nature

Say yes

Listen

Love … unapologetically

Forgive … and mean it

BE the energy of the Divine

Honor Her ….

Honor your mother, your wife, your daughter, and honor the feminine that resides in every single man on this planet.  Because guess what?  From what I’m hearing … a lot of them are wanting to shift, but they are so damn afraid of disappointing us.  They know … on a deep level they know, that we are the Shakti of creation.  And they too have been emasculated by our own imbalance of masculine energy.

There’s no manual on how to do this differently!  They can only go into the heart where many of them, and the ones before them, have never even traveled to.  Where many of them were hurt and told to fight, and consume, and gain, and win instead of love.

Support them with your loving grace. Hold them in times of transformation.  And love them for trying. 

This is where balance will happen. In your home.  In the way you love. In the way you receive.  In the way you acknowledge all phases of the Divine within yourself.

Your fierce compassion (Durga)

Your infinite generosity (Lakshmi)

Your intuitive guidance (Saraswati)

This practice is more than postures sequenced together to create a class.  This is about moving your body in time with the rhythm of the Universe. And it’s happening … with or without you, it’s happening. 

By Dana Damara

“My passion on the mat is proper alignment, powerful breath and effortless flow so you feel that off your mat. Your practice becomes sacred space where you arrive to find more meaning, depth, authenticity and integrity in your life."

- Dana Damara: mother, author, yoga instructor, speaker and yogini.

Visit DanaDamara.com for more inspiration from Dana.

Click here to download or stream one of Dana's YogaDownload classes!


A Meditation to connect the Ajna to the Anahata Chakra
A Meditation to connect the Ajna to the Anahata Chakra

When we meditate on the 3rd eye, we can travel to higher states of consciousness – to worlds that are more subtle and profound. But when we meditate in a way that connects the 3rd eye to the heart center, or anahata chakra, we can slowly begin to integrate these higher states of awareness so that they become embodied in us - so that we can put them to good use in our day-to-day lives.  

So find a comfortable seat. Make sure your knees rest a bit below your hips. Sit tall so that your spine is long and erect. Take a moment to sway gently from one sit bone to the other until you find your perfect center. Now close your eyes. Take a few moments to let go of any tension your body might be holding onto. Scan your body to see where that tension lies and then breathe deeply into those spots to gently release it. 

On an inhale, sense into the feeling that your body is becoming deeply rooted into the earth. Imagine you have deep roots penetrating the earth’s surface. As you exhale, visualize your spine becoming taller and even more erect. 

Now bring your attention to the place between and just slightly above your eyebrows. Bring your breath to your 3rd eye and imagine the breath is breathing in and out of this place in the center of your forehead. Imagine there’s a very small circle of light here. You can visualize a small moon here in this region, emitting a soft and subtle glow. Continue to breathe in and out of this little moon glowing in the middle of your forehead. 

Now, as you breathe, see that inhale gently pushing the light from your forehead into your heart center. Sense that on an inhale, the breath flows into the 3rd eye, and then travels down to your heart center. As you breathe, feel that a channel is being opened up between the ajna chakra and the anahata chakra. 

Now imagine a soft light beginning to emanate from your heart center, just as it does from your 3rd eye. So as you breathe, you visualize the opening up of the channel between the two centers. There are two points of light, one in the ajna chakra and the other in the anahata chakra. 

Add the mantra OM to your breath, feeling the sound OM flowing into the light in the forehead and down to the light in the heart on an inhale, and then from the heart up into the forehead and out on an exhale. Really allow the vibration of OM to seep into your consciousness and penetrate these two chakras and the central channel that connects them. 

As thoughts come into your mind, simply notice them and come back to the breath, the light, and the vibration of OM that connects your head to your heart – connecting you with your Higher Self. 

By Aimee Hughes N.D.

Aimee Hughes, ND, is a holistic health writer who has been traveling and exploring the world of natural health and wellness, yoga, dance, and travel for the past two decades. She is the author of a self-published vegan cookbook, The Sexy Vegan Kitchen: Culinary Adventures in Love & Sex,” available on Amazon. Aimee is the lead writer and health consultant for the Yandara Yoga Institute in Todos Santos, Mexico. [www.yandara.com]


Yoga for Digestion
Yoga for Digestion

 

 

 

What to do when you’re plagued by digestive discomfort? Whether it’s cramping, bloating, gas, constipation, diarrhea or a little bit of all of it, a specific yoga for digestion sequence may help.

Yoga for digestion: why the poses work

Twists and poses that compress the digestive organs can be helpful to get things moving again in your digestive tract. We all need a little extra motivation sometimes when things get tough. Research also shows that digestive discomfort can be heightened by stress and a lack of activity, so yoga is a perfect candidate to help get you moving and breathing to reduce stress.

Yoga poses that lengthen the torso help create more space and open up any areas that may be chronically compressed causing blockages. Think about it. When something goes wrong on the highway, everything gets all backed up and there is no way you’re getting through until whatever is blocking traffic gets moved out of the way. Considering your large intestine is about 5 feet long, I figured a traffic analogy would work well. 5 feet is like a highway for tiny cells and stuff.

Combine these types of poses in a flow and you’ll get your blood pumping, your breath assisting, and it will probably just feel good to move.

I’ve offered up some yoga poses for digestion on the blog before, so you can use those as a resource/reference as well. (I swear, I didn’t plan to wear the exact same shirt…)

It’s always nice to revisit this topic seasonally and switch things up a little so you don’t get bored!

Click here for video, it is 10 minutes. No excuses :)

By Ashley Josephine

I started practicing yoga to stay in shape and release stress. What I learned was how to love my life. How to have faith. How to find your community of people who support you and love you unconditionally. How to get back control. Today, it is my mission to help busy Type-A overachiever women like me gain back control of their lives, live pain-free, and love the life they want to live through yoga lifestyle practices. Visit www.ashleyjosephine.com to get free yoga lifestyle tips to help live healthier, happier, and pain-free.

 


Pumpkin Turkey Crockpot Chili
Pumpkin Turkey Crockpot Chili

While pumpkin is not technically cleanse friendly, it’s still a ridiculously healthy food and one of our 80:20 favorites – especially this time of year!

If you too have a passion for pumpkin and want to fully indulge your pumpkin obsession, we’ve got you covered!

Here’s our lineup of favorite pumpkin recipes:

 

Pumpkin Spice Green Smoothie
Creamy Pumpkin Sage Soup
Pumpkin Fudge
Nearly Raw Coco Nutty Pumpkin Pie

To add to the pumpkin madness, I thought we needed a new family-friendly crockpot recipe, something that will warm little bellies before heading out for trick-or-treating this Halloween.

Check out my new Pumpkin Turkey Crockpot Chili recipe below. This is a family-favorite among my boys! Plus it’s quick and easy, making it one of mama’s faves too.

Now it’s your turn! Are you pumped for pumpkin? Share your favorite recipe in the comment section below.

With pumpkin spice and everything nice,

Pumpkin Turkey Crockpot Chili

Yield: 8 servings

Ingredients:

2 TB. coconut oil, separated
2 lbs. ground turkey
1 yellow onion, chopped
3 garlic cloves, minced
2 tsp. cumin
2 (15 oz cans) great northern beans, rinsed and drained
1 (15 oz.) can pumpkin puree
1 TB. chili powder
1 tsp. oregano
1-2 small jalapeños, seeded and finely chopped
2 cups chicken broth
2 bay leaves
1 green onion, chopped for garnish
Handful of cilantro, chopped for garnish
Salt and pepper to taste
Coconut Lime Crema, garnish (optional)


Instructions:
In a large sauté pan melt 1 tablespoon of coconut oil over high heat. Add turkey meat and cook, breaking it up into small pieces until fully cooked, about 5 minutes. Transfer to crock pot.

Add remaining tablespoon of coconut oil to the sauté pan and heat until melted. Add onions and garlic, sautéing for 3-4 minutes or until translucent. Add cumin and sauté another minute. Transfer to crock pot.

In the crockpot, add beans, pumpkin puree, chili powder, oregano, jalapeños, chicken broth and bay leaves. Stir to combine. Cover and cook on high for 4 hours or low for 8 hours.

Before serving, remove bay leaves and adjust chill powder to taste. Garnish with green onions, cilantro and coconut lime crema, if using.

Jo Schaalman and Julie Peláez are co-authors of the book The Conscious Cleanse: Lose Weight, Heal Your Body, and Transform Your Life in 14 Days, a best-selling, step-by-step guide to help you live your most vibrant life. Together they've lead thousands of people through their online supported cleanse through their accessible and light-hearted approach. They've been dubbed “the real deal” by founder and chief creative director Bobbi Brown, of Bobbi Brown Cosmetics, beauty editor of the TODAY show. 

To learn more about “Jo and Jules” and to download a free e-cookbook for a sampling of the delicious food served up on the Conscious Cleanse, please visit their website.