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Ellie Grace, MA | Yoga Educator & Teacher Trainer

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© Emma Myrtle

© Emma Myrtle

Reflections: How Yin Has Affected My Practice & The Psychological Benefits of Yin

August 15, 2018

'To live is so startling, it leaves little time for anything else'

– Emily Dickinson

Introduction

Quite unexpectedly, this week's yin training presented an opportunity to leave the safety of my worrisome mind and to sink myself deeper into the practice of softening. I've been strongly aware of a mental state that has kept me gnawing at my own self, the question hanging over me in every waking hour of how to do what I'm doing in a sustainable, financially rewarding way.

I never planned on being a yoga teacher. In fact, the practice found me and at a time of intense grief and personal loss, scooped me up and provided therapeutic, physical, emotional and spiritual structure to a world that had been whisked out from under my feet. On finding moving meditation through mindful Hatha practices, I had, for the first time in my life, a way of managing – observing, accepting and processing – the pain I was experiencing.

And so I followed the path of yoga; the one that rolled out ahead in the most expansive and welcoming of ways. In my first teacher training at the Sivananda ashram, they systematically worked to break our egos and to make supple our minds while strengthening our bodies. In training I experienced the boundless joy of being at home with myself, the world and its people. And from there, I moved to the other side of the world to study yoga at Masters level, keen to intellectualise the process of becoming that I had witnessed.

My search for an understanding of what happens to the heart when it is broken open and becomes itself a mystic and a wanderer came to an abrupt end when I presented my thesis and took the decision to return to London to create my work. After two years away from this city, which is hard and closed, married to the material and sceptical of the spiritual, I had a different view of yoga to that which I'd studied on the west coast of the States. The path of yoga and the path of the heart seemed to be confused by yoga as physical exercise; a trend and a fad. And my wish to teach people what I knew to be true – that a practice offers relief, and a vast opening into the wonders of life – has been constantly undermined by the necessity of making a living in this world. What, in the early days of practice felt like gifts of insight, growth and awe, now feel like postcards from a trip taken many years ago.

All this is to say that the last 6 years of being awake in the world, on the seeker's path, has been a challenge of enormous proportions. At once simple and profound, the process of awakening has also been pyschologically disruptive to say the least. My monkey mind and its endless chatter has tried to sabotage my practice for as long as I've loved and benefitted from it. And my return to London has been a time of intense worry and rumination over whether my knowledge, study and wisdom can find material counterpart in a society that values status and income as markers by which to rate success.

 

The Practice

“The breath changes and you change. Nothing stays the same, yet there is constancy. The breath reminds us that we are here and alive: let it be your anchor to the present moment.”

- Elana Rosenbaum, 'Guided Meditation: Awareness of Breathing'

Yin practice. Though I've been teaching yin for a few short months and have interspersed my Hatha sequences with yin throughout the years of my own practice, this was my first teacher training and immersion in the practice. While the theory and physiological information have been reminders of that which I've studied durring TTC and my MA, more than anything I've felt the training to be a personal retreat; a drop into present-moment awareness and a softening of the harsh and pushing London mind that's returned.

The slowness and the depth of an inch-by-inch practice returned me to the realisation and remembrance, as the manual says, of “gradual training, gradual practice, gradual progress”. In slowing into my body I slowed and softened the edges of my mind. I remembered what it was to let spaciousness and stillness be my guides, and for the weight of mental activity to slip away through my ears. Here I'm reminded of Einstein's adage: “we can't solve problems from the same level of consciousness that created them.”

Releasing tension from the body, I felt tension and impatience releasing from the mind and by consequence, my anxieties around past and future events. Grounded, central to myself, and aware of my surroundings in a state of peaceful attentiveness, this yin practice has brought me closer to myself, like a good friend in embrace. And as I transition into the next phases of my creative, intellectual and professional life, I am reminded at the heart level what it means to trust, to surrender and to receive.

In Healing, Why yoga works, Yoga as therapy, Yoga Physiology, Yin Yoga, Teacher Training Tags Yin Yoga, Yin Practice, Yin, Psychology, Releasing Tension, Growth, Expansion, Learning, Returning to the mat
© JP Faraj

© JP Faraj

The healing power of writing.

June 15, 2018

I’ve been reflecting a lot recently on the power of writing.

Somehow, it’s only just become apparent to me that I’ve always written; until now, I thought it was something everybody did. It turns out they haven’t been doing it—just like I haven’t been running marathons or fixing motorbikes.

Writing’s been a constant through every job I’ve had since graduating from my English Literature BA. It’s taken me through each of my jobs in the art world, into ridiculously exciting territory with my food business, and was a way of making some additional money when I was studying for my master’s. But aside from the press releases, articles, artist interviews, or biographies I’ve tapped out for professional work, by far the most rewarding and therapeutic of my writing time has been the stuff of the pen, the words that have connected ink and paper to the flow of my mind or the ache of my heart.

During my first breakup at age 15, I wrote sheets and sheets of poetry about the first of my heart’s disappointments. I remember the process clearly, mapping out the hurt with heavy metaphor and candid feeling. And aside from finding what I put down at that tender age to be cringeworthy now, I’m glad I kept the folder of pages, each of which I remember filling with ferocious speed, tearing one sheet after another from the pad.

Nearly 15 years later, in the pitch-black pain of my dad’s battle with a brain tumour, I found myself writing through the pen again—writing letters to him (if only he could still read) and attempting to send letters out to my future self as a way of reaching beyond the agony of now. I wrote in the hope that he could hear what I wanted to say, and I wrote when sitting at his bedside was too much to bear.

A few months after his death, and when the long-term boyfriend I was hoping to marry broke my heart by walking, inexplicably, away, the act of putting pen to paper and letting the ink flow through was a step in the direction of expression. Most days were pure, felt chaos: I had lost my past and my future in one fell swoop and the only thing the present held was a pain so intense, so physical, so complex, I wished not to be alive.

Over time—a long, agonising time, during which I somehow found the motivation to write an award-winning blog, open a restaurant, and publish a cook book (isn’t it obvious that some of our best work comes from the tangled hell that lives right at the bottom of our being?)—it was a commitment to meditation, and later, yoga, that helped me to see the perfect clarity and abundance of the present moment.

The paradox seems so obvious: how can getting real and comfortable with the present moment be a tonic for the searing pain of right-now experiences?

Well, it turned out that meditation was the tool that allowed some space between me and my thoughts. And once I edged through that initially small gap, I started to be able to separate pain from stories, pain from past hurts, pain from fear of the future, and so on. Away from the maelstrom of the mind, all that was left was the pain—which, though considerable—was a more liveable, manageable phenomenon.

Of course, the practice wasn’t easy—and it isn’t for anyone, ever.

That’s why we call it practice and it’s how we come to cultivate and to nurture, rather than “succeed” or “improve at it.” The reason we return to sitting is in order to gain awareness of how the mind functions and to pay respect to the complexity of experience that is human life. Sitting, for me, is about making space, seeing with clarity what’s going on, and allowing the dust to settle.

In writing, we can find a way to label what we are feeling, much like we do in sitting meditations. The truth is, I don’t feel that there is a language for that kind of loss, nor that we’ll ever find it. But at least what is turmoil and agony on the inside finds something of a voice through the known field of language and more than anything provides a process by which to let the grief through. Putting pen to paper makes room for a stream of consciousness outside of ourselves, reminding us of our ability to reach into language and have it pull us out from the water, if only we can find the end of the rope. That, at least, is a start in releasing…releasing…releasing.

When I sit to write, I open myself to the same quality of attention that I’m cultivating in sitting practice. The blank page tempts me in the same way as the meditation cushion: in both places I must “make myself empty like a pot,” approach it with beginner’s mind, and be susceptible to doubts, fears, and second voices before letting the flow of awareness and focused attention settle me into a way of being that is at once present and transcendent. In both, I experience how the present moment ushers in the next.

As acts of discovery, both practices help me to trace the contours of my awareness, to take me deep into my truth, and to direct me back out from the vast reaches conjured by my psyche. If nothing else, writing pulls me out to the edge, into the mystery, and makes me feel less mad.

Back then, I also wrote because I knew I’d need to look back and remember how far I’d come; that, unimaginable as it was then and in every successive moment, there would—according to those around me—be a time when I’d look back and find myself in a stronger place.

I’m happy to say that time is now. There’s no more waking myself up in the middle of the night sobbing and reaching out for the pen to scratch some words into the notebook. Rather, my writing’s taken me to a place of stimulating academic enquiry where I can explore the healing connections between death and spirituality, mind-body practices, and yoga and neuroscience.

I count myself lucky, for those words have contributed to my healing. To write now from a point of resolution—one in which I find my spiritual enquiries and the facts of my life entwined, reconciled, and resolved—is about recovery (literally meaning “a return to truth”) and it is about recalling what was, what lingers, and what has been relieved.

Research shows that when we select, edit, and refine language so as to make sense of life events beyond our control, we positively impact our response to the events themselves and actively improve immune function, physical and emotional health, and behavioral changes associated with being able to act on our own behalf.

The sense of agency that comes with crafting a coherent narrative out of seemingly chaotic events that were deemed to be incomprehensible or beyond our control is crucial to the recovery of a lost self. Turning disarray into wholeness removes some of its power to hurt: we have alchemised the pain into art. Not only do we celebrate survival, passage, and courage in carefully selecting language as the representative of experiences that were found to be indescribable, but we replace feelings of hopelessness and victimization with the experience of control and authorship.

In writing, we become an observer to our pain, and so create space between shards of memory and present cognition.

Restoring control and identity through the conscious crafting of language, according to Louise de Salvo in Writing as a Way of Healing: How Telling Our Stories Transforms Our Lives, “…we symbolically resolve the searching and the yearning stages of the mourning process into the ‘finding and having’ stage” when we unearth the right details and phrases.

Not only this, but we are enabled to create public testimony out of private endurance and can use the thought involved in ordering events, conversations, and happenings as leverage out of being drawn back into past horrors. The miracle of art-making is that it allows us to turn the mirror toward the light of our once-charred soul and to unspool the grief that lives there.

de Salvo continues, “The act of linking feelings with troubling events also causes our bodies to display responses associated with yoga and meditation by working to integrate the left and right hemispheres of the brain, lower the heart rate, and relax the body.” When we confront the chaos of our memories in this way, we bring unassimilated events into an integrated sense of self and personhood, and when we’re no longer working to actively inhibit the story, we alleviate the stress of holding ourselves back.

Actively inhibiting our stories, in fact, is shown to be damaging to the body’s defense mechanisms and even the biochemical workings of the brain and nervous system, resulting in cumulative stress and an increased risk of illness and stress-related problems. Confrontation of trauma, however, reduces biological stress and helps assimilate the event, becoming something we can understand and ultimately put behind us, making it less psychologically daunting. Becoming the observer of the memories, then, leads to an improvement in health and well-being.

In those post-loss years, I spent a lot of time alone: processing, thinking, reflecting, practicing, changing—building strength again.

And for the most part, however hard I searched, I still couldn’t find a way to express what I’d been through to the people I met, so I continued to write for myself. I am ever glad I returned to the page in the same way that I returned to the meditation cushion and the yoga mat: to see what was there and to let it through

These tools have been positively life-changing—the rope, in fact, with which I could pull myself ashore again. Together, they have helped me to write a way out of the darkness, into the flow of awareness, and to find a way home.

~

Sources:

Pennebaker, James W. Opening Up: The Healing Power of Expressing Emotions. New York & London: The Guilford Press, 1997.
DeSalvo, Louise. Writing as a Way of Healing: How Telling Our Stories Transforms Our Lives. San Francisco: Harper Collins, 1999.

~

 

In Writing, Healing, Memory, Yoga as therapy Tags Writing, Writing as Healing, meditation, Published writing, Article, Elephant Journal, Writing Yogi, Yogi Writer, Yogis who write, Yoga and creativity
Yoga for Mental Health

Just Giving for Mental Health Research UK

August 20, 2016

The issue of mental health is dear to me. The likelihood is that you - or someone you know - has been affected by mental health issues, the social and economic burden of which is enormous.

Before my dad, John Grace QC, passed away, he set up the UK's first charity to research the causes of and cures for mental illness. He was inspired by his sister who has suffered from schizophrenia the majority of her adult life and by his lifetime's work as a medical defense barrister. Click here for more info on Mental Health Research UK (MHRUK).

At least 1 in 4 Britons and 1 in 4 people worldwide are said to be affected by mental health issues at some point in their lives. At least a third of all families in the UK include someone who is currently mentally ill and yet the research into the causes of mental health remain woefully under-funded.

Since my dad died I've become a regular practitioner and teacher of yoga and meditation. I'm currently living in Los Angeles where I'm studying for my MA in Yoga Studies with a special interest in Buddhism, Psychology and Peace Studies.

I keep a practice because I'm firm in my belief that the traditional practices of yoga and meditation have profound effects on mental and emotional wellbeing. I currently volunteer my time at Venice Family Clinic, have trained in trauma-specific yoga teaching (both for war veterans and prison populations) and love to bring these beautiful, ancient teachings to beginners and vulnerable communities alike, confident that the maintenance of a robust mental, psychological, physical and emotional life is the key to a successful life. I am also due to teach an undergraduate course (aimed at reducing stress and depression in the undergraduate community) at my university - Loyola Marymount - starting next Spring.

I've launched a Just Giving campaign to dedicate my next year of voluntary teaching to fundraising for MHRUK.

Each year the charity looks to award the John Grace QC Scholarship in support of a PhD student in his or her mental health research. The cost of each scholarship is £100,000 and 9 of them have been awarded to date. The charity is an incredible resource for advancing this crucial aspect of societal health and wellbeing.

Please consider making a donation, whether big or small, to help make a difference to those affected by mental health issues. I would love to continue to promote the vital work that the charity champions and to know that researchers, patients, families and societies alike are supported through our campaigning. All proceeds will go direct to the charity, at least 95% of which go straight to fulfilling the aim of funding research into the causes of mental illness in order to develop better treatments with fewer side-effects.

Thank you so much!

 

 

 

In Yoga as therapy, Research, Yoga Classes, Yoga LA, Psychotherapy, Why yoga works Tags Mental Health Research, Volunteering, teaching, Charity, Fundraising, Yoga Class, Yoga for Social Change, Yoga for Mental Health, Yoga and Wellbeing, www.ellie-grace.com
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© Ellie Grace

Yoga in Psychotherapy / Why Yoga Works

May 21, 2016

I've just completed an introductory psychology class at Antioch University as a personal added interest alongside my MA.

For a few years I've been meeting psychotherapists and psychiatrists who are starting to recognise somatic practices – particularly yoga and meditation – as powerful tools in their therapeutic toolbox. Many of them are training to become yoga teachers so that they can offer their clients something beyond talking therapy, medication or any of the other healing modalities found in the clinical setting.

I'm trying to do things the other way round, and to bring what I know about the healing properties of somatic practices into my understanding of psychotherapy.

Part of our research in the psychology course is in learning about the work and advancements of the western world's most prominent psychoanalysts and therapists. Each week we've surveyed the contributions of maybe 20 key (white, male) theorists and their personality theories, the acceptance of which have been largely responsible for our private, clinical-based treatment of the self in western culture.

What struck me, as I was reading up on Albert Ellis – an American psychoanalyst of the 1940s who developed Rational Emotive Behavioural Therapy as a way to engage his client's sense of responsibility for their thoughts, deeds and actions – is that his theories on positive psychology and thinking, of reframing negative thoughts and cultivating deep self awareness, all stem from early Indian yoga philosophies, chiefly those of the late Hatha and early Buddhist period.

In fact, not only did Ellis seemingly appropriate early spiritual psychology's understanding of the observer and the observed but he also understood just what yoga philosophy at a later date developed: namely that our world, our reality, is shaped by our thoughts and that the world 'out there' is a pure reflection of the world within. He understood too what neurosis and mental affliction are often caused by: an inability to separate one's self from one's thought processes; an over-reliance on the idea that we are separate and independent from others rather than part of an interconnected whole; and attachments to the pains of the past as correlative proof of a doomed future. Drawing directly, it seems, from the lessons of the Bhagavad Gita, Ellis asserts that the key to happiness is to act, to be involved and driven in one's life and to relinquish the idea of having absolute control over everything.

Ellis' Rational Emotive Behavioural Therapy (REBT) has an ABC of procedures that are viewed in successive order when working with a client:

'A is for activating experiences, such as family troubles, unsatisfying work, early childhood traumas, and all the many things we point to as the sources of our unhappiness. B stands for beliefs, especially the irrational, self-defeating beliefs that are the actual sources of our unhappiness. And C is for consequences, the neurotic symptoms and negative emotions such as depression, panic, and rage that come from our beliefs.

Although the activating experiences may be quite real and have caused real pain, it is our irrational beliefs that create long-term, disabling problems! Ellis adds D and E to ABC: The therapist must dispute (D) the irrational beliefs, in order for the client to ultimately enjoy the positive psychological effects (E) of rational beliefs.

For example, "a depressed person feels sad and lonely because he erroneously thinks he is inadequate and deserted." Actually, depressed people perform just as well as non-depressed people. So, a therapist should show the depressed person his or her successes, and attack the belief that they are inadequate, rather than attacking the mood itself!' (C. George Boeree: Personality Theories, 2000)

I was stunned to read this short description of Ellis' clinical approach to the therapeutic process. What, in effect, he teaches, is what we teach ourselves when we find ourselves taken by a yoga practice.

The saṃskāras or mental patterns that groove and re-groove themselves into our mind (and all of us have them in various ways) through habitual, day-to-day thinking and rumination on past events or fears of the future, are actually re-oriented as a result of dedicated physical yoga practice. Not only do we start to sense that we are thinking differently – light, positive, compassionate thinking – but recent neuroscientific research has now 'proven' what yoga practitioners for the past two thousand years have known all along: that the yogic brain actively rewires itself, creating new neural pathways and new ways of seeing. It's partly why we become so inclined to return to yoga above and beyond any other form of physical activity.

Just one example from yoga philosophy's banquet of offers shows us man's relationship to his mind: 'Pratipaksha bhavana' is a Sanskrit phrase that translates as the ability to turn afflicted thinking on its head. Put simply, it's the practice of changing negatives into positives and it's an example of early Indian philosophy's ability to regard consciousness as a mutable, manipulable phenomenon. Yoga as a philosophy understands that we needn't be subjects of the wild and unfocussed movements of our minds (as Patañjali's Yoga Sūtras attest, 'yogaḥ cittaḥ vṛittiḥ nirodhaḥ' – 'yoga is the cessation of the endless fluctuations of the mind') and furthermore, that we have the power to change the way we experience the world. If Hindu and early yoga philosophy allowed us to see that the world is an illusion created only by consciousness (much like the proposals put forward by Ellis) then Buddhist thought picked up this idea and ran with it, developing the notion that just as we seek a way to avoid the persistent suffering of life, we also have the power to radically alter our perspective on that suffering.

In the fourth of five psychology classes, and sitting among a group of hopeful future psychotherapists, all of us excited and happy to be discussing brain function, behaviour and therapeutic techniques, I was illumined by the thought: 'YOGA IS THE BEST PSYCHOTHERAPY THERE IS!' Aware that I was no longer in the room with 15 other Yoga Studies graduate students who knew what I was talking about but faced instead by a body of people whose prime interest lay in discovering cerebral and cognitive methods of therapy, I tried to explain myself to the classroom, telling the story of how I'd come to yoga in the first place.

While in therapy with a Cognitive Behavioural Therapist to help me work with grief and depression, I was recommended to try yoga and meditation with the suggestion that they might ease the symptoms of stress, anxiety and low mood. At that point I didn't have the energy or wherewithal to try either. Some months later, something had shifted and I was able to make my way to a local meditation class. CBT itself had opened to me for the first time something about the working of my mind: my fears, core beliefs and behaviours, all of which was curiously interesting. Meditation, however, allowed me to bear witness to these things in a way that created a more tangible separation between me and 'my self.' The observer and the observed, as we call it. Yoga followed meditation and with it, the beginning of a series of layers being peeled back and revealed to me in a way that was both healing and entrancing.

And that's it: because yoga works at both the subtle and the gross level, it allows the body and the conscious mind to soften together, having the added effect of quieting the daily, ongoing, chattering, anxious, always-moving mind in order to let the deeper work and the profound messages from within to rise up. It allows you to get in and take a good look around. The more one practices, the more that sense of intuition, bodily wisdom and inner healing is advanced, and because the brain receives positive feedback messages from the rush of endorphins and GABA (one of the central nervous system's neurotransmitters responsible for calming nervous activity, low levels of which are thought to be linked with anxiety and mood disorders) – not to mention the extraordinarily powerful calming of the autonomic nervous system which is responsible for fight or flight but which, through controlled and regular breathing is soothed into a state of quiet trust and relaxation – it is not uncommon to leave a yoga class feeling grounded and soothed from the inside out.

The positive feedback system works like this: the body holds a posture, say Warrior 2, for longer than it might like to. The muscles work hard to keep the spine straight, the front leg bent, both arms extended and straight. After a few seconds, the mind chips in and asks to stop, complains about the pain and the tension in the lower back, gets bored and wants to do something else. This is totally normal. This is where the breath comes in and why it is so crucially important to our yoga practice: without it, we are simply not practicing yoga, but gymnastics. In order to quiet the mind and train the brain we draw on the breath, inhaling deeply and exhaling fully. We stay with the movement of the breath at all times, in every posture. And in a nutshell, this is why: the sympathetic portion of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) flares up in response to the stress of holding a pose, sending messages to the brain that puts us into 'fight or flight' mode. By breathing deeply and steadily, we activate the parasympathetic or 'rest and digest' response in the ANS that counteracts this stress signal, leading to a soothed state of being. The more we practice, the stronger the feedback between the two responses becomes, meaning that when we're faced with stressors and aggravations from daily life, our neural memory knows how to maintain our arousal at a comfortable and safe level. In short, we become calmer and more easily able to handle life's ups and downs with greater ease. This is why yoga has shown to be especially effective for war veterans and PTSD sufferers - in fact, any population used to running on 'high alert' in such a way as to exhaust the adrenal system.  

So there it is: Yoga is not about the asana and how good it does or doesn't look, nor is it about flexibility, which is actually the byproduct of practice, the release of blocked emotion and a removal of the mind's insistence that the body 'can't' or 'won't' get into a certain posture. It is brain training and soul therapy, pure and simple. I like to think of it this way: We move the body to still the mind and we still the mind to move the spirit.

And in so doing, we dive deep into the essence of who we really are, far, far away from the associations that the mind or ego likes to make with itself and the world around us. This inner voice – the one that has been cultivated into silence by society, our families, the structures that we live in in the modern world – is at the centre of each and every one of us. Its voice is so damn clear that once you hear it, it is not only profoundly moving but impossible to ignore. It brings confidence, understanding, compassion, focus and in my opinion, the ability to dig out from the root the debilitating thought processes that hold so many of us back from being as brilliant as we truly are. It also has the power to deliver the grace of spiritual wisdom; a stillness and resonance beyond language. At a grosser level it lends us the opportunity to understand ourselves better than anyone else can, and to intuit what is best for us at a properly humanist level. The practice of yoga is not only a sort of clearance sale of the mind so that the body and soul can speak but in so many instances, it is a naturally intelligent way of enacting the original Greek meaning of 'psyche' and 'therapeuin': therapy of the soul. Or to go direct to the source, it is Sanskrit's own definition of yoga, meaning to yoke or unite. 

It's my responsibility to say that psychotherapy has a wonderful, charted history of deep thought and great success and that I've used it as a client with great effect. In fact, it's what I hope to study next. It's important also to say that severe mental health problems – though shown to be responsive to yoga and meditation in some cases – deserve individual medical treatment. Each of us has our own healing path to tread and in that sense different modalities will work for different people, and at different times in our lives. What I love in the study of mind-body relations is that these various tools and techniques can find intimate, revelatory ways of talking to one another and offer us a picture of ourselves in totality, in our full, beautifully-flawed humanness. 

 

For further reading, I can't recommend highly enough these two books:

The Healing Path of Yoga, by Nischala Joy Devi

The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind & Body in the Healing of Trauma, by Bessel Van der Kolk, M.D.

 

In Yoga as therapy, Psychotherapy, Why yoga works, Research, Yoga Philosophy, Yoga Research Tags Yoga therapy, yoga, psychotherapy, yoga as psycotherapy, autonomic nervous system, parasympathetic nervous system, sympathetic nervous system, www.ellie-grace.com
1 Comment

This is the beginning

January 11, 2016

...Of my blog posts, at least. It's certainly not the starting point for my writings and meanderings about food and yoga, the former of which started here, several years ago. 

I look forward to writing updates on yoga news, research, projects, insights and gatherings as the time rolls on. Thanks for reading!

© Emma Myrtle

In Writing, Yoga as therapy, Yoga LA Tags Writing, Women's Voices, www.ellie-grace.com, Yoga and Wellbeing
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लोकाः समस्ताः सुखिनोभवंतु

Lokāḥ samastāḥ sukhino bhavamtu

May all beings everywhere be happy and free. 

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