Friday, March 29, 2019

Yoga: The Lexicon of Subconscious.

Yoga: The Lexicon of Subconscious.

It was a sultry summer afternoon. The boy stood hesitantly on the submerged slimy half wall of the village pond. Little fishes fondled his feet. The son looked at his father who was balanced in the water, with skepticism on his ability to swim but with confidence in those open arms. “You can do it”, the dad insisted. The child closed his eyes and jumped into the cold water; moved his hands and legs freely, feeling the support of his dad; floated in the water, moved slowly and started swimming.  The man was my dad and that’s how I learned to swim. No water acclimatization; no kicking lessons; no rowing practices; no floating devices. (This is not to encourage anybody to take this path; just to say how Faith, Confidence and Hetero Suggestion worked for me then)

On a remote island, on a stormy night, a young girl sat in front of a small congregation listening to their pastor on his sermon on faith. The gathering was stranded on the island when the storm broke loose. After several hours, the pastor and the rest of his group was able to find a boat to the mainland. They were astonished to see that young girl there and wondered how she reached there - so fast in the storm and in the rain. The girl said: “didn’t you say that we can walk on the water, if we have faith”

“If I just touch his cloak, I will be healed” and with this belief the woman inched forward in the crowd and touched His robe and she was freed from her suffering.

The denominator in last two stories is the same: a stage for autosuggestion, hetero suggestion, faith or belief; proclamation; and manifestation. We may call it mystery, phenomenon or miracle; modern thinkers call it the power of subconscious mind – the non-argumentative, non-squabbling self that do not dispute what was passed to it. It indelibly mark those suggestions, thoughts, feelings and emotion and present them in all its glory and marvel at the right time. The key to etch these feelings, emotions and thoughts into the subconscious is to bypass the conscious mind – the watch dog – that is continually modulated by temptations and instant gratifications.

Yoga, meditation and mindfulness is a gift given to us to access the subconscious mind. I have taken “Impregnation of subconscious” as the theme of my classes for the next few months. When you set the stage for the beginning of the yoga practice with breathing, when you move mindfully to execute one of those millions of poses listening to the Body, Energy, Action, Direction, Elaboration and Dynamic stability, you’re moving with your subconscious mind. Sub themes of strength, balance, detox and mindfulness are handy tools to train the subconscious. When you hear  “center yourself”, “find your sacred place” or “leave your strengths, weaknesses, imperfections, money, job, relationships, health, beauty for the next sixty minutes”  remember the stage the yogini is setting for you and be ready to act: sync with your subconscious  mind.

Hope to you some time in one of my classes.

Love,

Jay

P. S. “A man is what he thinks about all day long”, R. W. Emerson

Friday, January 18, 2019

Lifestyle Adherence


Hope 2019 is treating you well; and you are returning the favor as well.


I recently heard about “failure Friday”- the second Friday of the New Year when many fall off their resolutions!  Also heard the best time to buy used fitness equipment is February. I pondered these two hypotheses; there seems some meat in them.

So, why we fall off that precipice? Why struggle to adhere and commit to the newly perceived norms? My two cents (rather four):

1. Ask: Why are you doing what are you doing and how? So what?


2. You and, of course, many have told who you are and that has engrained in your brain. Remember: you are more than what you (and others) think. I strongly believe we are pliable (in a good way): we can modulate our body, we can control our mind, and could still tether our soul to “that” original cord.


3. Get the right information, synthesize your own and pave your own path (one size will not fit all; or, there are several paths to the same destination). Google, YouTube, Alexa, Internet, advices, even peer-reviewed publications are only leads; build on that. I write for a website   https://healthy-indian.com/ . It’s a good site for life style practices. Recently they published one of my essays - https://healthy-indian.com/lifestyle/are-genes-really-our-destiny/ there is no dearth of information.

4. Acquaint with what you do; make a truce, a friendship and a bond. Find somebody who can motivate and inspire (or, even drag you to the gym). Like we say in yoga, it’s a time to recognize the grace we seek (warrior 1); stability we aspire (warrior 2), balance we nurture (warriors 3), humility we develop (meek warrior) and the ensuing success (exalted warrior). These qualities will stay with you like a valiant friend in our journey – like Veerbhadra to Shiva, Krishna to Arjun, faith to Job or Katniss Everdeen to Peeta Mellark.


Continued Best,


Jay


Friday, January 4, 2019

Wish you all an Idyllic 2019!


Fair Fights.

Idyllic New Year to you, your family and loved ones. Wish you all the best in 2019 – A Blessed year to pursue goals with passion and perseverance.
Let your resolutions be your dreams
Imperfections and disappointments to fuel them
(In life there are no failures, only invitations to succeed)
Truth to light your path

Our creativity, talents and commitments are like timid wild animals. Seek them gently with care to ground them. Try to connect with them and accept them with love. I had talked in the past on the transition from sympathetically active flight, fight, freeze or faint to parasympathetically active realm of feed, relax and happy - a journey to discover the soul, the purpose of your life. There are few fights you may have to pick up, though; like a matador, with a purpose:

1.     Fight the feeling to be dissatisfied and unsatisfied. Change is a journey, sometimes long, that sting often. Gaining the mastery against the external influence (causes for discontentment) is a treacherous odyssey. A tortoise with its limbs withdrawn give clarity to that action. Make your goals comfortable, stable and steady. You are the reference and the judge. Let realities replace perceptions with right association (especially with food) and impressions.

2.    Fight the urge to devalue yourself. The power to transform yourself is in you- listen to your body, mind and spirit and be mindful. Differentiate challenges and struggles. Ability to find solutions to challenges is the beginning of your intelligence. Always ask: How are you doing? Why are you doing what are you doing? ...so what? Teach yourself! You are the one who knows you the best. Work with your strengths, recognizing your imperfections. One way to know something is to know yourself; to get closer to something is to get closer to yourself; and to learn something is to teach yourself.

3.    Fight the impulse to be (too) self-centered. Honor others. Ask for help when you need and help them in need. You may have a lot to offer to them and much more to learn from them. We are no more islands and it’s no more the survival of the fittest; cooperatively we all thrive. Thoughts, practices, talents, efforts, skills, passion and perseverance may all be absorbed from right associations. The opportunity to watch, observe and learn in a group setting makes one gritty; it creates herd immunity and collective resilience.

All the best to you this year and years ahead; Love,

Jay

Friday, December 14, 2018

Cultivate Mindfulness in Life and Yoga Practice


Let’s Count it!

Aristotle had a hypothesis: women have more teeth than men! For almost 2000 years the dogma remained unchallenged until someone had a brighter idea. He said, “Let’s count it” A revolutionary insight. Reflection on age-long practices often unravel truths. Recently, I gave a presentation “Plant pigments: beyond aesthetics” at St. Xavier University on plant pigments, flavors, fragrances, artificial food colorants, their drawbacks and alternatives. I was hungry after the question/ answer session and thought to eat some cookies. While I was about to bite one, a student raised her hand. Her question caught me off-guard: “you told the issues with artificial food colorants, why are you eating the cookies loaded with those”. I was embarrassed. Another student saved me with another question on the subject matter. I ignored the first and tried to answer the second one; the first one persisted. To make the story short, I had to give up those cookies. The seminar sailed through unchartered territories- meditation, yoga, mindfulness, organic, vegan…I was challenged. Challenging our thoughts, believes and practices is the beginning of realization to transform the body, mind and soul. Now you know where I am going, hold on.

Once I met a faithful vegan; enjoyed the discussion on the science; and felt an urge to follow it.  His spouse termed the habit a headache. Deliberation with others on the subject crystallized my thoughts: it is expensive, and it’s hard to balance the demand of our body and food sources. I took the challenge and decided to go vegan this advent season- economically and (mostly) transparent to the household and parties. One of my friends asked, “what the poor plants did, in the past thirteen years (my career as a plant scientist) to hate them so much?” I never thought so. I don’t have an agenda driven by any faith or fallacy. My goal is to analyze food matrices in the molecular level and find alternatives to meat, fish and dairy products respecting the wallet; challenge myself beyond what I have been doing. Remember: finding solutions to challenges is the beginning of intelligence. (So…that’s is your agenda: Yes, agreed.)

I happened to share my thoughts with two of my friends, Sarah Giuliani and Kate Schwatz- both have a good understanding on the food, food ingredients and alternative sources for proteins, amino acids, fats and vitamins. Sarah suggested it may be good idea to rename veganism due to various stigma attached to it. I am planning to dig little deeper into this topic in this season and will share some of the recipes and thoughts of Sarah and Kate here. I am going call this “Eating Mindfully”, segue for the theme of my yoga classes for this month. I consider mindfulness as a tool to create kindness, reduce anxiety, depression and ADHD. In the context of yoga, I was specific on the mindfulness of executing yoga poses, practicing breathing and quantifying foci. This time, I incorporate food into that puzzle.

Yoga, meditation, pranayama (breathing) techniques, corpse pose, Mindful Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and prayer could all lead you to mindfulness.

How to create mindfulness in our yoga practice.

1.             Make breathing mindful. Explore the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and targets in your breathing. Triangular, SWOT (4-4-6-2) breathing is an excellent tool: inhale for 4 seconds; hold for 4 seconds; exhale for 6 seconds and hold for another 2 seconds. Exaggerate the actions of thoracic and abdominal muscles. Bring into your mind the complementary benefits (internal organ massage, sensitization of endocrine system…) of deep breathing. Redefine breath, if you may: breathing is nothing but our ability to enhance the three dimensional capacity of lungs.

2.            Make poses BEADED: In every pose scan your body to see how it acts, how the energy flows (close your eyes and listen), how you are working with your body; how you are directing and elaborating your poses to yield the dynamic stability you need to stand or sit in a pose for a long time (if needed) without any discomfort. By definition, yoga should be stable and comfortable.

3.            3. Make all foci -external, internal (locks)  and cognitive (chakras) - mindful

Hope you see you, hear your thoughts and share mine.

Love,

Jay

Friday, November 16, 2018

Synthesis in Yoga


Synthesis in Yoga

“I keep all recipes handy when I cook and synthesize my own that suits my taste”, a friend told me. Recipes, perfected by personalization, could be modified to fit our palate adding to an ever-expanding world of culinary art.  I happened to be in a discussion on innovations in television. OLED screens was the topic. I remained oblivious to those techies with jargons flying over my head. My time with Best buy (and YouTube- my go-to place for similar research!) told me, “OLED is the latest in television.” Then why one brand significantly expensive than the other if all have similar display technologies. “The expensive one is using smart technology to display the scene”, another friend told me. I was bowled again. He also mentioned about machine learning, artificial intelligence…and dissected recent advances in technology to the dummy’s level. I was fascinated how algorithms concocted sensible judgements based on data; how data driven we are; and how machines could “think”, and potentially, like us- to form ideas, opinions, judgements, reasoning based on our experience.

A parallel story materialized in my mind- the evolution of yoga. From its humble beginning with 74 poses, this art, science and the philosophy evolved into millions of yoga poses with the infusion of anatomy, physiology, energy centers, internal locks, and the knowledge on the intricacies of human brain function. Yogis ventured to innovation sprouting crowd-sourcing. We learned from the data (experiences and documented ones).  Disseminate poses to the lowest level, listen to your body, be innovative and be a master yogi; open your mind (unlike machine learning, we don’t need anybody to feed the data, we can do it yourself!) and be a synthetic yogi!
I have taken detox as the theme of my classes for now. I encourage you to be innovative and synthesize your own poses listening to your body. I will suggest few poses that you may personalize in your journey on detox (make them your veer-bhadras). Remember: yoga is limitless. Detox through yoga practice is an ever evolving science; yoga poses with unique characteristics quality them to be in the realm of detox. Listen, learn, focus, practice, meditate and make them your own, the rest is guaranteed in the path and promise of yoga. Few suggestions:

A)      Various breathing techniques utilizing as many muscle s and muscle groups. Please be mindful on the complementary benefits of deep breathing- internal organ massage; endocrine (thyroid, parathyroid and thymus system massages.

B)      Poses that access abdominal muscles and organs. Complement them by coupling with flexional and rotational poses. Utkatasana, parivritha utkatasana, januseershasana, parivritha januseershasana are examples. Look for “parivritha” in the name, it is bound to have some detox benefits.

C)      Poses that activate lymph nodes. Fish, veerasna, suptaveerasana  are examples.

D)      Inversions, preferably after C.

E)       Enhance basal metabolism by recruiting major muscle/ muscle groups in poses. Warriors and goddess are examples.

F)       Enhance aerobic capacity. One of my favorite pose is pavanamukhtasana.

G)      “Therapeutic duo” combining flexion and extension in the lower abdominal to upper thoracic areas. Combine dwipata pidasana, sethu bandhanasa, matsyasana and backbends with pavanamukthasana and halasana.

Accessing all these poses in a day, a week or a month may be hard to (even) seasoned yogis; now you know why I say, “Yoga is a journey”. Blessed to be with you!

Love,

Jay

Monday, October 8, 2018


  Semantics versus Substance

I recently conducted a workshop on “Heal the vagus nervous system to heal the body and mind”. This is how I presented the theme:

“One of the parasympathetic nervous systems, Vagus, manages our ability to control stress, anxiety, depression, body image issues, and behavioral disorders (OCD, ADHD...). Vagus nervous system represent the mind body connection. Sensitizing this system by mindful diaphragmatic breathing, mindfulness and meditation is found to heal mind and body. In this one hour session, we will explore the benefits of deep diaphragmatic breathing to sensitize the Gut Brain Axis (GBA) and the role of meditation and mindfulness to create Gamma Amino Butyric Acid (GABA) to calm and relax the body and mind”

I was surprised when twenty five percent of the people did not show up on the day of the workshop. I had the chance to talk to one of them. “I will be judged if I had attended”, he said. “The idea is not entirely deal with the issues we may face, it is all about prevention and to be proactive”, I said. I had been there many times and I realize the semantics is as important as substance and the purpose. “May be you should’ve said, breathing exercise to relax”, my friend told and I heard her.

A week after the workshop, a young man (who attended it) came to me and said, “The breathing worked like a magic, I am able to focus, relax and get off the gloominess of anxiety. Why our physicians and therapists do not encourage these ancient wisdom”. I have an answer and being a hypothesis I would rather not spell it out.

Anyway, I took “Healing the Vagus Nervous System” as the theme of my classes for the past one month. Vagus nervous system is a wandering bidirectional system innervating the internal organs in the gut area. There are five things we may be able to incorporate in our yoga practice, life, to achieve this. This is a practice to stay away from sympathetically active flight, fight, freeze or faint to parasympathetically active realm of feed, relax and happy.

1    1. Deep Diaphragmatic Breathing: Diaphragmatic breathing massages internal organs and activates this bi-directional wandering nervous system. It also massage thyroid, parathyroid, thymus ad prostate glands. It sensitizes the manipura chakra (No…the solar plexus energy center!)

          2.  Recreate, Strengthen and Maintain spinal curves: There are number of simple pose combinations (therapeutic sequences) to achieve this: Cat-Cow-down-dog; pyramid-crescent lunge; bridge(s)-apanasana.

3    3. Detox poses extending upper thoracic area: Anytime when you flex and rotate the lower abdominal area, it is a detox pose. The best way to recognize them is look for the word “parivritha” in it. These poses amplify the internal energy that will seek a path to move up through Gut Brain Axis (GBA). Mindfully executing these poses tone GBA

4    4. Engage the chin lock, if possible, while executing poses: Locking the chin helps to massage the vagus nervous system passing through the neck.

5    5. Be mindful in breathing and poses. Practice SWOT breathing to counts of 4-4-6-2. There definitely seem to be a reason why the military folks are using this breathing to help those feet on the ground.

I am planning to continue the theme for another week. Hope to see you.

P. S. Help your students, friends, colleagues to discover their soul, the purpose of their life. Our soul, creativity and talents are like timid wild animals. Seek them gently with care to ground them. Try to connect with them and accept them with love. Our goal is to help them to discover that purpose. The rest will fall in place. It means a lot when you say Namaste,

So,

Namaste!

Jay.
 

Friday, June 15, 2018


“We are shaped by our thoughts; we become what we think…with our thoughts we make the world” Buddha

Our life is riddled with elusive questions and, sometimes, they remain as puzzle to us. The discovery of that enigma, our real obligation, leads to a cascade of events unlocking the door to our destiny; mindfulness is the path to that discovery. In silence, in meditation we pave the path to mindfulness leading to the goal we are destined to.

If mindful breathing, poses and foci form the triangular base of yoga, the converse might be true too: yoga should cultivate mindfulness. Nurturing mindfulness through yoga practice and in our life is the theme of our practice, the last one, in the park this Sunday at 8.30 am. Hope you will be able to make it.
Here are three ways one could cultivate mindfulness (and this is what we would do):

1. Make breathing mindful. Use thoracic and abdominal muscles efficiently. Bring into your mind the complementary benefits (internal organ massage, sensitization of endocrine system…) of deep breathing. Redefine breath, if you may: breathing is nothing but our ability to enhance the three dimensional capacity of lungs. Deep breathing in mindfulness triggers parasympathetic nervous system stimulating “rest and digest” and “feed and breed” mechanisms in contrast to “fight or flight” stimulation triggered by sympathetic nervous system and shallow breathing.

2. Make poses BEADED: In every pose scan your body to see how the body acts or behaves, how the energy flows (close your eyes and listen), how you are working with your body; how you are directing and elaborating your poses to yield the dynamic stability you need to stand or sit in a pose for a long time (if needed) without any discomfort. By definition, yoga should be stable and comfortable.

3. Deploy external, internal and cognitive foci in yoga practice.

All these accompanied by a live soul music rendition by Tey! Hope you see you.

Love,

Jay

P. S 1: Mindfulness reduce anxiety and depression; in children mindfulness improve test score, awareness and attitude; it help adults to succeed in all realms of their activities.

P. S 2: When I first set the time at 7.30 am, they told me, “it is too early and too cold”; I changed the time to 8.30, now they say, “It’s too late and too hot”…haha. We, still, are children. Good news for a yogi!