Posts from the ‘Inspire’ Category
I had a major epiphany the other day over mimosas and heuvos rancheros. (An excellent recipe for eureka! moments, by the way.) I’m sitting with my soul sister Kristan talking about all the ideas I have for the next year, all the ideas I’ve had in the past, and how things always seem to turn out differently than originally planned.
In the past three years, I’ve planned I-don’t-know-how-many businesses. And I have the domain list to prove it. I’ll be the first to admit my domain-buying addiction. It’s like revisiting photos of past lovers when I look at that list of .coms, each with its own story and happy memories.

There was the national chain of wellness centers based off the Massage Envy empire. I was even prepared to take a part-time admin job there in order to learn the ins and outs of their corporate structure. (I still think this has major legs…someone please make it happen!)
Or the health and wellness website that was going to revolutionize the industry where users could personalize their own eating preferences, recipes and goals, plus setup sessions with virtual health coaches across the world. Here’s the highlight of that idea process: One night, my then-boyfriend dragged me to see Star Wars (or was it Star Trek? Clearly I was dying to see it.) I was so excited about this website that I was having trouble concentrating on the movie and actually walked out of the theater, went five blocks back to our apartment, sat on the couch with my laptop and began brainstorming like a maniac. But not before I sent my man a texting saying “Sorry babe, was too inspired, had to come home and brainstorm.”
Last year, while in India, I went as far as setting up a website and had ongoing dialogue with a list of manufacturers before deciding I didn’t want to pursue selling Indian lamps and lanterns, after all. To this day I still have a massive obsession with Indian lamps. They’re gorgeous!

Fair trade yoga pants. Couples yoga retreats. Daily Asana iPhone app.
I could look back on these plans and feel discouraged for not following through. I could feel embarrassed because I’ve spent a lot of time, money and energy on them and actively voiced these plans to friends and family more times than I can count. But I don’t, not for a second.
Instead, I look at it like this: none of these have been “the one”. And I know this because at some point in the process, I lost interest for one reason or another. But each has taken me closer to my own truth and current successes that are unfolding as we speak.
Yoga workshops, virtual lifestyle lectures, a super exciting dating series and more. There is a lot of amazingness in the works here and as all of the best things do, they each came about quite organically.
Back to mimosas and brunch. I realized then and there that ideas are not just thoughts; they go much deeper than that. They are relationships with our thoughts, a relationship that you develop, nurture, have conversations with, try on for a while. And maybe, just maybe…
if you like their style…
if they excite you…
if they are aligned with your passions and values…
if you think you’ll be really happy with them for years to come…
if you have major respect for them and they challenge you to be better every day…
…then you know you’ve got the right idea.
From there, it’s up to you to nurture a deep, lasting relationship and start taking some serious action.

By the way. These ideas I mentioned above? That’s only about half the list. The other half are still too cool to let go of quite yet, so I’ve got them in my little black book for those lonely nights.
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:: Presence, Passion, Productivity ::
I met an awesome girl last year around this time in India named Cole. She was such a breath of fresh air; a cool, grounded chick from Australia who ran her own creative consulting biz. We’d talk for hours about how we both value entrepreneurship, goals and self-reliance, and we had a fabulous time wherever we went. I’m not sure she knew it at the time, but she inspired me in more ways than one. She had started working for herself a few years prior, and the year of 2010 had been huge for her in many ways. She attributed it to a constant driving force behind her everyday decisions and thought processes: Her Yearly Theme.
[Enter unexpected turn of events where this post takes its own direction]
…As I’m writing this I’m searching through notes to see if I can remember what her theme was for 2010 that was so helpful. Instead, I stumbled upon a year-old post in which I stated my own theme for the upcoming 2011: Cheers To Following Your Heart.
Funny, because looking back on this year, I did just that. Even better – everything is so aligned – I made a gratitude list this morning for 2011 (thanks to the inspiration of Jenny Sansouci) and wrote verbatim: “Following my heart all the way out to Denver.”
Listening to my gut – to my heart center – is exactly what has driven pretty much every decision, every move I made since this journey began. Not the selfish, activity-driven voice that your mind sometimes mistakes for your heart. I’m talking that undeniable feeling when you know something is the right move, even though you can find plenty of people who wouldn’t agree. That feeling of complete flow, complete surrender.
I’ve been reading the Tao Te Ching recently and the most impacting messages are the ones about non-doing. Giving up trying to make things happen. That doesn’t mean we sit around all day, every day. My take on this is deeper than that – it’s an act of surrender to that which is actually happening. And if you’re in the flow, aligned with your center, then we naturally make and create that which is an extension of our Self.
At least that’s how I choose to interpret it starting now, as we move into 2012.
It’s funny how many different “futures” I’ve dreamed up for myself over these two years. None of them happened exactly, but they all stem from the same Root, the same purpose, just different forms.
There are a lot of things brewing here now, all very exciting. By abandoning trying to “figure out” what is the best move, I gave up. And something so inspiring has grown from that surrender. I can’t wait to announce more details soon.
So, here we are. December 31st, 2011.
I know we’ve all got some big visions ahead.
So what’s your Theme this year?
I’ll start. Just as it did one year ago, the answer came quickly:
Presence, Passion, Productivity.

Winter Solstice Ceremony, 2010.
Wishing everyone a safe and happy entry into 2012!
Cheers to following your heart,
Amy Carole
Today is my one-year anniversary of leaving NYC. I can’t even begin to describe the journey that unfolded, that is still unfolding, every-evolving with each day that passes. From the beaches of India to the monastic forests of Southern Thailand, back up to the untouched land of Northern Michigan, and into the beauty of the Catskills and Berkshires, I find myself using this time to reflect on all that I have learned and experienced. While I enjoy all the memories of laughter and adventure, I keep returning to all the teachers that I have been blessed to study with and learn from. So on this day, let this be a celebration of the journey and a homage to the teachers that crossed my path. May we all meet again.
Through my life, I’ve always been one to say “everything happens for a reason”, and I still believe this fully. But after this year, I can elaborate on this with certainty. People cross our paths at the exact time we are to meet. This is our gift from the Universe and I don’t believe we have any control on those meetings happening. But it is up to us to choose to cultivate and nurture a relationship – or perhaps we choose not to do anything. We are presented with opportunities, all the time, to learn from others. Sometimes these people appear as formal teachers, with credentials and certifications that resonate with us, and other times they are simply a peer or even a stranger we might only have one conversation with. What I’ve learned is this: each and every person and interaction is an opportunity for learning and growth.
So often we forget that we do not have all the answers. It’s a very humbling thing to remember as often as you can. Because that act of letting go – that choice to be vulnerable – is such a crucial tool in opening yourself up to deeper connection and ultimately, deeper learning. I used to be so intimidated by people who had more knowledge than me in the things I was interested in, especially those who could be in my peer group (opposed to an older formal teacher). That sounds so backwards, doesn’t it? But as I embarked on this trip last year, I knew I was in for a big awakening in many ways, and learning was top on my list. I wanted to learn as much as I could about yoga and spirituality, teaching, love, myself. This is a never-ending quest, of course, but I was ready to dive headfirst into it as priority #1 for the first time in my life. What occurred was beyond anything I could have imagined.
The teachers who facilitated my 200-hr yoga teacher training in Goa, India were so wonderful. Each so knowledgeable in their own right, their own specialty, and we had a number of guest lecturers come through. Beyond the eight limbs of yoga, Sanskrit, yoga history and theory, the 30 days of pure immersion with 27 other students was a huge learning experience. So many of us were traveling down similar paths: changing careers, embarking on self-discovery, searching for something greater, something more authentic and gratifying than the life we’d been living. I fell into a tight crew of girls, many of whom stayed in Goa for a month or two after the training was over. These girls were my rocks and a constant source of inspiration and knowledge. They will also all understand the picture below :)
During the training I explored dream analysis with a Zen Buddhism teacher as a way to make sense of the wild meflaquin-fueled dreams I was having each night. I’d never known the theory behind how our conscious and subconscious minds deal – or don’t deal – with the things that we dream. It was so fascinating.
One night I wandered into a restaurant called Magic Park with a dear friend of mine. Our first visit there was a game-changer for both of us, on many different levels. Teachers, friends, lovers, amazing conversation: Magic Park offered everything. One particular person – a lovely man named Rolf – taught me two invaluable lessons. First, the importance of your words, specifically suspending the use of “should” and anything similar. Ever since that day, whenever I catch myself using language with “should”, “need to”, etc, I take a deep breath and rephrase whatever I had to say. It makes a difference, changing the intention of your words like that.
The other lesson from Rolf changed how I live my life on a daily basis. You know those moments where you find yourself worrying about something you cannot control or decide about yet? For example, the moment you discover you’ve lost your phone and set out retracing your steps, or you get pulled over by a police officer, and have to sit and wait to see what happens next? It is in these moments that we can make a choice to either dwell in the worst-case scenario and let all the “what ifs” run through our minds, basically freaking ourselves out with worry; or, we can choose to breathe, relax and wait to see what actually happens. As humans, our egos are constantly drawn to the drama, and since drama doesn’t actually exist, we tend to fabricate things in our head instead. So you get pulled over. In this moment you can either choose to get overly upset because now you are going to get a ticket, have to go to court, pay a fine, which means the money you saved to buy that new suit will be gone, and to top it off you’re late for that do-or-die business lunch. So basically, this ruins your entire career. Wait—doesn’t this seem a little extreme? YES! That’s the point. The mind takes us to crazy places of worry and doubt, when in reality nothing has even happened yet. One little change in your perception of the situation could have you speaking honestly and calmly to the police officer, apologizing and owning up to your violation, being totally open to the situation. And here’s the important thing: doing all this with the intention of everything turning out just fine. Knowing that everything will be ok. And you know what? It usually is, especially if you shift your thoughts, words and actions away from worry and doubt and instead, enjoy, trust and surrender to the moment. (Thank you Rolf!)
In Goa I met a teacher for life, Master Gregory James. I was blessed to practice Tai Chi with him and other students on the shores of the Arabian Sea as the sun set, welcoming each evening with slow and steady intention. Immediately following one particularly powerful session, I experienced a breakthrough in meditation that I will never forget. It was the first time I found a physical practice that affected me more powerfully than asana (i.e. doing yoga postures). The discussions with “MG” were always insightful and thought-provoking. Every single session taught me so much about myself and my practice. Although our time was brief, I know we’ll be crossing paths again soon.
A month later I found myself in the forests of Southern Thailand, participating in a 10-day silent meditation retreat, called Vipassana. It was there that I realized the power of finding teachers in the stillness that comes from such an experience. I no longer had to look outward; instead, I sat with myself in nature. I learned just as much – or perhaps even more – from the birds, the ants, the rocks and the water than the monks and nuns who lectured each day. But most importantly, I learned from myself. Sitting in the silence of Vipassana is not just about no longer talking. It’s about finding that silence in the mind; learning from the vacillations from thought to no thoughts and everything in between. As the saying goes, the best teacher truly lies within each of us.
A month later in Bali, I was fortunate to teach my first yoga retreat. Ten days on the Northern coast of that magical island was such a learning experience. One where I deliberately put myself in a situation that terrified me. As a new teacher, I had to build up as much confidence as I could muster, even if I didn’t necessarily believe it at the time. What I found was amazing. Each and every moment served as a chance to learn, finding the connections between my actions and the students’ actions, my words and their practice. It was there I learned how unique and special each student really is, each with her own goals, struggles and reasons for coming to the mat.
The most profound teacher I met on my journey was in Bali, on the tiny party island Gili Trawangan. Why I was there, and why an enlightened Indian yogi was there, I’ll never know. But he walked straight up to me on a crowded road and asked me if I did yoga, fully knowing what my answer would be. This random-seeming occurrence was absolutely meant to be in every way, and we continue to communicate regularly from halfway across the world. Meeting Rahul was – and is – a deeply personal experience. My deepest gratitude to him and his continued teachings.
It is interesting to me that although I did not study with any formal teachers in my two-month Balinese journey, I learned more there about myself than anywhere else. Perhaps it was because of the timing, perhaps it was the energy of that magical place, or perhaps it was the beautiful company I kept there. Namely, my lovely soul sisters Jenn and Kristan. Our conversations went on for hours, each full of new realizations, perceptions and emotions. My deepest gratitude to them and all the friends I met along the way.
Back up to Thailand one last time, I had a whirlwind three weeks. The first few days I will never forget, as much as I probably wanted to forget at the time. I couch-surfed at a small ashram-type guesthouse with a Buddhist guy who told me more about myself and my character – good and bad – than I cared to face at the time. It was such a test of strength, trust and courage. I ultimately made the choice to leave the situation and continue on with my plans, but the experience showed me so much. It taught me about the delicate balance of trusting other people you encounter on this spiritual path. I saw first-hand how some seekers can get sucked into a person’s message and ultimately become a follower, due to their own weaknesses and self-doubt. Although that situation was filled with negativity and doubt, I am forever grateful for the lessons that came out of it. No one ever said you have to like a teacher in order for their message to be heard.
That last trip to Thailand I studied with a wonderful Thai massage teacher, Yan, at the Sunshine School of Thai Massage. This was the perfect example of how much I learned from my peers. There were eight people in our class, each with a body so remarkably unique that it was like starting anew each time. We were all so vocal that we quickly learned how to teach each other what felt good, what could use improvement, etc. If only people could communicate like that outside the classroom!
Socially, my time in Chaing Mai was the most unexpected blessing of my entire trip. Thanks to the amazing Emily Baxter, I was connected with an wonderful kula of yogis and yoginis. Most of us were formal teachers in some facet, the others still teachers in their own right. Never before had I felt so at home. I learned how to let go and just dive headfirst into a community of people, filled with love and total acceptance. It was like all veils were lifted and authenticity shined through each and every one of us. No matter where we were – on the mat, at a night market, in the sauna – the air just radiated with joy. It was through this experience that my standards for community were raised. My deepest gratitude to the Wild Rose Kula, especially sweet, sweet Rosemary.
Teachers. More and more I realize that formal teachers are only a small – albeit important – piece of the pie. The people you surround yourself with teach you so much, whether you invite it or not. For this reason it is so important to choose your friends and peers wisely, because you will learn from and internalize their actions and words. It doesn’t stop with people. Art, movement, nature – these can all teach us valuable lessons if we only open up and truly connect with what surrounds us. But above all, in this journey I can now say with confidence: the greatest teacher truly is yourself.

Halfway through reading this I was crying.
“Making Sandcastles”
-Unknown Author
Hot sun. Salty air. Rhythmic waves.
A little boy is on his knees scooping and packing the sand with plastic shovels into a bright blue bucket.
Then he upends the bucket on the surface and lifts it. and, to the delight of the little architect, a castle tower is created.
All afternoon he will work. Spooning out the moat. Packing the walls. Bottle tops will be sentries. Popsicle sticks will be bridges. A sandcastle will be built.Big city. Busy streets. Rumbling traffic.
A man is in his office. At his desk he shuffles papers into stacks and delegates assignments. He cradles the phone on his shoulder and punches the keyboard with his fingers. Numbers are juggled and contracts are signed and much to the delight of the man, a profit is made.
All his life he will work. Formulating the plans. Forecasting the future. Annuities will be sentries. Capital gains will be bridges. An empire will be built.Two builders of two castles. They have much in common. They shape granules into grandeurs. They see nothing and make something. They are diligent and determined. And for both the tide will rise and the end will come.
Yet that is where the similarities cease. For the boy sees the end while the man ignores it. Watch the boy as the dusk approaches.
As the waves near, the wise child jumps to his feet and begins to clap. There is no sorrow. No fear. No regret. He knew this would happen. He is not surprised. And when the great breaker crashes into his castle and his masterpiece is sucked into the sea, he smiles. He smiles, picks up his tools, takes his father’s hand, and goes home.The grownup, however, is not so wise. As the wave of years collapses on his castle he is terrified. He hovers over the sandy monument to protect it. He blocks the waves from the walls he has made. Salt-water soaked and shivering he snarls at the incoming tide.
“It’s my castle,” he defies. The ocean need not respond. Both know to whom the sand belongs…I don’t know much about sandcastles. But children do. Watch them and learn. Go ahead and build, but build with a child’s heart. When the sun sets and the tides take, applaud. Salute the process of life and go home.
“Making Sandcastles”
Author Unknown
My first article, so excited!
Below is the article as appears in Spirituality & Health Magazine’s Voices section:
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MANTRAS FOR LIVING 100+ YEARS
by Amy Carole Baglan
Eat Real Food. Not too much. Mostly Plants.
My mantra for eating food.
God willing, I’m probably going to live a very long life in this body, but it won’t be because of my Michael Pollen-advocated way of eating. It’s because of my adherence to a way of LIVING.
There are certain communities around the world – called “Blue Zones” – where the vast majority of people consistently live past 100. I’m not talking about 100 years old and lazily passing the time away in a nursing home. On the contrary: these people are living active, happy lives all the way till the end. After studying the lifestyles and eating habits of these longevity-lovers, it was found that they all had certain things in common. The biggest commonalities were an emphasis on family, physical activity, social engagement and eating a mostly plant-based diet high in fiber. But what is most interesting is their food choices play only a small part in the role of maintaining this highly-coveted healthy lifestyle.
The founder of the Institute for Integrative Nutrition, Joshua Rosenthal, teaches that we have two diets: Primary Food and Secondary Food. The beautiful foods we eat, that is our Secondary Food. And it is just one of our many sources of physical nourishment.
Most important, Rosenthal says, is our way of LIVING. And this, he identifies as our Primary Food. He breaks this down into four categories:
- Relationships: How healthy are your relationships? Family, community, spouses, etc. With a little effort, we can cultivate that feeling of love and nurturing in any of our relationships.
- Career: How happy are you in your career? Do you enjoy waking up every day for work? If not, it’s time to seriously consider what really gets you going, what awakens your passions, and think about making a change in this department. Rather than changing your entire career, this could simply mean altering your work schedule to better suit your needs, rearranging your physical workspace, or volunteering to work on a new project.
- Physical Activity: Do you use your body regularly? Do you feel aware in your movement and confident in your skin? If going to the gym makes you cringe, that’s no excuse. Take the stairs. Sweat once a day. Get outside more!
- Spirituality: How is your spiritual health? Whatever you call it/him/her, how’s your connection? If you’re interested in learning more about a certain practice, see if there are others in your area you can link up with for support. Go in with an open mind and an open heart and perhaps discover something greater than yourself.
So what should your Primary Food diet be? Luckily, just as there is no one right Secondary Food diet for anyone, your optimal Primary Food mix is as unique as your beautiful self. To season your perfect mix, try repeating any of the following mantras to yourself throughout the day:
- I am secure in my friendships
- Through my job I make a contribution to society
- Waking up each day brings a smile to my face
- I am actively learning every day
- Sweating feels good.
- I move with body awareness
- I belong to a community
- I feel connected to the world
Amy Carole Baglan has studied with top yoga teachers in New York City, India and Thailand since 2001 and developed a dynamic teaching style combining theory from Ashtanga, Iyengar and Anusara. She studied at the Institute for Integral Nutrition and is a Holistic Health Coach, Reiki practitioner, Pilates teacher and is a Thai Yoga MassageTherapist.
Amy draws inspiration from the present moment.
I’ve been a naughty blogger. I know this. Yes, I stopped mid-Bali. So to update…I arrived home a little over two weeks ago after an inspiring amazingness-filled seven month adventure. Life-changing? You bet. So much to be grateful for.
I cannot begin to wrap up that last month I spent in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Suffice to say it was the pinnacle of my entire trip, with the best people and energy and yoga and…fruit…oh the fruit! And black mango sticky rice…Ok ok, back to the post. I miss Thailand and all the amazing souls I met there, but the show must go on.
And go on, it has! Life since arriving back to America has been fabulous.
Things are happening. I don’t wanna get all Secret on you here, but seriously, you believe it and envision it, and it will find a way to you. Almost every day something happens. I’m starting to feel like paying the Universe for overtime. And you know what? It’s because I wholeheartedly believed life was gonna be amazing the second I got back. None of that “adjustment” stuff. Ok, of course I had insane jetlag for a week. But I let it do its thing, had an 11 hour sleep one night and poof, jetlag be gone.
I first spent 8 days in my hometown in St. Louis, MO. Unpacking takes serious dedication! I had a massive box from India, covered in over 200 stamps. I’d never seen anything like it. Mahavir from Arambol came through, good man! Going through my India things was like opening an incense-filled chapter of a book. So many stories, so many things, new and old, were stuffed into those bags. I found my glass and mirror mosaic elephant – my pride and joy purchase from India – in pieces at the bottom of that bag. A wooden Ganesh broke, too. I guess India was saying, as a reminder: aparigraha (non-attachment). Oh well, I have good memories of that thing on my altar in the Pink Palace, Arambol, Goa.
I bought too many random gifts. Never doing that again. I had this bag from Bali filled with things that I dragged from Bali to Thailand then left it in Bangkok while I went to Chiang Mai for three weeks. In Chiang Mai I bought a thai massage mat + bag (awesome!), which bumped me up to three pieces of checked luggage, and meant paying a $150 excess baggage fee. Great, I thought. What a way to go out spending money. Well, I think the Universe sent a little angel to guide me out of Thailand and on my way home. From the moment I left Bangkok in a taxi to the airport, things were in my favor. We were late, so we floated through traffic. My driver – this adorable Thai man – played John Denver’s “Leavin’ On A Jet Plane.” I cried happy tears, remembering listening to this song as a kid on road trips with my family. I arrived with my three massive bags and a ridiculously long Balinese handmade dragon kite wrapped in paper (for the nephew, of course J. Rushing to the counter with my stuff I tell the Thai Air woman I have excess bags and need to pay for it. She looks at my stuff and kinda frowns…
”You can’t carry any of those on?”
I said no, they are clearly too big.
Can you combine them?, she asks.
Hmmm…maybe I can.
Still, she said she’d have to weigh them to make sure they’d pass the weight limit.
“28 kilos. The limit is 25. Can you take something out?”
Ugg. Not really. I took out a book and watched the weight go nowhere.
So instead of saying ok, looks like you’ll have to pay the fees, she looked at me and motioned to the luggage wrapping station by the entrance. “Go there, I’ll let them on as one piece.”
Bam bam, another obstacle averted. I showed up to the luggage wrapping guy and he looks at my bags, tells me it’ll be 200 bhat (instead of their listed 240). I look in my wallet and I literally only have two 100 bhat bills left, along with some change. Smiling, I handed the notes to him.
The list of things like this go on. Suffice to say I made it home just fine. I even got to take a shower in the Tokyo airport. If you ever get a chance to do this, take it. It’s so luxurious amidst all the chaos and waiting!
With eight days in St. Louis, I saw my some of my best friends in the world, gave away some massages, ran a 10K, demoed a badass Specialized bike, and sampled the STL yoga scene. One week later, I packed up my stuff – again – this time for three months in Northwest Michigan….and Tahoe, NYC, upstate NY plus a wedding.
Michigan and me have a long, memorable past. Every summer of my life I’ve come to the same summer vacation town, a community of cottages in the woods and lakeside. People have been coming here for generations. Our cottage – “the Hut” – is nestled at the top of a hill in the middle of a beautiful, ancient birch and maple tree forest. This place is like my second life, my second love…not many people ever see this side of me. That’s me, in the top-right room of the “addition”.
This place inspires. We bike. We play tennis. Visit the local farmer and craft markets. We cook, hike, kayak, read, campfire, ‘smore, sunset, pick berries. Life moves at a different pace here. Every single person I’ve taken up here over the years has fallen in love with and felt the pull of Crystal Lake, Frankfort, Sleeping Bear Dunes…”Up North” in general. Think everything on “Main Street”, tourists walking down the sidewalk with waffle cones of homemade cherry ice cream, 1950’s A&W trucks cruising down the road, the beach packed with people watching the sunset over the pier and lighthouse.
I’ve been here every summer of my life, and I wasn’t about to miss it in 2011. While in Thailand in March during the vipassana, I realized I wanted to be here come June with my family. I told myself, when I go up there I’ll stay for the entire summer, teaching yoga and pilates at Anna’s studio, Studio On Main. I had no idea how I’d actually accomplish that at the time, but I put the idea out there. After one initial email and a little intervention from the Universe again, I was on the Summer schedule before I even arrived back Stateside.
So here I am, teaching yoga, pilates and meditation at the one yoga studio in the small, bustling vacation town of Frankfort, MI. Aside from teaching 7-8 classes per week, I’m doing Thai Yoga Therapy privately.
So. Back to manifestation. (Yes, I’m about to get all Secrety on you.)
Thoughts become things. It’s true.
And it’s time people start using that gift to change their reality and shine some more loving, positive light in this world.
Thoughts become things. Choose the good ones. (Thanks Mike Dooley!)
xo
Ames
PS. Hello Summer, officially coming June 21st! Summer smells sooo good.
Even eating is a sacred experience at Wat Suan Mokkh. Every meal, we waited until every person had filled their bowl and taken their seat. Then we said a food reflection. Saying this twice per day was quite powerful. Can you imagine how we’d feel if we took the time to reflect and appreciate our food before every meal?
With wise reflection I eat this food.
Not for play, not for intoxicification.
Not for fattening, not for beautification.
Only to maintain this body. To stay alive and healthy.
To support the spiritual way of life.
Thus I let go of unpleasant feelings, and do not stir up new ones.
Thereby the process of life goes on, blameless, at ease, and in peace.
Day 9: The Great Day of Silence
No dharma talks, no message board, no hot spring, no interviews, no lunch. This day of solitude, meditation and internal reflection was a very powerful, personal journey – and I’d like to leave it as such.
Day 10
Our last morning reading was about how this Vipassana meditation retreat is a way to help one better integrate with society once you leave – not about shutting yourself out of society. I think this is such an important thing to discuss. In my travels I’ve met so many people who go on these binges of cutting themselves out of society to go inward, only to let go completely once they come back to regular life. I don’t see the point in this. It’s like going on a strict detox program for 10 days, only to go back to smoking, drinking and fried food immediately after. The Buddhists have a great lesson in their “Middle Path”. So for those who shy away from meditation because they don’t think they can “dedicate” the time to doing 30+ minutes of meditation per day, I have a little piece of advice. It’s not about cutting out other things in your life in order to develop a meditation practice. It’s about making time for just 5 minutes per day in the morning to sit and observe the mind. Then maybe sitting and consciously breathing as you wait for your morning train. Or switching off your computer screen, closing your office door, and sitting quietly for 10 minutes when you feel overwhelmed. It’s about reconnecting with your breath and your body, and tuning into what you really need. Small, simple changes that can have a profound effect on your physical and emotional health, especially stress levels. And these personal changes can and do effect those around you, causing a ripple effect of calming, positive energy into the world. Isn’t that worth 5 minutes a day?
On our last day, I spent a lot of time reflecting on this overwhelming sense of clarity that had come to surface. I started to think about the rocky dirt path that led to the dining hall. We walked this path at least three times per day, back and forth. The middle part of the path was filled with small, jagged gray rocks, and on each side of the wide path were smaller dirt-packed footpaths. Although these side footpaths were much easier on the feet, there were still many rocks one had to avoid or gingerly step over. Since I took to walking around barefoot at the beginning of the retreat, I spent many times walking over these rocks. I noticed that when I was walking with awareness, each step slow and deliberate, I never felt pain. But there were some times when my mind went wandering, mindfulness completely gone, and without warning I’d feel the sharp, jagged rock edges jutting into the sole of my foot. Many times I almost cried out in pain. This rude awakening would cause me to breathe for a moment, reassess my state of mind, and hopefully return to a state of mindful walking, really bringing awareness into each step. I realized that throughout the retreat, I never once hurt myself when walking over the rocks with this awareness. So on Day 10, it dawned on me that this was analogous to how we live our lives. When we move about our lives with awareness, we are in control and do not feel pain. Sure, “painful” things may take place, but it does not affect us in the same way. Look at the people who walk on fire or sharp nails. Are they physically any different from us? Of course not. They are just using the power of the mind to transcend the pain. I sat with this realization throughout the last day.
The schedule this day was different. Everything remained the same until the afternoon. Instead of chanting or meditation from 4-6pm, we met in the meditation hall for a talk called “Work is Dhamma”. The chanting monk first gave a talk about how contributing to the monastery grounds was a very big part of monastic life. How the sweat from physical labor is considered to be holy water, helping to wash away the impurities of the mind and instill a sense of integrity through selfless service. So from 5-6pm the women and men separated to do their labor. While the men carried dirt and sand across the grounds, we ventured over to a nearby center for women and raked leaves. Every one of us women either had a rake or a big woven basket, helping one another make big piles of leaves and then carry them to a larger pile to be collected or burned…I’m not quite sure. I have to admit – my mind was not calmed by this activity at all. Instead, I found myself deciding that I’d prefer to pay someone to do work like this. And look at how you can help the community by paying someone a living wage to complete work for you. Although I felt a twinge of guilt in this, I have to be true to myself. Side note: When I have my own garden I will be happy to get my hands dirty pulling weeds, raking leaves, etc. But for the moment, I’ll choose to outsource :)
The two women who sat in front of me had started talking openly almost constantly by the last day. It was a big source of frustration for me, and a lesson at the same time. Each time I saw them, I’d try to send loving kindness their way, telling myself they must be having quite a hard time. This afternoon I noticed one of them kept taking her hair and twirling it on top of her head, trying to tie it up, but it kept falling down. Clearly she needed something to help hold up her hair. So I tapped her on the shoulder and handed her a hair tie. She smiled and said thank you – with her eyes, silently. Loving kindness feels really good.
Later that day, the girl I’d given the baggie of Prickly Heat came up to me and handed me a little bracelet she had made. It was simple and made of plastic. On it was a note that said “thanks for the powder! Don’t worry, you don’t have to wear it :) ” After reading the note, I walked back over to her with a smile and just held out my arm and the bracelet, silently inviting her to put it on for me. Like I said, loving kindness feels so good, and it comes back to you in countless ways.
In the evening, we had a sharing gathering in the meditation hall. Participants were welcomed to share with others any insights or comments they had about their experience at the retreat. Each speaker who came up had 5 minutes to talk. The first thing I noticed was how strange it was to hear people talk. I’d just spent 10 days looking at these people, wondering where they might be from, what they might be like, etc. The speeches were fun to hear and varied greatly. While one woman talked about her need for art, music and sex – and therefore her rejection of Buddhism – another guy basically got up there to say how it was a good experience and all, waking up at 4am, and that the next day he planned to go to the islands and stay up till 4am partying. That got a good laugh. With the path of rocks still on my mind, I went up there to share my realization about walking with mindfulness over the rocks, and how it applies to our daily lives.
The next morning we woke up for a short meditation, then straight back to our rooms to pack our belongings and head to the dining hall for tea and our goodbyes. It’s amazing how quickly people fell into conversation, creating social groups based on language, hometowns or even parting off with others who shared a similar style of dress. Not that any of that is wrong, or bad. It’s just how human beings congregate, how we like to feel part of something greater, cultivating a sense of belonging. I easily fell into a group of three other Americans. We ended up going to the nearby town, buying overnight train tickets for Bangkok and sitting in a café all afternoon, chatting with each other until it came time to catch the train. We ate junk food. We drank coffee. We used the internet and cell phones. And we talked…for 12 hours straight.
My friend Cole told me that every year she has a theme, or a word to live by. I loved this immediately. What was my theme for 2011, I thought. As quickly as I asked, the answer came: Cheers to following your heart.
I told myself that when I left for this trip, I wanted to stay in one place for an extended period of time, rather than running around from town to town. Check.
I told myself that I wanted to get to know the people, the ins and outs of the place. Check, check.
I told myself I wanted to learn something every place I went, and also teach yoga wherever I went. Well, two weeks into it I’m teaching 5 days per week. So check, check, check. Talk about the power of manifestation!
I pounded the pavement sand for hours today, and now it’s 8 hours before my first advertised class in India. I have a friend Mithun, who runs the guest house I’ve been staying in and has been such a good friend to have around. Anything I need we’ll hop on the motorbike and run to a store that does/has what I need. He took me to a copy shop and helped me print out my flyers, get them laminated and cut professionally. Always willing to help, asking nothing in return, and we have some really funny conversations.
Yesterday I was drinking a juice from Happy Banana (which is my favorite place EVER – my #1 order is avocado/papaya/banana/dates) and had the plastic cup in my hand, ready to throw away as we drove down the road towards the bus station. I said Mithun, what am I supposed to do? I never see garbage bins anywhere, am I just supposed to throw it on the ground? He was like, well yes, everyone else does so you really don’t have many other options. It all goes to the same place anyways…burned in a pile somewhere. (Don’t get me started on the stench of burning garbage in the hot sun.) Anyways, I reluctantly litter as we drive past the school and he goes Amy! What’d you do that for? Now we have to go back and pick it up…I was like Mithun, you told me to do it! I feel terrible now. He goes, Amy, you are destroying our beautiful India. Then he paused….and started cracking up. I quickly joined. Like I said, funny conversations.
So as I was saying, today I pounded the sand for 4 hours. I walked into each restaurant and introduced myself, walked up to each wall, each internet shop owner. And just taped and tacked those bad boys up. It’s exciting and beautiful, I feel as if I had a soft launch last week and tomorrow the real show begins. I could get very used to teaching full-time, very quickly. I think I already am.
Now that I’m in India exploring so many different forms of movement, I find myself thinking about what it’d be like to incorporate certain things into class. For example, today at Tai Chi I was just dying to try this one move in the morning at Blue Pyramid facing the sea. So we’ll probably start the day with that tomorrow. The yoga class officially starts at 8:30am, at least that’s when we start asana (poses). But from 8-8:30am will be open meditation and pranayama. Teaching full-time here is just fascinating me, I cannot wait to explore more. And the view from the mat ain’t too shabby either.
I’ll close with my theme for the sure-to-be-amazing year of 2011:
Cheers to following your heart,
Amy Carole
Over the past two weeks, I’ve learned so much about yoga philosophy, anatomy, psychology, chakras, asanas, chanting and meditation. During anatomy we discussed how each of us have “facilitated pathways” wired into our nervous system that determine how our entire body and mind work. I’m no neuroscientist, but a basic understanding of facilitated pathways in terms of personality and demeanor can be put quite simple really. Let’s say you’re walking in the park and notice someone from 100 yards away who looks distinctly like your 5th grade teacher, even though her hair and clothing is completely different from what you remember. Not because you can see her clearly, but because her movement and demeanor are distinctly as you remember, you know it is her even if just on a subconscious level.
For most people, these pathways are pretty much hardwired their entire lives. Think about it: your personality, voice patterns, body language, etc. are collectively what make you…you. However, the yogis say that by practicing asanas (yoga postures), we can actually begin to change the way our muscles and nervous system react to certain stimuli by bringing the subconscious to the conscious. In cultivating a heightened sense of awareness, we can actually begin to create new pathways in the brain and spine, thereby changing the way we move and feel.
This concept has been scientifically proven on a physical level. But when the mind comes into the picture, things get a little more interesting. Because the fundamental nature of our nervous system functions the same physically as it does mentally – with synapses and electronic impulses and all that good stuff – the same concept can be applied to the way we think. In tuning into our thought patterns and actively altering those patterns, we can actually change how we think, as well. Not just the thoughts we have, but the actual way we think. The way connections are made in the synapses, the path thoughts take every time a new one takes off. Sounds amazing, yeah?
So to do this, people often use mantras or little reminders that they repeat over and over for an extended period of time. The idea is that if you repeat something to yourself enough times – even if you don’t identify with it at the present time – your brain begins to create this belief pathway and you will actually begin to believe it eventually. Say you want to break a bad habit. To do this, you’d choose a mantra that expresses what you want to see happen. For example, someone who is chronically late no matter where they go might repeat to themselves: “I am a punctual person who never feels rushed.” They might want to repeat this whenever they feel rushed, and then 20 times each night before going to bed. (There is a lot of power of doing this right before sleeping, as the information seeps into the subconscious much easier.)
So today you might look at a chocolate cake and experience a whole array of thoughts and impulses, perhaps even causing your stomach to rumble and mouth to water. But with a little bit of work using the power of a simple mantra, sooner or later you might be able to pass a piece of cake without so much of a glance. Talk about powerful stuff! (Not that I’d ever want to give up chocolate cake…I’ve had two pieces today alone :)
With this in mind, I have decided to apply my own mantra to help let go of the home I left behind and live in the beautiful moments that I am experiencing here every day.
I am fully present in this perfect moment.
The beauty in this is so simple, so clear, that each time I use it I instantly am taken back to the here and now. I can feel the power of it working already in just a few days time.
As human beings, we are not hardwired. We can change, we can evolve. All it takes is awareness and integrity. So, if you have something you’d like to work on, give this a try. Create new pathways. Evolve. Become whoever you want to be.
**Disclaimer: I have no scientific background and don’t claim to be 100% correct about any of the inner workings of the mind and body. So if you see a mistake, deal with it :) Or feel free to enlighten me!




















