Curtains & Shadows

Last week, I brought a couple of canvas panels I had once used to create a “crunchy” yogi house vibe up to the studio where Lucy (16 y/o) started putting them together to create some shade in the main studio.

Over the course of her figuring out her machine and getting a few put together, there was some how a mix around and she stitched two in such a way that the fray was out the outside and the vision I was headed towards was lost unless they were redone. I imagine she felt kind of bad, but she was also fatigued from figuring out the bobbin and it was really OK. I just needed to figure out what to do… “restorative yoga starts July 12th”.

I can already tell this blog has a lot to say. Get a coffee or get comfy and just take a deep breath in.

<inhale>

So it’s a week later and in between that MJ infused sewing session and now, the following things have happened:

  1. I walked into my backyard one morning and the exact corner where my fence & house met was lit up with sun (normally total shade) and – upon examination – I saw the sun was perfectly positioned between the branches of two trees, casting a perfect light from a northeast corner of the sky into this corner. Naturally, I made shapes with my shadow and spent some time considering the figure in front of me. What were the odds? This was such a rare alignment. I stayed till the sun moved and my shadow wasn’t as prominent anymore. On to take care of the things, the dogs, the business, the kids, and – my favorite – my husband. In the land of the living, one’s shadow tends not to consume the life.
  2. I went to the fabric store with my mom & picked out some chiffon & some utility white nonsense. We spent the afternoon configuring some panels together so that, by the time my class rolled around, I had a distinctly different tone in the studio as a marker of my first restorative practice taught in the new space.
  3. I taught aforementioned first restorative practice in the new space. The two that stayed for the deep restorative “got there” (saw colors, felt the weighted blanket, experienced a sense of peace / relief in the physical body) and the three that came for the hour of breath / awareness of sensation and opening poses seemed to smile and enjoy the practice. All in all – it worked.

The present moment:

I am at OM and can hear Jane teaching in the main studio. I am in the front room with the next iteration of the curtain. It’s on the floor to my left and I have about one drink of coffee left and 45 minutes before its time to sage & prep the studio for a private party of friends, ready to experience the magic of a solid hour on their mat and in their bodies.

I am in my overalls with some sewing pins & a pen tucked in the pocket. My hair is in what I am hoping appears to be an artsy bun. 🤞🏼

I am deciding to write in this moment because it is not lost on me that the “mistake” Lucy made back in sewing the panels ended up being the starting point of what I am now incredibly excited about. I took the chiffon vibe that “made do” down and hung up the panels Lucy put together using the exposed fray as the crease over the curtain rod across the windows of the studio. It looked so cool. And reminded me of a studio in Santa Monica where I experienced healing. (The picture of their window & curtain is on my desk, if you ever want to see it when you’re here.)

With new inspiration that perhaps the curtain can showcase the creative spirit of the studio, I grabbed some fabric a friend gave me from her trip to Mozambique and began to pin it up the side, adding a little bit of practical width but also a sense of art: the story of women, life milestones and the woven nature of friendship and how friends help you see yourself.

Maybe sad and angry people simply need a good friend…

I think about the people in my life that are grieving, that are hurt, that are lost and that are lonely and my heart kind of aches in this moment.

What will they find on the internet that claims to help them heal?

What will they buy that the world says will make them feel better?

<Lord, have mercy.>

What I love right now is that any shame Lucy might have felt in her mistake can be lifted and resolved, as it was that mistake that reminded me there are no mistakes, only ways in to the next thing – the higher awareness – the light.

I love that in acting on the inspiration, I was reminded of a time I was healed physically by time on my mat, breathing into my body, allowing hydration to settle in and a yoga teacher to guide me through a sequence she thought of from her practice.

This. is. art. This is the constant unfolding.

This is the long game for healing…

Hang with me, check this out –

The panels that Lucy put together were curtains that were once hanging in my house. I had pinned them on the rods and it was good enough for a single working mom who needed a little privacy until a day a gal I went to high school with came over. I wanted help tying my eclectic house together, she was an interior designer whose taste I have always loved; I thought it was a good idea.

As I saw her see my pinned up curtains, I felt an old familiar wave of “being an idiot” wash over me. I hung my head in my own lack of something.

Even now, that flashback flashes me back to my high school years where feeling stupid, feeling left out, wanting to fit in caused me to shapeshift, risk friendship for friendship and ultimately take me into the most isolated years of my life when I am sure the prayers of my parents were from places of worry, wanting me to remember my gifts and my beauty, and to ultimately believe in myself once again.

(They probably also prayed for good friends.)

The shadow is a funny thing:

It comes about in the light, like my shadow in that perfect timing in the sun.

It moves as the light moves, eventually going away (but never gone).

It requires / creates / is shade, which we desire in our studios & homes, bedrooms and porches whether through artsy or IKEA curtains.

Though it requires light to see, the shadow can be felt in the dark.

Yet a shadow is not by definition a shadow if it is felt alone. It must also be seen, thanks to light.

Basically: the interaction with the shadow is always up to you, the meaning you allow is always up to you, your balancing is always up to you.

Will I love the artsy couture curtain once it is hung? Maybe.

Might I be headed to “get something normal” upon seeing my 7th grade quality sewing job hanging on the rod? Also maybe.

But the only right answer? Is the one that comes from this rooted sense of self trust. Trust that interacting with the shadow shows the way through one’s mistakes and ultimately brings in the spirit of the light. ❤️

My life owning a yoga studio. 🪷

It’s been about three weeks that I have been owner of OM Old Orchard, a boutique (read: small, stylish) yoga studio in a thriving lifestyle (dining, shopping) district in Webster Groves, Missouri.

My vision for owning a yoga studio has always been to have a clubhouse, more or less. Yes, some quality mind + body practices that make you feel strong and centered and connected but also like – time to be yourself, in community with other people being themselves, with opportunity to create, offer your gifts, contribute your ideas, pray.

I want to say I am fascinated with how “cut throat” the studio world is – but I’m not. I am not surprised by the competition and the ferocity of wellness providers wanting to seed another tangent to their offers. I don’t mean to sound whiny or ungrateful for people interested in hosting their offers here, but navigating the new loneliness I feel “as an owner” while at the same time being some what sought after is a key part of this season of shifting. By the way, if you are also experiencing a lot of shifting in your life – you are not alone.

Yesterday was particularly hard for me. I teared up a little bit on a drive home from dropping off a casserole in my sister’s fridge. (A demonstration of the type of community I want to lead, foster and encourage.) There is so much to do and my life is a little unorganized at the moment. I need to merge calendars and put away some papers and settle into a new routine.

I felt stress in my body that was not normal. If there is one thing I know, it’s that stress or anxiety are invitations to the present moment. The present moment shows you what is really right in front of you. The present moment is your place for clarity.

I left my house and headed up to the place that has changed my life. Like a tired mother of a newborn who loves their baby but wants to sleep, I went to the studio tenderly, like how that same tired mother is when changing the diaper – looking at baby’s eyes and sweet face – and remembering how delicate these days really are…

As I settled into the studio, I felt the nudge to breakdown the massage table, clear the front room with the windows and lay on the floor. I did. I opened the windows. I laid out a mat. I lit a candle. And right there, a domino of my life shifted and I felt the room become something new. It’s a place for prayer. An intimate place holding. A floor for conversation.

About an hour later, Jules arrived to the studio before her chanting night was to begin and we sat on the floor in this grounding room and had a conversation about our ancestors, the power of prayer and the depth of our practices came through.

Any competition in the yoga world is rooted in money, in fear, in left brain analytics to make ends meet. And though a successful small business needs numbers to matter, when I settled into the energy of the present moment I remembered the seeds of OM: my belief that self care is spiritual, that partnering with the breath is essential, that your body is the first gift given in this life and that community is wellness.

I feel good today, better than ever. Remembering that this yoga studio is not meant to be what you know, but a place for you to be known. To give generously and receive thoughtfully. For your gifts to have a place to thrive, connect and grow. And for all of us to experience when things come full circle.

And with all that being said… I have a spring calendar of events to figure out. If you’re in Saint Louis, find me on the socials or come by the new studio and say hi! http://www.omoldorchard.com

The human experience of having a faith life.

Since October, I have been allowing the obvious words (what the folks in my restorative yoga community are sharing) surface. I have sat with them and given them space to come together to help me string together something meaningful, some way to describe what it is one might experience in the practice.

There is always the option with yoga to simply call it yoga or restorative yoga or whatever and trust the practitioner will get whatever they need to get out of it. Yet, the depth of my study in regards to the Holy Spirit – the fruits of the spirit – the divine consciousness, somatic spirituality, the way it feels when you feel and then breathe and why that works to enter into some understanding of freedom – why, if you say you follow Jesus, this practice is actually so essential – how the elements of the earth actually poetically unlock the Psalms – how the understanding of Ishwara from yoga sutra connects you so beyond beyond – I mean… it’s the stuff that cultivates your faith life.

You have a faith life.

I think that is what I am realizing more and more.

See, my restorative yoga classes are a 50 / 50 split men and women. They aren’t explicitly teaching on the fruits of the spirit nor are they outwardly “spiritual” or “witchy” in anyway. Or whatever the words are that tend to be a marketing angle or conversation for the female demographic.

The classes are about care & curiosity of the physical body, awareness of the emotional or energetic sensations in the body and becoming present. Being present. Being present.

Coming back to being present.

<inhale>

<exhale>

You know, the more I think about it, I really don’t want to get into the market of saying I know the way to experience God or that I can usher you into some divine or transcendent relationship. I know my role in life, my gifting, is to host and make safe. I have been called and equipped to be endlessly generous with care and comfort. How some people are able to build, I am able to soften. I design paths to perspective rooted in spiritual truth; trustworthy because it doesn’t know the one right way.

One of the honors in my life’s work is when I connect with people who have experienced spiritual safety in the restorative yoga or spiritual direction I offer. My entire life shifted when I realized I didn’t have to pray, emailing God and wait for a response on whether or not I would get what I asked for. Rather, my study (thank you to my teachers) and my practice and the Spirit that dwells within me activated this understanding that you always have exactly what you need.

This presence of self and this full awareness of where you are – right here, right now – this is Stoic, Yogic and Christ Consciousness, Old Testament stories give us this in rich narrative & poetry.

And you know the thing that tells us otherwise? Ads.

My rule of thumb, and I have found myself sharing this more these days for some reason – is that whenever I find myself about to Google what I need or a solution to how I feel. Whenever I feel like I need a certain treatment or need to spend to heal, I ask myself what somebody in Bible times would have done. What would the most ancient of my ancestors do with the feeling I have in my body.

Sit on a rock?

Drink some water?

Get comfortable?

Look around?

Seek higher ground?

Try to rest?

Wander the natural world seeking a sage?

Allowing the intuitive yes and no to lead me in any of these ways?

We all have a faith life. Whatever you believe is going to work to bring love (connection), peace (an evenness within) or joy (hey! wow!) is your faith. Whatever you believe will happen again tomorrow like it did today (rising moon? setting sun, anybody?) Whatever you know is the way things always work (light after darkness is a good one or the process of compost or how elements of the natural world work together) is the way things will always work.

In yoga, Ishwara is the supreme divine. It is what taught our ancient ancestors and what continues to teach us today. Ishwara is ultimate because it is the beginning and the end. We experience Ishwara when we chant OM – the literal sound of a circle as the mouth goes from Ah to Oh to Mm.

Circles are a great way to recognize where your faith. Cycle of thought or cyclical behavior not working for you? Giving you anxiety? That’s a great place to start rewiring into a new loop. Clear the mind chatter by establishing the miraculous circle of body – breath – mind – breath – body – breath – mind – breath – body – you get it.

I guess what I am trying to say is that having a faith life is not “being spiritual” or “being Christian” or “being religious”. It is being human.

SO. What do you put your faith in?

<deep breath in>