Subtle Body, Radiant Mind: A Yoga and Meditation Workshop

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sri_yantgraSubtle Body, Radiant Mind: A Yoga and Meditation Workshop

with Ramesh Bjonnes and Radhika Banu Bjonnes

NEW DATE: March 4, 2017 – 1:30–6pm

Come explore the wondrous interplay between body, mind and spirit in this workshop for yogis who love the inner life. Both beginners and advanced students of yoga are invited to join us. You will learn practices to make your body more flexible and subtle for your sitting practice at home. You will learn meditation techniques to open your heart, focus your intention, and expand your mind into peace and radiance.

You will learn:

• Yoga poses to prepare the body and mind for deep meditation

• Yoga poses with breath retention to harmonize the emotions 

• Meditation techniques to quiet, focus and expand the mind 

• The number one secret to a successful meditation practice

• A meditation technique for letting go of stress and addictions


$60 per person, $50 early registration by January 21st.

Connect with patty to register: 865-951-6024 or email patty at pattyyogamail@gmail.com


ramesh-meditationRamesh Bjonnes has been teaching yogic meditation for the past 35 years. He lived in India and Nepal in the 1980s learning directly from the traditional teachers of yoga and Tantra. He is the author of two books on yoga, Sacred Body, Sacred Spirit (InnerWorld) and Tantra: The Yoga of Love and Awakening (Hay House India). Tantric scholar and Professor of Religion at the University of Rochester, Douglas Brooks, says that “Ramesh Bjonnes is an important voice for the study of living Tantra.” Ramesh is the co-founder of the Prama Institute outside Asheville, NC, where he lives and teaches.

radhika-photoRadhika Banu Bjonnes is an experienced yoga and meditation teacher with a personal, caring, and friendly style of imparting her lessons. Radhika is part of the growing “slow yoga” movement, and believes that a gentle yoga practice reaches deeper, makes us calmer and stronger. She taught yoga at the esteemed Ananda Marga Yoga Academy (AMYA) in Singapore for over 10 years. Here, she immersed herself in the study and teaching of Rajadhiraja Yoga, a traditional system of yoga focusing on breath retention and deep breathing while holding poses for a certain period. Radhika holds a Registered Yoga Teacher certification (500 RYT) with Yoga Alliance; a 60 hour certification and a 400 hour Diploma in Rajadhiraja Yoga from AMYA, and a 100 hour certification in Yin Yoga from Victor Chng.

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AcroYoga at Breezeway

Introducing Acro Yoga at Breezeway!

12814103_746257692111_648908030243128729_nStarting on the first Tuesday in November, we’re pleased to welcome Rebekah Luhrs to Breezeway for AcroYoga classes.

Rebekah is a certified yoga instructor who has been doing AcroYoga since 2011. After several years of teaching both in the US and internationally, she is excited to be offering weekly acro classes in Knoxville. Meryl Kerns will be joining her as assistant teacher. 

AcroYoga is a dynamic partner practice that blends the wisdom of yoga, the dynamic power of acrobatics, and the loving kindness of healing arts.  New content will be explored each week while reviewing components taught in previous classes and workshops, providing a space for students to form strong foundational skills. AcroYoga as a practice that is available for every body, age, and ability.

UT Medical Center Discount

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Just present your UT Medical Center badge at check-in for your class discount.

Breezeway Yoga Studio is located only ten minutes from UT Medical Center on Kingston Pike (Knox Plaza, Bearden) and classes are offered daily. Check our calendar for a time and type of class you’d like to attend.


practice styles include:

Yoga Basics  • Restorative yoga • Vinyasa yoga •  Therapeutic yoga • Power yoga • Flow yoga • Yin Yoga • Radiant yoga • qi gong & more

We also offer workshops and community events. Consider joining our mailing list (at right) to keep informed.

Namaste Betty: free yoga on the lawn

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Help us celebrate Betty’s legacy to our community.

September 10, 9:30 AM • Farragut High School football field

Join us on the Farragut High School Football field as we gather to continue Betty Kalister’s legacy of community building through the practice of yoga.

All levels of experience are welcome to attend this free event.

Radiant Yoga and Qi Gong workshop

AdobeStock_48419414-SmallRadiant Yoga and Qi Gong workshop


Sunday September 11, 2016 1-3pm with Mebbie Jackson and Belle Kent.

Come experience an afternoon to uplift your energy. Mebbie and Belle will facilitate yoga, qi gong, and dance movements to help reset your energy for the change of seasons. Fall is a time of rest after the busy experiences of Summer. Refresh yourself with movement and laughter in this energizing workshop!

Cost $25.00 in advance, $30.00 at the door.

To register, connect with Mebbie via email: mebane8@mac.com or call (865) 679-9642

 

Free Your Pelvis with Gina Baker

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Are your hips and hamstrings tight? Does your lower back get sore easily? Then this workshop is for you!

Whether you run, dance, or sit for long hours – doing hip opening postures to release tension in your hips is a good thing.

We will dive deep into the hips and learn a very gentle yoga sequence to release tightness and tension that could be causing low back pain. Learn how to access a deeper quality of listening to your body to release any tension to encourage lightness and well being in the whole body.

Our time together will conclude with a meditation and deep relaxation leaving you feeling more spacious in mind and body.

Come join Gina Baker and take the time to work slowly through this important area of the body. Everyone is welcome ~ Open to all levels.


Gina BakerSunday, Oct. 16 • 1-3:30PM

$30 pre-registration • $40 at the door. Register and pay online – www.ginabaker.me or text 415-858-2417

Instructor: Rev. Gina M. Baker, LMT, RYT 200

Date Night with Gina Baker

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Date night with Gina

Find a partner and explore the possibilities!


Explore moving and flowing in harmony with your partner and deepen your connection as a couple. Enjoy a candlelit evening with some relaxing tunes and great company. 

Unwind from the day by connecting with your partner and sharing a special bond through a unique yoga practice that blends partner yoga postures, conscious breathing, trust, communication, and — most of all — playfulness, laughter and fun. Gina’s planning a beautiful evening for releasing tension, strengthening relationships, and having a great time.

After you’ve blissed out with your boo or favorite someone, we will gather at a close restaurant (optional and we will decide which resturant at a closer date) for some community fun and conversation.

Spots will only be sold at the door if there is room. This workshop has limited space, so reserve ASAP. Bring a friend, lover, gym buddy – even your child (ages 12-21). This is an all levels class and everyone is welcome!

Friday, Sept 16 • 7-8:30PM

$45 per couple pre-registration • $50 at the door

Register and pay online – www.ginabaker.me or text 415-858-2417


Gina BakerInstructor: Rev. Gina M. Baker, LMT, RYT 200

Mindfulness Walking Meditation

By John Cianciosi  |  Originally posted here in Yoga Journal

Learning to establish awareness during walking meditation helps to develop mindfulness during your daily life.

In Bodh Gaya, India, there is an old Bodhi tree that shades the very spot where the Buddha is believed to have sat in meditation on the night of his enlightenment. Close by is a raised walking path about 17 steps in length, where the Buddha mindfully paced up and down in walking meditation after becoming enlightened, experiencing the joy of a liberated heart.

In his teachings, the Buddha stressed the importance of developing mindfulness in all postures, including standing, sitting, lying down, and even walking. When reading accounts about the lives of monks and nuns in the time of the Buddha, you find that many attained various stages of enlightenment while doing walking meditation.

The Forest Meditation Tradition of northeast Thailand, with which I am most familiar, puts great emphasis on walking meditation. The monks live in simple single-room dwellings dispersed throughout the forest, and in the area around each hut you always find a well-worn meditation path. At various times of the day or night, monks can be seen pacing up and down these paths, mindfully striving to realize the same liberation of heart attained by the Buddha. Many monks walk for long hours and actually prefer it to sitting meditation. The late Ajahn Singtong, a much admired meditation master, sometimes practiced walking meditation for 10 to 15 hours a day.

While I don’t expect that many will want to walk for such a long time, you may want to try this form of meditation; it’s a valuable method of mental training for furthering awareness, concentration, and serenity. If developed, it can strengthen and broaden your meditation practice to new levels of tranquility and insight.

Also see Guided Mindful Walking Meditation

Avoiding Extremes

In walking meditation, the primary object of attention is the process of walking itself. In other words, to sharpen awareness and train the mind to concentrate, you pay close attention to the physical act of walking, the way you take one step after another. Thus the object is more obvious and tangible than in the more refined meditation techniques, such as focusing on the breath or a mantra, which are often used in traditional sitting meditation. Focusing the mind on this more obvious object helps to avoid two extremes that meditators sometimes experience during their sitting meditation.

First, you are less likely to fall into a state of dullness or sleepiness because you are physically moving with your eyes open. In fact, walking meditation is often recommended for meditators who have a problem with the hindrance of dullness. My teacher, Ajahn Chah, used to recommend doing an all-night meditation vigil once a week. As you can imagine, one tends to get drowsy by 2 a.m., so Chah would encourage everyone to do walking meditation rather than sitting in a stupor of dullness. In extreme cases of sleepiness, Chah would advise us to walk backward-because you cannot fall asleep this way.

The other extreme is having too much energy, which typically results in feelings of mild tension or some restlessness. Because walking meditation is usually not practiced with the same intensity and concentration as a sitting practice, there is less chance of creating tension by using excessive force in an effort to focus the mind. Walking is generally a pleasant and relaxing experience for both mind and body, and therefore an excellent way to release stress or restless energy.

Another advantage is of special benefit for those who attend meditation retreats. During such retreats, participants often meditate for many hours a day, and sitting for such long periods inevitably causes some physical discomfort or pain. Alternating between sessions of sitting and walking meditation helps relieve that discomfort in a pleasant way, enabling meditators to maintain a continuity of practice for a long time.

Finally, practicing walking meditation greatly facilitates the development of mindfulness in ordinary daily life. If you can learn to establish awareness during walking meditation—when you are physically moving with your eyes open—then it won’t be difficult to arouse that same wakeful quality during other activities, such as practicing yoga, eating, washing dishes, or driving. It will be easier for you to arouse mindfulness while walking to a bus stop, through the park, or during any other time. Your meditation will begin to permeate your entire life.

The importance of this cannot be overstated. It is the presence of mindfulness that keeps your consciousness alive and alert to reality, thereby transforming ordinary life into a continuous practice of meditation, and transforming the mundane into the spiritual.

To illustrate the sheer power of mindful walking, I often recall an event that took place during the height of the Vietnam War. The well-known meditation teacher Thich Nhat Hanh was touring the United States, giving talks and participating in demonstrations in support of a peaceful resolution to the war. Obviously, people had strong feelings, and any demonstration could easily turn into an ugly confrontation. Fortunately, into the midst of that highly charged emotional atmosphere, Thich Nhat Hanh’s presence brought the irresistible power of a truly peaceful being. I can still visualize the picture of this simple Buddhist monk at the head of a demonstration of thousands of people, walking slowly, silently, peacefully. With each step it was as if time paused, and the aggressive, restless energy of the crowd was miraculously calmed.

On that particular day, Thich Nhat Hanh did not need to talk about peace because everyone heard the reverberating message of each slow, meditative step. You too can learn to walk with mindfulness so that your steps print peace and serenity on Earth.

Taking the Right Path

Walking meditation is best practiced on a designated path rather than casually walking about. The path should be straight, level, and have a reasonably smooth surface. It is also helpful if the path has a beginning and an end. You practice meditation by walking between these two points, being attentive and mindful of each step. Although the length of the path is primarily determined by individual preference, I have found that a path in the range of 10 to 20 yards is most useful. I suggest you experiment with paths of different lengths and find one most suitable for your practice.

Choosing a path with a beginning and an end is important because these two points provide structure for the meditation and foster sharper awareness. Each time you come to the end of the path, you are automatically reminded to check to see whether the attention is indeed with each step or whether the mind has wandered. In this way, you can re-establish focus more quickly and thus sustain awareness.

The guidelines for walking meditation are similar to that of sitting meditation: Choose an appropriate time and decide how long to meditate; for beginners 15 to 30 minutes may be suitable. The walking path can be either inside or outside, depending upon your preference and the area available. However, I have found quiet surroundings the best, as you won’t be distracted by external activity or feel self-conscious while pacing up and down along the same path. Also, whenever possible, it is better to practice in bare feet, although this is not essential.

Having established these conditions, stand at one end of the path and hold your hands gently together in front of your body. The eyes remain open, gazing down along the path about two yards ahead. The intention is not to be looking at anything in particular but simply to see that you remain on the path and know when to turn around.

You should now try to center yourself by putting aside all concern for the past and future. In order to calm the mind and establish awareness in the present, abandon any preoccupation with work, home, and relationships, and bring the attention to the body.

The meditation exercise is simply to walk at a slow, relaxed pace, being fully aware of each step until you reach the end of the path you are walking on. Begin with the right foot. While taking that step, pay careful attention to the movement of the foot as it is initially raised off the ground, moved through the air, and placed on the ground again. Then take a step with your left foot, being equally attentive. Continue walking in this mindful and methodical way until you have reached the end of the chosen path.

If while walking you become aware that your mind has wandered away from the step, clearly note the distraction and gently, but firmly, bring your attention back to the step. It is often helpful to make a mental note of “right” and “left” with each corresponding step, as this keeps the mind more involved with the act of walking.

When you arrive at the end of the path, stop for a moment and check to see what the mind is doing. Is it being attentive? If necessary, re-establish awareness. Then turn and walk back to the other end in a similar fashion, remaining mindful and alert. Continue to pace up and down for the duration of the meditation period, gently making an effort to sustain awareness and focus attention on the process of walking.

Walking meditation may be practiced in a number of ways that require different degrees of concentration. While walking at a normal pace is suitable for developing awareness, very slow walking is more effective for refined concentration. You may want to experiment with walking at slightly different speeds until you find a pace most suitable for you.

As with any meditation method, skill in walking meditation only comes from regular practice and patient effort, but the benefits are well worth it. Experiencing the simplicity and peace of being with one step at a time—with nothing else to do and nowhere to go—can be truly liberating. Each mindful step takes you toward the infinite wonder of the world of reality.

ABOUT OUR EXPERT
John Cianciosi was a Buddhist monk for more than 20 years and a disciple of the late Ajahn Chah. He is now a lay teacher in the United States and the author of The Meditative Path: A Gentle Way to Awareness, Concentration and Serenity.

Continue reading “Mindfulness Walking Meditation”

Southern Bend Yoga Festival

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Bend in Unity

On AUGUST 27, 2016, Join hundreds of your soon to be closest friends in a powerful practice of unity and breath at the Southern Bend Yoga Festival in Chattanooga, TN. Featuring unique sessions lead by the masterful teachings of nationally acclaimed yogis who offer up their wisdom and light to guide you through a wondrous experience.

Benefitting

Southern Bend Is happy to Benefit the Children’s Organ Transplant Association by donating 10% of all sales to this cause. The Children’s Organ Transplant Association (COTA) helps U.S. transplant families avoid financial ruin. Transplant procedure costs range from $100,000 to more than $800,000. Once the transplant is complete, families face significant transplant-related expenses, including medication; transportation to and from the center; lodging; and expenses while parents are out of work and often living with the hospitalized child far from home. These out-of-pocket expenses add up to tens of thousands of dollars annually for transplant families with lifetime totals exceeding $1,000,000. In cases where a shortfall exists, COTA helps bridge the financial gap.

Our Belief

Southern Bend aims to unite a yoga community in joyful celebration. Igniting passions for positive change, mindful living, and the belief that great things are possible when people knit together – on and off the mat. We believe a bend in perspective can accumulate and build into a movement large enough to change the world we live in or direct enough to change the life of one precious child.

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Get on the mat!

Find peace in the present moment, connect with a greater spirit, shape and heal the body, practice kindness through awareness of yourself and others. We the mat is a place where great things happen; a reflective mirror of who we are: what we say, what we do, how we listen.

Be the bend.

Let go of what is holding you back, find freedom and peace through unity so you can cultivate strength to change what needs to be changed. Bend when everyone and no-one is watching.

Take if off the mat.

As mindful members of this world, inspire others by leading. Find a need and be fearless. Go forward and be strong!

Remember the little ones!

Children are our future. Southern Bend’s 2016 festival directly supports and donates 10% of net, to Children’s Organ Transplant Association (COTA) as an acknowledgment of the web of life that connects each single spirit to a greater community.

 

Breezeway student in the big leagues

The Cubs keep insisting they won’t trade him, but, oh, man, they can’t help but dream about that New York Yankee duo.

(Kyle Schwarber is a former student of Patty’s and we get a big kick out of following his progress with the Cubbies!)

CHICAGO – USA TODAY  — July 20, 2016

Kyle Schwarber has been a consistent presence at Wrigley Field as he rehabs knee injuries, here chatting with left fielder Albert Almora Jr. (Photo: Dennis Wierzbicki, USA TODAY Spor)
Kyle Schwarber has been a consistent presence at Wrigley Field as he rehabs knee injuries, here chatting with left fielder Albert Almora Jr.
(Photo: Dennis Wierzbicki, USA TODAY Sports)

It’s late at night, and Kyle Schwarber limps across the Chicago Cubs clubhouse, one of the last players to leave Wrigley Field.

He made a spectacular play earlier in the game, receiving high-fives from his teammates, and a nice ovation from the crowd, for bare-handing a foul ball that sailed into the Cubs’ dugout.

It was his finest play in three months, ever since that April 7 night in the Cubs’ third game of the season, the moment he collided with center fielder Dexter Fowler at Chase Field in Phoenix. His left knee was shattered. Fully torn anterior collateral ligament. Fully torn lateral collateral ligament. See ya next spring.

“I’ve still got the hands,’’ Schwarber said, laughing, as he walked toward the exit. “Still got it.’’

It’s killing Schwarber not to be an integral part of this, knowing the Cubs are going to run away with the National League Central, and embark on perhaps the greatest October in franchise history, taking aim at the World Series that has eluded them since 1908.

Yet, the cruel twist is that Schwarber could actually be the key to the Cubs’ World Series championship.

He could be the one to bring the Cubs those pieces to assure that October belongs to them. Continue reading “Breezeway student in the big leagues”