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Here is a simple healthy and delicious vegetarian dish that takes about 45-minutes to prep and cook.

This recipe costs under $5.00 for the ingredients and makes approximately seven 1-cup servings. It is a truly economical and healthy way to promote some wellness to your busy lifestyle.

Pack this in small containers, freeze and take with you to work for a delicious and extra healthy lunch that is packed with protein, complex carbohydrates and dietary fiber:

Vegetarian Tofu and Bean Curry (approx. 250 calories per 1-cup serving)

Ingredients:
Extra Firm Tofu: 16oz container (~400 calories)
Dark Red Kidney Beans 15.5oz can (drained) (~350 calories)
Black Beans 15.5oz can (drained) (~350 calories)
Whole kernal corn 8.5oz can (drained) (~150 calories)
Stewed or diced tomatoes 15oz can (~150 calories)
1 whole red or spanish onion (~60 - 75 calories)
Curry Powder 2-3 Tblsp (0 calories)
Black pepper 1-2 Tblsp
Olive Oil 1 Tblsp (120 calories)
(Add garlic, salt, etc. to taste. I prefer to keep it simple and add only the curry powder, no salt or other flavorings)

Prep:
Dice the onions and cut the tofu into cubes (keep the cubes about 1″x1/2″)

Cooking:
Add the olive oil to the pan and bring to a medium heat.
Add the diced onions and sautee for ~2 min.
Add the Tofu, curry powder and black pepper and sautee for an additional 4-5 minutes
Add the beans, corn and tomatoes
Lower the heat and stir every 5 minutes. Simmer for 25 - 30 minutes

Be Not Afraid

“Be Not Afraid”

 

I hope you are not wondering, “What is a martial arts instructor doing writing about spirituality all the time?” It is all interrelated in my view.

In the Summer of 1993, at age 16, I had the opportunity through a Catholic Church organization to travel to Madrid Spain to attend a Summer camp for young men, where they would spend the Summer studing English, playing sports and interacting with young men from the United States. It was one of the two most profound experiences of my life (both of which happened, cosmically in my belief, during the same Summer).

At 16 years of age, I was absolutely lost in a 24-hour cycle of day-dreaming and listless teen-spirit. I listened to Nirvana, Pearl Jam and Simon & Garfunkel, spent my free-time wandering around the streets of NYC looking for adventure and escape (from a very boring home-life) and read books by Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus. I was, in my mind, a real cosmopolitan hippie.

I was fencing at Salle Santelli and the Fencers Club during this time and met all kinds of characters through after-school activities, martial arts, and an after-school study program run by the Church organization I was attending. It was an amazing, crazy, yet very innocent time in my life because I was completely wide-eyed at all the experiences, all great experiences, that were opening up the doors to the universe for me.

I won’t go into too much detail of my trip to Spain, I’ve never thought much about it since it happened, but it was always the best experience from my youth. I spent the days hanging around really great kids, smoking, drinking wine, learning about their pop-culture, listening to music (U2 and Sting was popular at the time), watching the Tour de France (it was July and Miguel Indurain was the current champion) and hanging out at the Prado Museum on my day off (every Thursday).

One day I went into Madrid for the day with an 18 year old kid from Florida named Pablo… he was supposed to be my guide for the day (I do not speak a word of Spanish), but the minute our driver from the Church let us off the van and we were alone, he ditched me, so I was stuck in the middle of the city by myself. I had no map and no idea where I was or what I was going to do. I had enough money to buy lunch, that was it. This was before cell phones too and I didn’t have the phone number for the Summer camp either.

It was beautiful. I saw a Burger King and had lunch there, I had to point at the menu at the Whopper and the Fanta Naranja and papas fritas, and the cute girl taking my order couldn’t stop giggling at me. I loved the experience. I managed to ask my way to the Prado Museum at the end of the day, and after the museum closed I again had to ask my way to “Club Mizar”, the youth club for the Catholic group that was sponsoring me. I walked all over Madrid by myself that day, and learned so much about how kind people can be and how I was able to completely depend on myself, no matter what.

This wasn’t some profound lesson that sunk into my mind at the time either, I was a naive and vulnerable, got angry easily and didn’t have much self-confidence. But during those moments I had absolutely no doubt about what I was going to do, it was as if another side of me, the side that had to be assertive and confident, took over for me and I carried myself through those potentially nerve-wracking experiences with joy and fun.

When I returned home from Spain, I was invited to go as a teen-mentor to Denver Colorado for the World Youth Day events with Pope John Paul II. That was the second most profound experience I had during my youth.

I was there to be a mentor for a group of junior high and high school students from the East Coast. It wasn’t easy and I didn’t quite live-up to the role, but I learned a great deal from the experience.

Although I no longer go to Church or really identify myself as a Catholic, the experience of being in the company of hundreds of thousands of other teenagers all gathering in Denver to welcome the Pope to the United States for a week was just amazingly powerful, it’s something I will never forget in my life.

He spoke the words, “Be Not Afraid” (Matthew 28:5) throughout his ministry and the words are so profound when we take them to heart.

In martial arts and in life. If we focus too much on the things that we are afraid of, we end up holding back the true expression of who we are in our hearts, minds, and in our spirits and souls.

We don’t have to look at the words spoken by Jesus and Pope John Paul II from the lenses of religion or secularism… the message is so universal, that truly in our lives, there is nothing to fear. Our egos minimize us into little concepts and ideas about who we think we are or ought to be… it’s a way to confine ourselves and keep us from expanding as souls that ought to be expressing ourselves with love and confidence.

I wanted to express this message once again during the current visit of Pope Benedict XVI. In times when we so easily lose hope to negativity and anger, it’s very easy to point blame to our leaders, both spiritual and political, for their failures… (i.e. the Churchs’ handling of clergy sex abuse) and get angry.

Rather than trying to find ways to create division with each other and focusing on negativity: societal woes, environmental woes, economic woes, spiritual and political woes — we should be looking for ways to expand our spirits, finding viable solutions to old problems.

In teaching martial arts, I was asked recently by a potential student whether I’ve won a lot of competitions and have beaten a lot of people in fights. I had to respectfully answer that fightng is not where I am trying to put my focus as a martial artist. Whether or not the person accepted or respected by answer is something he has to deal with, it’s not my interest to prove myself as a fighter to anyone. It’s very easy to inflict violence on another human being… very very easy. What is challenging is learning to interact with people during conflict with an attitude that inspires peace.

“Be Not Afraid” is a great mantra to recite when we are faced with self-doubt. It is not so important who said it, but that we say it and believe in the message.It can lift us up in times when our confidence wanes and we need to remind ourselves that the moment matters, not the outcome.
“Be Not Afraid” 

 

Music can be very spiritual, even if we don’t grasp the essence of spirit right away, music helps us to let go of thought and be present in the moment of Now:

Question: What do we do when people keep finding fault with us, disagreeing with us, being divisive and negative towards us despite our most positive and honest intentions?

As a martial arts instructor, my earliest experience with conflict was to combat an assault by assaulting the offender in return. “An Eye For An Eye” as the Old Testament put it.

As I developed I learned that a martial artist does not fight, a martial artist avoids fighting. But how?

“An Eye For An Eye” is a primitive level of dealing with aggression. The people of Israel were warriors, they had to be warriors because 3,000 years ago there were no borders, no governments, no law and order, if you wanted to protect the land where your animals grazed and where your women and children lived and played, you had to carry a big stick, and a sword, and a shield and wear a helmet and have lots of soldiers. That was the way the world governed itself in the early days of civilization (though not much has changed).

How we react to a situation is based on our perception. In shamanism, consciousness is divided into roughly 4 levels of perception. The native south americans associated the lowest level of perception with that of a serpent, the 2nd level as Jaguar, 3rd level as Hummingbird and the highest level of consciousness as Eagle.

I am paraphrasing regarding the 4 perceptive levels from shaman teacher Alberto Villoldo, and adding some of my own thoughts and insights to his ideas:

At serpent level, we live in a world of material senses… we see a loaf bread and identify it as a loaf of bread. It’s the “Eye For An Eye” level in my perception.

At Jaguar level, we begin to have more understanding and sensing of subtleties… like a Jaguar in the forest, we can jump from the ground to the limbs of trees and see things at different levels, but only materially… we see a loaf of bread and we identify it as “white bread”, “wheat bread” and the various differences bread may have. This is where we begin identifying with who’s side we choose to be on, “He’s Right, She’s Wrong”.

At Hummingbird level, we begin to carve out our stories in order to make sense of the things we see and perceive in life. Like a hummingbird that can migrate from the coldest climates of North America to the warmest climates of South America, we see the ranges of various regions of lands and we travel and make our histories in the world we live in. We create our myths about our family histories and the stories we define ourselves by in life.

We see a loaf of bread and understand the grains it was made with, the water that went into the dough, the bakery where it was baked and we can appreciate the differences in the various types of breads. This is where we begin judging situations to see the points of view of those in conflict, “Well this happened to me and I am taking offense,” while the other side may have a conflicting story, “No he’s wrong, this is really what happened and why I’m angry with him”. We begin identifying with stories and myths at Hummingbird level.

At Eagle level, we finally rise above creating stories and identifying with myths. Like an eagle which soars high above the landscape yet can see the mountain ranges, beyond the horizons yet is able to spot a field mouse under the brush in a tiny field, the eagle’s perception is very developed.

We rise above the stories that we have spent our lives identifying with and struggling to fit into, we understand the meanings of the myths we created as being stories to guide us rather than stories which victimize us… we are no longer Prometheus Bound, we are Prometheus Unbound. (By the way, Prometheus was the father of mankind, his great gift to humans was fire, he was born with foresight).

At Eagle level, we see a loaf of bread and see it as part of the earth, it came from the earth as grain and water and flows through us to give us life and then returns to the earth to be renewed once again as grain and water; we are therefore part of the bread and part of the earth, not the makers of or the owners of the bread, we live as bread, we are the bread and the earth.

At Eagle level we no longer identify with “An Eye For An Eye” we have been born into a new perception of life and humanity and no longer take sides when faced with conflict. We hear, “Turn the Other Cheek” and we understand that Jesus did not mean literally to let the offender strike you on both cheeks, but rather, turn the other cheek so that you can hear both sides of an argument without judging a situation, without choosing sides and without reacting.

We have risen above the arguments, the taking of sides over old stories and myths, debates and arguments over useless chatter and ideas, and we see the world as it is: We see the Mountains, we see the Rivers that flow from the Mountains, we see how there are millions of Rivers that all flow to the various Seas and we see how all the Seas are connected into one giant Ocean. The Ocean is divinity and life and we are all walking amidst the mountains, rivers and seas.

Now back to the Question: What do we do when people keep finding fault with us, disagreeing with us, being divisive and negative towards us despite our most positive and honest intentions?

In my teaching, I try to help participants develop their sensitivity to different attacks by developing their ability to respond naturally in a calm manner. As we practice drills that repeat the same movement over and over (drills are practiced either with a partner or solo, depending on the drill exercise being performed), we not only build muscle memory physically, but we develop sensitivity to how our body responds and reacts to an attack.

By physically learning to calmly block a strike and not panic or go into a fight-or-flight response to a sudden attack, we develop the ability to stay calm in the midst of anger, aggression and all the negativity we may be surrounded by in that particular situation.

This trains our nervous systems to function normally without releasing stress-causing hormones, and by training our nervous systems not to over-react in a situation, we are able to respond more clearly and assertively to a situation.

I have to admit, I learned much of what I teach today, through repeated failure and having to try over and over again to respond in a positive and non-reactive manner. When I was younger if I was insulted or felt I was treated unfairly, my anger would flare and take control of all my senses. I still occasionally flare up this way, but with more maturity I am always mindful of when this happens and try right away to correct myself.

We have to be patient with ourselves and remember that we are human and we make mistakes. As long as we are mindful of our intentions we can correct ourselves and lead ourselves back onto the correct course of action… again with mindfulness.

When someone finds fault with us, even though we feel we are not in the wrong or doing anything to provoke their negative reaction to us, a positive way to respond is not to have an initial reaction at all.

For instance, someone calls you “Stupid” for no apparent reason. Naturally you will be upset and your first reaction will be to argue or make a point back at the offender to defend yourself. Instead of responding this way, meet his offense with silence. Instead of focusing on the person calling you “Stupid”, focus on how your heart has started to beat faster and your breath has increased and all the many myriad thoughts that begin flowing through your head at that sudden moment.

If you focus on this for a moment and not react… yes the person offending you may feel justification that they have succeeded in their offense, but that does not affect you at all. They have not taken anything away from you, you are still who you were before they called you “Stupid”… but now your emotions are a-flutter with a search for how to react to their offense.

Don’t react. Let your heart race, let your breath rise, let your thoughts race in your head, but stand there in your center being mindful of all this activity inside of you and suddenly you will see that it all subsides after a few moments.

Martial arts is not fighting. Martial arts is “Not Fighting”… we may raise up our arms up to block a person’s attack, and we may have to strike them back in order to protect ourselves from being wounded, but we do not strike them with an intention to hurt them, but to protect ourselves and prevent them from hurting us.

In the real world, when someone disagrees with us for one reason or another, either at work or when we’re with friends, we may feel offended and want to react by offending them in return, but that is the primitive reaction, “An Eye For An Eye”. Better than indulging them in this you can rise above them like an Eagle and see the matter small as a field mouse… little and insignificant, and let the offense pass like water flowing from the mountain to the sea.

When you rise above little arguments, insults, debates and mindless chatter you will see more clearly how these things keep you at a lower level of perception, clinging to your story of who you are and what you identify yourself with.

When you rise above little arguments, you will no longer go through life constantly trying to defend your beliefs whenever you feel challenged or wronged.

You can help yourself reach for a higher level of perception where you no longer cling to any story about who you think you are or what you need to accomplish in your life.

Instead of being a fighter, constantly stuck on the battlefield, you can be a warrior in spirit — living with self-awareness, mindful of how your actions affect the world around you.

Yes, this sounds like the cover story of a Rodale magazine… but I am here to give you practical advice, not trying to sell you a heart-rate monitor or a weekend spa trip in Montana.

Are there Simple Steps to Fitness? Yes and No.

Eckhart Tolle writes and speaks about Spiritual Awakening in our lives. In my personal journey, I have discovered that spiritual awakening is to realize that everything we seek requires personal responsibility, conscious thought over our actions, and hard work. When we accept that our lives will be filled with hard work, we can enjoy our labor and then enjoy reaping the rewards of our labor.

A spiritual guru once wrote that enlightenment is knowing and understanding that your life becomes harder, not easier, when you have been spiritually awakened. You have reached a place of joy, but then you have the responsibility of guiding others to this place of joy, and this is a journey that requires constant hard work and mindfulness.

I will begin writing on the Steps to Fitness by giving a short success story of my friend Randy who took some exercise advice I provided to help him lose 10 pounds of body fat in 11 weeks. (I have Randy’s approval to use his story as an example).

My friend Randy works in the word processing department of a major investment bank. He is a hard worker, but works on a computer for 9 hours each night, five days a week. He eats a fairly balanced and regular diet and regularly exercises using some dumbells at home. At the end of each work day he will have some low-fat yogurt and occasionally enjoy something like a small cup of Ben and Jerry’s ice cream to wind down.

Over the years he went from a regular bodyweight of 150lbs up to 165lbs, although nothing in his lifestyle changed, he was not eating more or exercising less, it was just the office work and laid-back lifestyle that modern living often results in. He gained this body fat just by living a regular lifestyle that most people live.

Last fall I gave him some exercise advice. Without having to cut any calories or go on a special diet, without having to join a gym or get a personal trainer, he followed the advice I gave — at home, after work, a few nights a week — he was able to reduce his body fat and went from 165lbs down to a steady 155lbs.

The advice I give is simple: in addition to his regular dumbell workouts, I explained to him that by adding weight-less high-repetition squats to his workout routine, he would be able to 1) improve his cardiovascular fitness, 2) increase his muscle-tone, and 3) increase his overall metabolism — which in turn will help him burn more calories on a constant basis.

Disclaimer: if you aren’t accustomed to exercising, first of all, make sure you have the green-light from your physician to start a new exercise regimen.

I have described the squats in a previous article, you can find it here: http://soonmethod.wordpress.com/2008/03/11/basic-training-regimen/

The key is to introduce your body slowly to the new exercise routine, not to blitz your body into submission and failure after one workout or one week, which then will kill your motivation — you will find yourself back in front of the computer at night surfing Drudge Report, wondering why you quit, rather than enjoying your workouts.

It is better to get a light cardiovascular workout, break a sweat and slowly see results, than overload your body and nervous system until it forces you to quit what you’re doing. Less is more in the long-term. This is why crash diets always result in binge-eating and extreme workout regimens result in back-pain and visits to the chiropractor. The National Academy of Sports Medicine does not recommend more than 2lbs of fat-loss per week, in order to remain healthy and to avoid any risk of complications.

This may not be the best analogy, but think of yourself as the turtle, not the hare — slow and steady will get you faster to your destination than hard, fast, and extreme. Be the camel, not the race horse (another odd analogy?) — the camel trudges along slowly to its destination, but stays healthy and can travel long distances without struggle, but a race horse expends so much of its energy in such a short time that it risks life-threatening injury and has a very short racing career and life span.

To sum up, the initial Step to a Fitness Lifestyle is simply to get started. Start easy, take baby steps, be happy with slow progress and be patient with your expectations. In the 1940s and 50s when fitness guru Charles Atlas proclaimed that you can “Build an Atlas Body in 7-days” it was a marketing gimmick — back then it took 7-days for the post office to deliver his booklet :) His training regimen was very simple and straight-forward though, what he called “Dynamic Tension” is what the world today knows as weight-training, all it took to achieve success was commitment and hard work.

This is not new information — Jack Lalanne was giving sound fitness advice back when Franklin Roosevelt was President of the United States. What I’m trying to do here is put this fitness information and benefits into language that we can appreciate in the 21st Century… I will be happy to see even 1 person spend less time at home surfing the internet and more time outside feeling the joy of a life filled with health and fitness.

Like enlightenment, there are no shortcuts — we must work hard in order to find progress and see the fruits of our labor.

I do not enjoy writing anything that may be construed as political, but we live in an age when everything falls under one political context or another. If my view points are narrow or short-sighted, I would be happy to be better informed.

Beyond the borders of nationality, ethnicity, religion — we as a human race eventually have to realize that we all breath the same air, walk the same earth, drink the same water — we all look up at the same sky at night and see the same constellations that our human ancestors have looked to for millions of years … we are all the same people despite the color of our skin, the style of our religion or spiritual path, the design of our clothes.

We are all so small, despite the size of our egos, despite the size of our material wealth, despite our physical strength, worldly accomplishments or titles and ranks that we bestow upon ourselves.

I have been reading in the news about the protests to stop the Olympic torch on its journey to Beijing. I find it extremely sad — a testament to the human race’s impatience, aggression, violent tendencies and mob mentality.

As a whole, we all quickly judge situations as good or bad as long as the mob we want to fit into agrees with our opinion.

It’s a sad testament to the evolution of all mankind when we continually turn to violence to resolve political disagreements, social disagreements, any disagreements.

Reading history books on the fall of the Roman Empire, the American Revolution, the French Revolution, the fall of Soviet communism and other socio-political upheavals — we understand that throughout history, corrupt political regimes cannot stand the test of time and need to be defeated; that any government that uses violence, fear, aggression and propaganda to subdue and control it’s population is destined to failure.

We also understand though, the toll that war and violence has on a people, on nations, on the human race — in terms of the negative energy it generates, the law of karma — we know and understand that anger and violence will create negativity that lingers on generations that follow — which will lead to more violence in the future.

We have to stop identifying ourselves with ideas — the idea that one side is good vs. the other side which is bad. The idea that we are right while the other side is wrong.

Ultimately, the governments and corporations that do business with China need to be accountable for supporting the actions of the Communist government in China.

As consumers, we the people are responsible too for the choices we make and the businesses we patronize.

If we want to see a free and independent Tibet, it’s not as simple as going out into the streets rioting and attacking symbols like the Olympic torch.

People have to own up to their personal responsibilities — stop buying products manufactured in China. Stop buying products that exploit Chinese factory workers, that support the Chinese government.

You cannot ask for a free Tibet while you are investing in business opportunities in China that fund the Chinese military and government. It’s a matter of personal responsibility, governments listen to the angst of the businesses on Wall Street, not to riots and violence by gangs and mobs.

Searching the internet for some articles on practicing silence, I found a website called Prison Dharma. It’s a treasure trove of articles on the practice of the noble truths, all written by prison inmates. Prison Dharma is part of Venerable Thubten Chodron’s website, a Western Tibetan Buddhist nun.

The articles are well written on things such as practicing non-attachment, silence, letting go of fear, from people with true experience of hardship and suffering.

Here is an article by Leighton Bates on Compassion for oneself:
http://www.thubtenchodron.org/PrisonDharma/having_compassion_for_yourself.html

And another by Mr. Bates on Letting Go of Attachments:
http://www.thubtenchodron.org/PrisonDharma/letting_go_of_attachments.html

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Letting Go of the Bully
By Gregory Soon

I am still learning many strong lessons about how to live life without fear, without attachment to negativity, without anger — reading the articles, there are many and I am slowing reading them all — has given me some inspiration and motivation in knowing that we all feel the same insecurities and have very similar emotional reactions to events based on our formed-habits.

The poet John Donne wrote that “No Man is an Island”, we are all interconnected — our energies, emotions, actions and reactions are all intertwined and affect the world around us. Our hope is that we work towards helping those around us realize this interconnectedness, this union that we all have beyond our physical realities… without judgement.

But how do we do this?

Sometimes we can do this by not reacting to a negative situation, or at least, not reacting with our first instinctive response. This is where proper training, including martial arts training can help us. In martial arts training we learn to control our reactions in any situation.

Any form of training, mental or physical training, is a way to let go of negative habits and re-program ourselves with positive habits. If your initial reactive instinct to a negative situation is of fear — it can lead to many negative outcomes — you will project this fear through your energy, which presents itself as nervous tension and body language or an uncontrolled emotional outburst. Either way, you have lost control of the situation.

For example, if you went through your childhood being bullied by other children, either verbally or physically — because you were fearful of defending yourself — training in martial arts may help you to re-program the fear you have by showing that you don’t have to be afraid of a bully — whether they try to abuse you verbally or physically.

A bully can be psychological too, i.e. an impending deadline at work, an obligation you feel you have to fulfill but wish you didn’t, anything that causes stress.

Through the physical training we do in martial arts, let’s say for example in learning how to block a punch that comes straight at your face, you are slowly learning to stand up to face your fear of that bully, not only on a physical level, but also on an emotional and psychological level.

You learn to stand up straight, with your head held high, breathing in naturally with calmness and confidence, you move with the energy and flow of the punch, along its path as you raise your hand up in a block that parries the punch off its intended course, deflecting its force and negating its energy.

The punch that had been directed at your face in order to harm you — all of a sudden loses its negative energy, its intention to harm, its strength of force… it has suddenly fallen away and become nothing. You let it go and stand in your stillness of mind and breath.

Once you have had the experience of training to release your fear, you will be in control of how you react to a negative situation — the bully will no longer fill you with fear — you know that however the bully comes at you, you are in control of your reaction to it.

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I want to emphasize the difference from the training I offer in my martial arts classes from sport and competitive martial arts such as mixed martial arts, jujitsu, Judo, etc.

For lack of a better name for the training I offer, and because it is based on traditional martial arts, I call what I offer martial art training. Competitive and sport martial arts are events within very controlled environments. Rules are followed that prevents opponents from seriously harming or killing each other, yet some of the people (I stress, some, not all people) who go into these types of martial arts training do it with the intention to learn to defeat others, to have control over others and to act out their violent tendencies in controlled situations.

My intention in martial art training is to help and guide people to train their spirits — to let go of fear, let go of attachments, let go of their ego — through physical training.

Through physical training we cut through the emotional, spiritual and mental barriers that hold us back from developing into the enlightened beings that future generations will need to guide them into a future of peace and prosperity.

~ Peace to You and Thank you for reading ~

Hello Everyone,

Hope the start of your Spring has been full of new activities and plans for taking some time out to take care of your health and well-being.

Starting on Sunday May 18th I will be adding a 1.5 hour practice in Central Park from 2:00pm to 3:30pm in the afternoons (weather permitting).

The highlight of this Sunday practice is that you are welcome to participate and bring a friend… I am not charging for this outdoor practice.

The Sunday outdoor training will be a free training session.
It will be limited to a relatively small group (due to Parks Dept. regulations), so please RVSP.
For more information please email me.

I hope to conduct this as a way for more people to see how my training sessions are conducted, and to build a sense of camaraderie among the various people who attend.

It will be a dynamic and highly energetic martial arts practice with more focus on Aikido technique, including light ukemi (falling) and increased focus on pinning techniques which I have not touched on in my classes @ Moving Body Resources.

We will continue to work on self-defense techniques based on center-line theory as well, and will incorporate Aikido technique as a follow-through to initial blocking/striking techniques.

You will learn some dynamic movements that will help you to develop strengh and power in your dan-tien (”center”).

We will practice on soft grass so you will have the Earth under your toes and we’ll be more in touch with the energy that flows from the Earth and through our centers and beings.

The founder of Aikido, Morihei Ueshiba O’Sensei regularly practiced and performed misogi (purification) in the outdoors, where our spirits can best get in touch with the energy flow of the universe.

I conduct my martial arts training as a Yoga, a way to unite our minds-bodies-spirits with universal energy — it is also a great workout that will increase your energy level and self-confidence.

I hope you will join me this Summer in this training.

Peace to you all

Mindful Awareness

Since I have been on the topic of mindful awareness, here are some interesting and helpful articles on meditation and mindfulness that I’ve gathered, worth reading:

The Art of Living: Vipassana Meditation by Mr. S.N. Goenka; http://www.dhamma.org/en/art.shtml

Mind over matter by Neuroscientist Shanida Nataraja; http://lifeandhealth.guardian.co.uk/wellbeing/story/0,,2266220,00.html

The Science of Meditation by Cary Barbor; http://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/pto-20010501-000025.html

How to do Mindfulness Meditation by Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche; http://www.shambhalasun.com/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=2125

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These articles are helpful resources that you can print and read on the subway or in the kitchen while having your morning toast and coffee.

Here are some notes that I would like to add about finding your meditation space and being mindful in your daily activities…

I once was critical of a friend for telling his students to “be kind” to themselves. Of course, this was coming from my own ignorance and egotistical viewpoint that only wimps would be kind to themselves. Now I completely agree with his assertion that we all have to be kind to ourselves. Being kind to yourself simply means, have patience with yourself and your practice.

In Sufism, they speak of the blossoming of a rose bud. Think of your meditation as planting a seed that will one day flower into a rose bush. As the seed sprouts and grows, you will have to tend to pruning off thorns, taking care of it with patience. Your meditation will blossom and grow like the rose bush after you have been patient with your practice.

Don’t spend too much time over-thinking the preparation for your meditation. As the Nike slogan goes, “Just Do It”.

When I was in college, I would sit in my closet and meditate in the dark. My room-mate thought I was completely insane. But it worked for me, it was quiet and no one bothered me in the closet. Try not to spend your time thinking you need a perfectly serene environment with incense, dimmed lighting, a CD playing of rainforest sounds, etc. etc. to do your mindfulness meditation. All you need is to be present in the moment and the willingness to be still and listen to your breath.

Nowadays I like to use my subway ride to do some mindfulness meditation. Simply, I sit and focus on my breathing while absorbing and being present in the moment of the train ride, the chatter of people on their cell phones, the buzzing of music coming from the headphones of peoples’ iPods… all great for practicing mindfulness. Remember… Just Do It.

I can tell you from experience… in my late-teens and twenties I would sit and try to meditate… then I’d quit after 3 minutes because I would think, “this sucks, too much noise, it’s too loud, it’s too hot, it’s too cold, my ass hurts, I’m hungry, I’m too full,” anything that I could to avoid it. Then I would go through the rest of the day beating myself up for being too weak and lazy to actually just do it. So don’t make the mistakes I made all through my stupid young days.

Lastly, if you meditate, do it for yourself, but also do it with an intention that you are creating positive energy that is going to emanate from your heart to join the divine energy that flows through the world. Do your meditation as a prayer that will help to generate peace in the world.

In my next few articles I want to talk about our thoughts, especially negative thoughts, and how we can overcome them with some mindfulness and attention. Training forces us to step out of our comfort and safety zones and helps us to release ourselves of negative thoughts and actions.

I believe that much of the hardship that we — as individuals, experience in our lives — is a product of our negative thought patterns. I believe this through my own experience. I was a victim of negative thought patterns from my childhood up until I turned 29 years of age, when I began to consciously put an effort into releasing myself of negative thought patterns.

It is easy to fall prey to negative thinking. Throughout the day, from the minute we arise in the morning, until the second we fall asleep at night, we are constantly having an internal dialogue with ourselves. How often do you focus on listening to this internal dialogue and observe how you speak to yourself? Are you overly critical of yourself? Do you constantly berate and belittle yourself for one reason or another? If you do, then please keep reading.

Throughout my childhood and twenties, I had a negative pattern in my internal dialogue. I always thought negatively. For instance, as I child when I was in elementary school — if I was in the classroom and the teacher asked for a volunteer to read out-loud to the class, I would want to volunteer, then thought, “No, the other kids will make fun of you, you sound stupid, you’ll mess up and embarrass yourself!” and I would hold myself back. I went through my whole childhood thinking this way. I went through most of my twenties thinking this way! I do not know where this self-condemnation came from, but as far back as I can remember, I was always thinking negatively.

Negative thinking is the quickest route to failure and never accomplishing a goal or a dream you may have in your heart. I believe that a negative mindset is a form of self-protection, basically a remnant of a survival instinct that we carry from our early ancestors. When our ancestors lived as hunters and gatherers in pre-historic times, often they had to take risks in order to hunt prey and survive in harsh environments. A negative thought pattern could have arisen as a form of protection from putting them in danger, for example, if our early ancestor had to risk hunting a large wild animal for food, thinking of a negative outcome such as death would keep them alive long enough to hunt smaller prey.

In the 21st Century though, we naturally no longer face many of the dangers that our ancestors had to face in order for survival. We do though carry the survival instincts that kept our ancestors alive. Many of these instincts still help us today, such as our fight-or-flight instincts that help us to react quickly in moments of stress.

As modern human beings, becoming stuck in a negative pattern of thinking can hinder us in our personal and professional lives. Have you ever wanted to take a risk, such as leaving a job that is uninspiring, to seek a job in a field that actually motivates and inspires you — but then came up with reason after reason as to why you should stay in your uninspiring job? That is a form of being stuck in a negative thought pattern.

Just like our early ancestors, in order to excel in our lives and survive in a world that is harsh and competitive, we at times need to take risks. Releasing ourselves of negative thinking helps us to take these risks that may produce positive and rewarding results for ourselves and our loved ones.

You can start releasing yourself of negative thought patterns here and now.

It will be a challenge; taking the first step will be hard, but once you have taken that first step, you will begin to see that the world does not end at the horizon… the world expands and broadens once you can see beyond the horizon.

Exercise Number 1: Start by listening to your internal dialogue. Throughout the day listen to how you internally speak to yourself and how you view yourself. Be mindful of any negativity you may be directing at yourself… even if it is a very minor thing, such as berating yourself for forgetting where you put your keys.

Please follow this exercise for the next few days, listen to your internal dialogue with awareness. Listen to the times you internally scold yourself or mutter something like “God Damn It!” when you become frustrated at some event that arises throughout the day.

These little negative moments of self-condemnation can have a rippling effect on how you negatively view yourself and present yourself to the world around you.

In Part II I will write about how to begin the change from negative to positive once you are aware of your internal dialogue and how you view yourself.

Thank you and Peace Be With You.

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