This past weekend I found myself back in Portland for this year's VegFest. For two days a wonderful group of vegans, vegetarians, and our friends took over a section of the Portland Convention Center and the city's many veg-friendly establishments. In the past four months, I have been fortunate to have made four trips (yes, one a month) to Portland and have fallen in love with the city and it's ultra-friendly inhabitants. With no more trips planned there this year, I will definitely be missing it! However, this last trip for VegFest really packed in so many reasons why I love the city. I saw so many people who were strangers four months ago, but who I now enthusiastically call friends, I visited some of my favorite businesses, and I even had the opportunity to spend time with some of the real veg pioneers who have been making vegetarian food business a reality for over three decades!
So, it was total icing on the cake that I had been invited to speak about The Yoga of Veganism at this year's VegFest. It was a thoughtful, inspiring, and dedicated group who attended the Saturday 11am talk. I was so touched to run into the talk's attendees throughout the weekend to hear how the teachings of yoga have impacted their lives. I hope that everyone I met will continue to keep in touch in some way and that I will see you all again!
Below, you can find an edited video with some parts of the talk given at VegFest. This talk included so much that is so close to my heart. Please enjoy!
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Sunday, September 11, 2011
2011 Chicago Walk for Farm Animals
Yesterday I had the great fortune to participate in the 2011 Chicago Walk for Farm Animals. These nationwide walks benefit Farm Sanctuary organization, who advocates for the treatment of our forgotten brothers and sisters living lives of confinement away from our eyes. I was unable to stay for the entire event, as I had to teach the regular Saturday morning class in Oak Park, but I was able to show up early and lead a short yoga session at the beginning of the day's events. It was a ton of fun with a really enthusiastic group of participants. It's not everyone who will go out on a Saturday morning and do yoga (some for the first time ever) on a patch of wet grass in Lincoln Park!
When I arrived at the usual Saturday morning class, I had to mentally change gears. I almost couldn't figure out how to teach this group of students sitting patiently in a studio... no one was even dressed as a pig! Over the course of the short previous yoga session, that had come to look quite normal. Funny how the mind works.
This event also marked the debut of my newly-purchased Flip camera which I intend to use often now that I have it! There are so many things that I want to make videos of. The above is my first attempt at video editing. Many thanks to my friend, Mark, took much of the yoga class video. I think I learned a lot making this and have ideas about what to do differently next time.
Thank you all for coming out and participating and, most of all, for acting as voices for the voiceless! And thank you to the organizers who invited me and to the many friends who recommended me for the duty!
Friday, September 9, 2011
EZ 2B Anti
Every day we hear of people who are doing "good." They dedicate their lives to a passionate, bitter fight against this world's evils. This is a wonderful thing... or is it? It's truly a small issue of our own motivation that determines whether our paths as activists are sustainable.
When we direct our energy towards fighting against something, no matter how wrong we perceive it to be, we're draining ourselves. We're maintaining a negative focus. We see the world as "us vs. them", as full of evil, or as something that needs to be fixed. We risk becoming immersed in this negative worldview and our reaction against this perceived evil becomes the driving force behind our actions. We become overwhelmed by the mounting injustices that we struggle against and we burn out.
As hard as the negative and unjust can be to ignore, a shift in perspective can greatly improve our motivation to bring about change. Do things FOR others. Instead of fighting against the oppressor, be the voice of the oppressed. Share your gifts and see the changes that come about in the lives of those who are touched. We cannot help everyone in the ways we envision, but those that we do help are forever changed and that change affects us all. A shift in the global attitude starts with one individual. Perform your service for the good of all, without attachment or desire, and see how your flame burns brighter as a result.
Though it may not appear that way, everything is already perfect. The wheels of karma are spinning and things are playing themselves out exactly as they should be in order to balance out all deeds from the past. Your karma may or may not be to make great changes in the lives of others in the way you've imagined, but continue on your righteous path knowing that your thoughts, attitude, and actions influence change all around you in ways that are both subtle and monumental.
“If you think you are too small to make a difference, try sleeping with a mosquito.” Dalai Lama XIV
Friday, September 2, 2011
Going Beyond the Pets
So, I occasionally teach Doga classes. Yep, yoga for you and your dog. I will write more at another time about how goofy I think this concept sounds and how actually non-goofy I think it is in practice. I mean, how much time do we spend around our dogs without REALLY noticing them? How much time do we spend like that with other people for that matter? There is something to be said about taking 30 minutes and sitting down and giving your full attention to your dog. They are loving, devoted, honest friends and we should feel fortunate to have them and we should tell them as much in a language that they understand. Doga is a great option.
Somehow, people have come to know that I teach Doga and I get requests from time to time to teach at special events and fundraisers for pet rescues. The whole Doga thing started in the first place when my friends at One Tail at a Time rescue asked if I could come up with a Doga class as a fundraiser. I figured that I was already doing plenty of yoga with dogs around in my own home that I might as well learn to invite them into a few poses. It was a success and now the requests come in from all over the city.
One request last year was for an event in a city park. It was a dog-themed event with dog-themed vendors, rescues, and more. All of them in some way touting the benefits of a healthy relationship between you and your pet. While I taught at this event, to my left was a tent cooking and selling bar-b-qued animals. So here I am trying to encourage people to connect with the animal at the other end of the leash (which was one of the goals of the whole event, responsible pet care) while this tent is serving up the cooked flesh of animals that are not all that different than the dogs we're there to celebrate. Another Doga event I was invited to teach, which I turned down, was for a monthly class followed by a social bar-b-que. Connect with this animal as your trusted friend and devoted companion, but butcher another and call them dinner? Where is the disconnect, my friends?
Yoga teaches that all beings have a divine spark. A part of them that is exactly the same as any other being. Yoga practice leads us to a place where we can discover that spark in ourselves and eventually, in everyone else (including our pets, animals formerly knowns as "food", and insects). The ethical rules of yoga become easy to follow when we look at others and see ourselves or our loved ones. When I look the expressions and behaviors of a cow or a pig or a sheep, I see my beloved dogs and cats. I see animals that want and deserve compassion and dignity. They do not deserve to exist as nothing more than a commodity. As Sri Dharma says, our compassion must extend "beyond the pets." This practice is yoga.
(Photos by Alyse at Out-U-Go Chicago and my partner, Dan.)
Somehow, people have come to know that I teach Doga and I get requests from time to time to teach at special events and fundraisers for pet rescues. The whole Doga thing started in the first place when my friends at One Tail at a Time rescue asked if I could come up with a Doga class as a fundraiser. I figured that I was already doing plenty of yoga with dogs around in my own home that I might as well learn to invite them into a few poses. It was a success and now the requests come in from all over the city.
One request last year was for an event in a city park. It was a dog-themed event with dog-themed vendors, rescues, and more. All of them in some way touting the benefits of a healthy relationship between you and your pet. While I taught at this event, to my left was a tent cooking and selling bar-b-qued animals. So here I am trying to encourage people to connect with the animal at the other end of the leash (which was one of the goals of the whole event, responsible pet care) while this tent is serving up the cooked flesh of animals that are not all that different than the dogs we're there to celebrate. Another Doga event I was invited to teach, which I turned down, was for a monthly class followed by a social bar-b-que. Connect with this animal as your trusted friend and devoted companion, but butcher another and call them dinner? Where is the disconnect, my friends?
Yoga teaches that all beings have a divine spark. A part of them that is exactly the same as any other being. Yoga practice leads us to a place where we can discover that spark in ourselves and eventually, in everyone else (including our pets, animals formerly knowns as "food", and insects). The ethical rules of yoga become easy to follow when we look at others and see ourselves or our loved ones. When I look the expressions and behaviors of a cow or a pig or a sheep, I see my beloved dogs and cats. I see animals that want and deserve compassion and dignity. They do not deserve to exist as nothing more than a commodity. As Sri Dharma says, our compassion must extend "beyond the pets." This practice is yoga.
(Photos by Alyse at Out-U-Go Chicago and my partner, Dan.)
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