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Meet the Experience Life team, and get a behind-the-scenes look at how the magazine comes together each month.

Posts Tagged yoga

Experience Life Magazine

Behind the Scenes: Yoga 4 You

  • Makeup and hair stylist Natalie Hale uses a steamer on the yogis’ wardrobe.

  • Yogi model Martha Williams warms up before her portion of the shoot.

  • Martha finds her balance in Dancer’s Pose while photographer Bob McNamara shoots.

  • Natalie gets yogi model Carlton Morris camera-ready with some light makeup.

  • Carlton adjusts his Warrior II pose.

  • Art director Lydia Anderson and Carlton discuss his photos.

  • Natalie does yogi model Jan Johnson’s makeup.

  • Natalie’s tools of the trade.

  • Lydia and Bob review Jan’s photos, while Natalie readjusts a lock of Jan’s hair.

  • Photos of Jan, ready for review.

  • Yogi model Matt Portwood warms up with some handstands before his shoot.

  • Matt demonstrates his yoga skills with a challenging arm balance.

  • Natalie adjusts Matt’s shirt to smooth out the wrinkles.

  • Matt stays in a challenging foot-behind-the-head pose as he reviews one of his photos.

Since joining the Experience Life staff just over a year ago, I’ve been introduced to lots of new ideas, many of which have worked their way into my daily life in terms of what I eat, how and when I exercise, and trying to live mindfully. But none of my new habits have affected me as much as yoga. And my journey started at the photo shoot for the “Yoga 4 You” article in our April 2013 issue.

Watching our yogi models through my camera lens gave me insight into the way yoga transforms us. I noticed not only the physical strength and grace they each possessed, but also their calm demeanors. The common denominator between them, obviously, is their yoga practice, so I made a New Year’s commitment to take one yoga class per week. I started with Jan Johnson‘s Monday Vinyasa Flow class, which my co-workers Courtney Helgoe and Heidi Wachter already regularly attended.

I was immediately hooked. Jan is an amazing teacher, and Courtney has been super helpful by answering my yoga questions outside of class. My one class per week quickly turned into three to four, as I found myself always needing to know when my next class would be. The LifePower Yoga program has been perfect for me in terms of balancing traditional yoga with physical fitness. I can sweat it out in a Warrior Sculpt class, or really get in touch with myself with Yin/Restorative.

As long as I know I’ll be able to attend a yoga class within a day or two, I feel like I’ll be fine no matter what life throws at me. Every class I take invigorates me emotionally, physically, and spiritually. I try to take my yoga practice off the mat and into my daily activities, and because of it, I feel like I’m slowly becoming a calmer, gentler version of myself (I have a few rough edges that could use softening up).

Thanks to all of our yogis, and especially Jan, for guiding me onto the yoga path!

Experience Life Magazine

Yoga For Me, Yoga for Mamas

I’ve been promising for a few posts now to share why I became a prenatal yoga instructor, a side gig that I squeeze in around working full-time, and being a present wife and mom. So here goes: My yoga journey starts back in 2005, when I began working here at Experience Life …

I had tried yoga in college, but it wasn’t until I was hired on as the full-time associate editor here at Experience Life that I began practicing yoga regularly. Our then managing editor taught Forrest Yoga at a Twin Cities studio, and a couple of us on the team began attending her classes regularly. It was challenging both physically and mentally, and I loved the combination of strength and flexibility that each class offered. I overcame mental blocks around inversions, learned how to use my breath to breathe through intense poses and find inner calm, and discovered a confidence that I had never known. A lifelong athlete (I played multiple sports from grade school through high school, and became an avid runner in college), yoga provided an opportunity for physical and mental development on a deeper level. I was hooked.

I soon began attending vinyasa classes with Andrea Gerasimo, a gifted yogi and feng shui guru who also happens to be the sister of editor in chief Pilar Gerasimo’s (check out the decluttering miracle she worked in my closet in our “Order Out of Chaos” series). It was there that I realized the power of mantras and how to use the breath to flow from one pose to another. I left those practices so relaxed and in tune with my body, and often with a renewed mindset and fresh perspective.

Over the years, teachers have come and gone, and I’ve tried various classes. I’ve learned that hot yoga is NOT for me, and that vinyasa is right up my alley. I’ve taken weeks off and come back to question why on earth I ever stepped away from my mat. It’s transformative.

So when I learned I was pregnant in early 2010, I knew I wanted to make yoga a key part of my prenatal health and wellness regimen. At the recommendation of various friends, I began attending classes at Blooma, a Minneapolis-based yoga studio for expectant mamas, new mamas and their families. It turned out Blooma was about so much more than yoga — it was about community and education and empowering women to trust and believe in their bodies (and themselves!) through this biological process.

SheBelievedMy perspectives about pregnancy shifted as my belly grew, and thanks to the encouragement and knowledge of the amazing instructors, I approached the birth of my daughter with confidence. I knew I couldn’t control all the circumstances surrounding my daughter’s birth, but I was well-informed and empowered.

My daughter was born on a warm fall day in 2010, and the experience, while no doubt the most challenging of my life, was nothing short of amazing. I credit Blooma for helping me have that kind of birth — from the poses and movements I used during labor to the mantras I repeated over and over to the informed decisions my husband and I made throughout those 24 hours. I knew I wanted to share what I had learned with other women.

Fast forward to fall 2011: I learn that Blooma is offering a prenatal yoga teacher training program. This was my chance to embrace that fire and passion that had ignited during my pregnancy and first year as a mom. I signed up without hesitation, and on a cold weekend in January 2012, I joined 12 other women for what would be another transformative experience — physically, emotionally, spiritually, socially. We shared, we cried, we laughed, and we learned SO MUCH about how yoga is a powerful tool in supporting women through pregnancy and birth and motherhood. It was one of those weekends where I knew I was exactly where I needed to be the entire time.

Shortly after the training, I began co-teaching classes with Blooma instructors and subbing whenever the opportunity arose. I taught private prenatal sessions to a friend of a friend. When a long-term subbing opportunity at Blooma arose, I jumped at the chance, and since September, I’ve been teaching one to two classes per week. I’ve taught mamas who are brand-new pregnant to those multiple days past their guess dates. And I’ve received beautiful emails from new moms sharing their birth stories and how what they’ve done and learned in my classes have helped them through the birth experiences.

Those emails and the pictures of the moms and their sweet babies are the reasons I became a prenatal yoga instructor. They’re why I’ll continue to embrace new opportunities to deepen my own practice and knowledge as a teacher, mom and woman for years to come.

Looking to start or deepen your own yoga practice? Watch for the April 2013 issue of Experience Life, which features “Yoga 4 You” — an overview of the four main categories of yoga to help you pinpoint what kind of practice (or practices) might be right for you. 

PHOTO CREDIT: Blooma.com. This saying is a staple in all of the Blooma studios.

 

Experience Life Magazine

Come Fly with Me

I love (and am grateful for) going to exciting and fun places, but I don’t much care for airline travel itself. I tend to feel foggy-headed and nauseous during most of it. I also know planes are great incubators of various germs, an especially relevant concern during cold and flu season. It’s a bummer being sick, but especially so when you’re traveling.

I’m sure you’ve also noticed that airports have limited healthy eating options. It’s a sea of Big Macs, Whoppers, bagels, frozen yogurt and tiny bags of peanuts and pretzels.

The past few times I’ve traveled though, I’ve changed up some things to make it a bit more fun and healthier.

My pre-flight routine now includes using my neti pot to clean out my nasal passages. I also bought a nasal spray to take along as the neti pot is a bit cumbersome to carry in my luggage although it appears they do make travel versions. I got a tip on the nasal spray from some Experience Life twitter followers. It really does pay to be the community engagement specialist!

I follow up the neti pot process with a a series of sun salutations and stretches to get my blood flowing, calm my pre-flight jitters and to clean out my sinuses further.

I add a vitamin C with zinc tablet to my regular daily multivitamin, vitamin D and digestive enzyme regimen. I’ve actually been doing this all winter anytime I know I’m going to a party, the Experience Life office or any place it seems I may be in closer quarters with a lot of other people. So far, I’ve avoided getting a cold or the flu. That tapping sound you hear now is me knocking on wood.

Food wise, I pack my own snack bag. This helps me use up the things I may have on hand in my cupboard and refrigerator so that I don’t have to throw away food. What I end up eating is a little different each time depending on what’s on hand.

This trip, I found the following items in my vegetable bin and cabinet and they made for a pretty delicious and healthy alternative to the airport food options:

  • 2 cups of raw almonds (I didn’t eat these all at once, but  I knew I’d eat them at some point during my vacation.)
  • A KIND bar
  • 2 clementines (more vitamin C!)
  • 1 cucumber (that I sliced into wedges before I left home.)
  • A few slices of (a type of hard, cheddar) cheese along with some rice crackers.
  • 2 squares of dark chocolate
  • The remainder of a bag of pre-washed spinach

I wasn’t sure how I’d like eating raw spinach with no dressing or mixed in with other yummy salad fixings, but it was actually really delicious and spinach is an excellent source of vitamin C and E, beta-carotene, manganese, zinc and selenium, making it an excellent antioxidant and travel companion.

My travel snacks were really good, but mostly they made me feel like I was doing something good for my body, which is just as important in my opinion.

Finally, after all the sitting on the plane, I did a little more yoga (I consider it a way to practice meditation on-the-go) at the gate to a few confused glances and a couple of smiles. I must be on to something here as I came across this article that reports some airports are opening yoga studios.

On my trip home, I’ll try out my nasal spray, pack my own lunch and do more yoga. This time, though, maybe I’ll ask if anyone wants to join me in a moment or two of pre-flight Zen.

Happy and healthy trails!

Heidi Wachter is the Community Engagement Specialist for Experience Life magazine. 

 

 

Experience Life Magazine

Inspired to Make Mistakes

In addition to working full-time as the digital initiatives manager for Experience Life, I also teach one or two prenatal yoga classes per week at Blooma, a prenatal yoga studio here in the Twin Cities (my next blog post will be about why I got into this, so stay tuned!). As I was preparing for my usual Wednesday evening class last week, I went in search of an inspiring passage about the New Year to read during savasana, or final resting pose. Upon googling “New Year, inspiring quotes,” thousands of results were returned. It only took a few quick clicks and page scans, though, for me to find this one by author Neil Gaiman:

I hope that in this year to come, you make mistakes.

Because if you are making mistakes, then you are making new things, trying new things, learning, living, pushing yourself, changing yourself, changing your world. You’re doing things you’ve never done before, and more importantly, you’re Doing Something.

So that’s my wish for you, and all of us, and my wish for myself. Make New Mistakes. Make glorious, amazing mistakes. Make mistakes nobody’s ever made before. Don’t freeze, don’t stop, don’t worry that it isn’t good enough, or it isn’t perfect, whatever it is: art, or love, or work or family or life.

Whatever it is you’re scared of doing, Do it.

Make your mistakes, next year and forever.

Sometimes I get so caught up in trying to make everything perfect (at work, at home, in my creative pursuits), that I freeze when they’re not just so. I hold back instead of pushing forward, instead of allowing myself to fail — to make mistakes.

So inspired by the passage above, I’m dedicating 2013 to taking more chances and putting myself out there in ways that are uncomfortable, challenging — even scary. This year, I’m going to make mistakes, learn from them and grow.

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Completely unrelated to rest of my post above, here’s a picture of a delicious lunch I made myself at the office earlier this week — one that fellow editor Anjula Razdan said I had to share here. I found the recipe for the “Avocado Chicken Salad” on Pinterest, and let me tell you, it did not disappoint. The green salad, hummus and lentil crackers were team leftovers. YUM!

Avocado Chicken Salad with green, hummus and lentil crackers

For the avocado chicken salad recipe, visit BecomingBetty.Blogspot.com.

Experience Life Magazine

One Year Left

This week, I turn 29 years old. With only one year left of my 20s, I’ve decided it’s time to get moving on some of the goals that have been sitting stagnant for quite a while. I mean, how great is going to feel to have accomplished all of this by the time I turn the big 3-0?!

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  • Complete my third half marathon (I have absolutely zero desire to do a marathon, for those of you who may be wondering why I don’t just go the next step — 13.1 is JUUUST right for me).
  • Complete an individual sprint triathlon and a team International triathlon.
  • Begin a 200-hour Yoga Alliance-certified yoga teacher training program.
  • Plant a REAL garden. In the ground. (A few potted plants are OK.) 
  • Try rock climbing — I’m inspired by my fellow team member, Jocelyn, who has been rocking the climbing wall.
  • Go on a yoga retreat, even if it’s just for a weekend. 

I’ll track my progress toward these various ambitions here throughout the next year. It’ll keep me accountable, and launch me into my 30s on a very high note!

My younger sister, Jenna, and me (left), after completing the Madison Half-Marathon in May 2009. It was her first, my second. I cut seven minutes off of my time. Here’s to finishing my third in under two hours!

Experience Life Magazine

What Is Yoga For?

Many great things happened when I attended the Yoga Journal Conference last weekend in Lake Geneva, Wis. I learned to chant the Gayatri mantra from memory. Senior Anusara teacher Desiree Rumbaugh taught me to expand my backbend by about a thousand degrees. And the beatific founder of Purna Yoga, Aadil Palkhivala asked me a really good question: “Why do you practice yoga?”

He didn’t want an answer, which was nice, because after 12 years of practice I didn’t have one immediately. My reasons for practicing seem to change all the time, and they’re not always so spiritual. Sometimes I practice because it feels good to stand on my head or open my shoulders or go into backbend. Other times I practice because if I don’t I will never kick up into arm balance without help, and I’ve been trying too long to quit now.

So that question lingered with me throughout the week, and a more satisfying answer did finally come to me yesterday afternoon. It wasn’t during a headstand, though. I was visiting a beloved wheelchair-bound relative and helping off her commode toilet. While struggling to dislodge the full bucket to empty it in the flush toilet, I spilled its entire contents on the carpet of her room. Dropped it like a hot rock. Oh yes, dear reader, I did. I will leave that mess to your imagination.

Meanwhile (and here’s where events become notable), panic did not take over. Not completely, anyway. What happened was: I got some rubber gloves and disinfectant and paper towels and start scrubbing with what I hope was a minimum of fanfare. My extremely gracious relative cracked jokes while I cleaned. Exactly nobody drowned in shame or discomfort, though the seeming worst had happened. The mess got removed and we got on with our day together.

It was while scrubbing that the answer to Mr. Palkhivala’s question popped into my head. This is what yoga is for. It’s for when, incidentally, s&#T happens onto the carpet. The physical benefits of yoga are so obvious and appreciable that it’s easy to forget that yoga is training for the mind; physical practice (asana) is only one of the eight “limbs.” The rest address the practice of ethical behavior and compassion toward others (yama), self-restraint (pratyahara), and the like. What we do on the mat, then, is only about 1/8 of yoga. The other 7/8 is all about the carpet.

Experience Life Magazine

Fitting Fitness In Post-Baby

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In my pre-baby life, I exercised regularly. I easily fit strength and cardio workouts into my schedule most days of the week; I almost always made it to my favorite yoga class; I played in a weekly sand volleyball league; I trained for two half-marathons and several smaller events.

These days, I’m lucky to squeeze in 15 minutes of any activity: I desperately miss exercising consistently.

Don’t get me wrong, I adore my daughter and love being a mom. I’m just struggling to find a balance that allows me to satisfactorily live the values most important to me, including being as healthy and fit as I can be.

So when I read this passage from Laurie Kocanda and Kara Douglass Thom’s new book, Hot (Sweaty) Mamas: Five Secrets to Life as a Fit Mom, I was comforted in the fact that I’m not alone in the struggle to fit fitness in:

Now that you’re a mother — with nothing left to imagination — you know there will be days when workouts will need to be squeezed in between feedings, when you may get interrupted during a kickboxing class to change a poopy diaper, when yoga will be preempted by Little League, and even times, yes, when you simply will be too exhausted to move another step.

These are universal dilemmas for fit moms everywhere. Some days these issues are little hiccups in our day; other times we feel like the groove is gone and lost forever. But you can be committed to both motherhood and fitness. Sure, the more you want to work out, the more planning it will take on the front end. That planning requires you to stay true to yourself and what is important to you.

Ah, that planning piece. Before having a little person in my life, I could head out for a run or go to the gym without a moment’s notice. Now there are naps, feedings and childcare to consider, on top of the preparation it takes just to get out of the house: Do I have my shoes, her bottle? How about Sophie the Giraffe, her very favorite toy that we can’t leave home without?

On the few instances that I have taken the time to plan, it’s been worth every ounce of effort. Case in point: I recently made it to a beloved yoga class at 8 a.m. on a Saturday morning. I’d been trying to get to the class for weeks, but something always came up (at least in my mind!). This time, I asked my mother-in-law to watch MK; I packed both our bags the night before; I got up early enough that we didn’t have to rush out of the house. I arrived to class with enough time to settle in and chat with the other women.

Then, for an hour and 15 minutes, I moved into poses and breathed in ways that I hadn’t in months. At one point I pushed myself to a physical edge; at the end of the practice, I relaxed fully into shivasana. When it was all said and done, I left feeling strong, open and light. I felt like my old self on my way to pick up my baby girl.

It was a reminder of how important it is to make the time for me, even if it does take a little more front-end effort. It also made me realize that while I may not be able to get in as many workouts as I once did — at least not quite yet — there are still relatively quick and easy ways to experience the physical and psychological benefits of exercise:

  • Do a 20-minute yoga or Pilates video while MK naps
  • Take MK with me on walks or jogs, either in the front carrier or jogging stroller
  • Now that it’s light out later, go for a run AFTER MK goes to bed
  • Do squats, planks, pushups, jumping jacks, kettlebell swings or whatever fits the mood first thing in the morning
  • Do a 15-minute yoga sequence before bed
  • Use the exercise bands to create an at-home strength workout
  • Keep a stack of workouts that I can do at home next to my equipment so I can grab and do them when there’s time

The list could go on. . . . What are your strategies for fitting fitness in to your busy schedule?

Related Reading:
New Baby, New Body” (September 2007)
Bye-Bye, Baby Weight” (September 2004)
Where Fitness Fits In” (Jan/Feb 2007)

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