Easing the Stress~Day #3

  • By Susan Reynolds
  • 08 Apr, 2020

April 8

Some Covid-19 days feel almost normal, while others are extremely stressful. One day was exceptionally so. Maybe it was a string of rainy days here in California, I’m sure it was because I wasn’t practicing yoga. It was before I’d come back to the mat. In hindsight, “What was I thinking skipping yoga?”

 

I’d forgotten that stress and anxiety are contagious, and in a household with different competing stresses: health, finances, and cabin fever, there were a couple of days that topped the charts. Somehow remembering the contagion factor helped me breathe more deeply and commit to a yoga routine.

 

It seems so obvious. I know the strategies for managing this stress. I teach them, but I don’t always do them. I speak and write about the ways technology contribute to anxiety and stress the nervous system. Screen apnea was first researched by Linda Stone. Yes it’s a thing and is when we hold our breath when we check a text, email or Instagram. I believe it’s one of the reasons so many teens and college students are suffering from an increase in anxiety and depression. We send our nervous system into fight, flight or freeze each time we forget to exhale. Just living in the digital age creates a low hum of anxiety for all of us, so you can imagine what’s happening now when screen time is up along with this enormity of crisis our world is facing.

 

But yoga is all about coming back to the beginning, and in many ways, writing these short blogs have reminded me all over again. Somehow adopting a rescue dog who needs who needs to be walked on a daily, routine basis (without a phone or a screen) has made a big difference, too.

 

On The Mat Yoga Blog

By Linda Malcomb May 3, 2020

“There is a light in the core of our being that calls us home—one that can only be seen with closed eyes; We can feel it as a radiance in the center of our chest. This light of loving awareness is always here, regardless of our conditioning. It does not matter how many dark paths we have traveled or how many wounds we have inflicted or sustained as we have unknowingly stumbled toward this inner radiance. It does not matter how long we have sleepwalked, seduced by our desires and fears. This call persists until it is answered, until we surrender to who we really are. When we do, we feel ourselves at home wherever we are. A hidden beauty reveals itself in our ordinary life. As the true nature of our Deep Hear is unveiled, we feel increasingly grateful for no reason—grateful to simply be.”

—John J. Prendergast, PHD, The Deep Heart  

By Linda Malcomb May 2, 2020

Seems like it’s been rainy, windy, dreary for eons. Which may have helped us shelter inside a bit more. I remember reading years and years ago in a Seth book that weather can be influenced, and even created by mass human emotion. Why not? We are far more powerful than we currently acknowledge, and science is beginning to validate many phenomena that had seemed inconceivable before. Those seemingly endless days of “bad” weather seemed congruent with the emotional tone of covid her in New England. And now SUN! Glorious, warming, invigorating, hope-filled Sun! Today I will be outside basking and gardening and thanking. And I’m sure the whole neighborhood, and most of New England will go outside, stand with our faces to the sun and breathe a huge healing breath of joy. And maybe the collective energy of that will resonate out across the word as a promise of brighter days to come.     


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