New You for a New Year

Hope everyone had a wonderful Christmas. It was certainly a nice long weekend.
So now we turn to the New Year. Since this is a time of year when many people decide to make a new beginning, here is one more reason to include yoga and pilates in your list of resolutions.
It will probably come as no surprise to most of you that approximately 85% of Americans experience low back pain at some point in their lives.  How to deal with low back pain?  The solution may be a bit more of a surprise. According to Harvard Medical School, the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons and the Mayo Clinic, exercise is listed as the number one solution for low back pain prevention.  The most important goals when exercising for this purpose are stretching the back and legs and strengthening the core (abdominal) muscles. And now for some really good news:  yoga and pilates both include exercises that do exactly that and more.
If you want more information, check out this article on exercising to beat back pain. And remember – there are no requirements in any class. If any move is too difficult or challenging, don’t do it.  Simple as that.  Just do what you can. No matter what that is it’s better than doing nothing.  The more you move, the easier it gets.  And, conversely, the less you move the more difficult it gets.  So start where you are and go from there.  We are all an experiment of one.  Pilates and yoga are designed to strengthen the connection between your mind and your body.  Focus on your own body and your own needs. You may be surprised to find out how much you actually can do and how much better you feel when you do it.
There are always caveats and all practioners should check with a health care professional before starting any exercise program.  Also, a private session with an experienced teacher may be a better choice than a class for anyone with specific concerns.  But most people can do more than they think they can.  And it is my firm belief that if you can move, there is a movement program that can be designed to help you maintain or even improve your abilities.
So before you say “I can’t”, give it a try.  There will never be a better time than now.
Happy New Year to all.  It is my fervent hope that we find a way to experience peace on our planet.  Peace and non-violence begin with each individual.  May you each find your own peace this year.

When Illness Happens to Healthy People

As you many of you know, throughout the years I have been a strong advocate of yoga and Pilates for maintaining health and wellness.  Now I find myself once again facing the prospect of dealing with cancer.  My first experience some 12 years ago was relatively mild compared to this one.  So some of you may be thinking “how could a health practitioner and advocate like Peg become so sick??” Or  worse, “why should I bother if illness may come to me whether or not I practice yoga or Pilates or even exercise regularly?”

Here are my responses:  First, illness or accident or anything unexpected can happen to any of us at any time.  If you are reading this and are over the age of, say, 20, it is probably safe to say that not one among us has escaped trauma during our lives.  All trauma is relative.  What may seem trivial to one can mean serious suffering to another.  The way we perceive experience is the way we internalize it.  We have all had difficult experiences.  The older we get, the more these experiences accumulate.  This is life.  These are part of what makes us who we are.

One recurring theme you may recognize in my writing is the constancy of change.  Everything is always changing.  The best predictions are guesses.  No one knows what the future holds – good or bad.  That’s assuming we still want to use those labels:  “good” meaning things we think we want to happen and “bad” meaning things we don’t want to happen.  All of which is, of course, very subjective.  None of this is to say that cancer is a “good” thing.  But it is what it is.  It has no agenda other than survival – just like healthy cells.  It’s not right or wrong or good or bad.  It just is.

During these past 3 weeks as I recover from surgery, I’ve been struck by the number of people who have told me how “good” I look.  This brings me to the second question, “why should I bother . . .etc.”.  The answer is simple:  if you want to survive life’s traumas you need strength, flexibility and balance.  Does that ring a bell?  It should!  These are the main benefits of yoga, Pilates and exercise in general.  And there are so many more.  In response to hearing how good I look I’ve been saying that I am a walking advertisement for the disciplines I advocate and try to maintain.   Something else you’ve all frequently heard me say – it’s never too late to start.  No matter where you are, you can gain in strength, flexibility and balance.  Just like any other experience, these qualities are relative also.  What’s strong for you may be different for someone else, but it is still strength.  All you have to do is start and then keep practicing.  Yet another sentiment I frequently express is how practicing yoga and Pilates will help you with all aspects of your life.  Perhaps my experience will help you to see how true that rea is.

None of us can escape trauma.  But we can learn to roll with the punches.  Or at least we can try.  It’s never easy, but fighting with reality doesn’t make it any easier.  Acceptance doesn’t have to mean giving in or in any way being happy about the state of things as they are.  All it means is that we acknowledge what we cannot change and move on from there.  We may not be very good at this and we certainly will never be perfect, but we can practice.  And each day – maybe each moment – offers a new opportunity to practice.

I am exceedingly grateful to the wonderfully supportive community of which I am privileged to be a part.  You all make my efforts at practice that much more significant and rewarding.  Thanks to all.

“Yoga teaches us to cure what need not be endured and to endure what cannot be cured.”

BKS Iyengar

“A hundred flowers blossom in spring, the moon shines in autumn, there is a fresh breeze in summer, and there is snow in winter. If your mind isn’t occupied with trivial matters, every time is a good time.”

Wumen Huikai, “Zen Basics”