Thursday 12 July 2018

A Year of Living Your Yoga: Finding the Spiritual in Everyday Life by Judith Hanson Lasater






Realizing that your life is about learning will reduce self-judgment and contribute to your happiness.


The greatest avoidance strategy is I don’t have time.



 Discipline is not supported by ambition but by consistency.




To improve your communication today, translate whatever anyone says to you as a request for attention and respect. 




Emotions arise when beliefs are challenged.




Teach for yourself; practice for your students.


Today notice when you are agitated, or angry, or upset. Then ask yourself: what belief of mine has just been challenged?



Being curious is a high state of being.




Thoughts are just neurotransmitters locking into receptor sites; they are not truth.




Wonder perfectly combines curiosity, gratitude, and presence.




Yoga is not about touching your toes; it is about what you learn on the way down.





If you want to be loving, first accept your ability to hate.




Tension is your body’s response to the past.




Simplicity carried to extreme is elegance.




The mind can’t be controlled; it can be observed.




Today notice how you cling to control as a strategy to feel safe.




Letting go means realizing you weren’t in charge anyway.




Ask yourself which pain you want – the pain of moving through your challenge, or the pain of avoiding it.




The nature of mind is to be agitated.




When you try to protect people by not telling them the truth, you multiply their suffering.




Meditation… is the art of just being with your mental agitation, without the need to control or eliminate it.  This process creates a disidentification with your thoughts that is the basis of all true freedom.




Our beliefs create a screen between what is and how we want things to be.




Fear is never about the present moment.




Taking care of others’ needs cannot be done well and willingly without taking care of yourself.




Anger takes many forms.  Count how many times today you feel frustrated, or irritated, or impatient.  These are the number of times you have disconnected from yourself.



Impatience is the surface of anger.



The more difficult a thing is, the more it requires softness.



If you feel agitated, sad, or afraid today, ask yourself, What am I resisting?



We feel insecure when we forget our connection to ourselves.  Then we feel afraid and try to control everything around us.




Hold the difficult as sacred.




Three times today, stop and ask yourself, what is true and alive for me right now? Then live from that understanding.




True freedom is the ability to be radically present to what arises, regardless of what it is.



Righteous anger is redundant. I can never be angry when I accept that I am wrong.  Today, when you feel irritated or angry, pause and identify the thought that fuels your belief in your rightness.




Shifting and giving in are not the same things.




Acceptance and acknowledgment are not the same.




Beliefs are thoughts that get repeated enough to take on a kind of internal structure.




When we are confused, we feel agitated.  This agitation has more to do with what we tell ourselves about being confused rather than actually being confused.




Whatever we experienced as a child, we consider normal.




We are either in the flow with the speed of what is happening or we are impatient.  Being patient is an attempt to cover our own impatience.




Reality is just one point of view.




Listening is being willing to be changed by what we hear. 




You are raising your grandchildren by how you raise your children.




My words reflect my thoughts; my thoughts reflect my beliefs; and my beliefs run my life.





Simple and easy are not the same thing.




Worrying is a way to avoid what is so by thinking about what could be.




What my senses tell me is only part of the truth.