12.10.2012
Deck the Halls with Balls of Chocolate
The good news is...wait for it...I have yet to eat a truffle! Although I did eat three bulls-eyes. (Out of context that sounds weird). I was thinking about giving it to my sister for Christmas but I found this great hakuna matata ring on Etsy that I think would be a great gift for her so recipient of choco-wreath is yet to be determined.
http://www.livingonadime.com/candy-christmas-wreath/
12.07.2012
Dontcha wanna Dosha?
Apparently, I am not good at any of these things and switch from task to task depending on how I feel motivated that day. Often times, I feel lazy and lethargic and other days quite drawn to a task. To even out my scattered tendencies, I decided to go back and look at my dosha. What is a dosha? According the Ayurveda (Indian health/medical practice), a dosha is your natural constitution. Back in 2010, I was evaluated to share about equal traits in all three doshas: Vata (air), Pitta (fire), and Kapha (water). Taking a second look now at the end of 2012, while I still have characteristics in all three areas, I constitute more strongly as a Vata-Pitta. Balancing for someone who is bi-doshic is more difficult that a person who falls more solidly in one area as there is the danger of unbalancing one dosha while trying to balance the other. For example, for a Vata, it is recommended to keep warm and eat spicy foods while a Pitta would want to avoid anything with heat in order to balance his/her dosha.
Luckily, we can group our constitutions based on characteristic and treat each characteristic separately. Physically, I am mostly Vata, so I should wear warm colors, keep a routine sleep and eating schedule, and stay warm, whereas my disposition shares Vata and Pitta traits thus making it more difficult to make changes in my daily routine in order to balance my dosha in this area.
Yoga poses also lend themselves to keeping you and your dosha in balance. Yoga journal published an article on different Arurvedic actions you can take in reaction to stress including yoga poses and practices. It is also fairly easy to create a balanced yoga practice in order to account for a bi-doshic personality. Students should consider their own dosha when choosing a yoga class or building their own home practice. A Vata dominant would not want to take a vinyasa class three times a week though that is probably what they are drawn to. Rather, they should mix up their practice with something more meditative such as yin to help ground them.
7.11.2012
White Noise and Meditation
http://www.rainymood.com/ and http://calm.com
Rainy mood just plays rain and thunder in the background, and at Calm.com you can select different environments as well as timed meditation.
4.30.2012
4.27.2012
3.28.2012
Wilco Festival!!
3.12.2012
3.05.2012
2.29.2012
A poem that Antonio wrote about our trip
2.28.2012
You are what you Yoga!
Alanna and I put together her new website! Hooray! Take a look....
http://www.youarewhatyouyoga.com/
There are still a few changes in the works, but it's fully functional! :)
And hey, I finished my sweater!
1.30.2012
My First Sweater!
I have been knitting my first ever sweater!
I have dubbed her (yes, it is a her) the Mermaid Cardigan, because the color is green like a mermaid. I've been having fun dreaming about all of the next sweaters I'm going to knit, and also trying to choose buttons. See? Wicket has been helping.
1.25.2012
1.03.2012
Soul Mate
Yoga Journal had some good insight today...
A committed yoga practice can absolutely transform our relationships. "Through our yoga practice, we learn to look at ourselves, including the parts of us that are less evolved. Learning how to do this physically, with discomfort in an asana, helps us to do this emotionally," says Bo Forbes, who is a yoga teacher, Integrative Yoga Therapist, and clinical psychologist in Boston. "If we can't sit with our emotions, we are more likely to act them out on ourselves or others."
Our culture and traditions school us to believe that someday our prince (or princess) will come, that a relationship has the potential to solve problems like loneliness, that the right partner will make us feel whole. Popular romantic movies propagate the myth of another person completing us. On the face of it, the idea of being "completed" by another seems deeply romantic. But it's a fantasy that can weigh down a relationship with impossible expectations. The truth is that while your partner can offer many things, he or she can't "complete" you. The only person who can give you a sense of security and an unshakable love of you is you. And though you may "know" this with your mind, sometimes feelings of unworthiness, insecurity, and incompleteness are so deeply buried that you aren't even aware of them or of how they influence your behavior.
full article: http://www.yogajournal.com/wisdom/2520?utm_source=Wisdom&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=Wisdom
Alpaca Eyelet Cowl
I based it off of this awesome pattern here:
...but I modified it (since I used bulkier yarn) by using bigger needles and casting on less stitches (which is why this is so quick!). I'd like to do another version just like this one with lightweight yarn for warmer days. The one I made is cozier looking and not as delicate.
When I get a picture of me wearing my cowl I'll add it....
Here is the pattern:
Gauge: 4x4 inches = 15 Stitches and 20 rows on size 10 needles
Needles: Size 10 circular needles (36 inch ones)
Yarn: 2 skeins of Bernat Alpaca in Tundra (only used about 1/4 of the second skein). This yarn was a Christmas present, but you can find it at Michael's.
- Cast on 144 stitches, and join in the round. BE SUPER CAREFUL not to twist the yarn!
- Work 4 rounds of garter stitch (knit 1 round, purl the next round, repeat).
- Now knit the first Eyelet Section:
Rnd 1: Yo, K2tog to marker
Rnd2: K2tog, Yo to marker
Repeat rounds 1 and 2 again, then repeat round 1 again. - Now knit the Solid Section:
Knit 5 rounds of stockinette stitch (knit every round).
Purl 1 round
Knit 5 rounds of stockinette stitch. - Knit the second Eyelet Section.
- Work 4 rounds of garter stitch (knit 1 round, purl the next round, repeat).
- Cast off loosely.
- Be cozyyyy.
And in case you were wondering, here's a sort-of close up where you can see the eyelet pattern, with the solid pattern in the middle, and then the eyelet pattern again: