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Posts Tagged ‘meditation’

Slowing Down, And the Benefits of Meditation

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

I recently did an interview for a site called Hip Mountain Mama.  Here’s a portion of that where I talk about the benefits of even just a few minutes of meditation each day.

You can view the whole interview here.

SuzyWhy do you think it is important for people to slow down and simplify in this day in age?

SaraBecause we’re all, simply put, moving too quickly. Life didn’t use to be like this. We didn’t used to be “plugged in” every minute of the day. We took walks, we sang to the birds, we ran barefoot and sat in silence. All of this is so important for our brains, our muscles, our digestion, and our spirits.
I will always remember one particular day during college. I was stressed and over-worked and worried and I called my mom to cry to her a bit. And she told me that I needed to find a park bench and to sit and watch the squirrels for a while. That’s it. Just watch the squirrels.
It’s still what I do today when I’m overly stressed. I call a time-out and I just sit and watch the birds or the squirrels.
A fantastic practice to get into is a short meditation session in the morning or evening every single day. The simple act of emptying your mind and breathing deep, cleansing breaths can be so incredibly healing.

I do believe in the powerful healing forces of meditation.

Among other things, meditation can:

  • Increase blood flow and slow your heart rate
  • Increase serotonin production to positively enhance mood and behavior.
  • Enhance the immune system.

Try it today!

Also on SaraSnow.com

Try a hammock for your health

Friday, November 20th, 2009

This time of year can be quite stressful.  Gifts to buy, pies and cookies to bake, dust bunnies to clean in preparation for the guests you have to pick up from the airport.  Relax?  Yeah right!

What if relieving all that stress was as easy as kicking back for just a few in a hammock hung in the backyard or, even, back of the basement?

Sounds pretty good, right?

Here’s how it works.

According to research on the hammock site, Hangouts.com, everyday people, as well as trained therapists, have been using hammocks and hanging chairs as a means of relieving stress and physical aches and pains.

Back and neck pain is often quite quickly and easily relieved by lying perpendicular on a hammock.  To do so, you’ll find yourself lying across the hammock, rather than lengthwise.

According to Hangouts.com (also the source for the picture here), The support removes pressure points and thus allows the muscles of the body to relax. Support without pressure points allows the blood to flow to all body parts and thus maximizes the healing potential that our bodies have. Without pressure points the verdabrae of the body can begin to align themselves.

The hammock works, in a sense, like a massage, helping you achieve a similar physical state of muscle relaxation equivalent to a massage session.  Pregnant women have also found that hammocks help to relive prenatal pains and allow them to sleep more soundly.

Many enjoy sitting cross-legged, in a meditative yoga sit, in their hammock.  Doing so, allows the body and mind to relax so they can achieve a deep meditation and a state of muscle relaxation similar to a yoga session.

The swinging and spinning motions of a hammock can even help Autism patients.  By stimulating cerebral activity it can help  increase one’s ability to focus and concentrate.  Good not only for Autistic children, but for those suffering from ADD, ADHD, or for any of us who lack the ability to focus from time to time.

But if you find yourself without a backyard or front porch fitting for a hammock (or weather unfitting at the moment), don’t worry.  Hammocks can be hung and enjoyed just as easily indoors.

orange-grey-sThough I remember swinging in our old rope hammock as a child, I more recently tried out a slicker version from Eagle’s Nest Outfitters.

The company was founded in the summer of 1999 by brothers Peter and Paul, who decided to leave the traditional workplace behind and make hanging out a full time occupation.

The brothers wanted something that would not only challenge them but would also be laid back, allowing them to live their lives in no particular way but their own. Starting with a sewing machine and a vision, they began sewing hammocks and slap straps in their sister’s garage.

They first traveled the  East Coast in a beat up old mini van, setting up shop selling and sleeping in whatever parking spots they could find. The response was beyond their expectations and soon the boys found themselves established high up on the Blue Ridge Mountains where they set up full-time shop supplying  hammocks and accessories to like-minded people all over the world.

Sounds like a story I’d like to be a part of!

Find their fantastic collection of beautiful and well-made hammocks and accessories at EaglesNestOutfittersInc.com.

Also on SaraSnow.com

Slow down to recharge

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

My acupuncturist recently gave me three interesting and new “prescriptions” that involve changes to my diet and my exercise plan.  And when your acupuncturist is the renowned Dr. Bong Dal Kim, you listen.

Because these changes are new for me, too, I figured this was the perfect place for us to begin this blog journey together.  I won’t share all three with you today (I don’t want to overload you, too!) but I’ll start with the fitness change since I’m writing here on the e-pages of Fitness Magazine. 

Though I love to exercise and feel, like many of you I’m sure, particularly great after a good sweat session, Dr. Kim has asked me to make a different form of exercise my first priority – meditation.  Mind you, I’ve always punctuated my workout routine with a regular yoga practice, but I hadn’t ever spent time a portion of every single day meditating.  Now I’m doing that.  If I’m not going to be in a yoga class that day, then I begin the morning by sitting cross legged on the floor (or sometimes on a chair if I feel like I’m going to tip over from fatigue….I’m not to the point of levitating yet) for 20 minutes or so breathing deeply.  Simply counting each breath in and out is the best way to get started, Dr. Kim told me, and it’s the method I’ve followed.  

Dr. Kim has also told me that I don’t have to stress, as many meditation novices do, about clearing my mind of all thoughts, rather I should acknowledge a thought when it comes to my mind, and then deliberately dismiss it.  And it hasn’t been as hard as I might have thought.

Since beginning my practice, I’ve noticed that I’m slower and more deliberate in everything.  My vinyasa flow has more focus and intention.  My daily meditation is a practice in slow, even breathing.  Even when I hit the treadmill, elliptical or the sidewalks, I have a new intention, and it feels good. 

It’s always been interesting to me how fitness can mean different things to different people at different times in their lives.  It means something different when you’re training for a marathon versus when you’re recovering from one.  Exercise can be a different experience in the morning as in the night.  And for women it can be very different at the beginning, middle and end of your monthly cycle. 

For me right now, it’s about focused and deliberate actions – in my meditation and my daily strolls, but it’s branching out into so much more.  And that feels really good!