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Using yoga to clear out creative block

Posted: May 4, 2013 at 5:45 pm


On a bustling 25th Street in Oakland's Uptown District, a group of people gathered in front of a storefront gallery and witnessed an innovative window display.

Wearing a yoga top and Capri pants, her body glistening with painted designs, Jillian Bobowicz moved fluidly from a Downward Dog yoga pose to a Warrior Two. From the corner of her eye she saw a little girl shriek with delight and heard her say "One of the mannequins just moved!"

Remaining poised despite the onlookers, Bobowicz said she balanced her body and mind amid the flurry of activity during Oakland's Art Murmur that Friday evening.

"The distractions were there but you use that challenge as a tool to concentrate and remain calm," she said.

Bobowicz and fellow yogis displayed yoga poses as performance art in the storefront window of the 25th Street Collective, a vintage warehouse -- tucked away among a row of car repair shops between Telegraph and Broadway -- where local artists create and showcase their work.

That first Friday of April officially launched "Yoga for Artists," an event organized by Bobowicz, her sister Chelsea and Walnut Creek artist Jenna Mitchell to give artists space to heal as well as gain inspiration to create works of art.

"For me, yoga is my art. It really comes down to practicing yoga as a form of personal expression," said Bobowicz, a Walnut Creek resident. "Yoga has provided an infinite source of wisdom from within."

As

While many artists boast the therapeutic benefits of creating art, as a yoga teacher, Bobowicz was concerned about the repetitive stress that plagues artists as they work.

"Jewelers can hammer over and over again, painters use their hands and wrists to do brush strokes, and writers crouch at their desks and type -- stress that builds up on important parts of the body can become a block so the creative force can't flow through," Bobowicz said. "We want to keep these body parts open and healthy. I see this as occupational therapy for artists."

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Using yoga to clear out creative block

Written by simmons |

May 4th, 2013 at 5:45 pm

Posted in Financial

Yoga as a Paraplegic: Howie Sanborn's Story

Posted: at 5:45 pm


After joining the U.S. Army in 2000 as an Airborne Ranger, Howie Sanborn served two tours in Iraq and became a member of the army's parachute team, the Golden Knights. Sanborn has performed 2,500 free fall parachute jumps at events across the country. About five years ago, he started participating in triathlons, which involve a combination of swimming, cycling and running. He joined a yoga class on the base in Fort Bragg, N.C. to make himself stretch more in preparation for the events. He wound up going several times a week and began training to become a certified yoga instructor. In September 2012, when Sanborn was about 140 hours into his 200-hour yoga training, he and a friend went on a bike ride. A distracted driver hit the two men, and Sanborn became paralyzed from the waist down.

"I credit a lot of how quickly, both mentally and physically, I bounced back from my accident to yoga," Sanborn says. "It really allowed me to live in the moment."

Sanborn tells U.S. News how he continued living in the moment, practicing yoga and competing in athletics after his injury. His responses have been edited.

Can you tell me a little bit about your injury--what can you feel and not feel?

Every injury is very different. For me, I can kind of feel touch through most of my left leg--not so much in my right leg. But I can feel pain in both of them. My doctors think that most of my pain is referred pain from my back injury. So, I do stretches for my hamstrings and pigeon pose, which helps open up my hip flexers. These poses help with the pain in my legs.

If I sit in my chair all day, I will be a wreck when it's time to go to sleep. I need to be out of my chair; I have to get on the floor; I have to stretch. I know that, from the many other wheelchair users I've met who haven't done this over the years, your muscles start to atrophy, and a lot of them become what they call "chair-shaped" in an "L." At that point, some of them can't even lay on their stomach because their hip flexers are so tight. That's something that I don't want to ever happen to me, given the knowledge that I have of what could be. For me, I was already in great shape when I got hurt, which carried over after the injury. Then there's the spiritual side, too, as far as learning to control your breathing and stress management. I think that really played a huge part in being able to cope with the loss of the use of my legs.

Could you elaborate on how yoga has helped you mentally?

Yoga practice can be an important time to be very selfish and forget about everything else. When you come into the yoga studio, you leave everything at the door. During that hour, you focus on you, your body and breathing. You learn how to stop thinking, which can be very difficult to do at the pace of life we're living. It seems like we always have a million things bouncing around in our heads. So you take just that session and focus on yoga and breathing, and then we can use that later on. So when I was doing my therapy and felt really overwhelmed with my circumstance, I was able to turn it inward and focus on my breathing, and let that calm of meditation settle over me. It made it a lot easier to get through some of the harder periods that I was going through.

How did you know how to modify poses?

Because I was an instructor, I learned the fundamentals and a lot about each pose, which made it easy for me to look at each one and say, "OK, this pose I can do the same way as before, and this other pose--because I have a titanium rod in my back--I can't do the same way. So I'm going to modify it." Also, there are sometimes two poses that give the same benefit, and sometimes there will be one you can do and another you can't. So I do the one I can do correctly. Obviously, I can't use my legs, so I can't do any balancing poses on my legs. But, because of my paralysis, I still have to work on balancing with just my core. So I can still hold a warrior II pose, and it can still be different for me, but difficult in a different way. I still use my core muscles, hold the poses if I'm seated and get a lot of benefit out of it.

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Yoga as a Paraplegic: Howie Sanborn's Story

Written by simmons |

May 4th, 2013 at 5:45 pm

Posted in Financial

Wedge The Spine To Get Rid Of Upper Back And Neck Pain – Video

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Wedge The Spine To Get Rid Of Upper Back And Neck Pain
http://www.tridoshawellness.com/ Physical Therapist, Clinical Ayurveda Herbalist and Exercise Science Specialist --------------------------------------------...

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Wedge The Spine To Get Rid Of Upper Back And Neck Pain - Video

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May 4th, 2013 at 6:45 am

Posted in Health and Fitness

Day 1 My Six Pack Life – Video

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Day 1 My Six Pack Life
Click http://www.MySixPackLife.com TRANSFORM your body and your life! Great Abs and the body of your dreams are just 69 Days away. Make it happen. This is Da...

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May 4th, 2013 at 6:44 am

Posted in Health and Fitness

Weekday Wakeup Workout – 30/04/2013 – Video

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Weekday Wakeup Workout - 30/04/2013
Visit http://LIVE.SmashTheFat.com to get more FREE workouts, recipes, headlines and interviews with health and fitness experts from around the world! 8 Round...

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Weekday Wakeup Workout - 30/04/2013 - Video

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May 4th, 2013 at 6:44 am

Posted in Health and Fitness

Day 2 My Six Pack Life – Video

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Day 2 My Six Pack Life
Click http://www.MySixPackLife.com TRANSFORM your body and your life! Great Abs and the body of your dreams are just 69 Days away. Make it happen. This is Da...

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May 4th, 2013 at 6:44 am

Posted in Health and Fitness

One-Minute Bikini-Core Challenge: Three-Point Touch – Video

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One-Minute Bikini-Core Challenge: Three-Point Touch
Now is the time to get beach-ready, and the three-point touch is perfect for toning your abs. Get the skinny on this plank variation here, and then see how m...

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One-Minute Bikini-Core Challenge: Three-Point Touch - Video

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May 4th, 2013 at 6:44 am

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Three-Point Touch Plank Variation | Bikini Abs RX | Fitness How To – Video

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Three-Point Touch Plank Variation | Bikini Abs RX | Fitness How To
Now is the time to get beach-ready, and the three-point touch is perfect for toning your abs. This simple but effective exercise works the entire core with a...

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May 4th, 2013 at 6:44 am

Posted in Health and Fitness

Durianrider

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Durianrider Freelee VS The Snake Oil Sellers
Durianrider Freelee VS The Snake Oil Sellers.

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May 4th, 2013 at 6:44 am

Posted in Health and Fitness

A Conversation With Bobby Bayliss: Part 1, Retirement – Video

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A Conversation With Bobby Bayliss: Part 1, Retirement
After 44 years as a head coach, including the last 26 at Notre Dame, Bobby Bayliss is calling it quits. In a 4 part conversation with UND.com #39;s Jack Nolan, C...

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May 4th, 2013 at 6:44 am

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