Month: January 2014

Spot on Deepak! Personal Power

Spot on Deepak!
Read on my friends, take the journey with us this week on the dance floor, and let’s focus on the place in the body where we sense our personal power… the solar plexus. By consciously moving the solar plexus, we move the thoraic spine, the heart, the ribcage, the organs… all places that hold keys to our positive personal power!
I love you beautiful beings!     Adelle
“There is such a thing as personal power, but most people haven’t encountered it even remotely. That’s because their notion of personal power aims at the wrong goal. They define a powerful person as someone with money and status who can exert his will over others. Such a person is imagined to be strong, smart, lucky, and more than a little ruthless. Examples crop up from Washington to Wall Street, any area of life where competition is fierce and the spoils go to the victors.
But the real secret to personal power lies elsewhere. The difference is that one kind of power, the kind I’ve just sketched, comes from what you do while the other comes from who you are. Before writing this post, I reviewed in my mind the qualities I’ve observed in the most powerful people I’ve met over the past thirty years, and it was astonishing how many qualities come directly from being rather than doing. Here’s my list:
  • A powerful person has built a life filled with meaning and purpose.
  • They are able to realize their intentions.
  • They direct their attention with efficiency and focus.
  • Their choices benefit themselves and the people around them.
  • From inside themselves they tap into creativity, imagination, and insight.
  • They can feel out a situation through reliable intuition.
  • Their accomplishments haven’t led to self-importance — humility and gratitude are present in their makeup.
  • At the end of the day life is a continuous source of joy and equanimity for them, not a battlefield of struggle and frustration.
Not every powerful person exhibits these qualities every day; room must be left for personal growth and a host of personal differences. Yet no matter how unique each of us is, we share a common source in the consciousness from which all personal power arises. Once you have made contact with this source, the most valuable things in life – love, compassion, strength, a sense of truth – can be accessed naturally. There is no need to rely on your ego to win them for you (or to do without once your ego fails at the quest).
The kind of power I’m describing isn’t the fruit of worldly success – it lies at the source of who you are. Therefore, success is guaranteed and cannot be taken away. This message has been delivered for centuries by the world’s wisdom traditions, yet it is left to each of us, at any age, to realize the truth by testing it for ourselves. A journey is implied, a lifelong project to know who you really are.
It’s a problem that modern society has such conflicted notions about the inner world, where a muddle has been created by the conflicts between science and religion, contending approaches to psychology, the demands of daily life, and the buried aspirations we never achieve because we spend so much time and effort on distractions. Even so, these obstacles exist in the realm of doing. The realm of being isn’t damaged by them; its door is always open.
How do you recognize if you are accessing your own being? Personally, when I look at myself, I ask if I’m living up to the following traits:
  • Am I immune to criticism but responsive to feedback?
  • Do I feel that I’m beneath no one and superior to no one?
  • Do I feel fearless?
  • Am I standing up for my own truth?
  • Do I find myself in the company of those who seek the truth (and act cautious around those who claim to have found it)?
  • Do I exist in mutual respect with everyone I encounter?
  • Do I feel the kind of courtesy that comes from the heart?
  • Do I know when to defer and when to assert myself?
These touchstones are the most valuable ones on a day-to-day basis because they tell me that I am connected to who I really am, my true self, as opposed to the image I project and the labels that others attach to me. It’s not always easy to remain connected to being; you have to leave room for self-forgiveness and a wide tolerance for making mistakes. But the kind of self-power that is rooted in the self and not in ego is unmistakable and deeply satisfying. The fact that it is open to all remains one of the great secrets of human existence.”
Deepak Chopra, MD, Founder of The Chopra Foundation, Co-Founder of The Chopra Center for Wellbeing, Author of What Are You Hungry For? and for more information visit The Universe Within.

The BEST Resolution for Year Long Health

Happy New Year’s my friends! 
I found this sooo fascinating, and know it to be true. Passing it on to you from the wise and knowledgable Deepak Chopra.

The Best New Year’s Resolution: Be Good To Your Genes

January 05, 2014 

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By Deepak Chopra, MD and Rudolph Tanzi, Ph.D.
The New Year occasions all kinds of resolutions (which only 8% of people keep, according to Forbes magazine), but almost no one, I imagine, resolves to improve the function of their genes. The fact that this is even possible sounds mystifying, since the specific genes you’re born with remain the same throughout your lifetime (except in certain cells as we age, e.g. in tumors). But now geneticists increasingly appreciate that the output of our genes varies considerably, not just from year to year but from minute to minute. The genetic read-out of two identical twins is quite similar at birth, but looks very different by age seventy. This understanding, still in its infancy, belongs to a growing field known as epigenetics. In the coming years research projects are set to reveal just how deeply a person can affect the activity of their individual genome – the findings so far are very promising.
Epigenetics was actually first proposed back in 1942 to explain how gene activity changes according to one’s lifestyle and environment. This area of genetic study focuses on the “epigenome”, which includes the complex sheath of proteins that surrounds DNA. It has become the focus of intense study because localized interactions help determine how the output of genes is turned up or down.
Your genes act in concert, forming incredibly complicated, fluid relationships. Their activity isn’t a simple on/off switch but more like a rheostat. Thus the old picture of genes as fixed, static things has been radically revised: your genetic material is active and highly responsive to such things as environment, emotions, personal and social relationships, diet, level of exercise, biochemistry, including neurochemistry. Since your brain chemistry is directly affected by your thoughts, feelings, and stress levels, even everyday experiences and how you react to them can theoretically affect your gene activity.
This new view allows us to see that positive lifestyle changes – meditation, stress reduction, good sleep, a balanced diet, moderate exercise – have a beneficial effect all the way down to the genetic level. Within a very short period, taking up a positive lifestyle alters the activity of 500 genes, according to the findings of Dr. Dean Ornish, the champion of lifestyle as the key in reversing heart disease.
A corollary to this is that some behavioral changes can be passed on to the next generation, through so-called “soft” inheritance. This has been shown in mice and lower organisms, including water fleas. However, future studies will need to tackle the extent to which this happens in humans.
Even though the genes a child receives from its father and mother are largely fixed, events that change the parents’ epigenome (either positive or negative) can potentially be passed on without altering the DNA sequence of the genome, changing the interaction of DNA with its surrounding protein sheath and its effects on gene activity.
A key experiment with mice showed that a mouse who benefited from good mothering or suffered from bad mothering was likely to become a good or bad mother in turn and pass the behavior along to the next generation. More recently, mice who were conditioned to fear a certain aroma passed on this fear to their offspring via epigenetics. Similar findings about events that affected our ancestors are beginning to crop up in human studies. For example, children born to parents in conditions of famine were more prone to obesity. Could this have been due to epigenetics? It’s the type of interesting observation that future epigenetic studies will need to address.
The upshot is that you can resolve to be good to your genes in 2014, with the hope that any positive changes in your gene activity will benefit you and perhaps even your children. The genetic proof is still in the offing, but behavioral studies have already concluded that someone associated with a friend or family member who follows positive behaviors is more likely to adopt those behaviors, too.
Another research program indicates that meditation specifically alters genetic activity almost immediately, which counters the belief that it takes years of spiritual practice to create meaningful change. In particular, meditation increases the levels of a protein called telomerase, which has been linked to slowing down the aging process in cells. The fact that a simple behavioral change acts quickly and deeply is very good news for all of us who have promoted the mind-body connection over the years. Science has moved from a skeptical stance about mind and body to validation at the deepest physiological level.
This year, then, is a good time to take a new attitude to your lifestyle, seeing positive changes not simply as something that’s vaguely good for you but as something that may be crucial to your genetic future. It’s hard to think of a stronger motivation for making a resolution and actually keeping it.
Image: hiddenlighthouse
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Deepak Chopra, MD, Founder of The Chopra Foundation, Co-Founder of The Chopra Center for Wellbeing, Author of What Are You Hungry For? and Co author with Rudolph E. Tanzi,Super Brain. For more interesting news and articles visit The Universe Within.
Dr. Rudolph E. Tanzi is Director of the Genetics and Aging Research Unit and Vice-Chair of the Department of Neurology at Massachusetts General Hospital. He is also the Joseph P. and Rose F. Kennedy Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School. Co author with Deepak Chopra, Super Brain.

Gifts, Giving, Gratitude!

2014… The Year of Gratitude!
Welcome to a new year, a new moment, a new opportunity.

In San Antonio, we have dedicated 2014 as the Year of Gratitude, and I am bursting with Gratitude for life! You are an amazing community of friends, family, colleagues, and fellow light beings. Thank you for being a part of my everyday gratitude dance.  

The dance of being grateful can happen everyday, if we take moments to pause, recognizing our numerous gifts, giving of ourselves, and filling our being with abundant Gratitude. 

I have experienced amazing transformation with this daily practice… so simple, yet so powerful. Catching someone’s eye in the grocery store and smiling in response, offering an ear and a calm breath to a passing stranger who is distraught, taking moments every week to reflect and write to you. Every moment is an opportunity to recognize the power of Gratitude.

We will dance our Gratitude wide open all year, starting this week. Join me for Nia tomorrow, Friday, at 5:30pm, and Sunday at 4:00pm. 
Welcome the New Year with Angie and me Sunday from 10:00-12:00 for a JourneyDance™ Embodiment workshop! Experiencing the yummy earth with embodiment movements is a wonderful way to show Gratitude for your body, your life. Below is copied more about the workshop.

Inhale Love, Exhale Gratitude… Adelle

Surrender to the earth! Enliven and strengthen your core!
Learn the JourneyDance™ embodiment series of release technique exercises and powerful core connections. We will get out of our mind and into our body, taking the time to slow down, roll and feel our body in contact with the floor. We will get grounded, releasing, surrendering, and feeling supported. We will drop deep and let go of stress and pressures.
Sunday, January 5, 2014
10:00-12:00pm
$25., or two punches on your Synergy card
*You can sign up online, click on the schedule page and ‘workshops and events’
www.thesynergystudio.com
Join Adelle and Angie as we energize our physicality with beginning contact improv exercises, and move into vigorous dancing from a place of fullness! Dance, move, and practice with our total surface area. Learn more core strengthening movements for better balance, stability and wild dancing freedom!

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