Posts Tagged: Andover


10
Sep 10

How did you do it?

Barbara Maffeo from Melrose, MA, is an exemplary person on many levels.  She started Dahn Yoga while suffering from Fibromyalgia,  even needing help getting off the floor at the end of class (as she will share in the video).

With determination, however, she kept going to class and eventually improved her condition significantly.  As soon as she started to feel improvements, she started sharing with others.  In this video, Dahn TV director Edwin Kim interviews Barbara how and why she went from barely making it through a class to creating one of the most successful Dahn Yoga outreach programs in Massachusetts at her workplace, the Red Cross.



16
Aug 10

Be Inspired. Introducing Celia Cooper Lombardi

Celia shines bright whenever she comes to the  Dahn Yoga center

Celia is a shining star whenever she walks in to the center

It is the night of the Level up Evaluation Test at the Andover Dahn Center. Members are testing their limits to make the grade on specific postures and stretches.  It comes time for the “Sleeping Tiger” test, a strong holding posture for strengthening the lower back and abdomen.  As the clock tics on legs and arms begin to drop as members release their posture to take a rest. 

But amidst the sea of dropping arms and legs one set remains still.  The other members continue to move through the remainder of the test. Some of them even complete it and head for the door. All the while one set of arms and legs remain still.

Deep in concentration, 83 year old Celia Cooper Lombardi holds her ground.  “Ok Celia healer nim, you can drop down now”.  “What’s that?!”, she shouts out as she reaches to turn up her hearing aid. “Lower your legs!” “Oh, sure, ok”. She replies with ease and comfortably releases the posture.

Celia has been practicing Dahn Yoga for 3 years now. In April of 2007 she stumbled across a Dahn Yoga Instrutor in a nearby grocery store. One thing led to another and she tried her first class.

“I knew I needed to do something but I thought I was too old. When I talked to the instructor they said age is not a problem so I decided to try the class. From Day 1 my mind felt brighter. I knew I would come back and that this is what I am supposed to do.”

Celia was born in 1927 in Monmouthshire, England and came to the US in 1946.  She has dedicated her life to serving others (both people and animals alike!). Celia retired as a social worker in 1991. From there she became a Reiki Master and began to become involved in different types of Holistic Healing practices which eventually led her to Dahn Yoga.

Despite her positive mindset Celia’s journey with health has not been an easy one. However, her determination always prevails.  About 30 years ago she completely healed her lower back through simply breathing! Her back was weak and poorly aligned which caused it to go out incessantly,  leaving her in a hunch.  After receiving advice from a trusted friend Celia attempted one last time to heal her pain.   For 1 hour everyday over the course of 1 full year, she practiced a breathing meditation that involves breathing into the lower back.  Slowly but surely, her lower back completely healed.

Today her main health struggle is Osteoarthritis.  When asked how she continues to stay in high spirits despite physical limitations Celia answered like this

I never think there is anything I can’t do. I always feel everything is possible. I never considered myself as old or sick.  And, when I  do get sick I  know inside that soon I will get better.

Celia’s  spirit is truly an inspiration.  She attends classes 3x’s a week and always arrives on time with a bright smile and arms wide open for a warm hug.  Dressed neatly in

Celia and Dahn Center Manager Marielle Cristofi

Celia and Dahn Center Manager Marielle Cristofi

her class uniform she devotes the utmost sincerity to her practice.  Every Wednesday she comes to class 30 minutes early for her home exercise check up. After class she quickly scoops up the tea cups to wash them for the next session. On some occasions you’ll even find her teaching a new member about the warm up exercises or even leading the class in an early warm up.

Celia will never stop growing and developing herself. She attended the Brain Management Consultant Training in November of 2009. She looks forward to taking her renewal test this Fall with hopes to teach someday at an outreach location for the elderly.  Every Tuesday Celia volunteers for the MSPCA at the Nevins Farm in Metheun, MA where she shares her love with the animals there.

At 83 years old Celia’s spirit is still young and bright.  Her positive outlook on life has helped her overcome many obstacles.  I hope we can all remember the words that keep her going day in and day out…

“I never think there is anything I can’t do. I always feel everything is possible. I never considered myself as old or sick.”

It’s that simple.

~Marielle Cristofi

Marielle Cristofi is the center manager at the Dahn Yoga and Healing Center in Andover, MA.


9
Aug 10

Amazing Women in Our Midst!

Caroline Grabner from the Dahn Yoga Center in Bethesda, MD shares her story with Dahn TV about overcoming cancer, then helping others through the journey as a volunteer instructor.


6
Aug 10

Off the Mat. A new series on Dahn TV.

In ‘Off the Mat’, Dahn TV covers stories of Dahn Yoga practitioners pursuing training out of the classroom. We take a trip to Korea in this first episode, with folks from all over the country.



28
Jul 10

If not me, then who? If not now, then when? (Part I)

Author Mike Houlihan, and his wife Beth, teach Dahn Yoga at Roots to Wings Yoga and Healing Center.

Mike and Beth Houlihan and their children, twins Conner and Griffin, and older girls Ashley and Emma in the Summer of 2010

Mike and Beth Houlihan are yoga practitioners and parents of four young children. Recently, Mike left a successful career as a Chief Information Officer of a start-up company to take over management, with Beth, of “Roots to Wings”, a successful yoga studio in Newburyport, MA that combines the teachings of Dahn Yoga, Brain Education, and Hatha Yoga.

Roots to Wings Yoga and Healing Center was the first Hatha Yoga studio in the US to host Dahn Yoga’s Shim Sung Workshop in January of 2008. Since then, approximately eight Shim Sung workshops have been held with more than 150 people participating. Of these 150, approximately 20 people have taken Dahn Yoga’s Brain Management Consultant and other advanced trainings. Mike participated in the first Shim Sung at Roots to Wings, and is a BMC graduate. I was at that Shim Sung, and have witnessed the incredible journey that Mike and Beth have been on. I asked Mike to share his story for the Dahn Yoga Blog readers. Enjoy part 1 below!

~Genia Sullivan, editor, www.dahnyogama.com
During the last year, my wife Beth and I have drastically changed our lives to follow a calling to live and grow as Earth Citizens through taking over management of Roots to Wings Yoga and Healing Center, founded by Wendy Hall. Together with two of our classmates who also graduated from Dahn Yoga’s Brain Management Consultant Course, we teach all the classes and take care of all management affairs. We host and staff three Shim Sung trainings each year, and keep up with our own training as well. We have four children ages 5, 5, 7, and 9 who practice yoga, soccer, and hockey. How do we do it all, you might ask?

To be honest, it is not easy. We’ve given up a lot of things we used to do like weekends away, having friends over for dinner, my own hockey and prime-time golf. We focus on doing the most important things really well. For example, we just got back from 7 nights on the beach in Maine living in a tent with all the kids. Taking over the helm at Roots to Wings has created some strain in our family, but we are a happier and healthier family for it. Practice helps. We are taking a leap of faith in ‘Chun Ji Ki Un’ that if we put our full energy into something we love to do the rest will be taken care of. Why? I look inside myself and see the results. I know how I have changed and how I have grown. I have experienced what can happen when we have the courage to let go, while also understanding it is a life-long process.

If not me, who? If not now, when?  This is our story, told from my perspective.

Part I – Pre-Yoga Daze

Mike, Ashley, and Emma Houlihan, approx 2007

Author Mike and his two older children in 2007

Somewhere in my early 40s, what I now understand as past memories, preconceptions, and worries about the future began to catch up with me. I generally considered myself to be relatively healthy and successful. I’d gone to college, grad school, had a great job, a house, two kids, and no financial worries. I played golf and hockey, skied, biked, rollerbladed and I was really good at drinking beer. My whole life, I had a nagging feeling that something was missing, but I couldn’t quite put my finger on it. I longed for the simplicity of a sunny day with a sweatshirt on and work boots that I remembered from my early childhood, but couldn’t find it in any of my successes; having grown up without a dad, I was insecure and deep inside thought I wasn’t good enough. No matter how much I had or how low my golf score was it wasn’t good enough and I always had this nagging belief that something bad would happen to me at the most inopportune time to prevent me from achieving ultimate success.

My job required significant travel and I began to feel torn about not being around for my wife and two young girls. Living on airplanes and away from my family was profitable, but not fulfilling. I was dying. Around that time I also began to get more concerned about my health. I was always self conscious about my looks, but this was more than just an inner tube around my waist. I would get dizzy, headaches, heart palpitations, and get a fat tongue and mess-up my words from time to time. With each ache and pain I had, I’d run to the doctor to make sure I did not have cancer or a heart problem. The things I did to make me feel better created more stress. I was truly a misguided seeker, as Deepak Chopra would say.

My minister at my local church had been nagging me for a couple of years to meet with her, but I had always managed to escape doing it. I kind of knew where I needed to go; but I figured there’d be time for that down the road. I used to ask myself the question “What happens to people who know but don’t listen, don’t act?” Of course I was foolish enough to think I knew, but scared enough to know there was something out there that I still couldn’t put my finger on.

Author Mike Houlihan in his 'pre-yoga daze'

Author Mike Houlihan in his 'Pre-Yoga Daze'

Even before she asked to meet with me, I was immediately struck by Minister Nancy. Her blazing blue eyes seemed to look right through me as if she could see who I knew I really was. I felt she could also see my potential, and I was inspired by her sermons. I eventually gave in, and began meeting with her on a regular basis, and these meetings really were the start of the spiritual journey I began. She helped me experience that as we share deep truths about ourselves, we begin to access a part of ourselves that exists outside of space and time, and we begin to see things as they really are. It would take me a long time to learn that failure to see things as they really are is what causes suffering, and I am still learning that it is me who is doing it. While these practices were mostly temporal, they were tangible and I was starting to develop a stronger belief in my own personal transformation.

I became quite enamored with having peak spiritual experiences that were different and safer than other highs I’d sought through the course of my life. The problem was that I had not made any fundamental changes to how I was living my life. I still had a nagging feeling that I was running out of time and that something bad was going to happen. I still did not feel great physically, didn’t like the way I looked and was bored with how I was living my life. My wife Beth had started yoga at Roots to Wings Yoga Studio, a local Hatha Yoga Studio in our town, shortly after our twin boys were born. I began to notice she was calmer, stronger, and more focused; different somehow, but I couldn’t put my finger on it. I was getting tired of gingerly walking down stairs after hockey games, nursing groin pulls, and going from one ache and pain to the next so I figured I’d give yoga a try.

Within five minutes of my first class I said to myself “Yes, Home!” There was just something about lying on that mat and gasping for air that had a quieting effect on me. I didn’t have much respect for yoga when I first went, and didn’t understand what all the fuss was about. I figured I’d take classes for a couple of weeks and would be in perfect shape again. I was so wrong about that it makes me shake my head even as I write this. Yoga tore me limb from limb for about the first six months of practice. I found it excruciating, but I loved it.

Come back on Monday for Part II: ‘Yoga Daze; Mike’s transformation through Shim Sung and decision to become a full time practitioner and yoga studio owner

Author Mike HoulihanMike Houlihan operates Roots to Wings Yoga and Healing Studio in Newburyport, MA, with his wife Beth.
For more information please visit  http://www.rootstowings.com.


24
Jul 10

A Two Minute Tip- Relieve your wrist pain

This week’s Two Minute Tip address is the first part of two short videos that will guide you how to release tension in your upper body joints.  If you have wrist pain, from sports, playing an instrument, or computer work, try this exercise once a day for relief.



12
Jul 10

Say ‘ahhh’ and release your stress!

Although tapping on your chest and saying ‘ahhhhhh’ as if you were at the doctor’s office may gain you a few stares, it can also help you release stress.  If you haven’t yet tried chest tapping and breathing out to get through your most stressful days, watch this video and start to try it.


9
Jul 10

Meridians, Acupuncture, Do-In stretching……..what does it all mean?

Do-in, the formal name for the stretching postures practice during a Dahn Yoga class, means, ‘pushing and pulling’ of the meridian channels’. So, what is a meridian channel, anyway? We asked a local expert, acupuncturist William Kellar, to shed a little light on the subject in this article.  He answered some of our questions below.

What is a Meridian Channel?

‘The human body has a lattice of meridians or energy channels that course through it. The meridians are responsible for moving the Qi (pronounced “chee” in Chinese) or Ki (pronounced ‘key’ in Korean) and balancing the Yin and Yang. Meridian theory assumes that disorder within a meridian causes disharmony and pain. For example, a disorder in the Stomach meridian may cause an upper toothache, because the stomach meridian passes through the upper gums.’

 With this question answered, another basic one asked to be addressed.  What is acupuncture? Why does it seem to help some people?   Again, William Kellar:

What is acupuncture?

 ‘Acupuncture is designed to unblock stagnant Qi in the meridian channels and restore the body’s natural balance. The role of the acupuncturist is to observe all signs and symptoms and to determine what acu-points would best resolve the presenting disharmony(s) when treated. One of the oldest forms of medicine, acupuncture was first practiced in China over 3000 years ago. In modern times, acupuncture has been in the news quite a bit lately. As one of the fastest growing forms of complementary or integrative medicine, more people are learning about and responding to this form of treatment.’

What will I feel during an acupuncture treatment?

 One commonly asked question I get is: ‘what do patients feel during an acupuncture treatment?’ Probably the biggest fear people have, getting stuck with a needle, is usually resolved upon the initial insertion. Because each needle is very fine, most people report feeling little or no discomfort. Many feel being in a state of deep relaxation during their session. Modern Western medicine can not explain precisely how acupuncture works. There are many theories, some supported by clinical research. But for over 3000 years, this medical protocol has helped people with a wide range of health conditions. In fact, the World Health Organization recognizes over 40 conditions for which acupuncture can be effective in treating.

Another question I commonly get asked is, what kind of conditions can be treated by acupuncture. The most common conditions I have seen and treated in my seven years a practice are: Stress and anxiety, neck and back pain, arthritis and joint pain, migraine and other headaches, infertility, facial pain and TMJ disorder, insomnia, allergies and sinus problems, and mood disorders.

Have you tried acupuncture or meridian stretching? Did it help you? Share your experience below.

~Dahnyogama.com editorial team

Thanks to William Kellar, M.Ac., Licensed Acupuncturist, for contributing to this article.

Mr. Kellar’s acupuncture clinic is located at 42 Pleasant Street in Arlington Center.

To learn more about acupuncture or his clinic, please visit: http://www.HealingWithAcupuncture.com


5
Jul 10

A Great Exercise for your Post-Holiday Weekend Body

Although enjoyable, sometimes a long summer weekend leaves the body feeling a little heavy from too much sun, resting, and drinking, or sore from intense physical activity.  This gentle but stimulating stretch for the liver is gentle but effective in opening and relaxing your body.


1
Jul 10

Reaching Out Through Reaching In

Unity on the River, Amesbury, MA

Barbara Parton of the Amesbury, MA area has dreamed of bringing the Shim Sung , or, ‘Finding True Self’ workshop to her church community ever since she first participated in the workshop in August of 2005.  On June 17 & 18, 2010, her dream was finally realized at the Unity on the River Spiritual Center of Celebration when six people participated in the first Shim Sung workshop held at the church.

The Unity movement is a “New Thought” movement in which God is everywhere present, especially inside of each of us, and fondly referred to as “the presence.” This concept resonated with Barbara immediately when she came to Unity in 1999.  It was when she took the Shim Sung workshop six years later, however, that she actually could “feel” this presence and “know” that it was so.  For her, it brought together the concept with the bodily sensation, and she knew she wanted to bring this experience to others in her community.

The link has now been made, with 6 participants whom experienced this connection with their “true self” at the workshop held last month.  It

Group photo at the end of the weekend

was an combined effort of three holistic yoga and healing centers in Northern Massachusetts.   The Dahn Yoga Center in Andover, MA, provided the trainer, workshop know how, volunteer staff, and materials.  The Roots to Wings Yoga and Healing Center in Byfield, MA, provided more volunteer staff, and advertising help.  The Body Prosperity Center, Barbara’s studio,  in Amesbury, MA, provided all logistical planning, and organization of the event.   Barbara shared, ‘A new outreach triangle is born!   Together we are reaching out to help others reach in and discover their true selves.”  She plans to organize more True Self workshops offered at the church, with the help of the newly formed trio of partners.

Volunteer Staff came from Dahn Yoga, Roots to Wings Yoga, and the Body Prosperity Centers, all in Northern MA

The Mission of Unity on the River is to  “….Celebrate the Presence and Awaken Humanity to it’s Divinity.”  The True Self workshop is this mission in action. Please watch for further news on when the next one will be held, hopefully in October of 2010.

Barbara Parton is the owner of the Body Prosperity Center, a Holistic Fitness Center located in the Unity Church plaza in Amesbury, MA. For     more information about this center activities and programs please visit: www.bodyprosperitycenter.com