Last day of 2019

What will you do to ring in the new year?

Whether it is a quiet night in or a night that will reach into tomorrow, I hope over the last month you experienced the magic of kindness and presence enough to carry this practice into your night and into the rest of the year.

Opportunities to be kind are everywhere. Let’s intentionally bring more kindness into the world in 2020.

Thank you for all the feedback over the last month in person and through email. It has made my heart very happy. I have also really enjoyed the process as a participant. Intentional acts of kindness simply spread joy. One of my favourite quotes this month was on Day 23:

β€œUnexpected kindness is the most powerful, least costly, and most underrated agent of human change.” ~Bob Kerry

I couldn’t agree more.

So much love to you and have a very Happy New Year!

See you on the mat, Katherine πŸ™‚

Let it snow

Yesterday’s invitation for kindness :
Notice the natural world all around you even if you are indoors. Really see the trees outside your window, look closely at the plants inside your house, the produce in your fridge. Be aware of the miracle of aliveness. Be aware of your own aliveness.

My husband and I finally used a gift certificate we were given a few years ago and went to the Scandinavian Spa in Collingwood yesterday. And once we were there it was lovely. There were opportunities everywhere to notice the natural world around us in the outdoor pools. It was an incredibly beautiful time of year to be there. Inside the eucalyptus steam room, I could hear my own breath and other people breathing but I couldn’t see them for all the steam. Then from there we would go into the cold water pool. All of it made me feel alive, alive, alive. So gorgeous. Go if you have the opportunity.

But I also want to back up a little and tell you about awareness on the way there.

We left for the spa after school drop off and it was softly snowing. The trees were so pretty…heavy with snow in the branches. Gradually the snow fall thickened. My windshield wipers started to freeze clearing away the windscreen above and below my line of vision. The wind picked up creating whiteouts. The drivers ahead and behind put on their hazard lights. We were all crawling. Then the road we were on closed. We turned around and went down an unplowed side road. There were A LOT of cars in the ditch or stuck. The way I started to ‘see’ really shifted. It narrowed. My body was tight. I didn’t feel my breath. I’m not really a nervous driver so it wasn’t an off the charts thing but I wasn’t just appreciating the beauty around me. I noticed the snow but I was more intensely focused on seeing through the windshield and keeping the truck in front of me in focus. I felt so much gratitude for the driver in front who was leading the way. I was also nervous about the guy behind me who kept wanting to pass. He hopped out agitated a couple of times when the car in front of me stopped because cars were stuck or in the ditch.

A photo my husband took of the truck in front of us.

There is nothing dramatic in this retelling aside from what I think are the tangible benefits of practising presence. I was aware that I was aware of the tension in my body, I decided deeper breathes were necessary, I noticed my need to turn off the music, I realized I was open to have my husband make suggestions about driving which is not always the case πŸ˜‰ .Β  I was aware of the unfolding events (weather, cars in front etc.) without blocking out everything else. It isn’t a huge thing. More years of meditation and maybe I wouldn’t tense up at all. Many, many more years of meditation and my husbands driving advice might not ever ruffle me. But still I know this is different from a twenty year old me or thirty year old me.

“In the midst of winter, I found there was, within me, an invincible summer…”

A yoga student gave me a card on Thursday with this quote he sourced by Albert Camus. It is incredibly beautiful and so perfect to describe what presence gifts us each time we choose to reside in the moment. Magic is right there when we are willing to experience it. The miracle of being alive is in our breath and our heart beat, in the natural world, inside every relationship…with ourselves and others and the world.

I wanted to use this post today to share:

  1. this quote (thank you, Jeremy)
  2. a kindness experience this week
  3. a link to a broader story that made me smile.

I enjoyed Tuesday’s kindness invitation (leave random notes of kindness) so much that it flowed into Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. I loooooove leaving surprise notes as some yoga students might guess and having an extra reason to do so was a lot of fun. I left notes for friends, in a few library books and notes in lunches. I also bought some post-it notes and my daughter and I left them randomly in surprise places around our house. The best one I found from her was this one:

So much love to each of you this weekend. I hope yesterday’s quote was an inspiration (“Be kind to unkind people. They need it the most”). It sometimes isn’t easy but it is such an opportunity for presence if you can respond instead of react to negativity.

Today, please take a moment to write a positive review about a product or service you appreciate. I am going to do that now.

Enjoy this youtube link that I came across about a random act of kindness.

Yum-fest

My recipe share didn’t happen yesterday but right now as I type this I have muffins baking in the oven. My daughter is still asleep and will looooove to wake up to the smell of these πŸ™‚

This is a cake recipe that I often use for birthday cakes and for muffins. It is a treat for sure since it calls for lots of maple syrup. This single ingredient equals a yum-fest in our house. Here’s what I am baking….

Vanilla Cake Muffins

Preheat oven to 350.

Ingredients: 2 cups of spelt flour, 1 tablespoon baking powder, 1/3 cup of melted coconut oil, 2/3 cups of maple syrup, 2 teaspoons vanilla, 1 cup of vanilla almond milk (or whatever you have), chocolate chips…however many you want πŸ˜‰

I mix everything together in one bowl. I made 24 mini-muffins with chocolate chips and 6 bigger muffins without chocolate chips. The smaller ones are just ready and they took 12 minutes. The bigger ones will take a bit longer at around 15 or so. Enjoy!!!

Driving around in your pyjamas

So today’s act of kindness was so terribly written it was a teensy bit cringeworthy when I saw it this morning. Here it is:

Let someone move ahead of you in line and while you are driving, buy coffee or tea for the person behind you in line. 

To that I say, “Yikes.” Here is a fresh version of the same idea: 

Let someone move ahead of you in line, let someone in while you are driving, or buy a coffee or tea for a random stranger who just happens to be behind you in line. 

Better? I think so.

Here is my quick story. My husband, daughter and I go to see Sparkles in the Park each year. We started doing this when my daughter was really small and I always wanted to have her ready for bed before we went so that she was bathed and ready for sleep as soon as we returned home. This meant she was wearing her pyjamas in the car and she thought it was funny if we wore pyjamas too. Sooooo, we all wore pyjamas (and still do) and to make it more fun we started to go through the drive-thru at Tim Hortons to get a hot chocolate and we pay for the order of the person behind us. This is still one of my favourite things to do leading up to Christmas. It feels so good knowing the person will be surprised. It makes the lights at Sparkles in the Park shine brighter somehow. My daughter is beyond excited that we are surprising someone we don’t know. It is pure joy. All of it.

Smile, smile, smile.

We shall never know all the good that a simple smile can do.” ~ Mother Teresa

Good morning! Today I was lucky enough to start my day with other yogis at an early morning class and see some beautiful smiling faces (even in side plank).

I wanted to share a few quick things….first, thank you for already sharing so many stories with me about our month of kindness. I have had a couple of comments here, loads in person and other requests to be part of an email list for those who missed out on the envelopes. All I can say is yay πŸ™‚ I am smiling even while I type this.

I also wanted to share a gift I received from a very talented artist and friend of mine on Tuesday. It is a sketch which is perfect to post after teaching at 6:15 a.m… it is called, “Early Bird Yoga.” I hope this makes you smile too.

A month of kindness

Welcome yogis to our month of kindness in December.

If you are here you have received a little envelope from me with messages numbered from 1-31 for each day in December. It is like an advent calendar but it runs the whole month long. The messages alternate an inspirational quote on day one with an invitation for an act of kindness on day two and continues on in this way until the end of the month.

Let’s strive to complete all the acts of kindness. A few require spending a little money and if that just doesn’t work with your budget then get creative on how you can still act kindly that day. Some of the kindness activities will stretch you to behave in ways you might not normally and others will come easily. Set the goal to complete them all and then tell me about it.

Here’s my thought process on the magnifying or ripple effect of intentional kindness…

  1. The intention, anticipation and the kind act is felt by many; the giver, those who simply interact with the giver, the receiver of the kindness and those who interact with the receiver.Β 
  2. The retelling of how it felt to anticipate, act and receive feedback about the act of kindness allows the giver’s mind to receive the benefit of the act of kindness more than once.
  3. Others who read or hear about the act of kindness experience along with you what it was like to be kind so that just by the retelling their mind and body occupies the same space of open receptivity and joy that acts of kindness bring.

It isn’t about accolades or trying to appear like you are a better person because you have been kind. I think the point is to share what it felt like to be intentionally kind. Or if it required bravery on your part or creativity, share that. If you want to leave some of the details out because it feels more authentic to you, then that makes sense. Sometimes a quiet act of kindness feels amazing.

Watch it all: your intention to be kind and then the unfolding of kindness. Watch your mind and your body throughout the process. Watch your mind and body on the retelling. Watch your mind and body reading/hearing the kindness stories of others. Be on the lookout for kindness everywhere this month and share that too.

Good luck and be kind πŸ™‚