• Posts Tagged ‘Community’

    Navigating the Postpartum Period

    by  • November 9, 2011 • Ayurveda, Community, Events, Health, Herbs, Perinatal • 0 Comments

    Pregnant mamas, please come to get ready!

    Postpartum mamas, bring your babe and learn some tricks to make it a bit easier!

    The postpartum period is so much easier with a few tips and tricks up your sleeve! Class will include herbs and food cures that are easy to have on hand to self-treat.

    Natural approaches to common concerns will be given: managing baby blues, natural pain relief, balancing appetite, toning the abdominal muscles and pelvic floor, lactation issues, prevention and home treatment of mastitis, strategies to maximize rest and minimize stress.

    For new moms and moms-to-be. Bring your partner.

    $35, but partners attend for FREE.

    When:  November 20, 2011 12:30-3:00pm

    Where: Berkeley Yoga Center

    call 415.938.7421 to register or click below to pay online.

    Community Quilting

    by  • September 27, 2011 • Community, Quilting, Sewing • 0 Comments

    Heart BlockMy friend came over for a “Stitch and Bitch.” All that gossiping? It was for a good cause.

    Our friend Hri just had a baby. In her honor, a bunch of us contributed a 10×10 block for her quilt. I invited a friend over, pulled out piles of scraps and we got to work. We stayed up ridiculously late. It turned out to be quite a collaboration.

    I really *get* the whole quilting bee thing. I used to think it was kinda corny, but now I see it as a tangible expression of community.

    Maybe it calls to something ancestral in me. Some of my people are Pennsylvania Dutch. When I visited Lancaster County as a girl, some old Amish granny I didn’t really know happened to invite me to the basement below her farmhouse. It was loaded with half a dozen or more wooden quilting frames for the women’s weekly gathering. Beauty on so many fronts.

    It must be more than ancestry for me. After all, I was the recipient of a community quilt once, so I know firsthand: community presence is tangible in the final product.

    Bird Block Stitchers for a Cause is a group that sews quilts for children who have been placed foster care and knit wheelchair bags. They’ve donated almost 2,000 items. I’ve heard stories about kids who have received Stitchers quilts. In some cases, those quilts are the first and only possessions these children call their own. It is the one physical item that goes with them from home to home, that they don’t grow out of. What an inspiring team of men and women. I got to volunteer for them for a few months last year.

    Then, earlier this year when we lost our baby, the Stitchers group stopped everything and collaborated to make a quilt for our family. I was stunned: thinking of all of those people working together across the country out of love for (little old) me whom they hardly knew? It has meant so much to us. In the first months after our loss, there were times my husband and I would just lie there on the couch under that quilt even when it was warm out.

    That’s the kind of nourishment a community quilt can give. It is as if the whole Stitchers gang is giving me a hug whenever I wrap that quilt around myself.

    There is power in a group. When individuals turn their energy on a project together, it is a beautiful thing.

    If you haven’t yet, try it. Invite friends. Plop scraps in the middle of the table. Open a bottle of wine. See what happens. You don’t need a sewing machine. You don’t need to know how. Just try. If you find your community and tap into it…if you give something back, you’ll receive more in return than you can possibly imagine.

    What’s with the Chanting, Yo?!

    by  • August 25, 2009 • Community, Yoga • 0 Comments

    Thai BuddhaOur yoga studio has a really great deal going on now where you can bring in a friend for free all this month. Consequently, we’ve met lots of new people. It has been a really fun opportunity to teach more than just the usual suspects at Yoga Mandala in Berkeley.

    In response to the newcomer energy in class, I’ve had to contextualize a few of the things we do at our studio that are unique–er, “unique” in the sense that they are *so* traditional and rootsy yogic they feel radical to us in comparison to the contemporary, commercial American yoga scene.

    Take, for instance, our mandala chanting. Yes, we make it short and sweet. Yes, we provide a pithy explanation every time. But for me, it is one of the most important aspects of practice. Chanting orients the entire session, setting the tone for whatever practice follows.

    To me, it’s serious stuff. Here’s a (sadly) not uncommon scenario: it’s morning and I’m all shined up and ready to rock it on the yoga mat, only to find myself–COMPLETELY UNINSPIRED! You know the feeling: uh-ok-i-guess-i’ll-do-some-(sigh)-Pawanmuktasana-and-then-see-what-happens sort of thing.

    It is tamas central, folks. Closed channels. Animal realm station on the BART train of the 6 realms. I mean, obviously, I know I’m going to pull myself out of it and will be stoked by the time breath is in full swing or later when it’s time to sit and yet, I’m thinking, “but how (oh HOW?!) am I going to get there this time, again, today?!” Essence nature is in there and I’ve gotta smuggle Her a file so she can break out of jail or something before limited ahankara notices.

    Enter chanting.

    Hands in supplication, there I am with no choice but to actually contemplate the innate mystery of Nature with my mind, voice and body (Oms): its totally Unbound, Flexible and Limitless Variegation (Ganesh chant), the Truth of its Wisdom (Sarasvati), and the Graceful Force and Power of Gratitude and Auspicious for Unbroken Living Wisdom (Guru Stotram). Oh yeah, and how could I forget the Teacher-Student Prayer which harmonizes me with everyone else I’m practicing with in this Fortunate Community of all practitioners throughout time? What a family. How many others have sat in this pose and opened their voices just like me today? How could I *not* open up?!

    Boom: instant gratitude! With that, it is easy to practice.

    So, yes. At Yoga Mandala–and every day–we chant with heart. It’s either that or fake it, folks, and I’m not that kind of girl.

    Sri Lalita’s Hatha Yoga class is at 4:30 at Yoga Mandala.

    Open Letter to the SF Health Commission

    by  • May 19, 2009 • Community, Events • 0 Comments

    st_luke-400I am appalled by the way St. Luke’s Hospital’s charitable programming is being gutted. Not only that, but its *natural* medicine: a Touro osteopathic teaching clinic. That’s right, they are cutting effective, natural medicine offered for free to those in need in a clinical context in which medical students are trained. The patients lose; the students lose. Everybody loses.

    Check out the letter I submitted to the Health Commission urging them to advise the SF Board of Supes to stop CPMC (Sutter) from this action. The address is there, if you feel compelled to weigh in on the issue. If you’re in the city today, the Health Commission hearing is today and there is another one coming June 16 at 2:00 pm. Speak up!

    —————-

    May 19, 2009

    Department of Public Health
    Health Commission
    101 Grove Street, room 308
    San Francisco, CA 94102

    RE: Sutter/CPMC Charity Service Cancellations

    To the Health Commission:

    I am shocked and saddened to hear that charity service programs such as Touro University’s osteopathic clinic and student training are being canceled. There has been a justifiably angry outcry against this move from the doctors offering these services as well as from the students who have an unparalleled opportunity to learn in the hospital setting, not to mention patients benefiting from these free services.

    It is for services like these that Sutter/CPMC has been granted non-profit status. As such, they have a responsibility to answer the real needs of the community. How can they hope to expand and create big, new hospitals such as that proposed for Cathedral Hill without protecting charity programs for facilities already in existence? If Sutter/CPMC wishes to function like a for-profit company, then they should be stripped of their non-profit status.

    My child has been a patient of the osteopathic training program with Drs. Cislo and McCombs, DO, through Touro University at St. Luke’s, one of the Sutter/CPMC hospitals. My son’s health has improved dramatically from his care there over the past two years. He was successfully treated through natural, hands-on osteopathic methods from symptoms that his pediatrician claimed couldn’t be helped. At each visit, a room full of students got to share the joy of my boy’s improved health and comfort. Real learning happened and real confidence in natural osteopathic care was instilled in each of us. It is a beautiful program–not only for us, but for many other families who may not be able to find the same quality services due to financial constraints.

    Ours was a simple story of good health turning great, but I know that for other patients participating in that program, it has been a story life or death. That is, I am told that some patients are literally kept alive through Touro’s free program. What happens to these patients if the care is stripped?

    This is yet another insult in a long line of charity service cancellations. Guided by Sutter/CPMC, the “new” St. Luke’s has already cut many badly needed services in favor of more profitable programs. Consider the impact our community has suffered already: the loss of the entire psychiatric care unit, the loss of neo-natal intensive care, the loss of much-needed SNF beds, the loss of the heart of the maternity ward which was once famous for its commitment to women-centered, safe, demedicalized birth. Now, charity osteopathic medicine has had its final day.

    Please listen to the opinions of the hospital doctors and nurses. Let people who took the Hippocratic Oath guide the hospital’s direction. They know what is best for their patients, not the money guys.  Please advise the San Francisco Board of Supervisors to keep Touro’s and other charity programs alive, otherwise they must revoke Sutter/CPMC’s non-profit status.

    Sincerely,
    Sri Lalita