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Thursday, January 27, 2011

Check out our winter workshops, starting with some Rockin' Flow this Saturday!

So along with more classes this winter, we're adding some groovy workshops. From rockin' music and flippin' inversions to detoxifyin' twists and chillin' meditating, we're offering more yoga to enhance your practice! Check out these offerings online.


Join us for the first winter workshop with Jamie this weekend, Rockin' Flow! It'll be an intense 90 minute flow vinyasa class set to some great music. This class is designed to amp it up, turn it up, and sweat it out. Join your fellow music and yoga lovers as we blast a mix of fun "rockin" music for you to flow your way into a tuned in you.

Saturday, January 29th
11:15 am - 12: 45 pm
$17 early bird by Wednesday 1/26/11
$20 at the door
Preregistration online or in the studio recommended

Friday, January 14, 2011

Join some Mighty teachers at the Ithaca YogaMelt!

It's just 3 weeks away! Huck, Gina, Zainab and other local instructors will offer yoga workshops at the Ithaca's first Winter YogaMelt in Feburary! Tickets are still available for this weekend yoga retreat right in town, so if you're ready for some more heat in the winter, join the fun!


2 days + 10 teachers + 20 workshops = Bliss!

February 5-6, 2011
NY Ramada Executive Conference Center
2310 North Triphammer Road
(Hwy 13 & Triphammer)
Ithaca, NY 14850
For more info, visit: www.matiyoga.com

Saturday, January 8, 2011

A Mighty Post Card from Africa

You got a taste of Heather's amazing adventure climbing the peaks of Mt. Kilimanjaro in this month's newsletter. Check out more below and a link to some awesome photos from the trip!

My Journey to Africa's Peak

My friends and I had been planning a trip to Kilimanjaro for the past few years. I did not expect that my real journey would begin eight months before the hike in April, when I injured my lower back. What began as something minor, grew to severely limit my movement, making many ordinary activities almost impossible. Ironically, the more I protected my back, the more limiting the injury became. Instead of improving, my body reacted by locking up even more muscles. By June, I was so fearful of triggering a spasm, I stopped doing anything that involved reaching or bending forward.

In July I had started working with a Feldenkrais practitioner. Over the next five months, she re-taught me how my body could move. It was a slow, but enlightening process as I gradually relearned to move to put on socks and reach down to pet my golden retriever.

By the time we left for Africa in early December, I knew the hike was here, whether I was ready or not. At that point I was already looking back at 2010 as a year of learning my physical limitations. What better way to top it off by climbing a 19,300 ft mountain?

The hike was nothing short of amazing. Being on the mountain, camping in tents and hiking every day took me out of my routine. It took me out of normal situations where I had firm beliefs of what I could and couldn’t do physically. I just hiked, climbed in and out of the tent, and scrambled over rocks, albeit carefully. As soon as I thought, “I shouldn’t be able to do this,” my back locked up. Yet, when I stopped thinking and just trusted my body to do what it could, it amazed me.


For me, this was an exceptional lesson in the opposite of “mind over body,” which I had been so focused on during my past rowing career. The more I thought about my body, the more limited I became. The injury had robbed me of this deepest kind of faith, the faith in my body to perform as I expected.

We spent 5 days getting to the base camp at 15,000 ft. Then left at midnight on day six to climb to Uhuru Peak, the highest point in Africa. That morning, climbing up 4,000 ft over 6 hours in the complete dark and below freezing wind chill was the most difficult physical challenge I’d ever encountered. We had no idea where our destination was in the dark night, and it seemed that the sun would never come up. I thought about turning around, but figured that working my way back down in the slippery volcanic soil was not going to be any easier or warmer, so I kept going. The moment when the sun peeked over the horizon as we reached the crater rim was indescribable. I had made it. My body, and not my brain, had gotten me to the top of Africa!--Heather Healey

Please feel free to check out the peak in these pictures from the hike!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/susanashlock/collections/72157625660048986/

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Happy Mighty New Year!

Many of you joined us for our first class of 2011, a yummy detox flow with Gina to benefit the House of Hope Initiative. Yogis were moved in more ways than one after the 2-hour session New Year's Day. Gina had this to offer from the day's session:

"I'm still smiling from ear to ear. We had 23 participants in a pretty demanding detox flow, all positively glowing afterwards! (And I don't mean because of all the sweat!) I expected to feel the fullness of gratitude that come with yoga as service, energized both for the project and the new year. But when I made my offering at the close of class, sharing my favorite translation of Om Namah Shivaya: I bow to that which I am capable of becoming, acknowledging that we are on this path together and bowing in reverence to that, I was quite surprised to rise to an applause-filled room and a chorus of thank yous. Very moving."

And thanks to these yogis and yoginis, the House of Hope Initiative received over$400 in donations! We are so grateful to the generous Mighty community who has supported our various benefits throughout the year. In the past year, Mighty Yoga has raised over $2500 for multiple organizations including the House of Hope Initiative, The Nutrition Clinic, the Sol Stone Center and the Ithaca Health Alliance. Thank you! Thank you!