Mindful Moments: 3 Chocolate Practices for Ash Wednesday & Beyond

Mindfulness is the practice of noticing what’s happening in the present moment without judgement.  It’s being aware of your sensory experience: sight, sound, scent, touch, taste. It’s offering your kind attention to your emotions and thoughts, all without analyzing or criticizing.  In my Catholic experience, chocolate has been associated with Lent and Easter for decades, and it’s possible some of you have memories of giving up chocolate for Lent and then eating a basket full on Easter Sunday.  Mindfulness is a big part of my yoga practice both on and off the mat. And chocolate is a big part of my life, both during Ordinary Time and during Lent. So, I thought I’d share a few mindful Lenten prayer practices that I have found useful at various times in my life.  

1. Give Up Chocolate Mindfully

When I give up chocolate for Lent, it’s a big deal.  Seriously. Because I love chocolate, the dark kind. I savor it daily.  When a person enjoys chocolate the way I do, it really is a sacrifice to give it up.  Non-chocolate-lovers might not have a felt experience of this. If that’s you, think of a special treat or snack you really enjoy and imagine not enjoying it for 40-ish days.  It can seem near impossible, excruciating, or completely pointless! However, it’s comforting to remember that the point of not eating chocolate (or any food or beverage of your choice)  is not so that we suffer, so that we lose weight, or so that we check the box of “giving something up for Lent.”  

2. Don’t Give Up Chocolate Mindfully

We don’t have to give up chocolate. In fact, we can choose to eat chocolate during Lent, and eat it mindfully.  Mindful eating is a practice of paying close attention to the experience of eating your meal by noticing the details of your food, how it looks and feels, its aroma and flavor.  Mindful eating slows us down and allows time to contemplate all the needed resources for the food to grow, such as healthy soil, the the sun and the rain, as well as the many people who made the food available to you: the farmers, harvesters, packers, shippers, and sales attendants.  And finally, mindful eating gives space for your lived experience of enjoying it: noticing the shape and color, then the scent, then the texture, then the taste, and as you swallow, offering thanks. This practice has a way of slowing us down to savor, to acknowledge that we don’t stand alone as individualists, but are an integral piece of the interconnectedness of all life.  

“This practice might allow
the act of eating to become
a prayer in itself.

These moments of mindful eating can create space to grow closer to Christ through an experience of profound gratitude for the many blessings we enjoy.  We often begin our meals with prayer, and some of us end our meals with prayer, but this practice might allow the act of eating to become a prayer in itself.  Try it out with your favorite piece of chocolate after your next yoga practice, or anytime!

3. Mindfully Explore Your Relationship to Chocolate 

What happens when we look closely at our cravings?  (Remember, it doesn’t have to be chocolate. It can even be cravings for non-edible things like attention or acknowledgment.) Consider this breath practice for Ash Wednesday:  

  • Identify a specific food, drink, or experience you have everyday.  Decide to be curious about your relationship to this item.  
  • When you notice a craving for it, acknowledge it, perhaps by labeling it with a name.  Then pause. Take a long, slow, deep breath. And wait. Does the craving pass?  Are there any emotions present here?
  • Take four more breaths, and if you like, link your breath with your favorite prayer or favorite name for God.  Then, look again. Is the craving still there? What emotions are present? Where do the emotions manifest in your body?  Are there any thoughts moving through your mind?  

Remember, in the moment of mindfulness there is no judgment, only awareness of the experience.  After your five breaths, decide to satisfy the craving or decide not to, remembering that neither of these actions is necessarily bad or good.  Mindfulness is noticing, and this noticing might give you interesting information. Stay curious. Breathe deeply. Pray well.  

For me, mindful moments are a pathway to prayer. They offer space and time for me to connect to my self, to my God, and to others. And that’s really what the Lenten journey is about – growing closer to others through prayer, through Christ, through a loving relationship with your own inner being. God has plans for you this Lent. Spend Ash Wednesday being open to possibility, open to connection to yourself and God’s Divine presence within you. And from there, move out from contemplation and into doing. In the words of Richard Rohr, ask God, “What is mine to do?” Listen and look closely for the answers and allow your prayer life to become an access road to action.

I’ll leave you with four prayer quotes for Lent gathered by Sr. Melanie Svoboda on her blog Sunflower Seeds:

“God is hiding in the world. Our task is to let the Divine emerge from our deeds.” Rabbi Abraham Heschel.

“Lent comes providentially to reawaken us, to shake us from our lethargy.” Pope Francis.

”No act of virtue can be great if it is not followed by advantage for others. So no matter how much time you spend fasting, no matter how much you sleep on a hard floor and eat ashes and sigh continually, if you do no good to others, you do nothing great.” St. John Chrysostom.

 “Lent’s not what you give up; it’s how you reach out.” Regina Brett.

What do you think?  Do any of these practices sound interesting?  Do any of these quotes inspire you? Perhaps you’ll start with the practice of exploration on Ash Wednesday, and then decide how (or if) the other two practices will be a part of your Lenten journey this year.  You might like to make up one or two chocolate practices that are unique to your own experience. If you do, be sure to share your experience here.

Happy Fat Tuesday, Happy Lent, Happy Practicing!

January 2020 Yoga Updates & News

Hello, Yoga Friends!

I hope this note finds you well and enjoying the turn of the calendar, the year, and the season. I also hope that you are being gentle with yourself as you live each day with your new or reestablished intentions, resolutions, or acknowledgments. Remember that you can always, shift, change, or revise your plans as you learn what works and what doesn’t. Allow January to be a “feeling it out” kinda month and practice flexibility with yourself and your expectations. Just like easing into a yoga pose at the beginning of your practice when your hamstrings are still cold — bend your knees a little! Trying out new routines and establishing new habits requires the same kind of care. So, bend your knees a little, bow your head a bit, and lift the corners of your mouth!

Updates

2019 was filled with some unexpected challenges and surprising opportunities for me. Was yours the same? I’ve grown some, learned a lot, and stepped into new responsibilities. {The next bit is lengthy, so feel free to skip to The Wrap Up!}

Yoga Class Offerings

As many of you know, last summer the old standby, Monday night Power Yoga Practice, took a back seat to my eldest son. It had become glaringly apparent that he will graduate and move out in less than three years, and I decided to offer my Monday nights to assist the Mansfield Symphony Youth Orchestra so I could spend more time with him. He’s been playing in the organization for many years, and it has been a blessing to be closer to him in this endeavor and share the experience in a new way. The decision feels right and good.

While I’m happy with this wise choice, I’ve felt myself longing for the rhythms of the vinyasa flow and the energy of the power yoga spirit. I’ve been scrounging around my family’s schedule for a new night to hold the class but have come up empty-handed. We’ll soon have a third driver in the family, though, so let’s keep our hopes high that the right night will open up in its own time.

Currently, I’m guiding Gentle Yoga for Strength & Vitality each Monday and Wednesday from 9:30 – 10:30am. I’ve created themes for each month so you’ll know in advance where some of our focus will be. You can view the themes at the Weekly Yoga Class page if you’re curious.

New Work

In addition to changing up my regular yoga teaching schedule this year, I’ve also changed up my stay-at-home time by joining the staff at Mind Body Align last August. This has been exciting, challenging, liberating, and supportive. My official title is Mindfulness & Yoga Educator, which means I teach both mindfulness and yoga classes and workshops at the Butterfly House, as well as off site for special events and programs. I also work with the Wellness Education Director to bring mind body awareness practices to the students of our local Mansfield City Schools. MBawareness Educational Program is moving into the end of its pilot year, and it’s been fun and rewarding to share my passion with younger students!

In addition to these endeavors I provide outreach and special programming for local community centers, area first-responders, and those in caring professions throughout mid-Ohio.

Writing and Learning

Continuing eduation and writing are a big part of my world right now. I’ve completed a second six-week course through Mindful Schools called Mindful Educator Essentials and have been accepted into their year-long Mindful Teacher Certification Program, which will begin this July. In November I began Yoga on High‘s 300-hour teacher training which will bring my credentialed hours beyond 500. I’m thrilled to be able to share new theories, perspectives, and practices with my students!

In addition to these trainings, I’ve been blessed with the opportunity to share my writing at Christians Practicing Yoga, a website dedicated to healing divides. I’m humbled to be a part of this amazing team of writers, yogis, and Christians. Follow the link to read more about the vision and mission of this extraordinary group of yogis proclaiming Christ.

The Catholic YogiA Trinitarian Focus in Yoga Practice

I still offer some independent sessions and classes and have been blessed with opportunities to share Yoga for Resilience with students at the 179th airlift wing. The chaplains there have been instrumental in bringing trauma-informed, mindfulness-based yoga practice to the base, and it’s been totally cool to share not only the physical and mental aspects of yoga, but the spiritual as well. Over the past few months I’ve also been able to share yoga practices with Christian Families who are curious about holistic health and pursuing ways they can integrate physical, mental, and spiritual wellbeing. (Super-Cool.)

The Wrap Up

Be on the lookout for a couple of fun new things:

By the end of the month, my first ever guided meditation will be available at Christians Practicing Yoga and right here at The Catholic Yogi. It’s called Setting Intentions for a New Year: Discovering Your Sankalpa, and I really hope you’ll check it out. I’m planning to record a few more meditations over the next couple of months, so for those of you who used to ask me to make relaxation cd’s ten, fifteen year ago (and I said,” No way!”), you’re about to get something even better, mp3 audio files in the palm of your hand. Hopefully it will be worth the wait!

The new Ask a Yogi section of the Mind Body Align newsletter will feature real questions from real people just like you — because I’m asking you to submit some! Yours truly will offer her best response, and while I don’t know everything, I promise to do my research, query my own teachers and colleagues when I need to, and bring you the most helpful and supportive information I can. (If you’re not already in the loop, follow this link to the MBA website and sign up for the newsletter, Align.)

Don’t Forget

  • Be gentle with yourself (bend your knees a little)
  • Keep practicing
  • Visit Christians Practicing Yoga & Mind Body Align to sign up for their blogs & newsletters
  • Spread the word about Mind Body Align’s MBAwareness Educational Program & summer teacher workshops
  • Check out my meditation once it goes live
  • Ask a Yogi Q & A: Submit your questions about yoga and mindfulness here
  • Forward this to anyone you think might benefit

That’s it for now, friends. I look forward to seeing you at the studio and teaching your kids in the classroom. Until then, Happy Practicing!

The Catholic Yogi

(Photos by Pexels)

Incarnation: The Realization of Your Divine Light Within Your Physical Body

Happy Advent, Happy Holy Days, Yogis,

I want to share with you this teaching from my spiritual study with Richard Rhor.

May you be fully awake!

Image credit: Flight into Egypt (detail), Henry Ossawa Turner, 1923, Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Incarnation

Living “en Christo”

Incarnation, the synthesis of matter and spirit, should be the primary and compelling message of Christianity. Through the Christ (en Christo), the seeming gap between God and everything else has been overcome “from the beginning” (Ephesians 1:4, 9). Without some form of incarnation, God remains essentially separate from us and from all of creation. Without incarnation, it is not an enchanted universe but somehow an empty one.

God, who is Infinite Love, incarnates that love as the universe itself. This begins with the “Big Bang” nearly 13.8 billion years ago, which means our human notions of time are largely useless (see 2 Peter 3:8). Then, a mere 2,000 years ago, as Christians believe, God incarnated in personal form as Jesus of Nazareth. Matter and spirit have always been one, of course, ever since God decided to manifest God’s self in the first act of creation (Genesis 1:1-31), but it seems we could only meet this presence in personal form after much longing and desiring. Most indigenous religions also recognized the sacred and even personal nature of all reality, as did my father St. Francis of Assisi (1182–1226) who spoke of “Brother Sun and Sister Moon.” Incarnation was always hidden right beneath the surface of things.

Jesus came to reveal the dualism of the spiritual and so-called secular as untrue and incomplete. By his very existence, Jesus modeled for us that these two seemingly different worlds are and always have been one. We just couldn’t imagine it intellectually until God put them together in one body that we could see and touch and love (see Ephesians 2:11-20). In Christ “you also are being built into a dwelling place of God in the Spirit” (Ephesians 2:22). What an amazing realization that should shock and delight us!

You are the body of Christ; you are the incarnation, too. Augustine (354–430) said this already in the early fifth century. The sacrament, the bread, is only for the sake of the people, to transform the people, to let them know that they are what they eat. [1]

The final stage of incarnation is resurrection. This is no exceptional miracle only performed once in the body of Jesus. It is the final and fulfilled state of all divine embodiment. Now even physics suggests that matter itself is a manifestation of spirit, a vital force, or what many call consciousness. In fact, I would say that spirit or shared consciousness is the ultimate, substantial, and real thing.

But matter itself also seems to be eternal. It just keeps changing shapes and forms, as scientists, astrophysicists, and biblical writers tell us (Isaiah 65:17 and Revelation 21:1). In the Creed, Christians affirm that we believe in “the resurrection of the body,” not just the soul. The incarnation reveals that human bodies and all of creation are good and blessed and moving toward divine fulfillment (Romans 8:18-30).

Gateway to Presence:
If you want to go deeper with today’s meditation, take note of what word or phrase stands out to you. Come back to that word or phrase throughout the day, being present to its impact and invitation.