Monday, March 14, 2011

The Nourish Blog is Moving! Be sure you move with us...

I have one teensy task for you to do today - it will take 30 seconds so please don't put it off. In fact, you'll be able to check one thing off your to-do list right away - and won't that feel good?

The Nourish Blog is MOVING so you'll no longer find updates on this Blogger site.

I've moved all the old posts and will do all new posts straight from my new brand website at www.NourishYourself.com.

Here's what to do to continue to read the Nourish Blog in the way you choose:

1 -To subscribe to receive our blog posts by email, go to the sidebar of the page found at this link and enter your email address. You'll immediately receive a verification email which you'll need to open in order to complete the subscription process. (Even if you already subscribe by email you'll need to RESUBSCRIBE by following this step).

2 - To follow us by RSS, click the RSS icon on the sidebar of this page. (Even if you already subscribe by RSS you'll need to redirect your feed by doing this).

3 - If you currently come directly to this site to check for updates, you'll need to bookmark a new page. It is http://NourishYourself.com/category/all-posts/

Okay, now off to do your 30 second task...as an incentive, if you subscribe by email or RSS by March 31st, you'll be entered to win a Nourish Goodie Bag full of really fun things to support your wellness journey! We'll see you on the new site, and thank you so much for continuing to follow the Nourish Blog!

Friday, March 4, 2011

Begin Making Tiny Movements - A bit of yoga Inspiration

At the end of each yoga class, our instructor settles us into "savasana"(alternately spelled shavasana), a pose in which we lie flat on our backs, perfectly still, for a few minutes of meditative silence. With nothing but a fan whirring overhead or (if we're lucky) birds chirping outside, it's the quietest moment of my day. It's a period of complete rest, no matter how short-lived. When it's time to end savasana, the instructor asks us to "begin making tiny movements with our fingers and toes" before we raise ourselves to a seated position and end the class with a single "om". 

That phrase "begin making tiny movements" has stuck with me for several weeks now. It seems to be a choicefully selected phrase, notable for its specificity. Not big movements. Not "okay, sit up now." But "Begin making tiny movements..." For a room full of women who've just been completely at rest, tiny movements are about all we want to muster.

Then, this week, I read this little nugget on the Peace & Projects blog written by  Melissa Gorzelanczyk, and I thought "Aha!" 

I'll include it here so you can read it for yourself.

"Focus on tiny movements. That’s all it takes to change your life. If you want to quit smoking, you can stop putting a cigarette in your mouth and lighting the end. Once you master the way you move, you can do anything. You can decide to write instead of go out to lunch. You can put away the beer and go to bed early. You can feel your feet on the ground for a run. Movements, no matter how small, shape your entire life. How you go through the motions is up to you."

So true. Change is simply a series of tiny movements strung together. It's making "the next right choice" and every moment is a new chance to get it right.  I've blogged before about momentum and how it can be a helpful force if you are on the right track. But if you find yourself on the wrong track, one that doesn't serve your goals, then perhaps the best thing you can do is to still yourself.  Completely.  Stop everything.  Find your own Savasana. And when you're ready, begin making tiny movements... strung together, they'll change your life.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Guest Post: Create Time to Change Your Life

Create Time to Change Your Life

Post written by Leo Babauta of ZenHabits blog
When I decided to change my life a little over 5 years ago, I had a very common problem: I didn’t have the time.

I wanted to exercise and find time for my family and eat healthier (instead of the fast-food junk I’d been eating) and read more and write and be more productive and increase my income.

Unfortunately there are only 24 hours in a day, and we sleep for about 8 of them. Subtract the hours we spend eating (3), showering and dressing and fixing up (1), cleaning and running errands (1), driving (2), working (8) … and you’re left with an hour or two at most. Often less.

Eventually I figured out how to do all the things I wanted to do. I’ve achieved all of that and more, and in fact I have more leisure time now than ever. But first I had to figure out the fundamental problem: how could I find the time to change my life?

I know many of you face the same problem — you’ve told me as much. So I thought I’d share some of what I did in the beginning, in hopes that it’ll help. 

The First Step
You must make a commitment. You have to decide that you really want to make a change, and that it’s more important than almost anything else.

For me, only my family was more important — and in fact I was making these change for my family as well as for myself. So these changes I was making were really my top priority in life.

It has to be that urgent for you. Think of this not as “improving your life” but saving it. The changes I made saved my life — I am so much healthier, my marriage is better, my relationships with my kids have improved, I am happier rather than depressed. If you don’t feel you’re saving your life then you won’t make the tough changes needed. 

Next Steps
Once I made the mental commitment, I took small steps to give myself a little wiggle room to breathe and move:

  • Cut out TV. I watched less TV than ever before (eventually I watched none, though now I watch a few shows a week over the Internet). For many people this one change will free up a couple hours or more.
  • Read less junk. I used to read a lot of things on the Internet that were just entertainment. Same with magazines. I cut that stuff out early so I could focus on what was more important.
  • Go out less. I used to go to a lot of movies and to dinner and drinking. I cut that out (mostly) for awhile, to make time.
  • Wake earlier. Not everyone is going to do this but it was a good step for me. I found that I had more time exercising and working in the morning before anyone woke up — the world was quiet and at peace and without interruptions. (Read more.)
In general, find the things that eat up your time that are less important than the changes you want to make. That’s almost everything except the things you need to live — work and eating and stuff like that. Cut back on them where you can.

Simplify Commitments

I had a lot of commitments in my life — I coached soccer, was on the PTA board, served on a lot of committees at work, had social commitments as well, worked on a number of projects.

Slowly I cut them out. They seemed important but in truth none of them were as important as the life I wanted to create, the changes I wanted to make. Lots of things are important — but which are the absolute most important? Make a decision.

If you are having trouble making a decision, try an experiment. Cut out a commitment just for a little while. See whether you suffer from cutting it out, or whether you like the extra time.

If you’re worried about offending people, don’t. Send an email or make a phone call and explain that you’d love to keep doing the commitment but you just don’t have the time and don’t want to half-ass it. The person might try to talk you into staying but be firm — respect yourself and your time and the changes you’re trying to make.

Here’s a secret: the people and organizations you’ve been helping or working with will live. They will go on doing what they were doing without you, and (omg!) they will survive without you. Your departure will not cause the world to collapse. Let go of the guilt.


Streamline your life
Eventually I made many other changes, including:
  • Making bills and savings and debt payments automatic. I set everything up online so that I wouldn’t have to run errands or spend time making payments. This put my debt reduction on automatic, and I got out of debt. (Read more.)
  • Streamlining errands. I tried to cut as many errands out of my life as possible. Often that meant changing my life in some way but I adjusted and things became simpler. I cleaned as I went so I didn’t have a lot of cleaning to do on weekends. I did the few errands I had all at once to save running around.
  • Work less. I would set limits to how much I could work, forcing myself to pick the important tasks and to get those tasks done on time. I learned which tasks needed to be done and which could be dropped. I became much more effective and worked less.
  • Say no. When people asked me to do stuff that was important to them but not to me, I learned to politely decline. Instead I focused on what was important to me.
Slowly I learned to simplify. I simplified my daily routines, my work, my social life, my possessions, my chores, my wardrobe. It took time but it has been more than worth the effort: life is so much better now that I’ve created the time to do what I want to do.