2019 July/August
What Helps and What Hurts
Yoga can be a great tool for recovery, but only if yoga teachers understand how to shape the practice to the needs of people healing from trauma.
Yoga can be a great tool for recovery, but only if yoga teachers understand how to shape the practice to the needs of people healing from trauma.
Is the great outdoors your holy place? You might want to consider joining the Wild Church Network.
"When you find yourself in turbulent waters / tie a rope to your center / and loosen your hold.
Bring attention to the doors of your life and you might discover the magic they hold.
Warning: Yoga may cause you to reassess your life's purpose and—gasp!—go for it.
"Our sexuality is one of the tenderest, most vulnerable aspects of who we are. It needs us to be safe and to feel trust. Then it can come out with the confidence, creativity, and even fierce passion that are its natural expressions."
Low sexual desire can limit energy and vitality. The good news is you can take control turn that light back on.
Not hungry in the morning? Here is what Ayurveda tells us about eating breakfast.
In the last part of her five-part series on mushrooms, Leslie Krongold looks at mushroom ... art, including dyes made from mushrooms.
“I am hoping the researchers are right when they say that breathing in and touching soil bacteria can strengthen the mood and immune system.”
How to celebrate the summer solstice and other special occasions this season.