Australian Yoga Journal — January 2018

(Jacob Rumans) #1
PHOTO: AVESUN/ISTOCKPHOTO.COM

SERENITYNow!


YOUR SILLY SEASON SURVIVAL KIT


PRACTICE WELL


om


WHO REMEMBERS THAT EPISODE on
Seinfeld when George’s father Frank
keeps exclaiming ‘Serenity Now’,
intending on bypassing his frustrations
and find a lasting solution to inner
peace? Of course by the end of the
show he explodes and destroys
everything in his path! Such is the
trap for many yogis who only use
affirmations and positive thinking
without actually acknowledging how
they truly feel. This Silly Season, let’s
commit to both serenity and keeping
it real!

Being a yogi often means being highly
sensitive to energy which has its huge
advantages and also it’s a reminder to
protect your aura when around large
groups of people, or out of your
normal peaceful routine. If you get
overwhelmed easily when not given
enough time alone to spiritually
recharge and don’t understand some
of the crazy out-of-control behaviours
that may accompany the ‘silly’ season,
here’s some tips to stay centred
amongst all the parties and big family
gatherings.


  1. Don’t force yourself to be nice. Rather
    choose to see everyone as perfect in
    the eyes of LOVE and through this
    awareness, you will naturally find
    conversations with others will be
    empowering and you will be able to
    see the good in all. You will truly feel
    and know that everyone is doing the
    best they can with their current level
    of awareness.

  2. Choose not to pretend. One of the
    interesting dynamics of being with all
    your family all at once on Christmas Day
    is you don’t know which ‘personality’
    to put forward, since we unknowingly
    become a different character for different
    people. You may behave one way with
    your Mum, but a different way with your
    brother, different again with your cousin



  • you may be loving with some family


members, hurt by some and
competitive with others. It’s exhausting
and leads to big frustrations and often
family disagreements. So just do you!
Authenticity is not only a relief for you,
it silently conveys to everyone else
just to be themselves. Talk about your
successes and your failures - we all have
them, so keep it real and watch the
positive response you receive.


  1. Avoid buying into others’ egos. Ego
    behaviour is not just big-noting - it also
    includes victim mentality (feeling sorry
    for oneself), negative belief systems
    (the world and people are ‘terrible’),
    views that others’ are better off
    and more. If you feed others’ ego
    projections, you make their stories real
    when in fact the ego is based on illusion.
    This isn’t an easy task but do your best
    not to agree with ego-based stories
    you hear from others. Rather talk
    about all the good you have
    encountered throughout the year.

  2. Take responsibility if someone
    irritates you. The way to stop the
    endless pattern of being annoyed by
    certain people is to accept they are in
    your life to teach you something.
    They may also be a reflection
    of the parts of yourself (albeit in a
    smaller way) that irritate you about
    yourself. Oh, this one takes courage to
    apply but is well worth owning your
    stuff and transcending it!

  3. Honour your True Self. Say no when
    you need to honour yourself first.
    You don’t have to go to every event,
    function or party over the festive
    season. If you need rest or time
    out to find your centre, you have the
    right to put yourself first. Turning up to
    something that you are resisting actually
    blocks your energy field and can make
    you sick. It’s not selfish to say no.


Many magical moments for the festive
season to you all and SERENITY NOW!

By Carrie-Anne Fields


22


january 2018

yogajournal.com.au
Free download pdf