Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Costa Rica Retreat

March 14th-22nd
I co-led a yoga retreat with Robin Rothenberg at Guaria de Osa in Costa Rica.
We do lots of movement and free exploration using many of Avodah's methodologies for exploring ideas through movement.
My job is to bring lots of fun to the program! Pretty fun!

Here is a note from Robin's newsletter that sums up the retreat!

A Note from Robin
Spring-Summer 2008

We aptly named our annual yoga retreat this year Simple Abundance, contemplating the teachings of how contentment and non-attachment can lead us to joy. Costa Rica’s Osa Peninsula ushered us into an experience of what that truly means. We awakened each morning to the sound of scarlet macaws and howler monkeys. The scintillating scent of ylang ylang perfumed our path wherever we walked. We swam under waterfalls and explored the vast and varied wildlife of the jungle from leaf cutter ants, to iridescent blue morpho butterflies and giant cathedral figs.

There was also an abundance of heat – 90 degrees with matching humidity - and insects, no-see-ums that carved mosaics on our calves and ankles. The full moon, shimmering like a giant pearl in the night sky, turned the ocean into a riptide that made wading more than knee-deep a life-threatening proposition. Heat-stroke hit our group hard on the second day. Accommodations were rustic (or simple, depending on how you chose to view it), meaning the toilets and showers (cold only), didn’t always work, sheets were of a low-thread count and clean towels scarce.

There we were in this land of limitless beauty, (a Cessna, jeep and boat ride away from civilization), challenged by the lack of amenities to which we’d become accustomed. Instead of A.C., we swathed ourselves in wet sarongs to stay cool, and rocked in the hammocks which hung from every shady tree. We were given medicinal bark tea to soothe our bellies, fresh watermelon and guayabana juice to stay hydrated. Those who felt well tended to the wilted. We took turns as nursemaid and patient. We laughed a lot. We laughed A LOT.

In fact, as the week progressed and we practiced our yoga through the sweltering heat, the bugs and the tummy aches, we found a deep and true appreciation for each other and for a simple kind of life. Our formal practice centered around a blessing for peace; peace for the earth, the water, the trees and heavens, and ultimately for ourselves. Through meditation we observed our ‘inner roommate’ the constant narrator in our head who judges, chatters incessantly and has opinions about everything. We practiced witnessing her neurosis and recognizing ourselves as the quiet witness who experiences her but is separate from her at the same time.

This strange and unruly tonic worked. Not one of us slipped into the angsty Eyore we were all capable of becoming. Momentary lapses into whine-ville were met with some good-humored teasing or the serendipitous citing of a parrot or iguana, all having an amnesiac effect on our discomfort. With nature abundantly present, we forgot about our cell-phones, e-mails and blackberries. We rose at dawn and prepared for bed shortly after the sumptuous evening meal was served, meandering back to our cabins with headlamps a-glow like miners in a quarry. It wasn’t in spite of, but rather due to the rawness of our surroundings that we were able to shed some of our modern armor, bonding through laughter, grapefruit seed extract, sunset meditations and a shared interest in quieting our anxious minds. There was as much yoga being practiced off the mat as on the mat.

We went on retreat to well… retreat... At our closing circle we reviewed our stated intentions from our first day together: To quiet the noise inside our heads, to go inside and learn to trust; to find balance, open our hearts, and learn to listen; to become still and be in spiritual community with others. We had accomplished our hearts’ desires and it wasn’t always comfortable. Caressed by the wild tangle of flora and fauna we witnessed each other blossom, like jungle orchids - simple beauty, simply abundant.

Layers Residency @ York 2008

Wow! We just got home from our SEVENTH week long residency at York Correctional Institution for Women. Our theme this year was LAYERS, and the women were willing and able to sink their teeth into the theme to create a beautiful, moving performance.

We journeyed through dance, yoga, music, writing, and a visualization/reflection on the theme. Then the women created solos, duets, trios, and group pieces based on their personal reflections: First the idea of creating safe space in which to look at these questions...Did they feel they had layers they needed to remove, peel, clear or shed? Or did they feel they needed to wrap themselves up or add a layer? They all had an individual way of answering the question through movement.

We also created movement as a group that reflected what we do to create some space from the layers in our head, the static in our minds. And a finale piece, or epilogue, that showed our journey--from layered with thickness and heaviness, to sometimes becoming stuck, to realizing the beauty, life and warmth within, to melting, shedding and blasting through the layers, to shaking the residue off, to dancing our fullness and joy, to moving as ourselves and showing our true essence (in their words: CONFIDENT, QUEEN, WARRIOR, FLOWER ON THE RISE, FLOWING, FREE, FALLING, FLYING, SAFE...).

The women performed their entire piece including a Hip Hop number along with the Avodah Dance Ensemble and accompanied by Newman Taylor Baker's inspiring and sensitive percussion. One woman from York also accompanied through percussion with Newman-she is a natural. We performed twice: once for the school and once for the women's families and friends in the visiting room. Both performances were received well with lots of positive energy. At the end of the performance in the school at York C.I., women in the audience spontaneously arose from their chairs and started dancing!!

The women are magnificent to work with. Natural creators, artists, performers. Willing to dive deep within themselves. Become vulnerable to the process and share who they really are. As artists, the members of Avodah all agreed that working with the women is a true exchange; we are all humbled by the process and feel so much gratitude to share and learn so intensively with them.

We will be heading to Baylor Women's Correctional Institution on April 13th for our next week long residency! We'll keep you posted!