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Silence in the Morning

January 21, 2018 By Arlene Faulk

 cellphone

From the minute we wake up it’s noisy. It might be the television, radio or phone we turn on to catch the latest news. It might be a daughter or husband wanting our attention, wanting lunch to be packed or wanting to hurry to catch the train to work. It doesn’t stop all day. It just keeps coming and coming.

We get used to it, the increasing pace and volume of information coming at us. And, we just think ‘that’s the way it is’ If we stop to think about it, what it is doing to us, usually our answer is not positive. “I feel drained. I am anxious. I am so tired. I can’t keep up. If only I had a few more hours in the day.” Sound familiar?

Want some relief? First, become aware of what all the noise, all the news flashes across a screen are doing to your nervous system and psyche. A friend of mine told me she waits an hour after she wakes up before looking at her phone. That’s a start. Another friend takes 15 minutes in the morning, out of bed and onto the floor for stretching exercises. And that’s before coffee!

Arlene Faulk

I have found five to ten minutes of Tai Chi helps me immensely in the morning. I get my energy moving through the relaxed, slow moves of my form and start the day with some stillness. I think better, don’t rush around and best of all, start the day with some focus.

Just a few minutes of creating silence can make a huge difference in your day. What do you do when you wake up? What do you do to silence the noise for a few minutes?

Filed Under: Mindfulness, Tai Chi Tagged With: put the phone down, silence, stretching, waking up to silence

Do You Know What “Relaxed” Is?

May 21, 2017 By Arlene Faulk

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Two days ago, as I was writing a chapter in my book, I literally went back to the moment I first learned what it feels like to “relax”. Go there with me.

It is October, 1990. Rancho La Puerta in Tecate, Mexico for a week. I have been coming here for 10 years with good friends, Kathie, Dena, Carla, Linda and often, others. This beautiful place, south of San Diego is familiar, comfortable. No phones in the room. No television. Lots of Rummikub playing. The world outside of here does not exist right now. Ah. . . silence, the smell of jasmine, healthy food, massage, deep pink bougainvillea, exercise, massage.

In my red and black leotard with black tights to my knees, I am sitting on a large, padded mat in an outdoor pavilion. The only enclosure is a roof overhead to protect us from the sun; the rest is open to outside. Sheri, a tall, slender young woman, maybe mid-twenties, is our instructor for stretch and relax class. I am captivated by the very thin braid that gently flows down the left side of her head, almost to her waist. She has a multi-colored cloth woven into the braid. The rest of her shiny, blond hair is straight. What a great look!

“Roll your shoulders up, breathe in. Exhale, and roll your shoulders down,” she says while walking around among the 20 or so people in the class. I feel a tiny breeze float through our space, tune in to the singing of a couple birds above us in a tree. I am glad to be here.

About 30 minutes into the 45-minute class, Sheri says she wants us to do a little experiment.

“Do you know what ‘relaxed’ is, what it feels like? Let’s all lie down on our backs. Just be comfortable with your arms at your sides.”

Very methodically, she leads us through bringing awareness to our body. “Tense up your toes. Hold. Release. Next, tense up your feet. Hold. Release.” Step by step she instructs us to move up our body, tense up each part, hold, then release. After we move up to the top of our heads, she tells us to just take time to be here, feel the moment, still, relaxed.

“If you have any remaining tension in your back, let it go. Let it go out of your body and into the mat.”

We lie still for a few minutes, with soft music playing, helping us further relax. She asks us to sit up, very slowly, taking our time.

“One last thing as we close,” Sheri says, pausing to give us time for our eyes to re-focus, for us to return to where we are in the pavilion. “We often think about ‘relaxing’ as something we want to do. We might go watch the sun set, sit by a lake and stare at the water or sit on our couch and read a book. Those are good things, but. . . relaxing is not adding something, not adding a new activity. ‘Relaxing’ is letting go of something we are already doing.”

At that very moment, I realize that I thought I knew how to relax, but not really. Letting go of something I am already doing – I want to remember that and put it into practice.

Filed Under: Breathwork, Energy, Inner Balance, Listening to our Body, Paying Attention Tagged With: life lesson, relaxing, stretching

Arlene Faulk

Arlene Faulk

After a years-long struggle to understand and conceal debilitating symptoms while I ascended the corporate ladder, I found comfort and healing through Tai Chi and Chinese Medicine.

My memoir, Walking on Pins and Needles, is the story about the power to control our lives and move in the direction of possibility. Read more...

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FROM TAI CHI STUDENTS

“Tuning into the class and seeing familiar faces of the other students brings a nice sense of community and connection during this time of separation and isolation.”

I hear Arlene saying to listen to my body and only do what I can do. That helps me relax.

Tai Chi has made me aware of how I’m standing and where my weight is. My balance is improving.

I love the walking practice because it helps me slow down and focus only on the moment.

Tuning into the class and seeing familiar faces of the other students brings a nice sense of community and connection during this time of separation and isolation.

I really enjoy our time together and I’ve found Tai Chi a great way to “keep moving,” not only during this pandemic but also as a regular practice with a wonderful integration of mind, body and spirit.

The community Tai Chi has provided has been a gift. With so much we can now do whenever we wish — with an app, YouTube video, or streaming service — meeting weekly (via zoom) in real time, live, to practice Tai Chi creates true community.

In just a few months, the practice has become perhaps the most nurturing element in my life during COVID times, when sustaining a commitment to anything else has been challenging.

For me, Tai Chi brings comfort and quiet amidst all the chaos and change.

Tai Chi really gives my body strength to put up with the pains of my breast cancer and back problems. Tai Chi is ‘sneaky’. You don’t think it’s helping, but eventually you realize it’s helping you.

Tai Chi relaxes your entire body and promotes peace and proper breathing. The more I manage to breathe properly while doing any activity in my life, I generally tend to do a lot better at it. I benefited from Tai Chi because it managed to help me with my breathing skills even more.

I play golf and had a lesson after school, on the same day we had Tai Chi class. My coach commented, ‘Your posture is amazing and all of the balance issues that we have been fighting for so long seem to have just taken a vacation.’ I mentioned to him that I thought it was due to Tai Chi.

I’m really inspired by what Tai Chi has done for Arlene. She is a great teacher, who is calm and very patient. She has really helped me not to be so hard on myself.

I love Arlene’s Tai Chi classes. She helps us understand not only what we’re doing, but also why we’re doing it. That really helps me take what I learn in class and apply it to my daily life.

I’ve always been a klutz and have regularly lost my balance and fallen when walking outside. Arlene taught me how to stand and walk properly through Tai Chi. I really can’t believe it: I haven’t fallen in four years since I’ve been taking Tai Chi with Arlene!

I’ve even shared some of the exercises with my bike club to help reduce injuries. They really work!

Arlene teaches the Tai Chi form in such a gentle and connected way that many movements now feel utterly natural and healing.

I had back surgery, was in pain and had little range of motion. Tai Chi practice at Heartwood has helped me increase flexibility, my range of motion and my overall stamina.

Tai Chi makes me feel calm, yet energized. Because of my practice, the small irritants of life affect me less.

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