Angie’s Blog
Inspiration on yoga, philosophy, mindfulness, art and creativity
Three Winter Favorites
Typically, my least favorite months are January, February, and March. But this year feels a little different. Now, I wouldn't call myself a winter person…
This Changed My Life...Yoga Teacher Training!
Seventeen years ago, I made one of the best decisions of my life.
I decided to become a yoga teacher.
I had been practising yoga for six years. Yoga had become a life-line for me
Try Intentions Instead of Resolutions
I believe that winter is a time for self-inquiry and reflection. The darker days and colder temperatures make me want to turn within, to make large pots of tea, and to stay by the fire…(photo by Zane Lee, Unsplash)
Adaptogenic Holiday Dream Latte
The holidays can be a season of great joy and time lovingly spent with those we love. Maybe we take a little extra time off from work to spend with family and friends, and maybe we over-indulge in our very favorite vegan desserts! But it is important to remember…
How easy is it for you to sit, to stand, to walk?
I have been sharing the following quote in my yoga classes this week.
The Trouble With Kindness
Recently I read Topher Payne's alternate ending of Shel Silverstein's The Giving Tree. Josh and I used to read this story to our girls when they were little, and we would all get so angry over the ending.
Layering Stories of Myth and Place
If you have spent any time with me at all, you know that I am both a yoga teacher and an artist. In all of the work I do, my mission is to awaken a sense of spirit by exploring the connections between artful-living, nature, and
One chick left in the nest...
Josh and I brought Ellessia to college last weekend.
It was a week of tears and uncertainty as she was recovering
Dying to be me
I feel that I am moving at a much slower pace since returning from Sicily. I just don't feel the need to push, to force, to respond to requests, to emails, to run a to-do list and get anything done. It seems completely ok to sit on my deck and just let my body breath
Congratulations to Myriad Yoga Teacher Trainees--2022!
A big CONGRATULATIONS to the Myriad Yoga 200 Hour Class of 2022!
I have been leading yoga teacher training programs for almost ten years, and each time we close out a training year I feel the bittersweet emotions of pride, joy, and sadness to see it all come to a close. It is like releasing my little birdies out of my yoga nest and into the world!
The right nostril is like a gas pedal...
As you know, I have completely shifted my relationship with the breath because of this book: Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art, by James Nestor.
There are so many lessons to learn inside those pages, that I thought I would share a few quotes to inspire you to think more deeply about Prana (our theme for May) and your breath.
You do this 22,000 times a day!
This is your greatest asset–your most immediate connection to energy and life-force in your body.
How I meditated with Mark Twain
Mark Twain taught me how to meditate…
*Image from Elmira College on Flickr
The Oldest and Most Confusing Form of Energy Exchange
I think most of us have a complex psychological relationship with money.
I am constantly pondering and examining my own relationship to this ancient form of energy exchange.
How Growth Arises From Discomfort: A Perspective on Cultural Appropriation
Over the past few years, I have opened my yoga teacher training programs with a lengthy discussion about cultural appropriation and yoga. The Brittanica website defines cultural appropriation in the following way…
Simple Practices That Help You Learn to Say No
How often do you find yourself in the uncomfortable position of wishing you hadn’t said yes?
Maybe you didn’t want to seem rude and you responded too quickly to a request, but deep inside you wish you just said “no”.
For Courage
“For Courage” by John O’Donohue
From the book: To Bless the Space Between Us
When the light around you lessens
And your thoughts darken until
Your body feels fear turn
Cold as a stone inside,
Confidence, driving, and a broken foot
Both of my teenage daughters received their driving licenses during the pandemic. If you are, or have ever been, the parent of a teen driver, then you understand how exciting, liberating, and completely terrifying this moment in time can be.
Now, I had to practically force my oldest daughter to sign up for driver's ed and take her driver’s test. She was eighteen when she finally got that license. It just wasn’t high on her list of priorities; she’d rather draw her comics than drive around shopping. But my youngest daughter was begging me to sign her up the minute she turned fifteen. She was in drivers ed right when the pandemic began in early March of 2020, and it took twice as long to complete due to the new precautions. She finished her remote drivers ed course and all her driving hours five months later, in September of 2020. She was thrilled to finally schedule that drivers test. Then she dropped a ten pound dumbbell on her right foot 🦶🏿