Maggie Heinzel-Neel Maggie Heinzel-Neel

Have You Tried This Instant Mood Shifter?

Did you know that our facial expressions can actually open and quiet our minds? This helps us during meditation and anytime we need to shift our mindset. Meditation is a practice we cultivate all year long, but primarily in the winter when the natural world is becoming quiet and still. To start meditation we purposely shift how we breathe, transitioning from involuntary breathing to a conscious long slow breath. Then we add the inner smile.

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Maggie Heinzel-Neel Maggie Heinzel-Neel

Transcend The Chronic Pain And Anxiety Associated With Autoimmune Conditions With This Powerful Practice.

The Meridian Flow combines a powerful combination of yoga and medical qigong, which is part of Chinese medicine's 5 elemental paradigm. According to traditional Chinese medicine, each season’s energy (or chi) feeds the next season. Now we are transitioning from autumn into winter. The element of autumn is metal, and it feeds the element of winter, which is water.

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Maggie Heinzel-Neel Maggie Heinzel-Neel

A Longevity Practice To Keep You Young and Vital: How To Conserve Your Qi.

As the cold weather approaches we need to address our energy reserves. In the Meridian Flow, we combine yoga and Chinese medicine, which both agree that our energy, known as Chi, is the most subtle, yet profound part of our being. Our energy, Chi, is received through the lungs and stored in the kidneys. The lungs are energetically running the strongest in the autumn, the kidneys are running strongest in the winter. Each season energetically feeds the next season. So the lungs are energetically the mother to the kidneys.

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Maggie Heinzel-Neel Maggie Heinzel-Neel

Gratitude Is The New ATTITUDE... And One Of The Best Things For Our Mental Health.

What are you grateful for? Just pause for a moment, close your eyes, bring your hands to your heart and consider what’s working well in your life. We spend so much time focusing on what’s wrong, rather than what’s right in our abundant lives. As author John Kabat-Zinn reminds us, “There is so much more right in our lives than there is wrong." Focusing on what we appreciate uplifts our spirits and brightens the mind. Especially the things that we take for granted - because without them our lives would be turned upside down.

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Maggie Heinzel-Neel Maggie Heinzel-Neel

Cultivate the Opposite... and learn how to train your mind.

When I sit to meditate one of the best spine openers is a qigong set called Crane and Tortoise. It’s arching and rounding of the spine with the breath, and a side-to-side spinal bend that releases the tension held in the sides of the spine which often carries a lot of stress. This relieves the tension held in the front, back, and sides of the spine so then I can sit with stillness and ease.

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Maggie Heinzel-Neel Maggie Heinzel-Neel

Become the alchemist of your energy...turn your metal into gold.

In the autumn sadness and grief can weigh heavy on our chests. In Chinese medicine, the emotion of grief resides in our lungs. The lungs and large intestine are energetically running the strongest in the autumn and their main function is to let go. The emotions of sadness and grief are part of the seasonal energy in the fall.

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Maggie Heinzel-Neel Maggie Heinzel-Neel

The way we BREATHE affects the way we THINK.

When we regulate our breathe We regulate our emotions. When our mind is stuck in negative patterns our breath is often being held or it's very shallow and there's no awareness of it. This is when we have repressed emotions of resentment, guilt, fear, or loss of control.

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Maggie Heinzel-Neel Maggie Heinzel-Neel

Dry Crying To Release Pressure In The Lungs.

As the natural world is turning inward, releasing leaves from the trees, and plants returning to the earth, there is a palpable feeling that nature, which we are part of, is letting go and grieving.

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