Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Balance Studio - Cohasset



Balance Studio
15 Depot Court
Cohasset, Ma 02025

Telephone:339-337-3660

Email: klynch@balancestudiocohasset.com

www.balancestudiocohasset.com

We offer: Hot Power Yoga, Hatha Yoga, Teen and children's yogaClassical Pilates Mat Classes, Private and Group Pilates Equipment classes

Charlestown Yoga Studio Events


Holiday Hours
Wednesday, December 31 - 10 am class only
Thursday, January 1 - 12 pm detox class
Friday, January 2 - regular schedule resumes

NEW YEARS DAY
Join us on New Years Day for a Detox Yoga class at Noon. Pre-registration is required. Visit our website for more information.
REGISTER TODAY

THIS SATURDAY - January 3 2009 - FREE Men's Yoga Classes
This class will focus on the basics of yoga alignment. Assistants will be available. Pre-registration is required. Limited to 15 students.
Saturday, January 3 at 12:30 - 1:30 pm
Saturday, February 7 at 12:30 - 1:30 pm
REGISTER NOW

NEW CLASSES - JUST ADDED
PILATES - will be back in January for 3 weeks.
Thursdays 7:30 - 8:30 pm

RESTORATIVE yoga class at the studio.
Tuesdays 8-9pm YANG/YIN
Wednesdays - Noon (Replaces 10am class)
Saturdays - 4pm

New Workshops for 2009. Space is limited so register online today!
Friday, January 9th - Belly Dancing class with Homey
Friday, January 23rd - Hip-Hop Dance class with Amy
Friday, February 20th - Belly Dancing class with Homey
REGISTER NOW

Baby & Me Classes return in January with advanced registration. Contact the studio for more information. REGISTER NOW

Beginner's classes return in January. Sundays at 12 pm.

Don't miss out on the 15% discount on packages. Sale ends January 15th!
Sign up for Auto-renew and receive 10% off the regular price each time the package is renewed
5 class card - $59.50 (reg $70)
10 class card - $110.50 (reg $130)
3months unlimited - $331.50 (reg $390 )

6 months unlimited - $578.00 (reg $680 )
20 class card - $212.50 (reg $250 )
1 year unlimited - $977.50 (reg $1150 )

Last chance to contribute a gift to our care package for soldiers/marines serving in Iraq & Afghanistan. We will be shipping it out mid-January

Donations - we are still collecting donations for the Boys & Girls Club Yoga Program and There & Back Again. If you're looking for a final charitable donation in 2008 -- here's your chance to a make a difference on a local and national level.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Reiki Level I and II at New England Baptist Hospital


New England Baptist Hospital

REIKI ENERGY HEALING WORKSHOPS
www.reikicertification.com
with Maureen Spencer, R.N., M.Ed., Reiki Master/Teacher

Reiki Level I – January 17, 2009 - Saturday

Reiki Level II – January 10, 2009 - Saturday
(must bring a copy of your Reiki Level I certificate to this class)

Time: 10:00am – 5:00pm

7.5 contact hours per workshop

Location: New England Baptist Hospital - Potter Conference Room - park in front hospital lot and ask security for directions to conference room.

Fee: Free for NEBH Registered Nurses, Certified Nursing Assistants,OR Staff, Hospitalists and Rehabilitation Therapists

$95.00 for Reiki I and $95.00 for Reiki II for all other registrants

To register, contact Maureen Spencer, RN, M.Ed. at 617-754-5332
or send an email to mpspence@caregroup.harvard.edu

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Whole Health Education in 2009



In 1993 I started a small education group called the Mind-Body Group at Mass General Hospital where I was employed as the Director of Infection Control. I have always had a interest in this field, since I started yoga in my teens and learned about complementary therapies with some of the best teachers: Joan Borynsenko, Dr. Herb Benson, Dr. Chopra, Norman Cousins, Carolyn Myss, Jon Kabat-Zin, Dave Eisenberg and others. I attended the annual course at Harvard Medical School on Complementary Therapies and Spirituality in Health and Healing twice in those early days of this movement. The group at MGH started out with 25 members and by the time I left MGH in 1996 there were over 900 members on the list. We offered a monthly speaker on one of the topics related to complementary therapies. We were pioneers - since many back then thought we were advising patients to use these therapies as "alternative medicine", which they are not. They are "integrative" and used in conjunction with traditional care. At New England Baptist Hospital in Boston where I now work they have a Council on Integrative Medicine. I teach Reiki to staff and we are working on setting up an acupuncture clinic in the future. It is slowly becoming integrated.

Early on I met Dr. Georgianna Donadio and eventually was appointed to her advisory board for the National Institute of Whole Health. She has graciously applied a credit toward tuition from anyone who is a student or graduated from a Finding Inner Peace Yoga School program.

If you are looking for a new career in whole person care, you might want to check it out and mention to her that you are affliated with us.

The National Institute of Whole Health
Fraser Medical Complex
326 Washington Street Annex
Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts 02481
Phone: 1-888-354-HEAL (4325) Fax: 781-431-0017
e-mail: info@wholehealtheducation.org

Advisory Board
http://www.wholehealtheducation.com/about/advisory_board.shtml

Course Offered

Yoga School Update



Yoga Teacher Certification Course

Winter 2009 classes start in January at Charlestown Yoga Studio, Centerville Yoga and Wellness Center, Feathers Wellness Studio (South Weymouth), Sanctuary of Kingston and The Yoga Studio of Millis.

Upon graduation - you are a Certified Yoga Teacher (CYT) and qualified to become a Registered Yoga Teacher (R.Y.T.) with the National Yoga Alliance. This is an approved Registered Yoga School (RYS) with the national alliance.

Format: Basic Yoga Teacher Certification - 200 hours
Weekly classes for 6 1/2 months and six (6) 15 hour weekend intensives to be held at the Sheraton Hotel and Conference Center, Braintree.

Tuition and Course Requirements:
Your investment: $2600.00 which includes a 350 + page training manual. There is a 5% discount on tuition if paid in full at beginning of semester.

$500.00 deposit is required at time of registration: there is a policy on deposit refunds which will be sent with the confirmation. $250.00 is nonrefundable once you have started in the course the first month.

The remaining balance of $2100.00 can be paid in monthly installments of $350.00/month by credit card (MC/VISA only). For more info, a registration form and curriculum outline - visit www.certificationinyoga.com
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Specialty Teacher Certifications

February 28-March 1,2009
Childrens Yoga Teacher Certification
Faculty: Suzanne O'Daly Higgins, Kristin Dooner, Michelle Fleming
Location: Marriott Hotel, Quincy, MA
Time: 10AM - 4:30pm
Fee: $195.00 (10% discount for SSYN&MYN members).
For more information view www.certificationinyoga.com
Contact Maureen Spencer, RN 781 878.0115 or Mark Keane at Healing Tree Yoga (he is handling the registrations) 617 770-4800

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March 14-15, 2009
Senior Yoga Teacher Certification
Faculty: Susan Thomas, Pat Harpell
Location: Marriott Hotel, Quincy, MA
Time: 10AM - 4:30pm
Fee: $195.00 (10% discount for SSYN&MYN members).
For more information view www.certificationinyoga.com
Contact Maureen Spencer, RN 781 878.0115 or Mark Keane at Healing Tree Yoga (he is handling the registrations) 617 770-4800
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March 28-29,2009
Prenatal Yoga Teacher Certification
Faculty: Michelle Fleming, Brona Coogan, Kristin Donner, Sara Sprague
Location: Marriott Hotel, Quincy, MA
Time: 10AM - 4:30pm
Fee: $195.00 (10% discount for SSYN&MYN members).
For more information view www.certificationinyoga.com
Contact Maureen Spencer, RN 781 878.0115 or Mark Keane at Healing Tree Yoga (he is handling the registrations) 617 770-4800~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
April 4-5, 2009
Yoga for Mood Disorders
Faculty: Trisha McDonald, Owner Open Heart Yoga Studio, Dartmouth, MA
Location: Marriott Hotel, Quincy, MA
Time: 10AM - 4:30pm
Fee: $195.00 (10% discount for SSYN&MYN members).
For more information view www.certificationinyoga.com
Contact Maureen Spencer, RN 781 878.0115 or Mark Keane at Healing Tree Yoga (he is handling the registrations) 617 770-4800

To join the South Shore Yoga Network and receive discounts on specialty certifications and workshops - visit www.southshoreyoganetwork.com

Monday, December 22, 2008

Selflessness -- Core Of All Major World Religions -- Has Neuropsychological Connection





http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/12/081217124156.htm

All spiritual experiences are based in the brain. That statement is truer than ever before, according to a University of Missouri neuropsychologist. An MU study has data to support a neuropsychological model that proposes spiritual experiences associated with selflessness are related to decreased activity in the right parietal lobe of the brain.
The study is one of the first to use individuals with traumatic brain injury to determine this connection. Researchers say the implication of this connection means people in many disciplines, including peace studies, health care or religion can learn different ways to attain selflessness, to experience transcendence, and to help themselves and others.
This study, along with other recent neuroradiological studies of Buddhist meditators and Francescan nuns, suggests that all individuals, regardless of cultural background or religion, experience the same neuropsychological functions during spiritual experiences, such as transcendence. Transcendence, feelings of universal unity and decreased sense of self, is a core tenet of all major religions. Meditation and prayer are the primary vehicles by which such spiritual transcendence is achieved.“The ability to connect with things beyond the self, such as transcendent experiences, seems to occur for people who minimize right parietal functioning. This can be attained through cultural practices, such as intense meditation or prayer or because of a brain injury that impairs the functioning of the right parietal lobe. Either way, our study suggests that ‘selflessness’ is a neuropsychological foundation of spiritual experiences.”
The research was funded by the MU Center on Religion and the Professions. The study – “Support for a neuropsychological model of spirituality in persons with traumatic brain injury” – was published in the peer-reviewed journal Zygon.
“Our research focused on the personal experience of spiritual transcendence and does not in any way minimize the importance of religion or personal beliefs, nor does it suggest that spiritual experience are related only to neuropsychological activity in the brain,” Johnstone said. “It is important to note that individuals experience their God or higher power in many different ways, but that all people from all religions and beliefs appear to experience these connections in a similar way.”

Journal reference:
1. Johnstone et al. SUPPORT FOR A NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL MODEL OF SPIRITUALITY IN PERSONS WITH TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY. Zygon(r), 2008; 43 (4): 861 DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9744.2008.00964.x

Men Are From Mars/Women from Venus - Men And Women Respond Differently To Stress


http://www.sciencedaily.com/videos/2008/0403-men_are_from_mars.htm

Functional magnetic resonance imaging of men and women under stress showed neuroscientists how their brains differed in response to stressful situations. In men, increased blood flow to the left orbitofrontal cortex suggested activation of the "fight or flight" response. In women, stress activated the limbic system, which is associated with emotional responses. A new high-tech scientific study reveals the differences between men and women may really start at the top. Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania used a high-tech imaging method to scan the brains of 16 men and 16 women. The subjects were placed inside a functional magnetic resonance imaging machine, or fMRI.
"Using this state-of-the art-functional magnetic resonance imaging technique, we try to directly visualize what the human brain does during stress," Jiongjiong Wang, Ph.D., a research assistant professor of radiology and neurology at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
Researchers then purposely induced moderate performance stress by asking the men and women to count backward by 13, starting at 1,600. Researchers monitored the subject's heart rate. They also measured the blood flow to the brain and checked for cortisol, a stress hormone.
When the scans were completed, neuroscientists consistently found differences between the men's stressed-out brains and the women's. Men responded with increased blood flow to the right prefrontal cortex, responsible for "fight or flight." Women had increased blood flow to the limbic system, which is also associated with a more nurturing and friendly response.
Doctors say this information may someday lead to a screening process for mood disorders. "In the future, when physicians treat patients -- especially depression, PTSD -- they need to take this into account that really, gender matters," Dr. Wang explains.
Other experts caution that hormones, genetics and environmental factors may influence these results, bringing to light yet another difference between men and women. Neuroscientists say the changes in the brain during stress response also lasted longer in women.
STRESS-REDUCING TIPS: There are several easy, practical things people can do to reduce the amount of stress in their lives. (1) Be realistic and don't try to be perfect, or expect others to be so. (2) Don't over-schedule; cut out an activity or two when you start to feel overwhelmed. (3) Get a good night's sleep. (4) Get regular exercise to manage stress -- just not excessive or compulsive exercise -- and follow a healthy diet. (5) Learn to relax by building time into your schedule for reading or a nice long bath.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Yoga School Graduates - December 14, 2008







Students from Charlestown Yoga, Centerville Yoga, Yoga Studio of Millis and Healing Tree Yoga graduated on Sunday at the weekend intensive held at the Sheraton Hotel in Braintree.

New Yoga Teacher Graduates are:
Stephanie Bogdan
Annemarie Boyle, Annemarie
Belve Boyz
Maureen Brown
Rebekah Callard-Barry
Lucy Collins
Larissa Crane
Carmel DiPaola
Lori Dougherty
Catherine Dupuis
Jennifer Finn
Maryellen LaBelle
Anna Maria Lambros
Diane Lancaster
Michelle Lawlor
Perrin LeBlanc
Pamela Lough
Susan Lovett
Karen Matte
Debra McCulloch,RN
Brandon McCulloch
Montgomery, Kathleen
Stefanie Patterson
Lee Anne Pelligrini,
Tammy Pierce
Meridyth Ramsay Yurek
Kim Reilly
Pornipia Sutthimaitree
Kathleen Viola
Deborah Von Storch
Kathleen Welcome
Heather Tatarski-Wininger
Karen Yee

CONGRATULATIONS!!!!

Friday, December 5, 2008

Happiness is infectious



Source: British Medical Journal Dec 5, 2008

Happiness really does rub off. A person's happiness depends on the happiness of others with whom they are connected, finds research published on www.bmj.com today.

Happiness is not just an individual experience or choice, but is dependent on the happiness of others to whom individuals are connected directly and indirectly, and requires close proximity to spread, say the authors. For example, a friend who becomes happy and lives within a mile increases your likelihood of happiness by 25%.

Professor Nicholas Christakis from Harvard Medical School and Professor James Fowler from the University of California, San Diego, analyzed data collected in the Framingham Heart Study to find out if happiness can spread from person to person and if clusters of happiness form within social networks.

Using statistical analysis the researchers measured how social networks were correlated with reported happiness. They found that live-in partners who become happy increase the likelihood of their partner being happy by 8%, similar effects were seen for siblings who live close by (14%) and neighbors (34%). Work colleagues did not affect happiness levels suggesting that social context may curtail the spread of emotional states.

Interestingly, it is not only immediate social ties that have an impact on happiness levels, the relationship between people's happiness can extend up to three degrees of separation (to the friend of one's friends' friend). Indeed, people who are surrounded by happy people are likely to become happy in the future.

Importantly, they report that close physical proximity is essential for happiness to spread. A person is 42% more likely to be happy if a friend who lives less than half a mile away becomes happy, the effect is only 22% for friends who live less than two miles away, and this effect declines and becomes insignificant at greater distances.The findings suggest that clusters of happiness result from the spread of happiness and not just a tendency for people to associate with similar individuals.

They conclude: "Most important from our perspective is the recognition that people are embedded in social networks and that the health and wellbeing of one person affects the health and wellbeing of others. This fundamental fact of existence provides a fundamental conceptual justification for the specialty of public health. Human happiness is not merely the province of isolated individuals."
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Check out this wonderful presentation about positive thoughts - this must be why happy yoga teachers create happy students and strong community followings!

http://greatday.com/v.html?2149p08AG3r6