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THE YOGA SOURCE STUDIO

Namaste Yogis--
To update you on possible money-makers for our Children's International boys, I'm still researching the cost and feasibility of selling organic chocolate bars at the studio. From what I've heard this week it sounds like half of you like the idea and half of you dread the temptation. Also, I'm looking into one-time sales of Yoga Source T-shirts and calendars as special projects. Check out my Facebook wall to see photos of 'actual Yoga Source yogis.' My son Chris took them a couple of weeks ago and I think they'd make a really nice yoga calendar. Your thoughts?
Speaking of Facebook, if you are on it and you and I haven't connected as FB friends yet, before you close your computer today....please....find me and request me as your friend. (I'm listed as Marcia Scredon without the Madhavi.) It's just a great way for me to communicate with everyone and so much of what I can say on Facebook is, I think, useful and motivational to your practice but is not exactly news for the weekly newsletter.
And as news goes, this is an unusally slow week for it at the studio since so many of you are off for Spring Break. It's a good time though to share a recent short reprint from 'Yoga + Joyful Living' that I think you'll like. It seems the more western medicine looks at yoga the more it proves what we yogis already know....yoga is truly a gift to humanity.
Om Shanti-
Madhavi Marcia Scredon

Your Brain on Yoga
By Timothy McCall, MD
When I was in medical school in the 1980s, we were taught that after a certain stage of childhood development, the architecture of the brain was fixed. Brain cells, or neurons, couldn't be replaced; at best, we could slow the rate of their loss by cutting down on alcohol and other damaging habits.
But now, due to the growing sophistication of neuroimaging technology like PET scanners and functional MRIs, we understand that brain structure can change over time based on what we do. Recent research shows that even aging brains can add new neurons.
Scientists coined the term neuroplasticity to refer to the brain's ability to reshape itself, confirming what the yogis have been teaching for millennia-the more you think, say, or do something, the more likely you are to think, say, or do it again. With every activity, neurons forge connections with one another, and the more a behavior is repeated, the stronger those neural links become. As neuroscientists like to say, "Neurons that fire together, wire together."
In the Yoga Sutra, Patanjali offers a recipe for success in yoga: steady and enthusiastic practice without interruption over a long period of time. This ideal formula takes advantage of neuroplasticity to rewire the brain. Swami Vivekananda once said, "The only remedy for bad habits is counter habits." As your yoga practice deepens over time, it becomes a strong new habit that can compete with old patterns.
In yoga, you are systematically awakening your ability to feel what's happening in your body, heart, and mind. As your awareness becomes more refined, it can guide you in all areas of your life. You begin to observe which foods make you feel best, which work you find most fulfilling, which people bring you joy-and which ones have the opposite effects.
The key is steady practice-whether it's asana, pranayama, meditation, chanting, visualization, service, or all of the above. Just a little bit every day is enough to steer you step-by-step toward true transformation.
Timothy McCall, MD, is a board-certified specialist in internal medicine and is the author of Yoga as Medicine: The Yogic Prescription for Health and Healing. In addition to his ongoing study of yoga and ayurveda in India, Dr. McCall has studied with Patricia Walden since 1995 and, more recently, with Donald Moyer and Rod Stryker. Fall 2009 Yoga+ Magazine
'Madhavi' Marcia Scredon
THE YOGA SOURCE STUDIO
2268 Fountain Sq. Blvd., Snellville
678-377-1991
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