Showing posts with label Manifest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Manifest. Show all posts

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Freedom to . . . be what you "might be"


“Sometimes you have to let go to see if there was anything worth holding on to.” Anonymous

In the last post, we discussed what it means to break free from our modern lives of slavery. A friend sent me a long response asking me to consider the difference between freedom from and freedom to. So I have. What I found is that it fits nicely with this week’s theme on the Is Yoga Legal facebook page, where the Monday Intention was, “thinking outside the box.”

The notion that we must break free “from” something insinuates that where we are is not where we should be. While it is important to recognize the parts of our lives that are causing us more harm than we might like, we can also see these “problems” as teachers. They can provide us with the baseline to see where we might go.

We often hold onto our ideas of ourselves so hard that we forget why we started in the first place. We think of ourselves as lawyers, as yogis, as mothers, as fathers, as Americans, as Jews, etc. We let these labels define us instead of defining our labels. And we stay there. We believe what these labels expect us to believe, and we live our lives accordingly. For lawyers, this often means doing legal work long past the moment when it no longer works for us. As yogis, this means getting upset when we do not live up to the yogic ideals we believe we should.

But we have the ability to have freedom, freedom to think outside the box created by these labels. As Lao Tzu said, “When I let go of what I am, I become what I might be.” Choices we make along the way as to who we are need not define us the rest of our lives. We can think outside the box and be creative about who we are. But it requires letting go of our preconceived notions.

The quote at the start of this post questions whether our preconceived notions are worth it. How do we know until we try something new?

Yoga provides a great means to explore new ideas and new ways of seeing ourselves. Through yoga, we begin to understand our bodies and minds in new ways. We start to understand how the smallest adjustment in a posture can lead to a completely different experience. We learn to listen to the breath and notice when we are holding onto tension. Finally, as the same friend pointed out, savasana (corpse pose) remains a great asana for moving through these different ideas of freedom. It is in savasana that we have that moment to let go of the past, breathe into our present, and open our minds to what and who we “might be” in the future.

This path is not always, and perhaps never, straight and easy. I went to law school to help children, and along the way I did asylum law, worked at a law firm, and clerked for two judges. Now I am getting an LLM. Interestingly, I am more convinced now than ever that I want to work with children. But I had to let go of those ideas to ensure that they truly were worth holding on to, and yoga gave me the courage to do that. It gave me the courage to turn inward.

Most importantly, yoga gave me the courage to step outside of the box. The lawyer world would have put me at a law firm. And there was a lot of pressure to go, including the pressure of student loans. I read other law blogs where people lament their lives to no end but say, “I have to pay off the loans, so I am living my life at a job I hate.” That is the box. But yoga gives us the courage to have freedom to . . . step out of that box and be the person that we “might be.”

Who might you be? Are you ready to be free to find out?

Namaste.

© 2011 Rebecca Stahl, all rights reserved

Monday, December 13, 2010

Shifting ideas into reality

The Reverb10 prompts continue to be about my life in so many ways. Today’s prompt states, “Action When it comes to aspirations, it’s not about ideas. It’s about making ideas happen. What’s your next step?”

The class I just finished asked this very same question - what are you next action items to make your aspirations a reality? With respect to my aspirations regarding Is Yoga Legal?, I have recently created a webpage (link soon), and my next step is to make it useful to the public. Within the next month, the website will be full of articles about yoga and professionals, about the benefits yoga and meditation can provide to professionals, and explanations of postures you can use at your desk to make your workday work for you. Also, I hope to create a Q and A page where we can begin to create a community together, asking the questions we all share, and providing answers to one another. If you have ideas on how to make such a page useful to you, please send them my way.

My other action item, in the representation of children in legal proceedings area of my life, is to go to New Zealand. I have mentioned this several times on this blog, so now is as good a time as any to explain what I plan to do there. I will be studying the New Zealand Family Law System. Unlike most courts in the United States, all children in New Zealand have an attorney in any case in which they are affected, such as divorce, child welfare, and delinquency. I will be writing a thesis on children’s representation, and hopefully coming back to the United States armed with the information and tools to implement better systems here.

But what about combining yoga and the law? One of my goals, having little to do with New Zealand, is to help shift the paradigm of thinking that we encounter in the legal system. While many people do their best to help children, often they are coming from old ways of thinking, ways that do not work in this ever-expanding world of energy and consciousness. What if we lived in a world where compassion were the starting point? What if we lived in a world where we did not judge individuals by individual acts? What if we lived in a world where children had a voice because they are people? What if?

Yes, these are aspirations for which I have no physical action steps today, but asking the questions, opening the universe to such possibilities is the first step. After all, two years ago, I told a judge in New Zealand that I wanted to go to his country to study, and my apartment in shambles is proof that I am leaving soon. Sometimes the most important action step is just being willing to see the possibility.

What are your aspirations? How can we best connect as a community?

Namaste and Blessings!

© 2010 Rebecca Stahl, all rights reserved

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

A year in a word . . . or two

I have signed up to follow the reverb10 prompts. This is an annual event to reflect on the year gone by and manifest for the next year. Each day throughout December there will be prompts, and I will do my best to answer as many of them as possible, including bringing attention to how reflection and manifestation can change the legal profession, and all professions. That is, after all, the point of this blog.

Here is today’s prompt: Encapsulate the year 2010 in one word. Explain why you’re choosing that word. Now, imagine it’s one year from today, what would you like the word to be that captures 2011 for you?

2010 word: Foundation
2011 word manifestation: Exploration

This year has been about finding my own two feet. Although Is Yoga Legal began in 2009, it has begun to truly take shape in 2010. This blog, and a supportive community, have helped me find my own path, own it, and begin to share it with others hoping to help them find their own path. What do I mean by this?

When I started working at the Court of Appeals in August 2009, I was scared to talk to people about yoga. I would hide from the spiritual / energetic side of yoga in my daily discussions, and I would allow people to talk about yoga as “just” exercise. It pained me, but I saw no other way. I did not think the legal profession was ready for a different discussion. Personally, I continued to follow the paths set out for me by others, specifically people in my family. There is nothing wrong with those paths, but they were not my path.

2010 was a different story. I found my own two feet. I found my foundation. My yoga practice deepened physically, spiritually, and emotionally, and I have begun to find my way in the law as well (more on that in a moment). And as I have gotten stronger in my own beliefs, I feel more confident sharing them with others, using them to hopefully help others, and I have begun to literally put myself out there, teaching Stress Management Workshops for Lawyers that focus on yoga and meditation techniques you can use at your desk. In other words, I have found my place.

Foundation is vital in so much of life. We all know what a pyramid looks like, and we know how strong it is. Its strength comes from its foundation. In law, we need to have that strong foundation; we need to have a solid base onto which we can add the rest of the work. When a client comes into our office, our solid foundation gives us confidence and inspires them that we can help. Our solid foundation sets the framework for our arguments in court. There is no substitute for foundation; it is simply hard work.

Yoga and meditation help us gain this foundation, even in legal analysis, by giving us the tools to find our inner strength. We learn what matters to us, and we can use that to our advantage. We learn our strengths, and we use those to help our clients. In short, these tools are our internal foundation to help us set our external foundation.

So, what about exploration? Personally, I am about to embark on a literal exploration - to New Zealand. I will be studying family law and getting an LLM (a Master’s in Law to all non-lawyer folks). It was because of my foundation that I know that I want to find the best possible way to help children and families by helping to find a better way to do family law in this country. I have no answers today, but I know that the foundation I have gained over the past year will help me with my exploration over the next year. Hopefully the word for 2012 will be reconciliation - bringing the foundation and exploration into harmony and creating something amazing.

What are your words? What do you want to manifest in the new year?

Namaste and Blessings!

© 2010 Rebecca Stahl, all rights reserved