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Itâs hard to imagine in the western world, but in Nigeria, girls as young as ten are married and four out of every ten girls are married before the age of eighteen, eight out of ten in the northern region. When a girl is forced into marriage, sometimes to a man old enough to be her grandfather, she often cannot continue her education unless her husband allows it, she is likely to live her life illiterate, and she faces a higher risk of death from childbirth due to being neither physically or emotionally ready.
In this episode, we speak with Habiba Mohammed and Maryam Albashir, the co-director and deputy director respectively of the Centre for Girlsâ Education in Nigeria. These women have dedicated their lives to helping girls through educational programs, safe spaces, Gender-based violence prevention, vocational and leadership training and other mentorship programs through the Centre which has helped thousands of girls since it opened in 2007.
Until this interview, we did not understand just how far reaching the issue of child marriage was in the Sahel region of Africa, and we were blown away by the incredible impact these women have had in improving the lives of so many girls.We believe that if we want to see more peace in this world, it starts with empowering the girls and women and Habiba and Maryam are showing all of us how.
You can learn more about or make a donation to the Centre for Girls Education HERE.
2.08: Marital Age in Northern Nigeria
7.23 Education of Habiba Mohammed
8.17 âMy mother, she always tells me that the schooling is not for anybody but for me. So I should understand that I am not doing anybody a favor by going to school. I am doing myself. So I need to know that I want to change my life, I will be who I want to be, if I go to school. It can influence the husband that I marry, it can influence the friends that I have, and it will influence the way I want to live my life.â Habiba Mohammed
9.24 Maryam Albashir´s Story12.20 A Mother to All
13.00 Arranged and non arranged marriages
15.00 Going to the communities
16.31 âAt the safe spaces we encourage the girls to go back home and discuss what they are learning in the safe spaces to their mothers and their aunties and their other siblings. So this helped us to get very acceptance in the communities.â Habiba Mohammed
16.57 Number of girls they have helped educate
20.00 Things the girls learn at the safe spaces20.30 âWhat we do at the safe spaces is also to empower her, for her to know her self worth, for her to be able to identify what she wants to become in life. Some of these girls, depending on the category of project that we enroll them into, we empower them with vocational skills. So along the line, if they start earning an income it gives them an upperhand in their homes, it gives them a voice to say who they want to be or what they want to become in life.â Maryam Albashir
23.00 1st story of success, story of Sakina
27.30 Favorite part of their job
29.50 Their message to the world
âEvery girl, wherever she is, needs an education. And she needs to be empowered and she needs to be who she wants to be in life. So if we are educated and we are given that opportunity the sky is not our limit, the sky will be our starting point.â Habiba Mohammed -
With all eyes on the conflict in Isreal, Lebanon and Gaza, it can be easy to sink into despair witnessing the endless stream of news stories of violence and devastation. However, there are some who are like lights in the darkness, spreading peace and love at the center of the strife.
We are so honored to have one of those people on our podcast, Nechama Shaina, an expressive arts therapist originally from the Chabad community in the Bay Area of California who currently resides in Israel with her two teenage children. She has a background in clinical psychology and uses dance, drama and visual arts in her therapy. She has been playing an active role in healing those who have been so horribly affected by the current conflict there including giving hands-on treatments for the Kibbutz Beâeri survivors of the October 7th attack where Hamas-led terrorists killed 101 people in that kibbutz alone. She also organizes healing retreats for the grieving Druze women who lost their children during the Hezbollah attack on the soccer field in Majdal Shams this past summer.
Speaking with Nechama, we were in tears listening to how she brings her life journey of creativity, her passion for the sacred feminine and her deep knowledge of the Jewish tradition to anyone who has need allowing those she treats the space to heal on the level of mind, body, heart and soul.
She is a true pioneer, and her diverse background puts her in the unique position to be of great service at this particular time in Israelâs history. We feel like we got a glimpse into what it is really like to be there now at the center of the conflict, and surprisingly, miraculously, it was a glimpse of hope.
Meditation Without Borders is currently raising funds to go to Isreal in 2025 in collaboration with Nechama Shaina to teach Vedic meditation to the women and mothers in Isreal of various backgrounds who are most effected by the current conflict. If you would like to contribute to this effort, please consider donating HERE.
Show Notes:.30 Intro to Nechama
2.00 Nechama´s current work
3.19 Druze Community6.18 âOnce you connect to the people that have been at the edge of life and death there is something very sacred there.â Nechama
7.53 Nechama means comfort
9.25 âHe said I want to continue learning Arabic cause I want to learn how to speak to the Palestinian people and not fight with weapons.â Israeli Soldier
14.00 Nechama´s story in her own words
14.20 âMy Mom and Dad raised me with one of the many many foundations of the belief system that we are being breathed into existence every moment by the divine. It's not the divine that created us and this universe and just took a walk. That we are being intended or dreamed into this planet.â Nechama15.00 The Hasidic Community
16.30 The Role of Women in Judaism
18.28 Being a Scribe and the Ketubah22.00 Inspiration for Ketubah Piece
25.52 Collective Consciousness of Israel right now
29.30 Methods of Healing33.50 Priestess and Weavers
35.00 The Feminine in Judaism37.49 âOur words are so powerful right? Our words create reality. Our thoughts create reality. How much more so do our words create reality when we bring in the divine feminine in our prayers, in our words. So we are bringing her in reality, in our presence, in our consciousness.â Nechama
38.38 The Feminine Rising as Controversial in Different Traditions40.46 Different therapies and Body work therapy for working with communities in Israel
43.00 Breathing Techniques
50.27 Pilgrimage Dream
52.07 âI felt like this dream was about opening the gates of prayer for each other. Like we are opening those gates together and praying in different languages. And that's actually what I did back in the year 2000. There was a whole group of Christians, Muslims and Jews, Israelis that came together overlooking the temple mount and the mosque and the western wall. and right in between the Jewish and Muslim quarter in the old city and we would come together, pray in different languages, talk, sing.â Nechama52.27 âI've had this strange opportunity and it's weird to say it's an opportunity to be here in this country for really challenging times. And opportunities for a lot of growth and healing.â Nechama
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Recorded October 2024
While it seems like the patriarchy is at its peak and brutality is rampant around the world, it can feel like weâre all tumbling towards darkness. However, when we take a wider view, we see that there is a larger movement at play, and there is hope of a phoenix rising from the destructionâthe rising of the Feminine.
In this episode, Isabel and Kristen discuss the nature of the Feminine as infinite organizing power and how to spot its promising emergence on the world stage and in our own lives. We hope our conversation can help ease some of the anxiety around what is going on in the collective and inspire mobilization for positive change.
Show notes:
2.00 The Safe space between Women
4.20 Tide Shift of the Feminine no longer receding
7.00 The New Role
8.00 Kali Yuga
9.00 The Receding of the Feminine
12.00 The Women in Rwanda
13.00 âThe feminine has in it this quality in which it sees everybody as equal.If you imagine a mother, all her children are equal to her. And so there is something about that forgiveness and that seeing everyone as the same that is required when there is such extreme division in order to come out of it.â Kristen Vandivier.18.00 Honoring our bodies
21.00 The Role of the Masculine Rising
27.00 âHow does the feminine fight? The feminine makes her enemies her devotees. Its an incorporationâ Kristen Vandivier
30.00 Feminine Empowered
38.00 Setting Boundaries and Kali Mode
45.00 Betrayal
49.00 Inclusivity
53.00 Women Are Never Losers -
Youâve seen them, people trying too hard, taking themselves too seriously, putting on a show, straining to appear of a higher status or consciousness state or social status than maybe they are. Perhaps you have caught yourself giving off an impression as opposed to just being your sweet but not-always-so-glamorous self.
Youâd think in spiritual communities, weâd be beyond this type of behavior, but instead the environment seems to encourage it instead. So much so Maharishi Mahesh Yogi had a name for this behavior, he called it âmood making.â
In this episode, Isabel and Kristen talk about how enlightenment doesnât have to look a certain way. They delve into the reasons why we find ourselves occasionally engaging in this cringe-worthy behavior (while sharing some of their own self-deprecating moments) and discuss how to bring yourself back to your true âwarts and allâ authentic self, which ironically, is the most attractive way to be.
Originally recorded in March 2024
Show Notes:
.53 What is mood making?
2.30 Mimicking what we think enlightenment looks like
4.00 Taking ourselves too seriously
4.30 Aspirational vs Relatable
6.00 Different expressions of enlightenment
7.30 âEmbracing who we are, whoever that is, gets us past the mood making.â Kristen
8.00 Self-doubt and insecurity
âRealizing that whoever it is that I want to be is already me. Itâs just more me. Itâs me being totally comfortable with that me.â Kristen
17.30 Rice Krispies Guru
18.00 âWe canât put that consciousness state in a box. A person who is in enlightenment or has a certain percentage of enlightenment is going to act in whatever way is relevant to inspire those around him or her.â Kristen18.30 Dualistic way of looking at things
21.26 Authenticity
âWhen we meditate twice a day we are going to the place that is the true us, that is the authentic `I´, itâs the big `I´, itâs that layer of being, the source of everything that is our true self.â Kristen Vandivier
22.00 Identity
23.57 âThe important thing is this, to be able at any moment to sacrifice what we are for what we could become.â Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
25.00 Enlightenment â appreciation of creation
30.40 Our true self
31.00 Stardust
33.00 Big Bang
36.30 Unique traits
38.00 Let go of the idea of enlightenment
40.00 I guess this is us
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Meditation is a solitary practice right? Not necessarily. Our latest guest on our podcast is not only creating community through this individual practice, he is also pioneering a study on the effect of deep meditation on the collective consciousness.
We are delighted to have Barron Hanson on our podcast. Barron is a fellow Vedic Meditation teacher based in Australia, and has a long history of bringing people together, designing transformative experiences, creating films, and generally working to make the world a better place. His latest project, more like a family of projects, is centered on researching and documenting the âMaharishi Effectâ which suggests that if 1% of a geographic population starts meditating, it can have a seismic effect on the collective. Barron wanted to see what would happen if 1% of his community in Nowra learned to meditate, and the study and documentary about the initiative is called âBe Here Nowra.â
As a compliment to âBe Here Nowra,â Barron also is spearheading a festival called âHere In Nowraâ to invite meditators from all over the world to enjoy a month-long festival in October 2024 devoted to vedic philosophy, practices and teachings. It also will play a role in a study through the University of Wollongong to explore the effects of collective consciousness within the community.
AndâŚ.Meditation Without Borders is going to be there as to host a talk, a teacherâs workshop on outreach teaching, and a 5-day womenâs rounding retreat.
We couldnât wait to sit down with Barron to hear how all of this came about, and to learn more about the personal journey of birthing such an ambitious and inspiring project.
If you would like to learn more about the Here In Nowra Festival, here is the link: https://www.here-in.world/
Notes:3.00 Arriving in NYC
6.32 âI´ve always had lots of energy, the problem was channeling it.â Barron Hanson
6.52 âI started to move into things that could be more relevant and helpful to share a state of consciousness and making the world a better place.â Barron Hanson
7.10 Maharishi Effect
11.00 Challenges
11.16 âItâs not the size of the group med, itâs what you do with it.â
12.50 Importing meditators and studies on it
15.00 Invitation to come to Nowra and studies
17.40 Be Here Nowra Festival
18.00 Lighthouses and Loneliness
20.00 Individual flavors of different teachers
23.00 Experiences of building a community for Isabel and Kristen
30.00 Waves and consciousness
34.00 Coming back home to Nowra
42.00 Geysers of Creativity and Consciousness
âThe story of Nowra is trying to express itself through me. Iâm helping Nowra to express its own story. Iâm not the driver of this, Iâm the conduit.â Barron Hanson
46.40 Meditation Without Borders in Nowra
47.00 Be Here Nowra events
48.00 Call to Action
50.00 The feeling of service that comes with meditation
51.00 The feminine becoming lively
Contact Info
Here-in.world
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It is hard to imagine violence on the scale that occurred 30 years ago this spring in Rwanda. But for our guest, Odette Nyiramilimo, she doesnât have to imagine, she can remember.
We are so honored to have Odette on our podcast. She is not only a medical doctor who with her husband founded the first private maternity and pediatrics clinic in Rwanda as well as being a doctor for the Peace Corps, she also served as a senator and as Minister of State for Social Affairs under the government of Paul Kagame. Her account of the genocide is featured heavily in book âWe Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Familiesâ by Philip Gourevitch and is also depicted as a character in the film Hotel Rwanda. She now believes that wellness is the path to helping continue the reconstruction, so she founded the Rushel Kivu Lodge on Lake Kivu, where we had our meditation retreat.
Last month when we were in Rwanda, we got to sit down with Odette in person and listened to her life story of what it was like growing up in that country during the growing escalation and then the genocide that took so many including 16 of her 17 siblings and other family members. We also got to hear about how, through her work in both medicine and politics, she played a major role in the rising of Rwanda from the ashes.
We hope you appreciate hearing Odetteâs story as much as we do. By hearing her firsthand account, it made the atrocities that happened in Rwanda all those years ago seem very real for us and so much more than a historical event.
We wish to acknowledge with utmost respect the lives of all those who lost their homes, their families, their livelihood, their health, or their lives during the violence of the 1994 genocide and all the Rwandan conflicts the late 20th century.
âFrom that time, I never sit. I work every day. I cry when I am telling those stories but the other time I say no crying. I need to make sure no more genocide happen in Rwanda. That my children, my grandchildren, my neighborâs children they need to have a country
where they feel safe. Not the country where I grew up.â - Odette Nyiramilimo
Show Notes:2.00 Odette´s Childhood
6.30 1959 and the beginnings of the Genocide
10.30 âIf we have to die, we die together, but here.â Odette´s Father.
13.00 First Private Clinic in Rwanda and the Peace Corps
15.40 Surviving the Genocide
23.40 âWe think the war is finished. She didn´t understand it was the beginning.â Odette
25.00 Hiding in the convent
27.00 Military men
34.00 Hiding in the swamp
51.00 Interrogation with the police
53.00 âAfter, he has been killed. And he was a hutu. Because he protected us, and he
protected his wife and some other people maybe.â Odette.
56.00 Taken for dead
59.00 Calling friends
1.02 Hotel Rwanda
1.04 Character in the movie
1.07 âFrom that time, I never sit. I work every day. I cry when I am telling those stories but
the other time I say no crying. I need to make sure no more genocide happen in Rwanda.
That my children, my grandchildren, my neighborâs children they need to have a country
where they feel safe. Not the country where I grew up.â Odette
1.08 Peace Corps Medical Officer and Doctor at the American Embassy
1.09 Orphans living with Odette
1.11 Odette as a Minister of State
1.21 Going back home
1.25 A promise of light -
Thirty years ago, the world stood by as over 800,000 people were brutally killed in Rwanda over a period of three and a half months. The aftermath seemed insurmountable, yet today, Rwanda stands as one of Africa's safest destinations, boasting a stable political environment. This remarkable transformation is indebted, in large part, to resilient individuals like Mary Kalikungeri.
We are so honored to have Mary as this monthâs guest. She is the director of the Rwanda Womenâs Network, as well as a member of the UN Women VAW â Peace and Security Reference Team, who has been at the vanguard of rebuilding and restoring Rwanda since 1995.Beyond her fascinating personal story, Mary illuminates how she and other trailblazers recognized that women, as givers of life, held the key to rejuvenating their homeland. She created safe spaces for women who endured violence and empowering them to turn inward and recognize their inherent value. Mary's vision was transformative, cultivating women as leaders and catalysts for change within their communities and the nation at large.
The journey she and her counterparts undertook to turn their vision of a peaceful Rwanda into reality serves as a blueprint not only for regions entrenched in conflict worldwide but also as inspiration for individuals navigating their way out of profound darkness towards the light
In a collaborative effort, our non-profit organization, Meditation Without Borders, and Mary's organization, the Rwanda Womenâs Network are joining forces to introduce Vedic Meditation to women in Rwanda. Together, we will host a four-day meditation retreat for women community leaders and changemakers, as well as going into the safe spaces to teach women who are victims of gender-based violence. For more information on this project or to contribute to this cause, please visit our page.
Show Notes:
2.18 Maryâs background
âEverything around us is about love. It´s about caring, it´s about welcoming people into the home. And itâs about giving yourself to others. Growing up feeling that way, it has accompanied me all my life all the way through.â Mary Balikungeri
6.30 All about family
9.00 Safe Spaces and the Journey of Women beyond the Genocide
âWe came up with such an innovative idea of creating the safe spaces for women which allows the women to converge and eventually find each other; go through the process of healing. At the same time be able to rebuild the new communities, build the solidarity among themselves, and at the same time identify actual critical needs and beginning to plan their lives based on their priorities. And from that journey onwards we really have seen the lives of women transformed. Transformed in their own homes, taking leadership in their own communities. At the same time, also daring to take up leadership at the national level where we now see most of our women becoming women parliamentarians and even serving in the government.â Mary Balikungeri
11.50 Reconstructing the family â reconstructing the country
âThe first cohort group of women started coming to the safe space. There were women who were looking sad. And the journey we took them through helped them to look inwardly and be able to think through on how to live in a better and a new Rwanda we were all yearning for.â Mary Balikungeri14.00 The vision and journey of the women
âIn putting the vision of what we are looking women to be for the future helped them also to accelerate and to get out of that bitterness, sadness; to really make them see themselves as women who are going to transform what has been impossible.â Mary Balikungeri
20.00 Emerging from the darkest darkness
26.00 Promoting gender equality through women empowerment
âWe make sure that the women understood the power in herself.â Mary Balikungeri
30.00 Victimhood as a state of consciousness
32.00 Replicating this project in other countries
40.00 Othering
45.00 How to help
âWe need to go through our self-healing. We do so much, and we forget ourselves.â Mary Balikungeri
52.00 Maryâs personal challenges and being a mother
âI think the whole in the line is to becoming a model mother that helps them also to see that your struggle was also for them. And I think the day I discovered that they saw that I felt I was at peace.â Mary Balikungeri
56.00 Generational Challenges
58.00 Meditation Without Borders in Rwanda and how to help
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The world has been a witness to one of the deadliest conflicts in recent memory this fall with the Isreali/Palestinian conflict, and so many of us are feeling an urgency to help with no clear direction as to how.
In this episode, we interview our colleagues, David Lahav and Emily McCarthy, two Vedic Meditation teachers based in Colorado who have recently started an organization called Meditate For World Peace as a response to the current strife in Isreal and Gaza. Lahav, formerly an Isreali military officer, and McCarthy are looking to teach thousands of people in Isreal in the next couple of years Vedic Meditation as a way to cool the collective in the area.
We are very grateful to David and Emily for discussing this very sensitive topic with us as we discuss everything from the political minefield of the situation to how collective peace is established on the individual level of consciousness to the ripple healing effect of meditation.
If you are interested in supporting Meditate for World Peace, you learn more about their mission and donate to their cause via their website: https://www.meditateforworldpeace.org/
Show Notes:
Meditate for World Peace Notes1.24 Mission: What is it that we can do to actually help the current situation, apart from being on social media and talking to people about it and wanting to do something.
âThere is a big need to bring Vedic Meditation and teach many people in Israel to help individuals with the stress and grief that is happening. And also, me teaching many many people to create a collective effect that happens in the community, a coherence effect thatâs happening when a larger percent of the population begins meditating.â David
3.00 How does a big change in a region happen?
4.00 Maharishi effect: 1% of the population meditating creates a change in a specific region.
5.30 Meditators feeling the effects of what is happening in the world
âWhen something is happening on the other side of the ocean, all the waves feel it.â Kristen
7.00 Meditation deexcites and organizes.
8.30 The land of Israel as a focal point of conscious awareness.
10.30 The world as a body â all the cells feel it. We want to go to the axe wound.
âNo one is going to be safe if a conflict of this level is left unchecked.â Kristen
14.20 Political minefield
17.00 Ripple effect: Meditating for world peace is starting in Israel but it is not just about Israel.
âThe mission is not about us. We have a technique that we know how to teach, that we know creates change and the first project is beginning in Israel.â Emily
19.10 We want the bad guy meditating (it doesn´t matter who it is).âNo matter what you believe, even if you think of Israel as the aggressor, they´re the bad guy in this whole scenario, well you want the bad guy meditating. You want their consciousness pulled. Or if you think the Palestinian´s are the bad guys. First of all, there is no bad guy in the Vedic view. It doesn´t matter what your stance is, this is going to help.â Kristen
20.26 Mission is teaching 1% of the population of Israel. In 2024 teaching 10,000 people.
21.23 Every $100 USD donated to the cause sponsors a meditation course for someone in Israel.
22.40âEven for students in Israel who are not ready to talk about peace because there is so much emotion and feeling and trauma around this, then even for someone that´s not ready for that, it´s about healing on the individual layer. And all of the trauma that has occurred from the day-to-day life that is happening there and just healing yourself. We donât even need to talk about peace and world peace if people arenât ready for that right now. And thatâs okay. Meditation is here to reduce anxiety and bring greater happiness.â Emily
23.30 Peace comes from the individual
24.00 Leaders represent their people
25.00 With meditation everyone becomes extended self
26.00 David in the military experiencing unity with the other side
âOur practice has the power to enact that, that experience of what is it like to be you. It really can be challenging to have experiences from the same level of consciousness from which we are creating the problem to begin with. And so, we introduce meditation, we begin to shift our state of consciousness and then the experience of what it is like to be another unfolds naturally and effortlessly. And if all of us were asking that question, more often, day to day, `what is it like to be you? ´ I feel like there would be a really powerful change in how we treat and view and see one another.â Emily
29.23 Masculine and Feminine energies
35.00 People living in flight or fight in Israel for decades
36.00 Life in Israel now
41.00 When we go off balance we crave things that take us further off balance43.00 Meditation is a virtuous cycle
45.00 Stress and trauma
50.00 Meditation and community
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Weâre taught from when we are little to be ambitious in order to achieve what we want, but what if what we want is to strive for something that is already within us, enlightenment? In a teaching that expounds not looking to the future for happiness, where does something like ambition fit into such a philosophy? And is enlightenment envy a thing?
In this episode, Kristen and Isabel get personal about their own experience with feeling ambition in the spiritual sphere and how they have found ways of not letting it get in the way of their paths.
Show Notes:
1.30 Pitta dosha personality5:00 Santosha
5.55 âSuffering is wanting a different experience than what you are having right now.â Kristen
6.30 Enlightenment impatience
7.00 Flower blooming process
7.41 âWe want to have that destination in our mind while also realizing that there is a journey thatâs happening. And that we donât want to rush the journey. We want to have the full unfolding.â Kristen
8.20 Enlightenment envy
10.00 Vulnerability
10.50 Nature is never always in bloom
14.26 The trick is to feel sad without being sad
14.46 âAt your core you are always fine, but you are still allowing yourself to feel humanity. Itâs like being in the big ocean of self while simultaneously being in the wave of self. The wave of self, feeling sad and the ocean of self, the being, is always fine.â Kristen
17.00 Itâs about the how
19.50 Status â âTrue status is something you just experience.â Kristen
24.20 Punya â Spiritual merit
27.15 Karma and Kriya
33.40 âTo what extent are you enjoying and experiencing whatever point in the storyline you are in right now. Itâs not the how itâs the what.â Kristen
37.00 The characters we play
39.00 Big Self goals
43.54 âSpiritual ambition - Once you get there, it wonât matter to you. The unfolding is happening with that. The river is moving, you donât have to push it. You just have to listen and do the practice and do those spontaneous actions and watch the whole thing.â Kristen
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Two years ago, we spoke with Tracee Stanley, founder of the Empowered Life Circle, about her book "Radiant Rest," and it was one of the most memorable interviews weâve hosted on this podcast. We are honored to have her on again to talk about her new book, "The Luminous Self," which comes out in October. Traceeâs new book paints from a palette of her decades of study of the traditions of the Himalayan Masters and Sri Vidya Tantra as well as from personal stories that make the knowledge both practical and relatable.
In this episode, we get the hear Tracee tell some of these stories firsthand as well as hear her describe some of the practices she outlines in her book for reconnecting to our deepest selves. We discuss all the ways in which thinking of life as a sacred ritual infuses life with intention and purpose.There are so many incredible gems of wisdom from Tracee in this episode. And for those who preorder her book at Shambhala.com before the launch date of October 9, you get 30% off with the code LUM30 as well as free entry into her book club with live group sessions, practices, Q&A and sacred community.
Show Notes:1.15 Rituals
2.15 âIf we want to think about life as a sacred ritual, if we want to be able to weave our practices and our devotion throughout our days. Then we have to become more intentional with the things that we do and why we do them. Because a ritual is really meant to mark a moment in time when you take a pause, you do something intentionally to create an effect or an opening for something new to emerge.â Tracee
7.45 Timeline practice11.00 How The Luminous Self came about
14.27 âI am deeply listening to what needs to come through.â Tracee
16.50 Opening up the humanity
18.00 Sanskara : The moments we think hold us back propels us to our own growth
âThe crack is where the light comes through. This idea of discomfort is the portal to your healing. And itâs sometimes the very thing we want to avoid. Whether itâs because we donât have the support, or we donât have the practices or we donât have the trust or the faith that itâs even possible. And so, I really wanted people to be able to see through my lens that it absolutely is possible.â Tracee
19.30 The Yoga Sutras25.00 Internal Practices
âThis idea of internal practice is a strengthening of the remembering. Because we have so much beautiful memory from our spiritual lineages, our ancestor lineages that live in our DNA. When we are in a place of deep rest and deep listening that that remembering rises to the surface as wellâ. Tracee
27.00 The elements and our connection to them
âWhen we think about this idea of returning to our true nature, our true nature is not separate from nature. The more we are separate from it, the more we are separated from ourselves. As above, so below. What is in the macrocosm is in the microcosm, there is a universe inside of us. There is a sun, there is a moon.â Tracee
31.00 âThere is not a reciprocal relationship with nature. And once we are in that reciprocity with nature, that is when the healing starts to begin.â Tracee
31.30 The connected roots exercise
Ted Talk: Suzanne Simard
36.00 Yoga is not a feel-good practice â itâs a face your truth practiceâWhen I first started practicing yoga it was like -oh I want to feel better, I want to look better, I want to be stronger, I want to be more peaceful and then when I started reading that first translation of the yoga sutras, it was like oh thereâs a place in my that is beyond all sorrow. Then that means there is sorrow that I am not acknowledging, I am bypassing the sorrow so that I can be in the feel-good.â Tracee
37.00 Bhakti â Devotion
39.00 Upgrades in consciousness
âI needed that upgrade. It was excruciatingly painful until I realized what was happening. And then it was like -oh, let me be in the lila, and let me watch and let me experience. And it took on a completely different turn.â Tracee
Discount Code: 30% off the book if you preorder at Shambhala.com with the code LUM30
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You deserve the best.
Never feel unworthy or
not justified in having the best.
I tell you, this is your heritage;
but, you have to accept it.
You have to expect it;
you have to claim it.
To do so is not demanding too much.
These powerful words come from Swami Brahmananda Saraswati, better known as Guru Deva, the master of our tradition from which Vedic Meditation comes. This is one of his most quoted phrases, but also, in the current climate of âmanifest your dreamsâ gurus, it one of his most misunderstood. What does it mean to deserve the best? What is the best? Are some more worthy of the best than others?
In this episode, Isabel and Kristen go line by line to unpack the hidden meaning behind the words. They unravel some of the misconceptions around the phrase âdeserving powerâ or punya and reveal how the best is in reach of everyone.Episode Notes:
2.46 Deserving Power
âYour deserving power is to what extent are you aware of your own true identity.â Kristen
3.20 Punya
5.25 âWhat is the best? The best is a state of consciousness.â Kristen
11.00 Expectations
âWe expect what we are used to. This is where meditation comes in. Because when we start meditating, and innocently let our awareness go to that layer, that consciousness state comes spontaneously from that, so we start living the best and then the expectation for the best comes from the fact that we already have it.â Kristen
12.30 Support of Nature â the support of yourself
16.00 Releasing attachments to specific outcomes and timings
18.00 Self-doubt and suffering
20.30 Who are you?
âIf your concept of self is little you you´re are going to struggle with this, but if you are the universe, if that is your status there is no hesitance with that at all.â Kristen
25.35 Having the best and not feeling the best.
26.00 Projectors of our state of consciousness
29.00 Millionaires and happiness
33.00 Claiming the best
âTo me the claiming is easier when I think of myself as a servant (of the universe).â Kristen
33.45 Heritage
âHeritage implies this is what youve had before. This is your heritage because, at a certain layer, you are already here, you already have it, you are already living it.â Kristen
34.55 Heritage â Inheritance â it´s coming your way.
36.00 Acceptance
âTo the extent you perceive everything as a gift, you accept everything. There is no rejecting of what is, this is where suffering comes.â Kristen39.00 Suka Deva story
43.00 Self-doubt in the feminine consciousness
45.00 Joy is the baseline
46.00 Moving to the best
47.00 Pride in misery
53.00 Acting when there is a better deal
54.00 âYou get what you expect, and you get what you accept.â Kristen
55.00 Hanuman
56.00 âAsk yourself to what degree does this feel frictionless inside.â Kristen
58.00 Exploring what the best is for you
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As teachers of meditation, weâre always talking about the journey inward. But what about the outer journey, is there a spiritual value in traveling the world?
In this episode, we have a delightful conversation with fellow Vedic Meditation teacher and avid world traveler ThĂŠo Burkhardt about why we yearn to see far off lands and how the exploration of the globe is also an expansion for the soul. Theo brings his knowledge of Vedic Astrology (Jyotish) into the discussion as well as fascinating anecdotes of his many adventures to the remotest of places.
If youâd like to travel with ThĂŠo (he leads retreats in Bali and expeditions in India) or if youâd like to learn meditation from him, you can reach him at theoburkhardt.com. You can also hear more of his relatable brand of sharing Vedic knowledge on his podcast Slouching Towards Enlightenment.
Show Notes:
3.20 Traveling and teaching
5.40 Nivar tatvam
7.40 âThe body wants to get in on the action of what it is experiencing inside.â Theo
8.15 âYou want to take this new consciousness around. You want to take the show on the road.â Theo
9.50 The Comfort Zone âThe safest place is being on the cusp of the unknown.â Kristen
11.30 Jyotish and Travel
16.00 Equanimity and traveling
19.00 Adaptability
20.00 Everywhere is home
22.00 Homogenizing
26.00 Pilgrimage to India
29.00 Finding unity in difference
30.00 Varanasi
31.50 Naga babas
37.00 Breakthrough cosmic experiences while traveling
42.00 The importance of a teacher
45.00 No cultural appropriation
46.00 The call to teach in the west
47.00 Preservation of knowledge
49.00 Giving the student what they need
50.00 Dharma
52.00 Surprises and people
56.00 Knowing ourselves without our surroundings
57.00 Plot vs Story
58.00 The elixir
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This is a very special episode where we honor the memory of Nicole LeVeck McCracken who dropped her body this past September after a long battle with cancer. Nicole was a Vedic meditator on her way to becoming a teacher of the practice she loved so dearly as well as an Alcoholics Anonymous sponsor who had passed the steps to hundreds of people looking for a path to recovery.
In this conversation, Kristen shares her experience of being part of Nicoleâs support team in her final months and what it was like to witness someone in such a high state of awareness move towards her end-of-life transition. Isabel and Kristen discuss the Vedic perspective on death in between light-hearted memories. We hope you listen to this episode and feel a touch of the joy and upliftment Nicole brought to everyone she knew.
Show notes:
3.40 A beautiful death â the relationship we have with death
6.00 The Purest Love â student/teacher relationship
8.00 Cognition sand answers
10.00 The Luckiest Person in the world â being grounded in being
11.30 âAll of it is for evolution. And especially the hard times.â Kristen
12.00 Nicole´s life
14.00 AA practice of surrendering
16.45 âShe was so divine in one way and made you love her. And she was also so human.â Kristen
19.20 People´s different reactions to a person dying
21.00 The role of getting her back into the big
22.40 How someone in high consciousness deals with death
27.00 âThat´s the thing about people in that state, they don´t even have to say anything. Just their being is enough to uplift everybody.â Kristen
27.20 âAs she got closer, her enlightenment was getting exponential. You could feel it just going higher and higher and higher.âKristen
28.00 Story of the parking lot in the hospital and teaching steps of AA
30.40 Devotion
31.18 âDevotion and I just put her picture under it. That is who to me embodies it. And devotion is that sacrificing, that honoring of something bigger than yourself. And she did it so effortlessly. It made it so easy to be devoted to her. She was devoted to anyone who had need.â Kristen
34.00 The real pranayama and the real yoga â life
36.00 She was always a teacher
36.30 A true influence â the upliftment
40.00 Thom Knoles and his goodbye to Nicole
48.00 The circle on the other side waiting for ger
48.40 It´s not an ending, it´s a continuum â another portal
50.55 âIt´s also a gift to get to love somebody that much.â Kristen
51.00 The gift of grief
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Itâs no secret that our lack of awareness as a society is doing great harm to the planet as well as all of its creatures. In this episode, we are thrilled to speak with one of those who are holding back the tide of destruction, Rachel Hogan, director of Ape Action Africa. Rachel has devoted the last 20 years to primate conservation in Cameroon and is well known for her work in the rescue and rehabilitation of gorillas and chimpanzees, as well as fighting the illegal bush meat trade in West Africa.
We are honored to hear first-hand about how Rachel started in this field (her three month trip turned into two decades!) and all about her work to raise the awareness of the local people in order to protect these majestic residents of the African jungles. She is also a daily meditator, and shares about how her practice has helped her manage such a demanding role.
Listening to her story, and all about how intelligent and aware the primates are she works with, we are humbled by the beauty of these animals as well as the efforts made to save them.
Click here if you would like to learn more about Ape Action Africa, donate to their cause or if you would like to "Adopt an Ape"
Show Notes:5.30 Pushing back on low consciousness.
7.36 Concentrating on the women of the community
8.28 New Generations are the ones spreading the message
14.07 âWhen I look back then, it really just feels it was all a learning process⌠When I look
back when I was 25, 26 and I would be dealing with these issues at the time it was like ´oh
gosh, how do we get past these issues´, and it was the worst thing ever. And then looking
back now, and especially since I´ve started meditation as well, I can really see the reason
behind those challenges and how that helped move the project forward. And how we all
developed.â Rachel
17.30 Benefits of meditation for Rachel
23.30 Rachel´s Journey
26.39 âIt really does feel like the path was already set. And it´s home now. It feels like Iâm
where Iâm meant to be and where I want to be. And I make that choice every day, I make
that conscious choice. I am here today.â Rachel
28.00 Consciousness of the apes themselves
29.00 The peacemaker
30.50 Awareness of others and themselves
32.30 Gorillas are the big thinkers, big meditators
33.00 Chimps wear their hearts in their sleeves
34.21 âEven now, even after 21 years, they´ll do something that will completely blow my
mind. And just when they look at you, you can just see, you can just feel it, it´s incredible it
really is. They´re like us, but with a lot more hair.â Rachel
35.46 They are all different, with their own unique soul.
36.00 Personalities and introductions
40.00 âThere are times when there will be a little bit of doubt, a little bit of
discouragement but itâs just not enough to stop. Itâs not a phenomenon, itâs not on the list.
We are doing something here; we need to keep moving forward and thatâs what we do. Itâs
about whether you want to be part of the solution or part of the problem. And I think
thatâs how we all feel in the Ape Action Africa team.â Rachel
42.00 Working with the government
44.40 Releasing apes back into the wild
45.12 âOne of the best feelings ever is when you see a chimp back with other chimps, or a
gorilla with other gorillas. And the family that they lost; they have a new family. It really is
incredible. It shouldn´t be us looking after them. They should be with their own kind.â
Rachel
50.20 The future of Ape Action Africa âforest and wildlife protection.
51.00 Deforestation and the effects
52.15 How to help Ape Action Africa -
Meditation is all about letting the light in. In this episode, we speak with Joh Jarvis, Vedic Meditation teacher and founder of the Light Inside, who is on a mission to let the light find its way into prisons and jails. Joh talks about what it was like teaching men in maximum security at Rikers Island Correctional Center in New York as well as women prisoners in Philidephia who were recently released.
Beyond her story, we go into how prison is a metaphor for the binding effect of karma we all experience and how healing those behind bars can go a long way towards healing the collective at large.
We hope you are as inspired as we were to hear Joh so humbly describe her work of going straight into the heart of darkness to bring the light where it is most needed.
If you are interested in Johâs work, you can email her here: [email protected]
Or go sign up for her mailing list on her website: www.the-lightinside.com (live but under construction)
Show Notes:.40 Intro to Joh Jarvis
2.40 making a mistake you have to pay for all your life with no rehabilitation
8.00 Hiding our putting away our own mistakes is similar to what society does with people in prisons. Out of sight out of mind. Healing within, healing outside.
8.43 the prison system as a reflection of the consciousness of society
9.06 The Light Inside Organization
9.50 Correction officers are also affected by the system
12.40 Teaching in Riker´s island
13.00 Prisons vs Jails
14.40 Future plans to measure results
17.30 Seeing prisoners beyond being just prisoners
19.30 Hold both states with prisoners âGyana Kanda and also Karma Kanda
20.28 Not feeling in danger in a prison while teaching
26.30 Closing eyes in meditation for prisoners
30.40 Desire is where there is the need to teach
31.15 Prisons are metaphors of what we all experience â karma â binding effect.
32.00 Outside bounds are nothing compared to the inside ones
32.20 Prisons can fast-track you to evolution â not as many distractions
32.55 Nelson Mandela´s self-realization in prison
33.00 âLet´s make as many of us available as possible to be available to those people who, once itâs explained to them, experience what we teach.â Joh Jarvis
33.30 Covid- opportunity to go inward
40.00 Trying to teach correction officers
41.20 Raising the collective consciousness â finding victims, finding the ones helping the victims and then the ones causing the suffering (who are also victims).
42.30 Uplifting the farthest from society and from there uplift the whole thing
43.36 The keys to the kingdom â the best meditation that you could learn
44.20 âWe are giving you the best, and in a way, I think they deserve it. I think anybody who gets in front of a meditation teacher and takes that opportunity inherently deserves it.â Joh Jarvis
44.46 âThey very fact that I´ve got the desire, you got the desire, says âoh this should be doneâ. Itâs coming from the divine, this idea that people do this and therefore there is a reason for that and itâs for the collective evolution. So yes, I think prisons for that reason are going to be a powerful impact on the wider collective, the teaching in prisons.â Joh Jarvis
45.20 The point of enough
47.00 Jarvis Jay Masters â inmate who does mindfulness in San Quentin State Prison
48.59 The Dhamma Brothers in Alabama State Prison (there is a film about this)
-
There is one constant in the human condition and that is the desire for growth. However, we all have these different issues, habits, or patterns that seem to hold us back and keep us from living life to the fullest. But what if it were those very traits that held the secret to our evolution?
In this episode, Isabel and Kristen explore this revolutionary perspective and how to look at your setbacks as footholds for expansion. They delve into their own personal challenges and how they enriched the storyline of their own lives and shed light on how to look at your life with a renewed sense of empowerment.
Show Notes:
.25 âWhat we think in our lives what is holding us back is actually what is propelling us forward. Your weakness is in fact your superpower. They are one in the same.â Kristen
3.48 We all have an Achilles heel that shapes us
5.30 Indoctrination of having to be perfect to live our âbestâ life
6.30 âThe things that we struggle with are the footholds for our growth.â Kristen
7.40 We are looking for transformation
8.20 Idiosyncrasies
10.20 Setbacks are for our progress
12.00 How the dots in our life connect
15.30 Leaders with experience
17.00 Spectrum of weaknesses in teachers
22.00 Learn the lessons as they come â no repeats
27.00 Binding of Karma happens within you â the viewpoint
28.00 âBig perspective makes everything okay. Suffering always come from a very narrow perspective. And narrow perspective comes from being in the wave of self.â Kristen
-
Boundaries are a fascinating subject because according to the Vedas, they donât really exist. When we want to manifest, boundaries are created, when we want to unify, boundaries are dissolved. What that looks like in our own lives is setting healthy personal boundaries while at the same time dissolving all boundaries in meditation as well as witnessing the dissolving of boundaries between civilizations, races and genders.
In this episode, Isabel and Kristen explore this very nuanced topic while giving concrete advice on how to master the creation and dissolution of boundaries in your own life.Show notes:
1.25 Soma Bandits
3.00 Setting boundaries to actually help others
3.40 âBoundaries are always important, sometimes we want to create them, sometimes we want to dissolve them.â Kristen
4.00 Women and boundaries â a theme in feminine consciousness of the feminine being invaded of boundaries being ignored.
5.28 Myth of Ganesh being created
7.21 Protecting yourself from yourself â realizing we CAN have boundaries
14:00 âWhen you actually set boundaries it´s like that respect you have for yourself for setting them gets reflected back.â Kristen
15.00 In meditation we obliterate boundaries
18.00 âThe difference is in the direction of manifestation, if you want to go that way, direction of diversity, manifestation it´s is more and more boundaries. And if you want to move towards unity you want to dissolve boundaries.âKristen
19.00 Sexuality, Races, Countries in the dissolution of boundaries
21.00 The illusion of boundaries
23.20 âLove is a dissolving of boundaries.â Kristen
26.00 NIVAR TATVAM: go where you are not. Make boundaries of dissolve them based on where you are at a time
27.00 There is no right or wrong â what is right for who at what time.
35.40 The bigger YES
âYou are not saying no, you are saying yes to something else.â Isabel -
There are some that proudly proclaim they are on a spiritual path while others want nothing to do with it. However, spirituality is not something you can be "into" or not, everything is spirit. We are all devoted something, the question is what do you worship? What is getting the bulk of your attention? Do you worship your problems by thinking of them constantly? Do you worship your stress by serving it through coping behaviors?
In this episode, Isabel and Kristen discuss how we're all evolving on different paths to greater self realization and that through meditation, you can effortlessly redirect the flow of your attention away from troubles and surface desires to your highest self.
Show Notes:
2:00 We are all on a spiritual path (some actively â some not)5:00 âA lot of times people´s belief systems, they may be a very spiritual person, but they are not into `spirituality´ as a subject matter but they are doing things that are full of spirit.â Kristen
7:00 Even our obstacles guide us
8.48: Soma and Devotion
9:47 âAs meditators, our soma flow is actually being redirected inward⌠it flips around and goes back to its source. Meditation is an act of devotion going back to that one indivisible whole consciousness.â Kristen
11:00 Seeing meditation as an act of devotion
13.40: We are all serving something
âEvery bit of consciousness is serving something else in some way and that service is that devotion and soma flow.â Kristen14.00 âMy body serves me, and I serve the higher self.â Kristen
14.30 When we are stressed, we serve the stress
16.40 Ask ourselves where our soma is flowing to?
19:00 Abhyanga massage as an act of serving our body
21:00 Inner bashing of our form
26:00 What does devotion feels like that?
29:00 Surrendering is not non-action
30:00 The appreciation of others
34:00 The beginning of the end: turning inward
37:00 Becoming devoted to life itself
42:00 Getting higher quality soma
45:00 Non active role in your spiritual path
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Every day the news seems to get worse and worse. The sense of urgency builds and yet for most of us ordinary people who live thousands of miles away, we feel helpless.
In this episode, Kristen and Isabel confront their own moments of helplessness in the face of global tragedy and discuss how meditation itself works to cool the collective. Listen in to hear how to overcome feelings of helplessness and explore real tangible ways to contribute to not only the easing of suffering in Ukraine, but everywhere.
4.30 Cooling the collective through meditation
5.30 Leading through a grounded place
6.00 Leading through fear vs leading through happiness
7.30 Yogastha Kuru Karmani
9.00 Feminine Warriors â âmake your enemies your disciples â it´s a unity action.â Kristen
11.00 Micro and Macro â fractalization of the oneness
12.00 All problems are consciousness problems
16.00 It´s okay to be angry â all feelings are valid.
24.00 Dharma â universality through individuality contacting all other individualities
28.45 âIn times of great difficulty is where heroes come forth.â Kristen
30.00 The power of group meditations
34.00 Cleaning the collective stress
35.00 Fear comes from âotheringâ
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So much of what we want out of life does not require more effort and struggle, we simply have to stop resisting and allow what already is. As they say, âwhat we resist persists.â But how do we learn to let go and simply relax and enjoy?
In this episode, Kristen and Isabel examine the root causes for our resistance and define how the inner resistance that is keeping us down differs from pain, aversion and fighting oppression. With their typical levity, they break down the steps for releasing our grip in order to realize the liberation that is already flowing underneath.
Show notes:
1.08 Finding liberty and liberation
2.46 âReal liberation is actually an inner experience. It´s not anything you can be given from the outside.â Kristen
4.15 it´s not about gaining it´s about stop resisting
5.00 Stress release in meditation
8.30 Difference between pain and suffering
âSuffering is the resistance to the pain.â Kristen14.30 Witnessing yourself â observe and allow
16.30 Big consciousness is neutral, interested in everything but neutral
17.30 Embracing change
17.40 âWhat we are resisting are the areas where we need to grow and where change needs to happen.â Isabel
20.30 Nature pushing us harder when we resist
21.30 Difference between resisting and aversion
24.00 Difference between resistance and resisting oppression (fighting for a cause)
25.25 AA program â surrendering to a higher power
30.00 Does the universe have your back?
34.30 Getting in the witness state allows us to find joy and comedy in life
41.40 Don´t resist resisting
45.20 Others resisting you
- Se mer