Benefits Beyond the Mat — Power of Yoga

Yoga is a mirror to look at ourselves from within
Photo by Carl Barcelo on Unsplash

I am certain you have heard of yoga some time or other in your lifetime! Let me tell you a few interesting facts about yoga and its inception.

Yoga is over 5000 years old practice of ancient India which is a combination of holding postures, breathing, relaxing and meditating. India’s ancient religious texts, in the language of Vedas, Sanskrit, gave birth to both the literature and the technique of yoga. The idea of doing yoga is not losing weight and increasing heart rate. In the older times, it was not a part of a fitness goal, it was more to do with expanding your inner awareness, increase focus and mental stability and ultimately expand one’s spiritual energy.

Yoga is a light, which once lit will never dim. The better your practice, the brighter your flame.― B.K.S Iyengar

It was widely practised by the sages of ancient India, who believed the yoga is a kind of magnificent tapestry woven together by the inner spirit and the universe. The word yoga is derived from the word “yuj” which means bind and is often a method of discipline one follows. Yoga helps to gain balance, inner peace, coordination as well as physical and overall well being.

Yoga is gaining popularity in today's chaotic and busy lifestyle like never before. The goal and benefit revolves around the central fact of “awareness”

There are a top 5 benefits of practising yoga regularly.

  1. Feel the energy flowing inside you, soothes tension and anxiety in the mind and body
  2. Yoga helps to calm disturbed and stressed mind, letting you enjoy inner peace
  3. Yoga detoxifies the body and improves immunity
  4. Yoga and pranayama (mindful breathing) help create awareness and bring the mind back to the present and focused instead of swinging from the past to the future.
  5. With the regular practice of yoga, you feel more content and relaxed and at peace with yourself and others. You will notice, you do not get agitated with small things around you and are more patient with your loved ones, improving your relationships.

Begin your journey to a better life with Peace, Love, and Happiness!

Start practising yoga and see the difference it makes in life. I have been practising yoga since 2016 and I have experienced my body becoming more flexible and developed a great sense of self-discipline and self-awareness. It has improved my well-being and given me mental clarity and peace.

Start yoga today, even it is it for 15–20 minutes, sit down and relax your mind and body. Your mind and body will thank you for that.

Namaste!

©Shweta, 2020. All Rights Reserved.
Originally published on a Few Words. 

5 Works of Eco-Fiction You must Read

An exploration of the world of the relationship between nature and the human communities that dwell in it

When I visited Seychelles January 2019, I was not aware the land is inhabited by humans about 300 years ago, with untouched flora and fauna, thousands of species lived on this beautiful turquoise waters and lush green land. And I didn’t know to what extent this remarkable view and experience of nature so close, would inspire my reading and writing over the coming years.


As a writer, I find myself curious to read about environmental issues captured into stories and characters and words written through an eco-focused lens, from how a story unfolds, and characters adapt and survive through the changes.
There’s no shortage of nonfiction about the environment, and the way humans are degrading it with every passing day and additionally animal extinction and protection, but fiction has the power to open eyes and hearts in completely unexpected ways. If you don’t believe the oceans are in trouble or farmlands are eroding, for example, you’re not likely to pick up a nonfiction book that outlines exactly that.

Fiction personifies the world around us, by contextualizing life into the story in the same way that it did to me, as I saw nature through a different angle when I visited a place with rich nature.
I’m inspired by the writers on this list, who have woven environmental themes into their fictional stories, raising important issues while they also show how the characters are dealing with the issues. These authors also see the untold ways in which everything is connected — humans, animals, land, dignity, power — and subtly and seamlessly allow readers to connect the dots as well.

1. The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck

This is one of the best books on eco-fictions ever written, dated back to 1939.
The book is set during the Great Depression which was followed by Dustbowl. The novel focuses on Oklahoma capturing the economic hardship, drought, and changes in the agricultural industry from 1920 through 1930. The situation puts the tenant farmers out of work since the farmlands were severely affected by wind erosion. This made thousands of farmers move from their home to different places in seeking jobs, land, dignity, and a brighter future.
How can you frighten a man whose hunger is not only in his own cramped stomach but in the wretched bellies of his children? You can’t scare him — he has known a fear beyond every other

 The book is a portrait of the conflict between the powerful and the powerless, and a man’s fierce reaction to injustice. The novel captures the terrors and panic of the Great Depression and probes into the very nature of equality and justice in the world.

2. The Drowned World by JG Ballard

This book was first published in 1962, a classic book on climactic fiction, 
which has mesmerizing descriptive narrative style making the reader envision going into a petrified future in which solar radiation and global warming have melted the polar ice caps. The book depicts the chaotic breakdown of the world, giving a perceptive of deep implications of time, space, the evolution of humans and the psychology of people going through the catastrophe. Writing during such an era most of perhaps fervently believed the world was ours to shape and module. Sadly, we see now in 2020, it wasn’t true.

3. Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward

The book is muscled with poverty, helplessness, and reality. Set during hurricane Katrina, building over the Gulf of Mexico, highlights the tragic turn of events of the people living in the Mississippi during the 12-day hurricane and aftermath of the storm. The writer draws a vivid link between personal trauma and climatic disaster.
Suddenly there is a great split between now and then, and I wonder where the world where that day has happened has one, because we are not in it
The writer lived through Katrina and wrote this book after being very dissatisfied with the way Katrina had receded from the world’s attention and people’s consciousness. The book also depicts the Southern life of Afro — American people and culture and their hardships.

4. The Road by Cormac McCarthy

The Road is a profoundly moving book on an unplanned journey of a father and his young son over several months, blasted by an unknown cataclysm that has destroyed most of civilization on earth, intervening life on it for years. It depicts a future of no hope, dignity or a simple livelihood, but is sustained by love for each other. It gives a vivid imagination into the world of catastrophe we humans are capable of bringing into this world causing ultimate destruction, making the survivors witness complete devastation.

5. Flight Behaviour by Barbara Kingsolver

The book is set in rural Tennessee during a period of unseasonable rain when a young woman tempted to attempt adultery out of marriage witnesses hundreds of monarch butterflies in a field near her house. As the news reaches the experts, it comes as a warning of a disturbing event due to global warming, although they look beautiful in the farmland in Tennessee, displaced from their natural habitat in Mexico.

The book captures the reader leading us to one of the most crucial topics of our time — climate change. With a deft and versatile empathy, the writer dissects the motives of humans of this precarious world.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
So there you have it!
I realized how impactfully these books have captured my empathy and giving a glimpse of ultimate destruction, we humans are causing to the world. I hope this article motivates you to pick up at least one of these books.

I hope this list helps you add some books to your reading list. If anyone has any other books I would love to hear them.

©Shweta, 2020. All Rights Reserved.







Downhill

Photo by Tyler Mullins on Unsplash

I sat there in silence, dwelling on my thoughts, zoned out, staring into the black tunnel, willing to see the lights blinking at me, growing closer, declaring I am on my way closer. The quiet chills me, suddenly adrenaline flows through, hushing me, crashing my courage, as I go downhill. 


©Shweta, 2020. All Rights Reserved.
Originally published on The Friday Fix.

Homecoming Reunion

A place where I once belonged
Photo by Mike Scheid on Unsplash

Returning home I feel like a tortoise retracting into her secure shell. I drive down the road leading towards my home, where I lived for most of my life and my heart both sinks and rises all at once. I sink because I used to know every rise and dip on the trail, yet no longer. To anyone else, this is a house like all the others beside it, but to me, it was where I once belonged.

I haven’t forgotten, it is the path that has changed over the course of time, due to footfalls and weathering. I rise to experience what awaits me at the end, a place of love, happiness, warmth and endless chatter, then I’ve had these countless days that have gone by like a zapping bullet train.

Come home, little flower, I hear my mother whispering. Come home and talk while we sip the tea of love, and laugh over our own silliness and talk heart to heart, and I will make the dishes like the way you relish it.

Why did we ever sweat the small stuff? Why didn’t we let go and enjoy the ride all along? Maybe it took time, to realize those were the best days we shared and there is no turning back. The joy still exists, but with a twist, we meet a couple of days a year now, once every few months, we look forward to, so be with me now. Stay. Pack your bags and come visit me and belong, or perhaps I will do the same as time passes by.

Photo by Calum Lewis on Unsplash

Come we’ll paint new memories of togetherness, and do things the way you like it. So come along as you are here I am happy, I am content. We all are here!

Now, everyone is out of their kilter, it is hard to believe, I’m no longer a part of the natural flow of their lives (my parents and my sister), and there is a deep longing and unsaid things, which leaves rustic memories lingering, like a scent of a sweet apple pie.


©Shweta, 2020. All Rights Reserved.
Originally published in I Challenge You. 

Memories - A poem

Photo by Debby Hudson on Unsplash


Learning to heal,
Learning to set boundaries,
it is just a process each learns
in the matter of time
to surrender and make peace!

Letting the experiences
spin a story, a safe cocoon for us,
memories slowly fade,
as each thread untangles itself
to fall away!

©Shweta, 2020. All Rights Reserved.
Originally published in The Cotton Thread

So.....I got published as a writer in Spillwords

Photo by Marcos Paulo Prado on Unsplash It’s published. My writing has been published. I have only published in Medium publica...