Dragon Breath

Dragons are said to breathe fire, and so can you (sort of) when you do this pose.

Instructions

  1. Sit comfortably in any of the seated postures.
  2. Place your hands on your belly.
  3. Breathe out through your nose with a strong snort as you gently push your belly back towards your spine.
  4. Focus on your breath as it goes out. A little bit of air will naturally sneak into your nose after each outward dragon breath, so you don’t need to think about inhaling, it will happen naturally.
  5. Do the Dragon Breath 3-6 times. Then breathe in and out normally.
  6. Repeat.
  7. Add more dragon breaths and rounds as you feel comfortable. You will notice that your dragon breath will get stronger and longer with practice.

 

Notes for Parents and Teachers

This breathing pose is a really good belly toner. It’s also excellent for aiding your child’s elimination system, especially for constipation. Only do this breath on an empty stomach. If you get lightheaded, it’s just because you’re getting more oxygen than you’re used to. If this happens, breathe in and out normally and rest.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Awesome Anatomy
Our intestines absorb nutritious elements from our food into our bodies. Dragon Breath helps us clean the walls of the intestines. It loosens undigested particles that can clog things up, and helps move them out. The intestines are about 20 feet long, but they are coiled up so they can fit inside our bodies.

Musical Musings
As you snort in the Dragon Breath use different rhythms. Snort fast. Snort slow. In music terms, staccato means faster. Adagio means slower. Mix up your adagio and staccato dragon breaths — make a pattern and play your belly like a musical instrument.

Laughing Language
The yoga word “prana” means energy, vitality, life-force. When you practice breaths like the dragon, which make you feel awake and alive, that is the prana. Can you whisper the word “prana” as you exhale and snap your belly back in the Dragon Breath?

 

 

Tarzan’s Thymus Tap

child doing tarzan poseGo ape! Pound your chest. Howl like a monkey. Stay happy, healthy and energized with this fun YogaKids pose.

 

Pose Instructions

  1. Stand in mountain or sit in lotus or on your knees. (This pose can be done in many positions.)
  2. Make two fists and pound your chest. Pound and tap under your arms too.
  3. Howl and yowl and yodel.

 

Note for Parents and Teachers

When you or your child feel tired or cranky (yes, of course grown-ups get cranky too), this pose will stimulate the thymus gland and send a steady flow of oxygenated blood through the carotid arteries to the brain. It’s a great pick-me-up and the whole family will feel better.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Awesome Anatomy
Feel the collar bone (clavicle) that runs between the shoulders at the front of your chest. From the center of the clavicle draw a line down your chest. This is your breast bone (sternum). Run the fingers along your ribs. These are the bones in your upper body.

We all Win
Play the game we call Monkey Me – Monkey You.

  1. Face one another.
  2. Make faces and sounds for your partner to mimic.
  3. Take turns being the leader.

Nutrition Notes
Bananas are one of monkeys’ favorite foods and children love them too. They are rich in potassium, help to balance the sodium (salt) in our bodies and reduce stress. Bananas are a great substitute for cookies and other high fat sweets. Bananas also have lots of natural fruit sugars that help reduce those late afternoon sugar cravings.

Green leafy vegetables support the Tarzan Thymus Tap blood flowing to your brain. Broccoli, kale, spinach, collards, mustard greens, and broccoli rabe also strengthen the blood and the respiratory system. Greens are high in calcium, magnesium, iron, potassium, phosphorous, zinc and vitamins A, C, E and K. They are filled with fiber, folic acid ,many micronutrients and phytochemicals.Eat your greens, tap away stress, and become a powerhouse of health. YES!

 

 

Take 5

“Take 5” is an expression that means “take a short break.” Take 5 breath gives you a quick rest whenever you  need it. If you get angry, tired, nervous or frustrated — just breathe and Take 5. Before tests or while you’re studying, Take 5 breath will help you focus and concentrate. This pose can be done anywhere, at any time. Breathe in for 5 seconds and breathe out for 5 seconds.

Instructions

  1. Make a fist and breathe in through your nose with an inhalation. Have someone count out loud for your or count it out in your mind 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
  2. Next, put up your hand with 5 fingers spread wide.
  3. Breathe out through your nose with an exhalation. Exhale and count: 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. Put one finger at a time down with each count– thumb (5), index finger (4), middle (3), ring (2), pinkie (1).
  4. Repeat 1 to 3 times.

 

Activity Ideas for Home and Classroom

Family Benefits
Take 5 with each other and make it a family practice. You can use it anywhere: In the car, at the dinner table, when tiredness or crankiness sets in for anyone in your family. Children love to remind their parents to Take 5 when they see them stressed or anxious. When things get wild just signal each other with an outstretched hand. Together you´ll learn to Take 5 automatically!!

Math Medley
Increase your breath in multiples of 5. Count 5, 10, 15, 20. Count backwards 20, 15, 10, 5, With practice, your breath span will naturally increase.

Quiet Quests
Begin your day with Take 5. Use it to help you fall asleep or anytime in between: at the dinner table, in the car, standing or sitting, anywhere-anytime.

Affirmations

  • “When I get upset, I take 5.”
  • “When I get frustrated, I take 5.”
  • “Before a test, I take 5 to quiet my brain and focus my mind.”
  • “I take 5 and feel calm.”

The Gift that Keeps Giving

Certified YogaKids Teacher Karen Martin with her Daughter

With ten minutes to go, I take a final glance at the soft blanket and pillow lying on the yoga mat in the uncluttered, “walkable” part of the room. This peaceful preparation is in each of my kids’ bedrooms, ready for their arrival off the school bus. Once home, my teens will get “down time” in this space, listening via ear buds to either their own music or silence (what I would call “blissful quiet”). This creative solution to after school stress? The result of my becoming a YogaKids instructor and my realization that teens (especially my teens) really, really need this yoga break!

Since becoming a CYKT, I have shared yoga with a variety of age groups. My teen teaching experiences always linger on my mind long after the class is over. They have a profound effect on me. I think it is because I identify with many of these kids who stumble through this awkward stage just as I did. And my own teens? Outwardly, they appear confident and controlled. Inside? Not so much. They can be just the opposite: conflicted, unsure, moody, and impulsive.

I felt gawky and out of place many times during my teen years. Figuring out who I was and what I wanted to be was tough. I wanted to fit in, yet didn’t wish to compromise my gradually emerging inner voice. I wanted to “feel comfortable in my own skin” but not at the expense of appearing too “different”. Oftentimes I wish I had been introduced to yoga back then, knowing now how grounding and self-affirming this practice can be.

There is a strong component of self-discovery and self-care with yoga. Teens can begin to recognize and listen to their inner voice and learn how it can steady them on rocky paths. Poses truly are pathways where each step in learning a posture can build confidence. Teens learn to modify asanas in regards to their own body’s response. They feel capable and self-assured.

Noticing the breath’s change in intensity and rhythm can provide more feedback to teens as to how they are feeling. Awareness of the breath can also open up possibilities allowing regulation in a positive way. Taking the time to notice the breath; to stop, pause, and think can help bring a moment of clarity to any situation, slowing impulsive responses.

With better understanding of themselves, teens can interact with greater empathy towards others. The realization that we all have different abilities, yet can partner pose successfully with others opens up more opportunities for cooperation and communication.

This post-school “Mini-Savasana” for my own teens is an important and highly anticipated part of our day. Relaxation offers a safe place for stillness, reflection and rest. Upon arising, they feel refreshed and better able to concentrate on homework and other activities. I hope they always continue to see yoga as a sweet and sustaining part of life — it will be the best gift I’ve ever given them.

 

Sit and Twist

Sit and Twist is a fun partner pose, so find a friend and get twistin’!

Instructions

  1. Sit cross-legged in front of your partner with your knees touching.
  2. Put your right arm behind your back, reach out with your left hand and grab your partner’s right hand. Breathe in and sit up tall.
  3. Breathe out, turn away from your partner, twist your spine, and look over your right shoulder.
  4. When you twist, rotate your spine gradually from the tip of your tail to the top of your head. Take your time and fee the stretch. Inhale as you lengthen your spine and exhale as you twist.
  5. Sit and twist for 5 breaths. Change sides.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

We All Win
Have your students/children help each other twist and lengthen to their “edge.’ In yoga, going to the “edge’ means that you practice the pose the best you can. Tell your students/children not to force the pose or strain their muscles, but to keep breathing and moving as deeply as they can. Have the students guide each other with gentle communication.

Body Benefits
Twists are beneficial in so many ways. They massage the internal organs and glands as well as energize the spine, hips, open the heart and release tension in the neck and head.

Laughing Language
Play with opposite words as you twist. For example, one person would say “dark.” Your partner says “light.” The choices are endless. Have fun. Here are some ideas to get you started:

  • Silly/Serious
  • Happy/Sad
  • Sun/Moon
  • Morning/Night
  • Wet/Dry

Nutrition Tip
Just as you can achieve an even deeper twist with a partner, some foods help digestion when eaten together and yet other foods can give you an upset stomach or cause discomfort like gas and belching when eaten together.

Here are some examples of foods that are great food combinations for your body when eaten together and other combinations that make digestion more difficult.

Easy to digest

  • Grains with vegetables
  • Pasta with vegetables
  • Beans with vegetables
  • Fish with vegetables
  • Cooked/Raw fruit eaten alone
  • Melons eaten alone

Difficult to digest

  • Fruit or sweets with beans
  • Fruit with vegetables
  • Fruit with grain, dairy or meat
  • Grain with dairy or meat
  • Melons with anything

 

Snow Salutation

A sun salutation in yoga is a sequence of poses, linked together with your breath. They are a wonderful way to wake up in the morning, and celebrate the sun and how it helps give life to all living things. This winter, you can do a new version of this — a SNOW SALUTATION — and offer up some gratitude to this magical, festive season.

  1. Reach your arms up high and grab some snowflakes.
  2. Bend forward at your waist and pat the snow on the ground.
  3. Lift half way up to look up at the snow falling.
  4. Jump your feet backwards like a snowshoe rabbit. Keep your elbows hugging next to your ribs, and slowly lower your body down to the soft fluffy snow.
  5. Press your mittens into the snow and look up (Snake). Catch some snowflakes with your tongue.
  6. Roll over on to your back and make a snow angel.
  7. Roll back to your belly and take a little rest in Child’s Pose. You are a little mouse in the snow.
  8. Lift your bum up and press down. Now you’re a wolf in the snow (Down Diggety Doggie Down). Howl! 
  9. Bend your knees, look at your hands and jump forward like a snowshoe rabbit.
  10. Pat the snow on the ground.
  11. Stand up, and reach up for some more snowflakes with your mittens.
  12. Look up! Stick out your tongue and catch some!
  13. Bring your hands to your heart center in Namaste pose.
  14. Repeat!

Idea by: Certified YogaKids Teacher Kathleen Abell

Bringing Meditation into Education

Happy Child in Spring Field

“The quieter you become, the more you can hear.” – Ram Dass

Preparing fertile ground for learning can often get overlooked due to time constraints in reaching curriculum standards. But this preparation is a vital part of the process that can make reaching those standards much easier for students and teachers alike. Fortunately, the world appears to be waking up to this idea — as meditation programs become more and more prevalent in schools across the land.

Young lives – like ALL our lives — are noisy, filled with instructions, expectations, and modern distractions. Never-ending voices (both external and internal) create a constant stream of input, like a broken faucet that just won’t shut off. Meditation is the valve that stops the gushing water – and by doing so, sets the stage for optimal learning.

The purpose of meditation is often described as “quieting your mind” – and this can be a simple, effective definition for explaining meditation practice to children: “We’re quieting your mind before learning.” Other analogies can be useful as well: it’s like setting the table before dinner, or stretching your leg muscles before a vigorous run, or de-cluttering your desk before doing homework. Whatever language you choose, the idea remains the same: meditation becomes a precursor for personal growth.

The Space Between Our Primal Needs and Self-Actualization

Childhood development theorist Abraham Maslow suggested that we all have a “hierarchy of needs” – and that we must first meet our basic physiological needs (safety, shelter, food) before we can even think about goals of self-actualization (i.e. thinking and learning).

According to Maslow, our physiological needs are not the only barriers to learning. Between the primal needs and the self-actualization goals exist even more needs that must be met prior to reaching our creative potential. These are defined as social needs (feelings of belonging) and esteem needs (feelings of worthiness). And this is where meditation comes in, providing a proven strategy for nurturing self-love and self-acceptance.

While Maslow’s theory has been criticized for establishing a definitive ranking of human needs (where one does not truly exist), his ideas nevertheless create a useful framework for understanding the relationships between our perception of reality and our abilities. In other words, a child with low self-esteem is still capable of learning challenging material. But a child with high self-esteem will have an easier time of it. After all, children learn best when they believe in their ability to actually do so.

The Science of Meditation

The benefits of meditation have been backed-up by science. Students who practice meditation experience increased focus and creativity, a reduction in stress and anxiety, greater self-esteem and self-love, and improved academic achievement and overall health. Setting the stage for learning with meditation practice allows children the space and freedom to know their inherent worth. And nothing breeds success quite like the expectation of success.


Learn more about the YogaKids program here.

Birthday Candle Series

Birthday Candle SeriesCelebrate your strength and courage every day with this fun and empowering series. Sing. Make a wish. Blow out the candles.

Pose Instructions

Step 1 (Rock ‘n Roll)

  1. Sit cross-legged.
  2. Take hold of your toes from the outer side of your knees.
  3. Breathe in and lift up your chest.Breathe out and tuck in your chin.
  4. Breathe in and out as you round your back and roll backward. Extend your crossed legs over your head.
  5. Roll forward, tuck your legs, and sit up again. Do this 2 or 3 times to loosen up your spine, back, and legs.
  6. Re-cross your legs the other way, then roll another 2 or 3 times. (Note: If crossing your legs is too challenging, I suggest you just tuck like a ball with your knees into your chest and roll back and forth.)

Step 2 (Plough)

  1. Roll backward. Let go of your toes, bend your elbows, and use your hands to support and lift your back.
  2. Straighten your legs and lift them past your head until your bent toes touch the floor. Squeeze your shoulders and elbows together. Breathe in and out for 30 to 60 seconds. (To relax in this pose, bend your knees and rest them on the floor on either side of the head.)
  3. Continue to let your breath flow in and out.

Step 3 (Birthday Candle)

  1. Lift the legs straight up towards the ceiling. Rest your weight on your shoulder blades. (Your weight should be on your shoulders, not on your neck.) Lift your chest.
  2. Your feet are the candle flames. Wiggle your toes to make the flames flicker.
  3. Tuck your chin to keep your neck relaxed.
  4. Sing “Happy Birthday.”
  5. Take a breath in and blow out your candles.
  6. Rest your hands at the back of your knees.

Note to Parents and Teachers

This might be a difficult pose series for younger children. Encourage them to do their personal best without any sense of perfection or “getting it exactly” right. Remember, they are just beginning. Encouragement, praise and patience is their best teacher.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Body Benefits/Awesome Anatomy
This child friendly version of the shoulder stand brings many gifts:

  • blood flow and energy to the brain
  • flexibility to the spine
  • relief for the valves of the legs; energizing the glands of the body.

Musical Musings
Sing the Happy Birthday song in this pose. Learn it in Spanish, “Cumpleanos Feliz.” Find other Birthday song versions and share them with your children.

Nutrition Tip
Create a sugar free Birthday Party. Refined white sugar is highly addictive. Over-consumption may lead to hypoglycemia and type 2 Diabetes, as well as drastic mood and activity swings. Try using these naturally occurring sweeteners* instead:

  • barley malt
  • brown rice sugar
  • date sugar, or even better, whole skinned and blended dates (tastes like brown sugar!
  • honey
  • maple sugar
  • molasses
  • stevia

Try this ice cream alternative!

Ingredients

  • 2 cups organic plain yogurt
  • 1 bag frozen organic strawberries
  • dash of vanilla
    1 tablespoon honey or 1 pack of powdered Stevia

For a dairy-free alternative, try using full-fat coconut cream. 

Directions

  1. Place in the food processor and puree.
  2. Put puree in the freezer for at least an hour and serve like ice cream, or just drink this combination right away as a smoothie.

Bunny Breath

girl doing bunny breath pose

Bunny Breath is a quick pick-me-up that will give you energy and focus. It is especially helpful for children with ADD and ADHD.

 

Pose Instructions

  1. Sit on your knees like a bunny.
  2. Keep your chest lifted and your shoulder blades descending down the back.
  3. Tuck your chin in slightly and let your lower jaw relax.
  4. Get your nose ready for breathing by twitching it like a bunny.
  5. Take 4 to 6, short, quick breaths in through your nose.
  6. Breathe out through your mouth with a long, smooth sigh,
  7. Increase the number of inhalations and double the length of your exhalation as your breathing power grows stronger and stronger with time and practice.

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Bridge of Diamonds 

“Allogrooming” is what rabbits do to take care of one another. If one bunny is disabled in some way, a friend will groom her. If a rabbit is blind, his companion doesn’t leave his side. Helping each other is important for people and animals.

Body Benefits 

This breath cleans the inside of your body like a washcloth and soap cleans the outside.

Brain Balance 

The rapid intake of oxygen inherent when practicing the bunny breath awakens the brain. Tune into learning readiness and get smart!

Laughing Language 

Bunnies ears are their “thermoregulators.” That is a fancy word for their bodies natural air-conditioning and heating system. They release heat through their ears to cool their body down and then adjust their internal organs to the right temperature for perfect comfort in the hot or cold weather.

 

Mountain

child in mountain pose
p107 re

Mountains represent majesty and solidness. Can you stand tall and proud, yet relaxed and still on your own two feet? The mountain pose looks very simple. You just stand there. Yet, there is much to be aware of in the body. This pose promotes correct posture.

 

Instructions

Stand rooted with your feet together or your feet hip width apart. However you feel most comfortable on your own two feet. The feet are the foundation. Sink both feet into the floor. Stretch downward through the legs. The more you ground downward the more you will be able to stretch upward and skyward. through your spine, belly and the top of your head.

Let’s see how well our feet can listen to the directions of our brain! Tell your toes: Big toes stay on the floor. Others lift up. Good. Tell your heels to lift up and open from the center. Place your heels back down. Were they good listeners? Now tell the big toes to lift up. All others stay on the floor. Well done!

 

Activity Ideas for Home and Classroom

Body Benefits

It takes time and practice to feel proper form and alignment in the body. Practicing the mountain regularly will promote stillness in the mind and body.

Quiet Quests

Experience your breath flowing through your Mountain body. Upward and downward from the earth to the sky. We are the conduits of this natural flow and exchange of energy. Take 3 to 5 breaths. Increase with time and practice.

Laughing Language

Tell or write a story as if you were the mountain. Where are you? How big are you? Does a volcano live inside of you? Do children snowboard or ski on you? Do you have water? Trees? Houses?

 

‘Tis the Season of Patience

YogaKid in Peanut Butter and Jelly Pose

Sitting in a circle, legs stretched straight out in L-Sitting Pose, we raise our arms to sit up even taller. We then reach for our toes in Peanut Butter and Jelly Pose. Some of the kids groan or sigh as they discover the furthest they can touch is not much past their knees. Then they see others in the class who can reach further than them. This comparison may lead to frustration with the pose, which can translate to irritation with oneself. Overstretching can occur, some of the kids wanting to reach their toes NOW.

We may not get to touch our toes today. We may not even achieve it in a few sessions. It might take much longer than that. It hinges upon what we are told is a virtue: patience.

In exploring this forward fold asana I see a valuable lesson about patience unfolding. Patience can be defined as the ability to wait calmly, the capacity to accept delay without getting angry. This subject is so timely with the holidays quickly approaching. I’m thinking about this while going about my daily routine — one that includes being stuck in traffic and waiting in lines at the grocery store. As the holidays loom closer, the lines will get longer and tempers will get shorter. There will be more rushing about and even more frazzled nerves. And it makes me wonder, where is patience? And if I don’t have patience, how can it be cultivated?

The seeds of patience must be sown and nurtured within ourselves before we can express it towards others. I have to be patient with myself first. If I cannot be patient with myself, then how can I expect to be patient with others? I work on studying patience within my own practice, noticing that how far I can reach may vary from day to day. I may have to make adjustments and modifications. And hopefully this acknowledgment of where I am is how I view where others are within and beyond the yoga studio.

Revisiting PB&J Pose, we work on determining and then accepting where we currently are in the pose. I assure one student that she is where she needs to be right now if she can only comfortably reach halfway to her toes. The added stretch will evolve with time and practice. We set small goals to slowly progress to the next level. Is this easy? No. Is there still frustration? Most likely! But at least this learning experience is a start in developing patience and self-acceptance. When we are less hurried and impatient with ourselves maybe we can then be less hurried and impatient with others. We become calm. We are more focused and tolerant. We see our goals as possible. We persevere.

“Patience is being like the ocean, slowly taking back the sand on the beach. It is in no hurry, because it knows eventually it will gain, or regain what it desires.” – Brian Martin


Change your life… and the world — as a Certified YogaKids Teacher!

Bow and Arrow

Bow and Arrow Pose

Archery is one of the oldest sports and requires skill, focus and concentration. The Bow and arrow was originally developed for protection and survival. Someone who makes bows is called a bowyer.

 

Instructions

  1. Begin sitting down with your legs straight out in front of you.
  2. Clasp your big toe. Bend your knee.
  3. Inhale. Pull the “bow” back behind you.
  4. Exhale. Shoot the arrow skyward and across your other leg. Make a whooshing sound like a speeding arrow moving through the air.
  5. Maintain a long and tall spine as you practice your seated archery.
  6. Use the other arm and hand to press into the floor and support the lift of your spine.
  7. Do this 6 times. Change sides.

 

Note for Parents and Teachers

Many children shoot the leg straight ahead or out to the side. This is common but not optimum. Help your child achieve the physical movement of crossing one leg over the other. It begins to make new grooves in the brain.

 

Activities for Home and School

Body Benefits
Bow and Arrow opens the hips, lengthens the hamstrings, gastrocnemius and soleus muscles of the leg.

Brain Balance
Crossing the midline of the body with this movement stimulates the 300 million nerve cells of the corpus callosum. The corpus callosum is known as the brain´s superhighway.

Math Medley
Help build your children’s counting ability while they perform this pose. Graduate to 2s, 3s, etc. When age appropriate, also reinforce their multiplication tables.

 

 

Childs Pose

Child's Pose

This pose goes by many names. Sometimes we call it Acorn. Most call it Child’s Pose, because babies often sleep this way.

Begin in Heel Sitting Pose. Open your knees a little, so your belly relaxes between your thighs. Bend at the hips and fold forward, letting your shoulders drop down, away from your ears and spine.

Your arms lay back along the sides of your legs, with open palms facing upward. Please your forehead on the floor, or turn it to one side for a while and then to the other side to gently stretch your neck. Take at least five breaths on each side.

Extended Child’s Pose

This time, lengthen your arms forward in front of you, with palms facing downward. This pose “extends” the spine, shoulders, arms, and fingers. You can stay in either version of Child’s Pose for as long as you want to.

Awesome Anatomy

Can you feel your ribs separating and moving as you breathe? Your intercostal muscles are at work. We call this “breathing into your back.”

Quiet Quests

Imagine a giant zipperfrom your neck to your tailbone. Use your breath to unzip it slowly from top to bottom. As it unzips, feel both sides of your back melt away from your spine. Breathe into your back. Let your back soften from your breath so it feels boneless.

Ecological Echoes

Animals without backbones are called invertebrates. Some examples of invertebrates are worms and jellyfish. This pose could be renamed “Jellyfish Pose”!

Orchestra Yoga Sculpture

This is a great yoga game for groups! Begin with any size six-sided block or dice. Write or draw different poses on each face of a die. You can use a pair of dice for a larger group. You should also have a set of cards, numbered 0 to 10.

Take turns rolling the dice and doing the pose as indicated. As each person takes their turn, they become part of the group-created “yoga sculpture.” This means that every single member needs to be physically connected to someone else in the sculpture. When someone joins the sculpture, they can also make a unique sound, becoming an instrument in a group-created orchestra.

Take turns allowing one person to become the conductor of the orchestra. The conductor points to someone in the sculpture and draws a random card out of the pile. The person chosen recreates their unique sound equal to the number of times on the card shown by the conductor. If the number zero is selected, that indicates a silent moment. Experiment with the tempo of the music and the number of “musicians” playing at the same time. Play around and have fun!

R is for Roar

A lion’s roar serves many purposes: To warn, welcome, attract and scare. With sound, lions use their language to claim territory, attract members of the opposite sex and frighten enemies. Roars can be heard 5 miles away.

R is for Roar PoseInstructions

  1. Sit on your heels and spread your the knees a little bit.
  2. Stretch your fingers into giant lion claws. Place them at the top of the thighs.
  3. Inhale. Puff up your proud lion chest with your breath.
  4. Exhale with a quiet, throaty rrrroar. Stretch your tongue out towards your chin. Open the back of your throat.
  5. Start with 3 quiet ones. Do 3 more ripping roars. Growl, grunt, yawn and purr too.

Remember R is for Roar. RRRRRRRRRoar. L is for Lion. LLLLLLLLion.

 

Note to Parents and Teachers

This pose opens the throat. It can help remedy bad breath. It is especially helpful in winter months and for colds. It pulls up phlegm, which should be spit out to help clear the body of excess mucus,

 

Activity Ideas for Home and Classroom

Ecological Echoes
Both boy and girl lions share the responsibilities in defending territory, hunting and raising their cubs. With their relatives, the females live in groups called prides on land that has been handed down from one generation to the next. Males form “coalitions” and try to infiltrate prides to find their brides…

Musical Musings
There are 3 different types of roars that make up the lion’s song. The prelude or beginning is generally soft, low moaning sounds. Then, it rises into a high-energy “roar” that generally goes from high to low and ends with “aaoouuu.” The finale is very staccato (short and quick) with grunts that sound like “huh, huh, huh.” *

Laughing Language
We have learned lions have many different sounds in their language.

  • A is for aaoouuuu
  • G is for grunt and growl
  • H is for huh
  • P is for Purr
  • R is for Roar
  • Y is for Yawn

Go through the alphabet. Can you find a sound for each letter? They might not be in lion language, but that’s OK.

 

November: Mandala Coloring Page

To color:

  • Click on the image to open it in full size.
  • Right click (or command click on mac) and save picture to your computer, and
  • Use Paint or a similar program to color on your computer, or
  • Print the picture and color it with crayons, paint, glitter…whatever!

GRATITUDE FRAME

This month, to put a little extra practice into your ATTITUDE OF GRATITUDE, print your mandala and use it as a frame (or color it digitally in a program like Paint).

In the center, draw the person or thing you’re most grateful for!

HAPPY THANKSGIVING from YogaKids to all our Bendy Buddies around the world! 

We would love to see what you make with your gratitude frame. Have your parents email us photos or JPG images of your gratitude mandala. 🙂

 

Scented Bath Salt Gift Jar

Photo from travelblog.com
Photo credit 

Hey! Check out this guy, floating in a super-salty sea while reading his newspaper! How does he do it? Is he a superhero, or is the water magical?

Today we’re going to make a really easy, fun gift for our friends and family, and we’re going to learn how epsom salts can make your bathtub more like The Dead Sea, the density difference between gold and kitchen sponges, and learn a little about the super amazing body armor you wear every single day.


SCENTED SALTS GIFT JAR

This is a very easy and inexpensive gift you can make for friends and family. 

You’ll need:

  • 1 cup Epsom Salts
  • 1 cup Kosher or flaky sea salt
  • 1/4 cup baking soda
  • 10-20 drops essential oil(s)
  • A container with a tight lid
  • A bowl and a fork or whisk

Optional ingredients

  • 4-6 drops food coloring
  • 1 Tablespoon dried flower blossoms, like lavender, chamomile, rose
  • sticky labels, fabric, ribbon for labeling and decorating jar
  • optional: used for fizzy salts – 1/4 cup citric acid

Instructions

Mix the salts and baking soda together in a bowl. Add 10-20 drops of essential oil, dried flowers, food coloring and keep mixing until everything is evenly mixed. If you’re making a fizzy bath salt mix, add the citric acid when you’re absolutely sure all the other ingredients are soaked into the epsom salts. No clumps should remain. Now add the salts to your container, and either use labels or a fabric circle tied around the top with a tag. On the tag, write something like “To: Mom, From: Your Favorite Kid – Lavender Mint Bath Salts.

Make the jar look pretty, and give it as a gift!

What do bath salts do?

There are lots and lots of myths about what Epsom salts can do, so let’s start with the one thing we absolutely know to be true: when you put this mixture of salts into warm water,  your bathwater will increase in density because of the salts. This increase in density makes water feel silky, thick, heavy, luxurious…and especially when mixed with nice scents, this may make you feel more relaxed. It will also make you feel lighter — because your density remains the same, while the density of the water increases, making you float more easily.

What is density? Density is how much mass a substance has, compared to how much space it takes up.

Imagine this:

These two blocks take up the same amount of space. One is made of solid gold. The other is made of kitchen sponges. Which one weighs more?

The block that weighs the most is made of solid gold, even though it’s the same size as the sponge block. That means the density of gold is higher than that of sponge. If you look very closely at a block of gold, you will see there are no air pockets; just a solid piece of metal. If you look at a sponge, you see air pockets inside. The air pockets take up some of that space, but add no weight – just air. That’s how density works.

So why do you feel lighter in a bath filled with bath salts?

Have you ever heard of the Dead Sea or The Great Salt Lake? The first one is an inland sea that borders the countries of Isreal, Jordan, and Palestine; the second is a giant lake in the state of Utah, in America. What they have in common is that they are very VERY salty. The huge amount of salt dissolved in the water makes the water a lot more dense.

Your body is just a little less dense than water, meaning you will float in water.

  • When water is very salty, it becomes even more dense than you, so you float even better more.
  • If you have a lot of body fat, your body will be less dense, making you more buoyant (meaning “floaty”)
  • Epsom salts increase the density of the water, which in turn adds to your buoyancy. This floating sensation may help you relax your muscles more readily.

Body Stuff

This is a good time to talk about your body and how it cleans itself, something it is naturally very good at doing. There are several organs and systems that allow keep your body clean, from the inside out.

The digestive system includes the intestines, salivary (spit) glands, pancreas, stomach, and gall bladder.

The liver detoxifies the blood, and produces some of the biochemicals necessary for digestion, which is the way your body breaks down foods and uses their nutrients to run the magnificent machine that is your body. It filters your blood and produces special enzymes to destroy toxins we might get from food, water, and air. The liver basically packages up these things our body doesn’t want or need, so the body can get rid of them through your urine and bile. Liver is in charge of metabolism, a chemical process in which foods are converted into energy the body can use.

Food also passes through your intestines, where nutrients are absorbed. Healthy intestines keep good and bad bacteria in balance, so your body can digest (use) the food you eat.

Kidneys are part of the urinary system. They also filter your blood to remove waste, and send it to the urinary bladder. The kidneys get rid of waste products like urea and ammonium, which leave your body as urine. eir principal function is to transport oxygen from the atmosphere into the bloodstream, and to release carbon dioxide from the bloodstream into the atmosphere.

Lymph is the clear fluid that makes up part of our lymphatic system, which is part of the immune system. Lymph contains white blood cells (the body’s warriors!), which pick up bacteria and viruses from your cells and carry them back to your lymph nodes, where they are destroyed.

And finally, your SKIN helps fend off infection and absorption of unwanted toxins because it is basically a giant, flexible suit of armor that stands between your inner systems and the world. Skin can also excrete extra salts your body doesn’t need by sweating. Your skin is part of the immune system, but the top layer of skin is actually dead. That dead part of your skin is constantly falling off and being replaced by new skin cells. It is part of the integumenty system – the entire network of dead skin cells, from your skin to your nails and hair, that create a final barrier between your body and the outside world. Did you know you you lose 40,000 dead skin cells every minute!?

Your body sure does work hard to keep you clean! By eating nutritious, healthful foods and having good hygiene – like taking baths and brushing your teeth – you help all the systems of your body do the best job they can to keep you healthy and keep your amazing machine running smoothly.


More on the science of Epsom salts.

 

 

Vegan Pumpkin Soup

Vegan Pumpkin SoupYou’ll need a cookie sheet, a food processor or immersion blender (OR a good hand-masher and some patience), a soup pot, and an oven for this soup. You’ll also need an adult to help with cutting, baking, and cooking on the stove top!

Ingredients

  • 2 cups veggie stock
  • 2 pie pumpkins (2lb or less each)
  • 2 Tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 Tablespoons curry powder (you can substitute half or all curry powder with Seven Spice powder – I do half and half)
  • 1 bunch scallions
  • 1 cup coconut milk + 2T for garnish
  • Salt to taste
  • Roasted pumpkin seeds
  • Chopped parsley garnish optional

Preheat your oven to 350F.

Cut the tops off the pie pumpkins and scoop out the seeds and strings. Try not to scoop out solid flesh. Roast the pumpkins (top included) for 45 minutes. Remove and let cool, then carefully scoop soft meat out of pumpkin, taking care not to puncture the skin if you want to use the pumpkin as a bowl.

Add chopped scallions, spices, and olive oil to a saucepan or cooking pot and stir over medium heat until spices are fragrant, then add vegetable stock and ½ of the pumpkin flesh (all the flesh from one pumpkin).

Bring to a boil, then turn heat off. Allow to cool a little, then use immersion blender to puree. If you’re using a food processor, you need to let it cool down a lot before pureeing. You can also use a potato masher to squash all the squash, if you want your soup chunkier and more stew-like.

Add the rest of the pumpkin (cut into bite sized pieces), bring the soup to a boil again, turn down to simmer for 5 minutes, turn off heat, add coconut milk. Garnish with parsley, roasted pumpkin seeds, and a dollop of coconut milk.

To make the pumpkin seeds: Take all the pumpkin meat and gooey strings away until the seeds are mostly clean. Put them in a colander and run water over them, stirring them with your hands until all the pumpkin flesh is rinsed away. Pat them with a paper towel and spread them out on a cookie sheet to dry completely, then toss in a little olive oil (about 1 Tablespoon) and season with 1 teaspoon salt and your choice of other seasonings. I like to use spicy seasoning, like smoked paprika and Aleppo hot chili, but you can use whatever you like! Spread the seeds out again on the cookie sheet so they are in a single layer, and bake at 250F while you’re making the soup. Bake until seeds start to turn golden and are as crispy as you want them.

This recipe sounds like a lot of work, but it’s actually very easy. It’s a good teamwork exercise and looks fancy-pantsy for the holidays! If you’re not in a curry mood or don’t like spicy food, you could use nutmeg, sage, or other fragrant spices to season your soup.

While I was making this soup, I also cut my white fairtytale pumpkin (also called Ghost or Lumina) into slices and roasted it, too, so I can puree the roasted quash in a food processor and use it for my holiday breads and pies. Look at this beautiful pumpkin: white on the outside and pretty orange on the outside!


Squash is Awesome

Squash is used mostly by cooks as a vegetable because it goes well with savory spices – meaning, flavors that make up salty or spicy dishes, instead of sweet dishes. If you’ve ever had pumpkin pie or zucchini bread, you will know how sweet and tasty squash can be as a dessert, too! It is classified as a fruit because the seeds are inside. Vegetables are all the other parts of the plant, like stems, roots, and leaves.

Squashes include winter and summer squash, and gourds. Did you know that all the parts of the squash plant are edible? That’s awesome! Tender shoots and leaves can be cooked into soups and stir fry dishes, as well as the blossoms (which are delicious battered and deep fried, or tossed in a little oil and seasoning and pan fried).

Summer squash types include zucchini, yellow (or summer) squash, and pattypan squash. These types of squash have a very thin skin and don’t last for more than a week or so after you’ve removed them from the vine.

Winter squash types include pumpkin, butternut squash, Delicata squash, and lots more. You can tell a winter squash from a summer squash because winter squash has a very thick, tough, inedible rind (or shell) on the outside. Decorative gourds fall into this group, though they are not always edible – some calabash varieties are poisonous in high concentrations (meaning, if you eat a large amount). While you can technically eat most of the decorative gourds you see in the grocery store, their flesh is very bitter, so we usually use them for fall decorations or crafts that involve allowing the middle of the gourd to dry out and using the hollow shell for anything from shakers (like a maraca), to birdhouses, to bowls and carrying baskets. With gourds and many other plants, that bitter taste is often nature’s way of saying, “you should avoid eating me.”

The word “squash” comes from the Massachuset (a tribe of people indigenous to North America) word askutasquash. Most squash originated in South and Central America, where it was then spread by human and animal migration to other continents, including North America. Calabash gourds, which are sometimes hollow, originated in Africa, and scientists believe they spread not only through migration, but also by hollow gourds full of seeds floating across the ocean. That is a long journey! If you look on a map and find East Africa, then find your house, how many miles would a gourd have to travel to get from its original home to you?

Summer squash grow all summer long and are plucked from their vines as they ripen through the whole summer. Winter squash also grow in the spring and summer seasons, but the biggest harvest comes in the fall. The reason they are called winter squash is because their rinds are so durable that, if they are not damaged or punctured, you can keep them all winter long! Squash become more bitter the longer they sit, though, so if you’re cooking with them you’ll want to do it soon after you buy or harvest them.

I used folded note cards to label the winter squash I have — but not just because I needed something to write on. If you’re cooking with winter squash and want to save seeds for your garden, you can label them, use tape to enclose the dried seeds in the paper, and store them in a cool (not freezing) place until you’re ready to plant them. If you have a patch of dirt or a nice big pot that isn’t occupied, try growing some of these yourself, and experiment with all the fun and tastiness squash has to offer!

 

YogaKids for Speech and Language

Two Boys Laughing

It all started with a wink…

During the  summer before  11th grade, over 30 years ago, I volunteered at a special needs summer camp. I worked with a non-verbal boy with Cerebral Palsy, with long, beautiful eyelashes.  By the end of the summer, I taught him to wink at me as a way of communicating. I felt such joy that he had a way of communicating his happiness.  This is the moment that I knew what I was meant to do.  

Since this experience, I’ve earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Special Education and  a Masters in Speech-Language Pathology. And as a practicing Pediatric Speech-Language Pathologist for over 20 years, I have treated a lot of children with speech delays and special needs.

It was also 20 years ago that I started practicing yoga. But it wasn’t until about 9 years ago that I considered combining the two passions. I woke up and realized that what I get from my practice of yoga is what I needed to bring to the children I treat. I started a Google search and, within minutes, there it was  – YOGAKIDS. I had to know more!  

I attended a Foundations Training and was amazed with the YogaKids curriculum. What impressed me most was how Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences were used to create the curriculum for YogaKids and that every child’s’ learning style is taken into consideration (something not always thought about in traditional education systems).  

Before my Foundations Training, I had not expected to sign up for the Full Certification (since I already had a career). But at the end of the event, I left in tears of joy — I had to become a Certified YogaKids Teacher! I spent the next several  months working towards this Certification  learning as much as I could and practicing what I was learning in my profession.

I saw such changes in the children I was treating! I love helping them move while doing animal poses and gaining oral-motor strength.  Kids love animals (as do I) and enjoy becoming the animals.  Seeing these kids practice their oral-motor movements (lip rounding-for moo in cow and lip spreading in meow for cat) gave me such joy and gave them another outlet to practice their movements rather than just drilling exercises.  I also introduced breathing techniques which help them stay calm and ready to work on their speech goals.  

The YogaKids program enhances my career every day and I’m so grateful to have found it!


Learn more about the YogaKids program here!

Child’s Pose

girl in child's pose

This pose goes by many names in yoga. Some call it the mouse pose, others call it the rock pose. Most call it the child’s pose, because babies often sleep this way.

 

Instructions

  1. Sit on your heels.
  2. Spread your knees a little, so your belly relaxes inside of your thighs.
  3. Bend at the hips and fold forward letting your shoulders drop downward, away from your ears and spine. Your arms lie back alongside your legs with open palms.
  4. Place your forehead on the floor, or turn it to one side for awhile and then to the other side to gently stretch the neck.
  5. Take at least five breaths on each side.
  6. Press your sit bones towards your heels as you stretch your arms alongside your head, palms down.
  7. This position is known as the extended child’s pose. It “extends” the spine, shoulders, arms and fingers. It’s an alternative to the traditional child’s pose.

You can stay in either of the child’s poses for as long as you want to.

 

Note for Parents and Teachers

Any pose in yoga where you bend the body in half at the hips is a forward bend. Child’s pose, PBJ and Ragdoll are some other favorite YogaKids pose examples for children. Forward bends are soothing, calming and quieting. Encourage your child to rest in the child’s pose if she’s feeling agitated. Gently stroke her back with a light, feathery touch to relax her even more.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Awesome Anatomy

Can you breathe into your back in the child’s pose? Can you feel your 12 ribs separating and moving as you breathe?

Body Benefits

The spine relaxes and elongates in this pose. The space between the vertebrae increases, as does the flow of blood and circulation to the brain. Its benefits are varied and great; from calming and relaxing to increasing the oxygen throughout the system.

Quiet Quests

Imagine a giant zipper from your neck to your tailbone. Let that zipper unzip slowly from top to bottom. As it unzips feel both sides of your back melt away from your spine. Breathe into your back. Let your back become so soft from your breath, that it feels like you have no bones there.

Ecological Echoes

Animals without backbones are called invertebrates. Some examples of invertebrates are worms and jellyfish. This pose might be renamed the jelly fish pose.

Stork

girl in stork pose

The stork is a symbol of good luck. Make a wish when you practice the stork, and you might just get what you ask for. This pose is one of the easier balance poses. It teaches two important skills: stillness and focus. We sometimes call this pose “crane,” even though storks and cranes are not really the same kind of bird. They are both long-necked, large members of the avian family. Storks live in both dry and wet environments, whereas cranes tend to live mostly around water. How can you tell them apart? Have you ever heard the phrase, “crane your neck”? That means “to stretch out one’s neck.” Cranes have necks that they bend, or “fold” while they’re flying and resting.

Instructions

  1. Begin in mountain pose. Breathe evenly in and out.
  2. Gaze at a focus friend to help you balance, as you bend your left knee and lift your left foot off the ground.
  3. Keep your leg in a right angle or tuck your foot inside your knee.
  4. Lift your right arm and bend it at the elbow. Relax your wrist.
  5. Begin by holding the pose for 5 seconds. With patience and practice, your wobbling will wane and you will become an expert at this balancing act.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Ecological Echoes
Swamps and marshes are some of the stork’s favorite restaurants. On the menu are insects, fish, frogs, reptiles, young birds and small mammals. Do you eat some of the same foods as the stork?

Math Medley
Count the number of seconds you can hold your stork pose. Try to increase your balance for a few more seconds than last time. Soon you’ll be up to a minute, or even two or three minutes. How many seconds is that? (Hint: 60 seconds = 1 minute.)

Bridge of Diamonds
Storks are loving and nurturing parents. The legend that the stork brings the new baby arises from the fact that they take very good care of their young.

Electric Circle

Children in Electric Circle PoseYou are hot, filled with power and electricity. Sizzling! Pass it on by holding hands with your friends. Can you feel the electricity flowing through your body and between you and your companions? ZZZZAP!

Instructions

  1. Sit cross-legged or in any comfortable position.
  2. If you are old enough to know right and left, place the left palm up and the right hand palm-down.
  3. Hold hands.
  4. Close your eyes.
  5. Imagine your heart. It is our power supply sending energy through our body.
  6. Feel the breath move across your chest, flow down your arms and into the hands that you are holding. Do you feel heat? A tingly feeling? That’s the electricity moving through your body.
  7. When you begin to feel it in your body, squeeze your friends hand. This is the signal to let each other know that a connection has been made. You have hooked up and the current is flowing.

Note to Parents and Teachers

Ask the children to tell you what is electric in their homes, schools and classrooms. Allow childlike answers for how these things work. It is important for them to express themselves through their own age-appropriate thought processes and words. Inspire and encourage their communication skills.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Laughing Language

Amps, volts and watts are three words to describe amounts of electric power or current. They are named after the scientists that “discovered” or “recognized” them.

Awesome Anatomy/Math Medley

Can you feel your heartbeat inside your chest? Your heart beats about a 100,000 times a day. How many times is that in an hour, a week, a month or a year?

Nutrition Tip (Our Electric Tongue)

All foods have different tastes. Some are salty. Some are bitter or sour. Most of us like sweet and salty the best. Experiment with the tastes of different foods. Be brave and daring and try new foods. Our taste buds enable us to taste all the varied, wonderful flavors the world’s gardens have to offer.

Bitter tastes like the vegetable kale, are mostly sensed towards the back and rear sides of the tongue. Sour tastes like lemon are mostly tasted at the sides of the tongue, at the middle and towards the front. Salty and sweet tastes are most people’s favorite taste. These are at the tip of the tongue.

Excite and surprise your tongue with new and different tastes. Delight your taste buds and body with power foods like fruits and vegetables. Feel the electricity of health run through your veins!

 

 

Crow

Crow Pose

Crows are very intelligent animals. Like parrots, they can be trained to mimic our voices. They are known for their good memories and fascination with shiny objects. They love to play and play tricks!

Instructions

  1. Begin in mountain pose with your feet wide.
  2. Bend your knees and squat down.
  3. Place your arms to the inside of your bent legs and press your hands with outstretched fingers into the floor.
  4. Lean slightly forward. Bend your elbows outward to make a shelf for your knees.
  5. Raise onto your tippy toes and place your left knee on your left “arm shelf.’
  6. Then carefully place your right knee on your right “arm shelf.’

In the beginning, you may only lift one foot at a time off the floor. With patience and practice, you will balance in the crow. As you do, see if you can increase the time of this pose.

 

Note for Parents and Teachers

This is a difficult pose that requires strength and focus. It builds self-esteem and confidence and strengthens the arms. It even tones the organs of the belly, because the abdominal muscles automatically contract in order to maintain balance.

With children under five years old, getting up into the actual balance part of the pose is generally impossible. But, you can follow the instructions and guide them in the steps to teach them patience and determination.

 

Activities for Home and School

Bridge Of Diamonds
Crows, like some other kinds of birds, build their nests in communities. During the summer, they roost and flock together, hanging with their families. What do you do with your family in the summertime? YogaKids encourages family and community participation. There is much to learn when studying and observing our feathered friends.

Musical Medley
Their courtship ritual consists of dramatic flight shows, bowing, strutting and puffing of their feathers to impress their mates. Along with their bird dance, they sing a song that sounds like a rattle. Can you sing and dance in this pose?

Ecological Echoes
Crows are omnivorous. This means they eat both plants and animals. Insects, eggs, small mammals, reptiles, carrion, seeds. corn, fruits and nuts. Which of these foods do you eat?

 

Planting Seeds

Row of Seedlings

I became a YogaKids instructor a number of years ago. And being the enthusiastic mom I am, I attempted to share it with my then teenage daughter. It was not overwhelmingly received. The word that comes to mind is “tolerated”.

She went along with my attempts to use her as my “guinea pig” in teaching asanas. Her eye roll additions to partner poses were quite creative, really adding to the experience! Even enhancing the practice by incorporating her music choices did not keep her interest for very long.

Time passed and I continued teaching kids’ yoga. The high school years led to college years. The distance between us grew physically as she was no longer just a scant few moments down the hall but two hours away by car. We connected often on happenings in our lives despite the distance, mostly via technology. Discussions centered on roommates, classes, and dining hall food. My husband and I explored interests left dormant in the uproar of raising our kids.

But last semester, something happened. My daughter decided to take a yoga class offered by the college for credit. And suddenly, it was as if she had discovered this practice of asanas, breathing, and philosophy for the first time, all on her own. It resonated with where she was in life. It was making a difference in how she saw the world and how a personal practice could enhance her life in many ways.

Suddenly we were sharing on a different level. It opened up new channels of communication between us. We exchanged longer texts and emails and opted for more talking via phone or Skype. In-depth talks about feelings and concerns surfaced. I was reminded how yoga is there to support us as individuals. And now, more noticeably, it can sustain us as a family through very challenging times.

When you share yoga, especially with children as a YogaKids instructor, you really never know the impact you may have made down the road. I was fortunate to have seen the effect of sharing yoga on a loved one. May your teaching be more far reaching than you realize.


Transform your life (and the lives of children) in our Certification Program!

Spinning Senses

Here is a great We All Win game from one of our YogaKids Teachers!

Cut a piece of cardboard into a  circle and divide into sections labeled with all the 5 senses: hear, see, small, taste and touch. Put a bottle in the center. Gather items that have a strong scent (essential oils are perfect), taste-able items (sour, bitter, salty, sweet), and touch-able items (examples: sand paper, velvet, plastic, wood).

Everyone takes a turn spinning the bottle. On your turn, play out as follows:

  • Hear: Close your eyes. The person on your right makes a sound.  Guess what the sound is.
  • See: The person on your right chooses an object in view. Guess what the object is. (I Spy)
  • Smell: Close your eyes. The person on our right chooses something for you to smell. Smell it and guess what it is.
  • Taste: Close your eyes. The person on your right chooses something for you to taste. Taste it and guess what it is.
  • Touch: Close your eyes. The person on your right chooses something for you to touch. Touch it and guess what it is..

What a great way to strengthen our senses!

 

Eyes Around the Clock

Eyes Around the Clock Pose

These eye movements link all the parts of the brain by stimulating the corpus callosum – the brain’s superhighway. Simultaneously exercise your brain and eye muscles to make learning easier.

Instructions

Take any seated or standing position. Imagine a numbered clock hanging in front of your face. Try to keep your head still and move only your eyes. Do each exercise 3-6 times.

  • Look up to 12 o’clock. Down to 6 o’clock. Reverse.
  • Look right to 3 o’clock and left to 9 o’clock. Reverse.
  • Look diagonally from 1 o’clock to 7 o’clock. Reverse.
  • Look diagonally from 11 o’clock to 5 o’clock. Reverse.

Between each direction give your eyes a rest. Rub your hands together to create friction until they feel hot. Keeping your fingers together so no light penetrates, place your hands over your eyes (open or closed) to soothe them and allow them to soak up the heat. Open your relaxed eyes and continue.

Now make complete eye circles: Begin clockwise at 12 o’clock and look at each number around the face of the clock. Return to 12. Look counterclockwise from 12 and back. Palm the eyes and relax. Repeat.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Laughing Language,Reading Comes Alive with Yoga™,Musical Musings
Can you think of books and/or songs that have clocks and/or time in them? Read them. Sing the songs. Roll and rotate your eyes and increase your brain power. Have fun!

Visual Vignettes
Create fun and wacky clocks and watches out of available supplies. Use these as a focal point to focus your brain.

Body Benefits
Just like the rest of the body, the eyes have muscles too. Improve your eyesight with this pose.

Nutrition Tip
Just as this pose helps all of the different areas of our brain link together and creates balance between the right and left sides of our brains and bodies, there are foods that are also more equalizing for our bodies. Some foods make us feel slow, heavy, dry and sluggish; these include cheese, eggs, meat and salty snacks. Other foods give us a huge burst of crazy energy, but then leave us feeling tired and spaced out; These foods include sugar, coffee, pop and and an excess of fruit juices.

The most balancing food are the ones that leave us feeling energized and de-stressed like:

  • Tofu, Leafy Greens & Seeds
  • Roots and Winter Squash
  • Beans and Sea Vegetables
  • Whole GrainsFish

Eat more of these foods for a balanced, calmer you!

Hula-Hoop Hoopla!

YogaKids Class in Action

YogaKids classes promote fun, fitness, and feeling good in a non-competitive setting. As a YogaKids teacher, I am always looking for new ways to keep all my students active and engaged. I love adding hula hoops to class!

Hula-hooping is a great way to improve balance, coordination, and core strength.  While not all children can pick up the action of hula-hooping right away, there are many ways to get all students involved without anyone getting frustrated.

Here are some ideas to make hula-hoops a fun part of your YogaKids class:

Poses As Pathways: History of the Hula-Hoop!

Share with your class the history of the hula-hoop! The hula-hoop of today became a craze in the 1950s. However, the idea came about around 1000 BC by Ancient Egyptian children who made hoop toys out of dried grape vines. The hoop idea traveled through many cultures and time periods. In 1958, the founders of the Wham-O Company introduced today’s hula- hoop to America. They were inspired by stories of Australian children and bamboo hoops. Americans loved this craze. The Wham-O Company sold an estimated 25 million Hula Hoops in 2 months! 

Add a Hula-Hoop to YogaKids Poses!

Try doing the following sequence of poses with a hula-hoop. Children can use the hoop in any way that is safe – traditional hooping around the hips, arms, or neck. They can also try holding the pose with the hoop lifted above the head or off to the side to gain upper body strength.

  • Om a Little Teapot Triangle 
  • Flamingo
  • Tree

Play a Hula-Hoop Game!

Pass the Hoop: Stand in a circle. Hold hands with a hula-hoop on one person’s shoulder. Try to get the hoop all the way around the circle without letting go of each other’s hands. Add a second hoop going in the other direction to make it more challenging.

Up, Over, and Through the Hoop: Children form a single file line. Child in front holds the hoop, lifts it up, and does a backbend to get it over the child behind them. The 2nd child steps through the hoop and continues with the backbend. Once the hoop is passed, the child goes to the back of the line for another turn.

Hoop Yoga Pose Course: Place hoops around the room and a pose card near each one. Children have to move from hoop to hoop performing the poses. Get creative and have students try a favorite pose with the hoop.

Venn Diagram: Searching for Similarities: Partner up students. Prior to class, take index cards and write down one discussion point on each card on a variety of subjects (i.e. Plays Soccer, Has a Dog, Likes Pizza, Eats Sushi, Has Traveled out of the Country, etc.)

Each student has a hula-hoop and a set of index cards. Set the hoops on the ground. The hula-hoops will overlap in the middle. The students place the cards in just their hoop if it only applies to them. Any cards that indicate similarities for both kids go in the middle where the 2 hoops overlap. Try to make unlikely pairs of students; this is a great activity for kids who don’t normally get to spend time together!

Musical Musings: Play Hula-Hoop Tunes!

Add these fun hula hoop themed songs to your class:

  •   Hula Hoop to da Loop by Keller Williams
  •   Hula Hoop by Octopretzel
  •   Hula Hoop Soup by Secret Agent 23 Skidoo
  •   Loop de Loop by Buckwheat Zydeco

Change the world as a YogaKids Teacher! YogaKids!

Reach for the Sun!

Reach for the Sun Pose

Did you know the sun is a star? There are billions upon billions of stars in the Universe, but the sun is one very special star that makes it possible for life to exist on Earth. The sun is the center of our solar system. It takes the Earth one year to travel all the way around the sun, which is 110 times bigger in diameter (the distance around the middle) than Earth! Without the sun, we would have no energy to grow plants and sustain life on our planet. Let’s reach up and grab some of that beautiful sunlight-energy so we can be strong and powerful!

Pose Instructions

  1. Breathe in and reach up high with an outstretched hand.
  2. Pretend that you are grabbing a piece of sunshine and pull the power into your solar plexus – your inner sun (the solar plexus is located between the chest and the navel).
  3. Exhale with a “hah” breath.
  4. Repeat with your other arm, alternating the reach with the left and right arms. As you practice, increase the force of your breath. Can you work up to 1, then 2 minutes. Feel the power of the sun shining inside of you. You are filled with light!

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Bridge of Diamonds Element
Encourage children to understand and trust their inner power. We do not need to exert force over anyone of anything. Let’s live in balance together.

Body Benefits Element
This is a perfect pose for tired, weary children. Reach for the Sun and pull energy into your body. Feel refreshed and ready to go!

Affirmations Element
Repeat these positive statements as you practice this pose:

  • “I am powerful.”
  • “If I feel afraid, I turn on the light inside of me.”
  • “I have the power of the sun shining within me.”

 

 

“Sugar-free” Crustless Apple Pie

No sugar, no crust…is this even pie?

I guess it’s not technically pie, but it has all the right flavors and it’s delicious!

Apples have lots and lots of natural sugars, like most fruits. Along with bananas, apples have some of the highest natural sugar content of any fruit. Sometimes apples and apple juice are even used as sweeteners, instead of processed sugar, for organic and natural desserts.

What does processed mean when we’re talking about sugar? The white granular sugar you may see in your home is usually made from these two plants:

Sugar beet plant
Sugar cane plant

Sugar cane is a type of grass that is packed full of natural sugar. Sugar beets are beet plants with very sugary roots. When they are processed, the cloudy brown, sugary juices are squeezed out of the plants by machines. The water from the juice evaporates, and brownish sugar crystals are left over. Sometimes these brown sugar crystals are sold as sweeteners. Sometimes, they are cleaned even more, pulling out all the minerals and vitamins and leftover microscopic bits of plant matter, until it is sparkling and white, leaving only the sugar behind. This is what we call table sugar. It is as pure as sugar gets.

It’s OK to have this type of sugar in moderation, meaning sometimes, and in small quantities. But it’s better for your body if you can enjoy sweets in their natural form, like eating a whole apple or banana.

We’re going to make a delicious apple-pie-like dessert, with only the sweetness of the apples themselves for sugar!

Ingredients:

  • Four large sweet apples, cored, skinned (optional), and sliced thinly. (Try Pink Lady, Gala, Fuji, Jonagold type apples)
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1 teaspoon nutmeg
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 Tablespoon flour or gluten-free flour
  • 1/4 cup water
  • 3 Tablespoons of slightly melted butter or margarine (don’t get it too hot, or it will burn you!) *

Instructions:

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.

Put all the dry ingredients into a mixing bowl and combine well. Melt the butter in the microwave for 10-15 seconds. Add the apples and toss them into the mixture to lightly cover them with the spices and flour. Now add the water and melted butter, and smoosh it all around with your fingers until all the apples are covered with the spices and flour mixture. Spread everything out evenly in an 8×8″ baking pan and bake for about 40 minutes, stirring the apples every 10-15 minutes.

What you will end up with is an ooey-gooey apple pie filling that you can eat just like it is for a healthy snack or dessert, put on top of ice cream, or add to a bowl of granola. Yum!

* Vegan Option: Replace butter with coconut oil.

 

 

Cultivating a Community

Children and Trainees in a YogaKids Class

Teaching yoga has many rewards, but it can be lonely at times if you haven’t yet cultivated a supportive community. Many YogaKids Teachers travel from studio to studio. We’re usually the only adult in the room and, while teaching in schools, we are usually the only yoga teacher on staff. Having a community of support is vital for a teacher’s continued growth and success.

RESEARCH ON CONNECTIONS

When we make a positive social connection, the pleasure-inducing hormone oxytocin is released into our bloodstream, immediately reducing anxiety and improving concentration and focus. In a study appropriately titled “Very Happy people,” researches sought out the characteristics of the happiest 10% among us. There was one characteristic that distinguished the happiest 10% from everybody else; the strength of their social relationships. Social support was a far greater predictor of happiness than any other factor — more than income, job status, age gender, or race.

BENEFITS OF BEING PART OF A LIKE-MINDED COMMUNITY OF YOGA TEACHERS

  • You can share lesson or class plans.
  • You can share teaching skills and current research in the field of yoga.
  • You can offer support if you are trying something new and out of your comfort zone, such as teaching a new demographic or breaking into a new location or market.
  • You can offer business support on such topics as pricing, insurance requirements and marketing.
  • You can substitute for each other’s classes.
  • You can be referred to new teaching opportunities and help promote one another.

TEACHERS FORUM

In the YogaKids community, we have a very active Teachers Forum where teachers from all over the world come together and enrich, motivate, and inspire each other. For instance, Clare, a teacher from New Jersey just logged on and asked for classroom management ideas for her active class of preschoolers. Within 24 hours, she had 8 responses from yoga teachers, classroom teachers and even a therapist. Clare could not have researched this topic and gotten better information. What can you do in your area to cultivate a connection similar to the YogaKids support system? You can join LinkedIn, or start a private Facebook forum and ask yoga teachers to join.

HOST A TEACHERS CLASS

Teach a class specifically for teachers and invite other yogis. Share your expertise, training and enthusiasm for yoga. Ask a different teacher to present different topics of interest to the group at each meeting.

SOCIALIZE

Plan inspirational social outings. Recently, a group of YogaKids teachers met up in Chicago and enjoyed a vegetarian meal followed by a Kirtan (chanting hymns or mantras to the accompaniment of instruments). Being around like-minded people offers a fresh perspective on life and livelihood. Other social events our Chicago group has attended include gong healings, arco yoga workshops, and spa nights. Host an event, invite all the Yogis you know, and pass the coordinating job onto another participant for the next event. A small amount of organization and follow through will result in many fun, rewarding events for all.

FIND A MENTOR

Find a mentor or professional guide. In the YogaKids program we have a professionally trained mentoring community of yoga teachers, OTs, PTs, and professional educators. This team regularity holds informative webinars, submits articles on a wide variety of topics, posts inspirational educational content to our private forum, and holds monthly team calls. To be able to connect with such a diverse, professional group is extremely valuable to our community. To form your own connections, look to teacher training schools for mentorship opportunities. Many senior teachers are willing and eager to guide a junior teacher on her path to greatness.

ATTEND A TEACHERS RETREAT

A yoga retreat can be a time of renewal, growth, connection. Practice, socialize and interact with a group of like-minded teachers and yoga practitioners often at beautiful, exotic locations. Often connections made on retreats last long after check out and these connections can cultivate and grow even over long distances to become part of your active teaching community.

Sharing passion for your yoga career can be a very rewarding and fulfilling experience. As poet Donna Favors says, Life has taught me that respect, caring and love must be shared, for it’s only through sharing that friendships are born. Here is hoping you make beautiful connections.

 

Coffee Filter Flowers

Coffee Filter Flowers are easy to make and very pretty!

Coffee filters are made of a very porous type of paper — porous is an adjective used to describe things that have many tiny holes that allow water and air to pass through them. Rocks, fabric, and papers are a few of the things that can be porous.

Coffee filters have to be porous because the water needs to pass over the ground-up coffee beans, taking away only flavor and color, into the coffee pot below. The same thing happens with rainwater as it flows through many layers of porous rocks and dirt, which slowly filter out little particles until the rainwater reaches underground aquifers, where the water pools inside the earth, purified after many years.

Porous paper is really fun for making water-based color crafts, because we can see the color travel through the porous surfaces. Sometimes we get unexpected results, and we can see mixed colors separate into different colors! For instance, green is made using a combination of the colors yellow and blue, so if you allow green inks to separate on a coffee filter, in some cases you will be able see both the yellow and blue colors pull apart as they travel over the porous surface of the paper.

Materials

  • White paper coffee filters
  • Food colors*
  • Thin floral wire, strong string, or yarn (to attach the blooms to the stems)
  • Wax paper, a drop cloth, or some other protective surface to work on
  • Sticks, heavy straws, strong wire, or thin dowels (to use for stems)
  • Cup of clean water
  • Four small containers for holding the colors, and cotton swabs to use as applicators

Instructions

  1. Set up: pour a couple Tablespoons of water into your four containers, then add a couple drops of food coloring to each.
  2. Fold your coffee filter in half, then in half again. (You may fold again, if you please!)
  3. One side of your folded coffee filter will be a point. You must not cut into or cut off this point — this is the center of your future flower, and you must be able to pinch it together to tie it onto the stem. At the other side of your folded coffee filter is the wide, rounded side of the triangle. You will cut points and rounded edges into this side to make petal shapes.
  4. Cut as many coffee filters as you want.

Adding color (Two Ways) 

Now: you may either touch the cotton swabs with color on them directly onto the coffee filters, or you may first use the clean water to wet your coffee filter before adding the color.

If you add the color to dry filters, the color will be more saturated, and will not separate as much. The filters should dry fairly quickly, unless you really put a lot of color on.

If you add the color to wet filters, it takes less color to “travel” over the surface of the paper. The filters will dry much more slowly, and may need to be set on a plate in a sunny window. If you live in a very dry place, the water will evaporate more quickly than if you live in a place with high humidity.

Finishing Up

Let the filters dry completely. Open them up and see your beautiful flowers!

Now, pinch the flower together at the center of each filter and tie it off tightly, using your yarn, string, or floral wire. Make sure you leave long enough ends on your fastening material so you can tie them onto the stems you’ve chosen.

Try putting two or three coffee filters together to make beautiful, multicolored flowers.

Now, give your pretty filter flowers to a friend, to brighten his or her day!

*PARENT PRO-TIP! Go to a store that carries food service supplies (like Smart & Final, Cash & Carry, etc.), to get big bottles of food coloring for about the same price you’d pay for the four-pack of tiny squeeze bottles at a normal grocery store. I got 16 oz. bottles of red, yellow, blue, and green, for about $2.75/each, a quantity that will last roughly three human lifetimes.  

Warning: The food coloring WILL stain your clothes, work surfaces, fingers, etc. Make sure you plan and work accordingly.

 

Butterfly with Antennae

girl in butterfly pose

When the butterfly first emerges from her cocoon, she will rest on a twig and spread open her wings to dry. Then she will gently flap her wings to warm them up before she takes off on her first flight. Where would you fly on your first flight?

Instructions

  1. Begin in the “L” pose.
  2. Bring the bottoms of your feet together with your heels close to your body.
  3. Open your knees out to each side.
  4. Extend your neck and the top of your head towards the sky. Stretch your spine long and strong.
  5. Place your hands at the sides of your head and stick out your fingers for antennae.
  6. Pull your arms back—now they’re your wings. Breathe in and out as you flap your wings forward and back.
  7. Flap your leg wings up and down, too.

Notes for Parents and Teachers

Did you know you have antenna? Remember the times that you’ve sensed something before it occurred, or had a hunch and were right. This is called intuition. Intuition is having knowledge of something you haven’t seen. Our antenna help us achieve this. Try to honor your children’s instincts. It empowers them, and teaches them to trust their inner knowing. It’s an important survival skill to acquire at a young age. Balanced with a sense of love and trust in one’s self, this inner knowing will build confidence and trust that will serve them for life.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Ecological Echoes
Insects, like the butterfly, use their antennae like reptiles use their tongues. They are like a “sixth sense” to help detect danger, smell, and get a ‘reading’ on things in the air.

 

Quiet Quests/Visual Vignettes
Close your eyes. Get quiet and listen. Wiggle your antennae around. What do you sense? What do you see, smell or feel? Draw a picture of what you experience with your antenna.

 

Laughing Language
Take a butterfly journey from A to Z. Think of a place to go that begins with the letter A. Fly there right away. Then think of a place that begins with B and fly there, too. Fly through the alphabet, all the way to Zanzibar.

 

Brain Balance
Flapping your leg wings up and down and your arm wings back and forth, is kind of like rubbing your tummy and patting your head. It takes coordination and communication between the brain and the body. Practicing your butterflying will stimulate the dendrites (the branches of the brain cells) to grow and make new neural pathways.

 

Bedtime Breeze

Child on Bed with Teddy Bear

Homework is done, bellies are full, the kitchen is clean and my daily mom duties are coming to a close. But for some reason, every night, when it is time for my three kids to get ready for bed, they get a second wind. They begin to run around, play or grab their favorite toy. They remind me of wind-up toys that keep going and going.

Their young bodies are not totally exhausted like mine, and they don’t desire the sweet silence of a sleeping house, so they are not motivated to go to bed. With my yoga background, I understand they cannot just flip the switch from active play to rest. Instead they need time to transition and prepare their bodies for sleep. Yoga breathing and poses help calm my children and create a shift in their mood, which triggers the relaxation response in their bodies, and enables them to not only fall asleep faster, but sleep better.

The first thing I do is reduce their sensory input. We turn the lights down and turn off the music and other electronics. While seated comfortably, we practice Take 5 Breath, which helps to calm and center them. We then do a special Peace Breath; as we quietly exhale the word “peace,” we begin to imagine what peace looks like. We also like to say other words, like “love” or “ kindness,” and try to visualize those words too.

Child’s Pose is naturally calming and is a great way to not only release tensions in the back and hips, but as a gentle inversion, it also calms the nervous system. While lying on our backs, we do a little progressive relaxation exercise described in Lemon Toes Pose. We pretend to drink sour lemonade through our toes as we squeeze all the muscles in our bodies and then relax them. This helps us to release muscular tension and rest. Lastly, we practice Swim Ducky Swim. By placing a little stuffed toy on our bellies, we breathe more fully and deeply with our diaphragm as we take it for a little ride. Focusing on the exhale helps to relax the body even more.

After a few minutes of deep breathing, my kids are finally ready to go to sleep and I can enjoy the beautiful silence. To help make the transition to bedtime a breeze, create a routine with your kids and include some yoga breathing exercises and poses. Do the poses with them and notice how you sleep better too! (Learn all these poses in our YogaKids book!)

YogaKids Poses:

  • Take 5 Breath
  • Peace Breath
  • Child’s Pose
  • Lemon Toes
  • Swim Ducky Swim

The Needs of a Bully

So my daughter is being bullied. She’s 9 years old and in the third grade. It’s gotten bad enough that her miserable social experience has morphed into a physical ailment — a chronic morning tummy ache every day before school. I met today with her teacher and principal to discuss the situation — and they both expressed surprise. Not that it was happening (they’re not that naive)… but that they were both totally unaware of it. (I should point out that it’s a really small school.)

But honestly, I’m not at all surprised that they were in the dark. Girl meanness can be insidious and sneaky. (Oh, I remember it well.) And I can’t help thinking how difficult it must be for my daughter to express the type of meanness she’s experiencing. The mean girl isn’t pulling her hair — an offense that would be easy to share with her teacher. (“She keeps pulling my hair!”)

No, no… the mean girl is just quietly telling all the other girls in the class not to be her friend. How does a little girl find the words for that?

(And… ouch. Let’s just take a moment here to remember the pain of adolescence.)

As a mom, my initial reaction to all this was pretty predictable. I’ve been in momma bear-mode — and I kinda want to rip the ponytail off this little girl’s head for hurting my child. Not a particularly productive response — and one I’m not proud of — but an honest reaction to be sure. However, as a part of YogaKids, I know I have to let that raging feeling go and look at the bigger picture.

Now I know there’s a great deal of education and resources out in the world to help those that are being bullied. And I’ve certainly shared them all with my daughter. And while that’s great… it does nothing to actually solve the problem. To solve the problem, we have to address the root cause. We have to shift focus from the victim to the aggressor. (This is feeling like familiar territory, women, isn’t it?)

So why is this girl, at 9 years old, being mean to my sweet daughter? I know from my years studying child development — and observing my own children — that kids behave in ways that get the results they seek. Behavior is learned — and when a behavior gets the desired result, the behavior gets reinforced. Again and again. So what is the bully getting by being mean?  Well, I’m not 100% certain — but I can make an educated guess that she’s getting a couple of “wins”: 1) attention from the other girls and 2) a feeling of power when my child reacts.

If social behavior is viewed as a means to an end (i.e. fulfilling specific needs) — then we need to focus on those needs. What other ways can this little girl experience these desired “wins”?  How else can she feel powerful? How else can she get attention? How else — in essence — can she feel good about herself… without the collateral damage that comes with bullying?

Today I spoke with the principal and the teacher about the specifics of my daughter’s situation. But tomorrow? I’m going to be talking to them about implementing a school-wide mindfulness program that can get to the root. It’s time to stop only looking at the effects — and to start looking at the causes. At YogaKids, this is what we do. We teach cooperation over competition, kindness over cruelty, and give kids the tools to empower themselves… without hurting others.


Be the change as a Certified YogaKids Teacher!

Eagle Pose!

Eagle Pose

Have you heard the expression, ‘as sharp as an eagle’s eye’? An eagle can see fish moving in the water from hundreds of feet in the air, as well as rabbits running almost a mile away. Their aerodynamically perfect wings contain about 7,000 feathers. They can gracefully glide great distances without flapping them.

Instructions

  1. Stand in mountain.
  2. Stretch your arms out to the side.
  3. Exhale. Make an X crossing the arms above the elbows and give yourself a hug. Entwine them around each other.
  4. Press the palms together in Namaste or interlace your fingers. Lift the arms.
  5. Bend your knees. Cross one leg over the thigh and wrap it behind the calf.
  6. Ground and perch with your lower body. Ascend and fly with your upper body.
  7. Doesn’t this standing twist feel eagle-riffic!? Unwind. Wrap it up on the other side.

 

Notes for Parents and Teachers

The wrapping of the arms is a great stretch for the upper back and shoulders, as well as the fingers and wrist joints. If you or your child spend a considerable amount of time at the computer, take regular 1/2 eagle breaks sitting at your desk. Stand up now and then and do the full eagle too. It will energize your legs and invigorate your lower back, too.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Ecological Echoes
The use of DDT, a deadly pesticide, which is still being used today in many parts of the world, almost wiped out the eagle, our symbol of freedom. As Chief Seattle said, “We are part of the earth and the earth is part of us.” When we use chemicals on our grass or in our soil, they eventually come full circle. Teach your YogaKids to respect the earth and all of the flora and fauna that we share this planet with.

 

Laughing Language
Can you find words within the word eagle? Here are a few to get you started; leg, eel, age. Keep looking with your eagle eyes.

 

Brain Balance
The combination of the twisting and entwining in this pose invigorates the brain. It increases the flow of oxygen to make you alert and smart.

 

 

A Certification in Happiness

Trainees and Child Playing with a Parachute on the Beach

I started the YogaKids training back in 2007 because I wanted to gain the skills and tools I needed to successfully teach yoga to kids. What I found over the course of the one year program, and the years that followed, was that it not only provided me with the skills I needed to teach — but in many ways helped me to become happier in all aspects of my life. For me it really was a certification in happiness, as it taught me how to love better, nurture myself, and to experience life with a greater sense of awe. Below are many of the key benefits I gained from the program.

A Regular Yoga Practice

During the YogaKids At Home Practicum, YogaKids Apprentices (YKAs) are instructed to cultivate a regular yoga practice. Many of us would love to do this, but find it difficult to commit the time necessary to reap the benefits of a regular practice. Researchers estimate that 75 to 90 percent of all visits to primary care physicians are for complaints and conditions that are, in some way, stress-related. Yoga, meditation and breathing techniques are three very important tools for relieving stress. Regular yoga practitioners typically report less pain, more vitality and a deep sense of peace. What happens on a yoga mat doesn’t stay on the yoga mat; it spills over into every aspect of one’s life in wonderful ways.

Parenting Skills

Parenthood can be a time of great inner turmoil. The YogaKids program teaches a calm approach to caring for yourself and your children. Patience, mindfulness and a focus on the bigger picture allows us to parent with love, patience, and gentle guidance, and opens us up to the possibility that not everything may go as exactly planned — and sometimes this leads to life’s most joyful experiences.

Improved Relationships

The qualities that our YKAs experience as a result of the training (love, exuberance, and a playful exuberance) affect not only their lives in a profoundly wonderful way; it affects the lives of everyone they touch. Once I began a daily meditation practice combined with asana (yoga postures) practice, my husband found that I was more compassionate, understanding, and appreciative of him — which all affected our relationship in a wonderful way. In her article Master of Love, author Emily Smith states that of all the couples that get married, only 3 in 10 remain in healthy, happy marriages. In most marriages, levels of satisfaction drop dramatically within the first few years together. But among couples who not only endure, but live happily together for years and years, the spirit of kindness and generosity guides them forward. Not only did my marriage improve, but my friendships became more satisfying and meaningful as well. When you start offering your time, advice, and companionship for no other reason than to simply give of yourself, the rewards are immeasurable. When you give and expect something in return, disappointment usually follows.

Community and Life-Long Friendships

The YogaKids live trainings (Foundations and Transformations) bring together a unique group of like-minded people from all across the world. The connections made at the live events often last much longer than the training. When we make a positive social connection, the pleasure-inducing hormone oxytocin is released into our bloodstream, immediately reducing anxiety and improving concentration and focus. YogaKids circles are full of lovely like-minded people joining together with a common goal — to spread the love of yoga to the world, one child at a time.

Experience Childlike Joy

One of my favorite YogaKids poses is Pedal Laughing. You lie down and pedal the hands and feet as if you are on a bike and… laugh.  A good belly laugh doesn’t just lighten the load mentally; it lowers cortisol, your body’s stress hormone, and boosts brain chemicals called endorphins which help your mood. In a YogaKids class, we bark in Down Dog, pick bugs off each other in Bug Pickin’ Chimp and wiggle our noses in Bunny Breath. Try doing any of these poses without smiling or laughing. The very nature of many of the YogaKids poses is joy.

Teachers join the YogaKids Certification for many different reasons — from professional enrichment to starting a new career.  Most of our teachers find that the personal rewards are just as impactful — if not more than — the professional opportunities that the program provides. I know it’s been that way for me.


Create your own path to happiness Certified YogaKids Teacher!

Rocking Horse

Rocking Horse Pose

In adult yoga, this pose is called the bow. In YogaKids, we like to take our yoga through space, so we move forward and back like a rocking horse. Get ready to rock!

Instructions

  1. Lie on your belly.
  2. Bend your knees and reach back to take a hold of your ankles one at a time.
  3. Lift and broaden your chest as you squeeze your shoulder blades and inner thighs together.
  4. Look forward and bring your feet towards the sky. Notice how the entire back of your body contracts, so that the front of your body can open and lift with pride like a proud horse.
  5. Take strong breaths in and out, as you begin to rock. Increase your rocking time with regular practice.

Do 3 rocking horses. Rest in the full or extended child’s pose when you get tired. Forward bends are counter poses to backbends. They have opposite effects. Backbends energize. Forward bends calm. Other back-bending poses in our YogaKids repertoire are Dromedary Delight, S is for Snake, Bubble Fish, Wheel and Bridge.

Notes for Parents and Teachers

This pose brings strength and elasticity to the back and spine, as well as the legs and shoulders. It stimulates the kidneys and adrenal glands, too. The rocking motion massages and awakens the internal organs. The rocking action in this pose should not be practiced right after eating. This pose is a excellent way to feel the prana (energy, life-force, vitality) of the breath enlivening the body. The more prana you can generate, the longer you will be able to keep your horse rocking.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Musical Musings
Sing The Rocking Horse song:

Rocking Horse, Rocking Horse, swing and glide back and forth
Rocking Horse, Rocking Horse, swing and glide back and forth
Gallop, trot, jump and play
Come back to the barn and feast on hay
Rocking Horse, Rocking Horse, swing and glide back and forth
Back and Forth, back and forth

Laughing Language/Visual Vignettes
Imagine an adventure on horseback. Close your eyes. Feel the wind rushing past you as you rock at great speed. What’s your horse’s name? Where will you travel together today? Name all the things you see on your journey. Tell your story to a friend, write it down or draw a picture of it.

Pedal Laughing

Pedal Laughing Pose

Laughter is an international language. Pedaling a bike is excellent exercise. Put these two together and travel to the land of ha ha he he health.

Instructions

  1. Sit in a chair or lie on your back.
  2. Bend your arms and legs like you are riding bicycles in the air.
  3. Pedal forward: laugh.
  4. Pedal backward: laugh.

It might be hard to really laugh at first, but once you get started, you won’t be able to stop. Have fun and be silly with this pose!

Notes for Parents and Teachers

Laughing is a great way to lighten up an intense mood or situation. If tension is mounting and bad moods are escalating designate a laughing break. Remind yourself and your children to look at the lighter side of things.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Math Medley/Awesome Anatomy
Count out loud or use a timer to see how long each person can maintain their pedal laughing. Time pulses and heart rates too. Make a chart or graph to look at the comparisons.

Body Benefits
Laughter lowers blood pressure, reduces stress hormones, increases muscle flexion, boosts immune function and produces a natural body chemical called endorphins, which make you naturally feel good.

Musical Musings
Form a Pedal Laughing chorus or choir. High tone laughters are sopranos, low tone ones are bass. Medium low laughers are tenors and medium high are altos. Take turns being the conductors to bring in different voices, get louder or faster and to stop.

Nutrition Tip
Have fun with your food! Many of us have a “love-hate” relationship with food.  It is a necessary part of our daily lives but is often confusing, time consuming and takes us away from other activities we would rather be doing.  This week bring laughter into your life with the Pedal Pose and bring that laughter and feeling of play into the kitchen.

  • Have family members create their favorite meal – participate in the menu planning, preparation and cleaning.
  • Play music in the kitchen.
  • Keep fresh flowers in your eating area.
  • Practice cooking different types of foods – get the children involved in cooking new foods and new recipes.
  • Connect Food to cultures or countries your children may be studying in school.
  • Have family members select a vegetable or fruit of the week – something you have never tried – they find a recipe(s) and help with the preparation.
  • Try to sit down and eat as a family at least a couple of times a week – no TV, no phones, no computers.  Enjoy a fun relaxed meal together.

It’s All Fun and Games with Yoga

Children in a YogaKids Class

A great way to get kids moving and enjoying yoga is by turning the poses into a game. Gather up the kids and incorporate a yoga aspect to games that you already play. Check your game closet and re-sales for inspiration. Here are some games that I incorporate when I teach YogaKids classes or just want to play around with my own kids.

Yoga Parachute: Place pose cards (picture cards of kids performing yoga poses) under a kid’s toy parachute. Take turns running under and grabbing a card. You can even say a little rhyme to go with it.  As we all lift the parachute up and down we say “1,2,3,4… get down on the floor… 5,6,7,8 pick a pose that feels great!” The child whose turn it is goes under the parachute on “4” and tries to be out with a pose card by “8.” After everyone has a turn, create a flow with each child performing the pose on his or her card.

Yoga Jenga: Place small stickers on several of the jenga blocks. Make a key indicating to what pose each sticker corresponds. When the child pulls out a Jenga block from the tower, they will see what pose should be performed by all players. When the tower falls, have all the players hold a challenging pose for several breaths. I like to use Lizard pose!  

Yoga Limbo: Even a broomstick will work. Try Down Diggety Doggie Down and crab walking under the stick. Don’t forget to play Chubby Checker’s Limbo Rock song!

Dice Game: Use oversized dice. Roll the dice and add them together. (Multiply for older kids.) That’s how many seconds to hold a certain pose.

Suspend Game (by the brand Melissa & Doug): This is a fun game of balance. When you roll the dice, do a certain type of pose corresponding to a different color (green = backbend, yellow = balance, red= twist, blue= inversion, etc.) . The game includes a stand and several sticks that players will suspend and balance on each other. When it falls down, hold a challenging pose for several breaths.

Moo, Moo, Cat: Just like Duck, Duck ,Goose – but we substitute yoga poses, like Moo and Meow.

Puzzles: Before you play with the kids, assemble an easy kid’s puzzle face down. Write several poses on the blank side so that the words overlap on different pieces. Break apart the pieces and assemble again face down with your YogaKids. You can every try to do all the poses in a flow series.

Scrabble or Bananagrams: Use the tiles to create pose names that can be linked together. Can the poses be performed together to make a flow that feels fantastic? You can also arrange the tiles in a mixed up order to spell a pose. The kids can unscramble the letters and do the pose.

Boggle: Do you see any words that could be poses? Can you make up poses for any words you find?

Operation: Get your Awesome Anatomy! Players perform surgery and then do poses that could help that part of the body feel better.  Twisting helps our “spare ribs” feel good!

Peace – It’s like the card game “War” but We All Win because we are doing yoga! Take a stack of blank index cards and write a name of a pose on each card. Divide the cards among 2 players.  They each flip over their card at the same time.  They need to each perform the pose but try to link it together to make it a partner pose.  Imagine what a Downward Facing Dog Pigeon might look like!

Kids Choice Game: Challenge your students to turn a game that you already have into a yoga game

Be creative, stay active, giggle and have fun with the YogaKids in your life!


Create your own We All Win games as a Certified YogaKids Teacher!

Dromedary Delight

Dromedary Delight Pose

A camel has two humps, and a dromedary, a type of camel, has only one. Both store fat (not water) in their humps.


Instructions

  1. Kneel on the floor with your legs and knees hip width apart.
  2. Press the tops of your feet into the floor, push the thighs forward, bring the hands to the lower back with fingers pointing upward and lift the chest.
  3. Breathe evenly in and out, as you extend the ribcage and broaden your chest.
  4. Continue to lift your chest with each breath as you curl your toes forward and bring your hands to the heels to imitate the camel’s hump. The head can come back (as shown) or tuck into the chest.
  5. Delight in the dromedary for ten seconds.
  6. Rest in the child’s pose after each of these backbends.
  7. Repeat.

Increase the times and repetitions as your spine and chest continue to become more flexible.

Note to Parents and Teachers

This pose strengthens the back and kidneys. Because of its chest opening ability, it can increase lung capacity and can be especially beneficial for children with asthma. It also helps the posture of those with drooping shoulders and rounded backs.

 

Activity Ideas for Home and Classroom

Ecological Echoes
Camels and dromedaries avoid trotting and galloping whenever possible in order to save water and energy. They can survive for months without water and can drink up to 35 gallons of water at a time.

Awesome Anatomy
Lift your chest, by letting the arch of your spine and your back ribs support you. Imagine your back ribs as lounge chairs for your lungs. Let your lungs expand and rest on these slatted chairs. Feel how much your lungs can expand when you breathe fully.

The lungs are light and spongy and are filled with millions of air channels which provide an enormous surface to absorb oxygen. If your lungs were flattened out, they’d make a slippery surface the size of a tennis court!*

* The Children’s Atlas of the Human Body by Richard Walker, The Millbrook Press Inc., 1994, Pg. 24

 

African Rain Sticks

Water is so important in our lives. Think about how much you use in a day and most importantly: how lucky you are to have — what feels like — unlimited access to clean water.  The Water Princess is a great book to help us all understand what life is like for those of us less fortunate when it comes to water supply. Pick up the book at your local library — and make your very own African Rain Stick!

 

AFRICAN RAIN STICK

Materials:

  • cardboard tubes
  • construction paper
  • aluminum foil
  • rice, beans, or popcorn seeds
  • beads, feathers, markers and other decorating supplies

Instructions:

  1. Cover one end of the cardboard tube with a piece of construction paper. Make sure the end is completely covered and either tape or glue it shut.
  2. Cut aluminum foil into long strips. Crumble the strips up and place them into the tube.
  3. Pour a cup of rice, beans or popcorn seeds into the tube.
  4. Cover the 2nd end of the tube with construction paper. Make sure the entire end is completely covered and glue or tape it shut.
  5. Decorate the stick with beads, feathers, markers and other decorating supplies.
  6. Turn the rain stick up and down and listen to the sound of the rain.

September: Mandala Coloring Page

To color:

  • Click on the image to open it in full size.
  • Right click (or command click on mac) and save picture to your computer, and
  • Use Paint or a similar program to color on your computer, or
  • Print the picture and color it with crayons, paint, glitter…whatever!

Ch-ch-ch-chia Fresca & Pudding

Chia seeds (chia hispanica) are amazing and nutritious. The originate in Mexico, where they have been cultivated for centuries. In fact, Aztec warriors used to carry chia seeds with them when they went into battle, and they were sometimes referred to as “runners food” because, it was said, eating just a small amount of these tiny, lightweight seeds could sustain the scout runners and warriors for an entire day. A chia seed can also hold up to TEN TIMES its weight in water! You’ll see how holding onto so much water gives the shell a slippery gel coating that allows us to make recipes like chia pudding. It also helps YOU stay hydrated (which means you have enough water in your body) because that gel coating of water and electrolytes is released slowly, as they make the journey through your digestive tract.

Today, scientists have discovered that chia is good for: balancing insulin levels and helping prevent diabetes, burning fat and providing loads of essential fatty acids, vitamins, nutrients, and fiber. They’re good for your guts, bones, skin, and brain!

Let’s do some warrior poses and eat some tasty chia treats!

Chia Fresca

In Mexico, chia fresca is made of fruit juices combined with chia to make a gelatinous, cooling drink for summer. It’s typically made with lemonade, but all kinds of juices can be used! Let’s make a pitcher of chia fresca. It’s both filling and light, which makes it a perfect drink-snack for hot summer days.

Chia con Limonada (chia with lemonade)

(Makes one pitcher, or four glasses)

  • 48 oz cool water
  • 4 large lemons
  • 1/4 c of sugar (or sweetened to taste with your favorite sweetener)
  • 2 Tablespoons of dry chia seed

(a single glass)

  • 12 oz water
  • 3 teaspoons lemon juice (about 1 lemon)
  • 1 teaspoon dry chia seed
  • 2 teaspoons sugar (or sweeten to taste with your favorite sweetener)

Note: If you’re using a type of juice that is already sweet or sweetened, you do not need to add any additional sugar

Stir all the ingredients together except the chia and make sure the sugar or sweetener is dissolved in the water. Add the chia seeds and allow the chia drink time to gel in the refrigerator. You will need to wait at least 4-6 hours for the chia to gel. You can make it before you go to bed and leave it to fully gel overnight. This lasts about five days in the fridge (but you’ll probably drink it all up before that!).

Chia Pudding

Chia pudding can be made into lots of flavors, using a variety of ingredients.

What you need, per serving of pudding:

  • 1 cup of a creamy ingredient, like milk, almond milk, coconut milk, etc.
  • 3 Tablespoon of dry chia seeds
  • fruit juice, cocoa powder, or extract (like vanilla extract) for flavoring
  • Sweetener, as needed (Sugar, honey, agave syrup, stevia, etc.)
  • Optional: nuts and cut up, fresh (or frozen) fruit, shredded coconut, flax meal — for extra texture and flavor

You may also like this a little thicker, to make it extra pudding-like; or thinner, so you can drink it. You can add extra chia seeds to thicken it, and fewer chia seeds to make it thinner.

Mix all the ingredients well, and then add the chia seeds and shake or stir them in as much as you can. It’s helpful to put each serving, if possible, into a 1/2 pint jar with a lid so you can shake it up halfway through the gelling process. This keeps the chia seeds from settling to the bottom and clumping into a hard mass. Usually if you can shake it up a few times during the first hour and a half, it won’t clump, even if you leave it to fully gel overnight. I like to make this at bedtime so it’s ready for breakfast!

If you want to blend fresh fruit into your pudding so the whole pudding is flavored (versus using pieces of cut fruit), put all the ingredients into a blender – EXCEPT the chia seeds (this is important; they will not gel if the seed coating is broken) – and puree, adding the chia seeds to the blended mixture right before it gets sent to the fridge.

Follow these basic directions for all the recipes below. Lasts for about 4 days in the fridge.

Chocolate Chia Pudding

  • Coconut milk
  • 1 1/2 T cocoa powder
  • 2 Tablespoons sugar

Horchata Chia Pudding

  • Rice milk
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon

Vanilla Chia Pudding

  • Any creamy base “milk”
  • A little sweetener
  • 1/2 teaspoon extract

Fruity Chia Pudding

  • Use 1/3 cup of berries (blueberries, strawberries, raspberries), or 1/2 large banana, or 1/4 c fruit juice
  • Use only 3/4 cup of creamy base
  • Sweeten if needed

Use a blender to blend chunky fruits and base mixture together before adding chia and refrigerating.

Be creative! What delicious flavor combinations can you come up with?

Math Medley

Using the one-serving size as your starting point, how much of each of the ingredients would you need to make enough servings for your family? Or for each morning of your school week (five)?

Laughing Language

Since chia fresca is a Mexican creation, can you learn to say all the ingredients of your chia treats in Spanish? Here are a few to get you started:

    • Milk – leche
    • Fruit – frutas
    • Lemon – limón
    • Strawberry – fresa
    • Vanilla – vainilla

What else are you using in your favorite chia recipe?

Ecological Echoes

Chia is one of over 3500 species of plants belong to the mint family — called Lamiaceae. All members of this family of plants have simple leaves that are directly opposite of each other on square stems, with five-petaled flowers that are fused into what looks like a single upper petal and one lower petal. All members of the mint family may not be tasty, but they are all edible. Some other members of the mint family include peppermint, spearmint, basil, lavender, marjoram, rosemary, savory, and thyme. Different types of mint grow all over the world…can you identify any wild mint plants in your local wildlife area?

Hurricane Harvey

Hurricane Harvey touched down in Texas on August 25, 2017. What is a hurricane? Why is it called Harvey? How does it compare to other storms? And what can you do to help?

What is a hurricane?

A hurricane is a type of intense tropical storm that forms over water. To be a called a hurricane, storm winds must be stronger than 72 miles per hour. When wind is that strong, it can knock down houses and trees  — causing major destruction.

A hurricane can be further defined by it’s “category.” A category 1 hurricane is the mildest, with winds between 74-95 miles per hour. A category 5 hurricane is the most severe, with winds upwards of 157 miles per hour.

Hurricanes can shift between categories as they shift in form. When Hurricane Harvey touched down, the winds were as strong as 130 miles per hour, making it a category 4 hurricane.

 

Why is it called Harvey?

The World Meteorological Organization is responsible for naming tropical storms. The practice has been in place since the 1950s when people realized that giving the storms easy-to-remember names helped in communication among emergency responders.

The names alternate between genders and some examples of previous hurricane names include Katrina, Sandy and Matthew. Tropical storm Harvey was named on August 17, 2017. It wasn’t considered a hurricane until August 24, one day before touching down.

 

How does Hurricane Harvey compare to other storms?

The strength and size of Hurricane Harvey is comparative to other tropical storms in our country’s history. However, what makes Hurricane Harvey different is the amount of rainfall that continued after it’s initial touchdown.

According the National Weather Service, Texas has received over 50 inches of rain — a record for any storm in the continental United States. (Hurricane Katrina, which happened in 2005, only had 17 inches of rainfall.) This equals to trillions of gallons of water in the city of Houston.

 

What happens now? And how can you help?

Areas in Texas affected most by Hurricane Harvey will have a long road of reconstruction ahead. Many, many people are displaced after leaving their homes and all their belongings to find safety from the flood waters.

Fortunately, at times like this, we find unity and humanity by helping one another. You can help too. Talk to a grown-up to see what you can do. Many charitable organizations (American Red Cross, Save the Children) are accepting Hurricane Harvey relief money. We can’t think of a better way to spend your allowance this month.

 

 

 

 

 

We All Win: Rock, Tree, Bridge!

This is a great game to play with friends! Get into a wide circle and have everyone get into alternating poses of Child’s Pose (rock), Tree, and Bridge. Then, one person gets up and goes around the circle stepping over the rock, walking around the tree ,and through or under the bridge.

Move slowly and mindfully so as not to disturb the rocks, trees and bridges. Work together to get through the obstacle course without a tree falling over or a bridge breaking! Everyone gets a turn.

 

Child’s Pose Instructions: Begin in Heel-Sitting pose. Open your knees a little, so your belly relaxes between your thighs. Bend at the hips and fold forward, letting your shoulders drop down away from your ears and spine. Your arms lie back along the sides of your legs with open palms facing upward. Place your forehead on the floor. Turn your head to one side and take a few breaths. Then, turn to the other and do the same.

 

Tree Pose Instructions: Begin in Mountain Pose. Lift one foot and press your foot against the inside of your other leg. You can use your hand to place your foot anywhere between your ankle and inner thigh. Avoid the knee joint. As your balance gets stronger, you’ll be able to raise your foot higher up your leg. Bring your hands to your chest, palms together in Namaste position. Then raise your arms up above your head. Stretch them out wide, like the branches of a tree. Separate your fingers. Balance and breathe. Now repeat on the other side.

 

Bridge Pose Instructions: Lie on your back with your arms by your sides. Place your feet hip-width apart as close to the sit bones as possible. Press your feet into the ground and lift your hips to the sky. Place your hands however it’s comfortable to support your lower back and pelvis. Lift your chest and arch your spine.

 

 

Flamingo

Flamingo Pose

Flamingos are born with soft gray feathers. Around their 3rd birthday, their color turns flaming pink or orange. That’s quite a birthday present! Their feathers are orange and pink because their diet of algae and shrimp are high in carotenoids. Carotenoids are what give carrots their orange hue and make cooked shrimp pink…like a flamingo’s feathers! If the flamingos stopped eating this type of diet, its feathers would eventually go back to being white.

Instructions

  1. Begin in mountain pose.
  2. Spread your arms open like graceful wings as your left leg extends straight back.
  3. Bend forward at the hip hinge.
  4. Establish your balance little by little as you adjust your arms and back leg.
  5. Clear your mind and fix your attention on your breath, body and focusing friend. Notice when your thoughts are scattered, your pose is unsteady too.
  6. If you feel like flying, gently flap your wings Repeat with the opposite leg.

Do both sides 2-3 times.

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Ecological Echoes
A flamingo flies with its head and neck stretched out in front. And, unlike other feathered friends, flamingos bend and stretch their legs behind them when balancing. Can you feel the difference between stork and flamingo?

Math Medley
Flamingo wings are about 60 inches from tip to tip. How many feet is that? Hint: 1 foot = 12 inches What is your wingspan? Measure from fingertip to fingertip.

Body Benefits
Flamingo legs might look scrawny and spindly, but they’re not. This pose strengthens, shapes and tones the legs. The upper body may then experience a sense of feathery lightness. Praise your child as you see them become more graceful, poised and balanced.

Peanut Butter and Jelly

YogaKid in Peanut Butter and Jelly Pose

Stretch your whole body – arms, legs, toes, spine and fingers. Become gooey and sweet as you fold forward and make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.

Instructions

  1. Begin in L is for Left. Reach up and grab the peanut butter and jelly jars that are floating through the air. Can you reach them?
  2. Rub PB & J all over your hands and smear it between your toes. Fold forward and make a sandwich by pressing your upper body towards your lower body.
  3. Spread it all over your legs and on your belly as you learn the names of your bones and muscles.
  4. Wash your face and hair in peanut butter and jelly.

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Awesome Anatomy
Teach your children to learn the parts of their body with age appropriate anatomical names and words.

Body Benefits
When you fold forward at the hip hinge, like in this pose, it is called a forward bend. Forward bends stretch the hamstrings, calves and all the muscles of the back. In time, you will become more flexible and be able to lengthen your legs and spine more.

Math Medley
The average child eats 1,500 PB&J sandwiches before he or she graduates high school. How many is that each day, week, month, year, decade, century?

Bridge of Diamonds
In other countries, peanut butter is not as popular as it is in the US and Canada. In Australia, they eat Vegemite, in Italy, they eat pizza. In Mexico, tacos. Black beans and rice in Brazil. Chicken rice in Singapore. Pho in Vietnam.

Nutrition Tip
Since many of you just love PB&J, take it up a few notches with these healthy tips.

  • Start with a multi grain, whole grain bread. One fun way to get your kids involved is making bread. The easiest and fastest way is to use a bread machine. Children love to put in the ingredients before they go the bed at night, set the timer and wake up to the smell and taste of delicious, homemade bread. Yummy. And they are so proud of themselves too.
  • Try using a jar of natural or organic peanut butter. Try to avoid the peanut butters with partially hydrogenated oils – they have a long shelf life and lots of flavor but the trans fat are unhealthy and do not digest well in our bodies. Did you know you can make butter from all kinds of nuts: almonds, cashews, sesame, pistachio. Try it out.
  • How about bananas instead of Jelly? What else would taste yummy with peanut butter? Apples? Honey? Avocado? Experiment and explore. Look for jams made from the whole fruit. These are naturally sweetened without the addition of high fructose corn syrup and other added sugars.

Spouting Dolphin

Spouting Dolphin Pose

Dolphins are mammals just like you. They have lungs and they breathe air, even though they live in the water! They also have their own language. Can you speak Dolphinese?

Instructions

  1. Begin on all fours. Lower your elbows to the floor. Make sure that your knees are under your hips.
  2. Clasp your elbows with the opposite fingers to keep proper spacing. Shoulders remain aligned over the elbows.
  3. Move your lower arms forward, interlace your fingers, and make a triangle. Your hands are one point, and your elbows are the other two points. Breathe as your spine lengthens, your tailbone lifts up, your legs stretch.
  4. Press your heels towards the floor.
  5. Move your body forward so your chin touches down in front of your fingers.
  6. Breathe out and lift out of the water.

 

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Body Benefits
This pose builds agility and flexibility in the joints of the shoulders, hips, knees and ankles as well as strengthens the muscles of the arms, legs and belly. Do the dolphin and build your upper body strength.

Math Medley
As you already know, dolphins are mammals just like us and have lungs like we do. Although they need to surface for a gulp of air about every five minutes or so. Do the math: If they were to swim for one hour, how many times would they come up for air? For 5 hours? For a whole day? Month?

Musical Musings
Dolphins squeeze air back and forth between breath sacs under their blowholes. Can you make clicking sounds and patterns like a dolphin singing his watery melodies?

Nutrition Tip
Did you know there are vegetables in the sea? Guess what they’re called? Yup, you guessed it — SEA VEGETABLES! They contain many vitamins and minerals. They have more nutrients than any other food on the planet!  These funny sea vegetables are very different then most of the foods we are used to. Sea vegetables balance our blood and can help us to calm down when are bodies are over-active and excited.

These sea vegetables have fun and exotic names like:

  • Kombu
  • Wakame
  • Kelp
  • Agar Agar
  • Hijiki

Can you say those? Now you’re speaking some Japanese.

Here are some ways to get cooking with the sea:

  • Add wakame to spaghetti sauce.
  • Use kelp or dolce instead of salt.
  • Bake with agar agar (instead of gelatin) as a base for custards, puddings and jello. It will thicken sauces too. (It’s also a vegetarian substitute for gelatin.)
  • Cook kombu with rice and beans to up the minerals in your body.

Experiment, look for recipes and talk about this new and interesting addition to menu!

 

Tree

kids in tree pose

Ground yourself. Feel the earth at your feet. Spread your energy all the way through your finger branches and to the sky just like trees do.

Pose Instructions

  1. Begin in Mountain. Imagine roots growing out of your feet, connecting to the earth.
  2. Bend one leg and place the sole of that foot on the inside of the standing leg, anywhere between your ankle and thigh.
  3. Bend your right knee and press your foot against the inside of your left leg. As your balance grows stronger, you will be able to raise your foot higher on your leg.
  4. Bring your hands to your chest, palms together in Namaste position, raise your arms and stretch them out wide like the limbs of a tree. Separate your fingers and stretch those little finger branches. Balance.
  5. Hold for as long as you can and then slowly lower your foot to the floor and change sides.

 

Note to Parents and Teachers

This pose fosters balance, concentration and focus when practiced regularly. Make a family or class forest in the morning or at the end of day to keep you all connected. Make your group Tree pose a sharing circle.

Activity Ideas for Home or Classroom

Reading Comes Alive with Yoga
Celebrate the strength and unity of trees with books like The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein or The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest by Lynne Cherry. Go to the library with your children and find other “Tree’ titles, and develop the lifelong library habit early on.

Visual Vignettes
Draw a family tree and teach your children about their ancestors.

Ecological Echoes
Take your children on nature walks. Read under a tree about trees when the weather permits. Hug trees. Talk to trees. Balance upon their sturdy trunks and honor them with your beautiful self and the tree pose too.

Body Benefits
This pose develops strength and balance in the legs and torso. The reaching and stretching of the arms and fingers improves fine motor coordination too. Trees live on light and water and so do we. Imagine drinking water through the roots of your feet just like a tree. Water hydrates trees and our bodies too.

Nutrition Notes
Trees need lots of water. And so do YOU! The body is 75% water and needs to constantly be replenished. Dehydration can be the cause of a variety of symptoms including low energy, sugar cravings, dry and rough skin, fatigue, lack of focus and headaches. Water helps children stay alert and focused in the classroom and at home.



Learn all the YogaKids poses in our Certification Program!

Peace Pops

Summer is such a great time for popsicles! And popsicle sticks make a great start to so many awesome crafts! This idea comes to us from one of our YogaKids Teachers, Paula Demeo. Thanks Paula!


Materials: 

  • popsicle sticks
  • construction paper
  • drawing materials
  • scissors
  • tape
  • beads & string (optional)

 

Instructions:

  1. Cut out two equal-sized circles from the construction paper.
  2. Draw the peace sign on both circles. (A peace sign looks like this: )
  3. Cut out the peace signs and tape them to both sides of a popsicle stick.
  4. You can also create peace necklaces by punching holes in the signs and then lacing them with beads on a string.
  5. Hold it up when you need to remind yourself (or someone else!) to take a peaceful moment.