Sukhpran Khalsa

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Sukhpran Khalsa

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A Yogic Model of Grief Recovery as the Integration of Change

By Sukhpran Khalsa

By Dr. Shanti Shanti Kaur Khalsa and Dr. Sat-Kaur Khalsa We are in a time where many of us are experiencing multiple losses: Our daily life as we have known it due to a potentially fatal disease, serious questions about our teacher whether one believes those questions or not, learning about our children’s experience with schooling in India, exposing racial injustices, and other personal losses we may experience during this tumultuous time. Because of these losses, we are individually and collectively experiencing deep and profound grief. Our intention for offering this document is to provide a guide for individuals and…

Naad Yoga & How Mantra Works

By Sukhpran Khalsa

In addition to the term 'mantra,' you will also hear the word Naad in connection with Kundalini Yoga mantras. Naad means “the essence of all sound.” It is a particular vibration, a fundamental frequency that comes from one common source or sound current. It is the universal code behind language and therefore behind human communication.  Naad is the glue or medium that connects the little me, the individual, to the Big Me, the Universal Self. It is the vibrational harmony through which the Infinite can be experienced.  Naad Yoga is based on the experience of how sound vibrations affect the body, mind, and spirit through the…

10 Ways to Keep your Liver Happy

By Sukhpran Khalsa

By Siri Kirin/Kathe Forrest According to Traditional Chinese Medicine, spring is the season of the liver. Imagine spring as a sort of “awakening” for the liver—a time when it becomes more active, working hard to clean out a winter’s worth of congestion. It’s a good time to give it some extra support. Your liver works hard to keep metabolic processes running smoothly and your body free of harmful toxins. Take some time this spring to give it a little extra love and support. 10 ways you can keep your liver happy every day: 1. Start your morning off with warm…

Love is Love

By Sukhpran Khalsa

Love is Love. There’s no condition. There’s no lack. There’s nothing to find and there’s certainly nothing to take. Love can only be received—and given—from the fullness of the liberated heart. Free yourself from ego, give your head, so that you can know love and share that love with all. Transformation in the game of love requires a complete reorientation to the rules of the game. In order to truly experience love and union, we must begin by playing with a new rule book. In the West, we have been trained to look for that one person—our soul mate—who can…

Kundalini Yoga for Disabilities

By Sukhpran Khalsa

By Vladislav Loginov, Estonia My main students are teenagers, kids, and youth with physical and psychological disabilities and their parents. I teach at the studio and on-line. Young people with disabilities who practice Kundalini Yoga regularly over the years show excellent results in their development. One of them is Matvey Smirnov www.beu-fund.com/matvey-smirnov  Matvey has been practicing Kundalini Yoga for 2.5 years. He is 17 now. He was diagnosed with Down's syndrome. Matvey could not crawl, sit or talk for a while. His physiatrist said “as if there were no muscles in his body.” Nevertheless, he was on his feet when he…

The Trinity Roots: 6 Potent Recipes for Keeping Up!

By Sukhpran Khalsa

Recipes for Healing with Onions, Garlic, and Ginger Root By Sat Jivan Kaur It was taught that onions, garlic, and ginger would help us stay healthy, detoxify our internal organs, feed our glandular system, regenerate our creative and sexual energy, stimulate our immune system, and help clean and rebuild our brain function and entire nervous system. At Guru Ram Das Ashram in Brooklyn we took this advice seriously and embarked on a devoted path of eating at least one bulb of garlic, one whole onion, and three inches of ginger for each person in the ashram each and every day!…

Teaching Trauma-Sensitive Kundalini Yoga

By Sukhpran Khalsa

By Navneet Kaur As Kundalini Yoga Teachers we far too often meet students in our classes who have experienced some sort of traumatic event or who are struggling as a result of some past trauma. Most people who experience a traumatic event experience some difficulties following the event but recover. A small percentage will develop Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or PTSD. Challenges for people with PTSD might include flashbacks, a persistent need to avoid thoughts or feelings related to the trauma; distorted thinking that might include excessive self-blame or blaming others; and difficulties with arousal or reactivity. The impact of…

Calmness in the Chaos

By Sukhpran Khalsa

By Doug Wilson In a time when we have more comforts, conveniences and opportunities available to us than at any other point in our recorded human history, why do we seem to have more chaos, illness and social problems than the generations before us? With technology and an ability to openly communicate with each other, why are the challenges and statistics surrounding these issues continuing to rise? The planets, moons and stars move with mechanical precision. Billions of biological organisms live and interact harmoniously with their physical environments, so why are human beings struggling to survive? Is this chaotic mess…