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Raw Shakti e-Newsletter Issue 7June, 2006
 
 
FEATURE ARTICLES
- Yoga in the South Seas: A 25th wedding anniversary gift
-Yoga with the Prime Minister of Samoa 
-Learning from Samoa
What's New with Raw Shakti
-Yoga Studio Partner Program                            
-2006/7 Yoga Adventure Retreats                           
-Article in USA Newspaper
-Art Miles Mural Project
2006 CALENDAR
-Yoga in Samoa
-Women's Yoga Retreat in Samoa
-Canoe Canada this August
-Magical Yoga Journey to Peru in October
EXPANDING THE PRACTICE: 
-Highlighted Asana
-Hana's Cooking Corner 
-Peter Eisenstadter                
-Anais Brown
It seems we are either in a state of evolution, stagnance or regression. Our soul craves to evolve but often we stagnate with old habits and regress with what we know are unhealthy choices. What relationships, food choices and projects move us forward? What ones are stagnating or regressing us? It is up to us on a daily basis to decide what evolves our soul. Yoga is a great tool for getting in touch with how our body and mind are feeling. Are we focusing on the goodness of the universe or are we kept busy with thoughts of fear and stagnating self criticism?
We need to affirm each day that our life is a one that can do the world good. By encouraging and allowing your own soul to evolve you help the world. Take time to nourish your soul with yoga and quiet time to just breathe and  be. We need to move into the quiet in order to evolve past the busyness of a seemingly unstoppable "monkey mind". 
The time to evolve is now. For example, make a choice to evolve with a positive conversation. Try to remain kind to yourself as you journey forward. Pat yourself on the back for what you have already done towards your personal evolution and enjoy the forward flow on your own evolutionary path towards lasting joy and radiant peace. 
Because you are alive, everything is possible.
          -Thich Nhat Hanh  
Our life is enough.
For our evolution,
Taialofa
 
Yoga in the South Seas: A 25th wedding aniversary gift!
 
Every so often, fortune hands you a bouquet. Last winter, Susan and I heard about a yoga retreat, run by Taialofa and Kevin Petrini, of  Raw Shakti's Yoga Samoa. Susan has been “doing” yoga for a while, and I had always wanted to see the islands of the South Pacific, a desire left over from much literature and many movies. We decided that the trip would be a 25th wedding anniversary present to ourselves.
Everything you have heard about the South Seas is mostly true about Samoa. It is lush, green, and set in a warm turquoise sea. Much of it is protected by a coral reef, inside which one can swim and snorkel in perfect safety. The water is so clear that you can count the rocks on the bottom. For a New Englander like me, the idea of an ocean that one can just fall into, rather than ease into inch by frozen inch, was a novelty bordering on Black Magic. And on a clear day, you can see American Samoa peak over the horizon, forty miles away. There are very few tourists.
 
The people in Samoa really do smile and wave at you when you drive past them. They like to have their pictures taken, especially the children. They like to laugh about each other and us. They call us palangi (“burst from the sky”), which is a big step up from what Americans are called in a great many places these days. They like you to spend your money, of course, but you get good value. They don’t haggle because they know what their wares are worth. And they are as hospitable as you could hope. And the coconuts, papayas, and bananas really do grow on trees, and without much coaxing you can get someone to shinny up a tree for you with a machete, cut down a coconut, cut it open and hand it to you, a circumstance we took advantage of more than once.
There are places in Samoa where the modern age is still pretty peripheral. Sure, they drive cars and have electricity in most of Samoa, and you can even (sigh) find a McDonald’s in Apia, the capital. But without too much trouble, you can find little, out of the way places, like Namua Island, where we stayed two days, the place to ourselves except for our guides and the people who lived there and took care of us. Then there was Apolima, a little volcanic bubble of an island, with about a hundred people and a cocoa plantation, where they welcomed us with an Ava ceremony and congratulated us on our 25th anniversary! Okay, the showers were buckets of rainwater, and the outhouses were pretty primitive (Susan once had to share one with a really free-range chicken!), but how many of you were ever fed like Polynesian royalty? Or practiced yoga in a fiery Samoan dawn? Or snorkled past purple coral and silver needle-fish, or bathed in a volcanic pool under a waterfall? Who has seen the Southern Cross bathing in the Milky Way, or the Big Dipper actually dip into the Southern Ocean? Well, we certainly hadn’t.
 
Taialofa and Kevin absolutely knocked themselves out for us. Taialofa (“love by the sea”- wow!), the daughter of two Peace Corps volunteers, was born on the island of Savaii, and Kevin is a former Peace Corps volunteer who speaks Samoan. Together they drove us, ferried us, introduced us, guided us, spoke for us, swam with us, clothed us in lava-lavas (the traditional dress of the islands), trained us in some customs, taught us some words (“malo”, “fa'afetai”, “manuia”) and, in between, taught us yoga every day. Susan received many compliments on her progress, of course, while I was told that I was “way ahead of most men my age”, a comment I accepted with a weak smile and a smug heart.
 
After a while, we came to know them as friends, not tour guides. We found a lot to talk and laugh about. And they gave us two of the best vacation weeks we’ve ever had.
 
What else? Sala’s supper serenade on Namu'a; walking with Warren over a lava landscape; breakfast by the beach at Regina’s Fales (my favorite), Robert Louis Stevenson’s mansion (his favorite); birdsong in the Baha’i temple; and, believe me, you’ve never been rained on till you’ve run through a South Seas drench!
It’s pronounced Sah’-moa.
We had the best time.


Peter Eisenstadter
 
Yoga with the Prime Minister of Samoa
 
Samoa is a destination of culture, nature, peace & beautiful landscapes.  Even the government of Samoa has a lot to share with the world about how to work together as a group.
 
We were fortunate to be able to guide yoga classes for the Prime Minister of Samoa and the Human Rights Protection Party (HRPP). After the recent election, which is held every 5 years to elect parliament, the HRPP held a few week long retreat. The group lives, works, and sleeps together in a large room for the duration of the retreat. They rise at around 5:30 am and sing together and have a prayer and then on a few of the mornings they practiced yoga! It felt amazing to be apart of a government event where the leaders were concerned with their health and were taking action with yoga classes! 
 
How great would it be to see other governement leaders all rising in the morning, together as a group, practicing yoga and healthy living before they start their big days of hard work! 
 
We felt blessed to be part of their healthy living routine. The picture is of Taialofa with Hon. Fiame Naomi Matafa, the Minister of Woman Community and Social Develoment and Hon. Gatolaoaifaana Amataga Alesana Gidlow, the Minister of Health.
 
Filemu(peace),
Taialofa and Kevin
 
Learning from Samoa
 
Our trip to Samoa ended up being far more than I had ever thought possible. My husband Gary and I were well over due for some time off from our hectic lifestyle in Colorado.  We both have careers which require more of us than we’d like.  Prior to leaving we had been discussing the need to simplify our lives and get away from the stereotype that American society deems necessary…ie.  career, nice cars, big house.  I knew it wasn’t all necessary, but it is very easy to get caught up in what our society thinks is important.
 
We had read about the fa’aSamoa (Samoan way) before leaving the U.S.A.  To be quite honest I thought it sounded like a typical way of describing certain parts of America like southern hospitality. What I didn’t expect was to be touched so deeply by the Samoan people with their generosity and kindness. They generate so much bodhichitta its unbelievable. No matter where you are on the island the people are unbelievably friendly, playful and happy. Everyone smiles and waves as you drive by them as if you were best friends and they had known you for years or in a past life. If you stop for directions be prepared to visit for awhile even with complete strangers. This is the fa’aSamoa. We have never traveled anywhere in the world where we have felt as welcomed as we did in Samoa. 
 
To many Americans the Samoans would be considered poor but in their eyes they are rich! Do they have busy careers? Do they have nice cars?  Do they have big houses? The answer is usually no to all of those questions. They have much much more than that. Families that live together under one roof or fale, a sense of community within their villages where everything is shared. Samoans don’t seem to need the material items that Americans can’t seem to live without, and they seem to be all the happier for it. Their lack of attachment to material possessions is commendable.   
 
One of my goals in 2006 was to attend a yoga retreat. We were quite pleased to find Taialofa and Kevin’s Raw Shakti Yoga retreat website.  Not expecting to find anything I was shocked to say the least. After reading Taialofa & Kevin’s bio’s and about their retreats I emailed Taialofa and to my surprise she responded immediately. I could tell instantly through our emails that we would really enjoy a day spent with her. As it turned out, Kevin was able to join us for our retreat too!  They took us to a beautiful grassy place overlooking the ocean where Taialofa guided us through a meditative vinyasa flow practice. Since the air temperature is naturally warm I found that I could go deeper into my practice than at my studio back home. The waves in the background served as a wonderful change from the meditative music that I usually practice to. Once asana was complete Gary and I went for a walk to take some snapshots of the coastline while Kevin and Taialofa set out our lunch. We mindfully ate a yogi style lunch filled with great conversation between the four of us. After lunch we drove around the coastline through several villages and stopped at a local beach where we snorkeled. Kevin had his underwater camera where he took some amazing photos of the fish and coral for us. We were back to our hotel by 5:30p.m. It was a perfect day!
 
Our trip to Samoa brought several things to realization and I would like to share a few of them with you. One, we must truly appreciate our most inner qualities and not the material items that we think we must obtain to make us whole.  They only clutter your home and do not enrich your life. Two, believe in yourself and that you can make a difference in other people’s lives. I have finally enrolled in a yoga teacher training program where I hope to share the practice of yoga with many others. This is something I have contemplated on for several years. Three, see the beauty within everyone you meet and don’t be judgmental. These all seem like common sense when you read them yet we tend to get caught up in our daily lives and forget them. Let each of us learn from the Samoans and show a little bit of their way to the rest of the world!
 
Namaste,
Anais
 
 
Yoga Studio Partnership Program: All yoga studios please contact please us and receive the benefit of expanding your offerings to include Yoga Adventure Travel with Raw Shakti!
 
2006/7 Yoga Adventure Retreats: The healthy vacation alternative! The wave of the future is to get healthy and feel rejuvenated with a yoga retreat vacation! Explore the world with our professionally guided tours.
 
Article in USA newspaper: We have made our first USA Newspaper Travel section!  From Surry to Samoa! It is titled "Peace in Paradise". 
 
Art Miles Mural Project: We will be giving as our Raw Shakti charity to the art mural miles project. We plan to have a mural set up at the south pacific games in Samoa. We are good friends with Joanne Tawfilis, the creative inspiration and founder of the murals and she is working towards health and peace on earth one mural at a time.
 
 
June 27-July 11, 2006  
We will lead you mindfully into the heart of Polynesia, to waterfalls and to secluded beaches.
 
 
August 5-17, 2006
Gain a deeper connection to the natural world through daily yoga instruction and wilderness immersion on this 11-day river trip.
      
September 12 - 25, 2006
Connect with your feminine body on this woman's retreat in Samoa. 
 
 
October 5-15, 2006
Practice yoga and learn the cultural history of Peru - exploring ancient ruins, including Machu Picchu. 
 
 
 
Highlighted Asana
Peter and Susan are in an intertwined Virkasana, tree asana. This photo was taken in the rainforst on a platform near the top of a huge banyan tree! Find a partner and help support one another in the tree pose. Connect with each other by looking into each others' eyes and enjoy the connection. To magnify it go outside and do it near a tree. 
 
 Hana's Cooking Corner:  Lasagna
 
I typically think of lasagna as a heavy winter dish but this lighter version is meant to serve up a bit of spring.  Choose whatever type of greens are growing in your area or are your favorites (I like fresh baby spinach leaves or chard).  It can easily become vegan by substituting soy cheese for the dairy cheese or leaving it out completely.  There are quite a few packaged foods in this recipe.  When I can't find fresh organic ingredients I try to find as many packaged organic ingredients as possible.  I think organic offers superior taste, lack of exposure to chemicals and higher probability of being raised in a sustainable, earth-friendly way.  Enjoy!
 
Ingredients:
1 pkg no-boil lasagna noodles 
12 oz package firm silken tofu
3 cloves pressed/crushed fresh garlic
1 cup chopped fresh basil
2 tbsp fresh grated parmesan cheese (optional)
freshly ground sea salt and pepper
1 28oz can crushed tomatoes
1 cup shredded mozzarella
3 cups fresh greens (spinach, rainbow chard, beet greens, etc) 
 
Directions:
Review directions from 1 pkg no-boil lasagna noodles (about 12 sheets of pasta).  Preheat the oven according to the package directions. 
 
Combine 12 oz package firm silken tofu, 3 cloves pressed/crushed fresh garlic, 1 cup chopped fresh basil and 2 tbsp fresh grated parmesan cheese (optional) along with as much freshly ground sea salt and pepper you would like in a bowl- stir until mixture resembles ricotta or cottage cheese consistency. 
 
Have ready the other ingredients for layering:  1 28oz can crushed tomatoes, 1 cup shredded mozzarella, 3 cups fresh greens (spinach, rainbow chard, beet greens, etc) rinsed. 
 
Cover bottom of 9x13x2 inch pan with thin layer of crushed tomatoes.  Place 3 lasagna sheets across bottom of  pan, topped with 1/3 of tofu mixture and spinach, 1/4 of remaining crushed tomatoes and mozzarella.  Repeat layering with pasta and other ingredients in same order.  Place remaining 1/4 of red sauce topped by mozzarella on the last layer of pasta sheets.  Cover and bake according to package directions. 
 
P.S. the leftovers are extremely tasty as the garlic has more time to permeate the entire dish!
 
 
Peter Eisenstadter 
Peter retired from teaching English after over thirty years in the field. He is originally from the Bronx in New York City, and now lives in Marlow, NH. He is married to Susan Loman, a professor of Dance-Movement Therapy at Antioch New England graduate school in Keene, NH. They have two sons, David and Matthew. Peter was a professional actor in the '70s, and now that he has retired, he is back on stage. He has worked with the Actors' Circle Theater in Peterborough, New Hampshire, where he won the New Hampshire Theater award for Best Actor in 2006. He will appear this summer with the Peterborough Players. Having originally been dragged by Susan to his first yoga classes, he has decided that there may be something in it, especially when it gets him to exotic locales where the practice of yoga is enhanced by such beautiful surroundings. Peter's vitality is stong and his passion for life is abundant. Peter is grateful to Kevin and Taialofa Petrini for their instruction and encouragement. He admits to being a bit more limber these days.
 
Anais Brown
Anais was born in Quincy, Illinois and grew up on a small family farm outside of Ursa, Illinois where her grandparents and extended family still live. Her love of nature, animals and the outdoors were instilled in her at a very young age. She was raised with seven Arabian horses and many cats and dogs. For college she attended Illinois College located in Jacksonville, Illinois where she majored in communications/ theater. Shortly after graduation, she moved to Ft. Worth, Texas where she met her husband Gary and they were married just ten months later. Gary was in medical school at the time and was accepted into a residency program in Pontiac, Michigan just a few years after their marriage. Upon completion of his residency the couple moved and still reside in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Anais started her journey with yoga while living in Michigan where she practiced hatha yoga. After moving to Colorado she enrolled in an ashtanga yoga class and hasn’t looked back since that fateful day four years ago. She continues a dedicated yoga practice and has recently enrolled in a yoga teacher training program where she hopes to enrich people’s lives through the practice of yoga. Her sweet nature will touch many people in inspiring ways. Anais also enjoys the Colorado outdoors where she hikes, backpacks, snowshoes, x-country skis and downhill skis with her husband and black lab, Terrell.
 
Please feel welcome and invited to FORWARD this newsletter to all whom you think might enjoy this journey toward health and peace! We kindly appreciate your sending this newsletter to others! Thank you so much for reading!
Raw Shakti is a Yoga Enterprise Dedicated to Promoting Health and Peace on Earth.
Raw Shakti - P.O. Box 684 - Western Samoa
Phone: 011 685 779 6400
Email: yoga@rawshakti.com
Web site: www.rawshakti.com