Sun B & living from the soul…

There’s no other way to start this post than to say that shit got real in yoga teacher training this weekend. We are in the throes of practice teaching a class and on Sunday, I stood up in front of a group of fellow teachers in training, with a well-prepared Sun Salutation B and flow, complete with a few well-timed phrases of encouragement.

I taught it well. And then my teacher called me on the carpet about the way I present myself to the world — about authenticity, and living from a place that’s real and not just “nice” or the way I think I should behave. She had everyone drop to child’s pose, and asked me to teach from within, without the things I’d planned to say. To really go there with what was happening in the room and to “cut the shit.”

I stood in front of my peers like feeling unprepared and shy as a small child. I hadn’t planned this. I was without words or the “perfect” thing to say. I couldn’t make a joke. I bawled like a baby in silence.

It broke me open.

There were several conversations during the weekend where I was challenged in this area, as well as one of the most emotional practices of my entire life, not because it was hard, per se, but because I was challenged to come into my body and be present in a way I haven’t in a long time.

But the more painful realization this weekend was how far away I’ve gotten from my soul, or my true self. Typing that makes my skin crawl, because it’s how I feel, and yet I’ve been so harsh and judgmental of others who write flowery posts about their soul. I used to think it was because I thought it was a silly waste of time; now, I think it’s because when I’m honest with myself, I realize how far away from my own self I’ve gotten.

Growing up, I was a really, really good kid. I got good grades. I never got in trouble at school — I made it through my entire academic career without as much as a tardy or a detention. I was a good Christian girl, and while I wasn’t perfect, I really didn’t stray from rules or what was expected of me until I was 22 years old, stuck in a miserable marriage and more depressed than I’ve ever been in my life. I blew up my whole life: divorce, lost my job, lost tons of friends, and did every “wrong” thing I could think of.

I’ve said for a long time that I missed that time in my life. I was so raw, and yet, I did so many things to find myself. I made art. I read and wrote. I cried a lot. I tried new things. I lived alone, and I ate what I wanted and did what I wanted. For maybe the first time in my whole life, I was myself. I wasn’t sure who that was, but I was bound and determined to find it.

I was also a hot mess financially, an emotional liability to the people around me and totally irresponsible with my heart. But as I’ve put my life back together over the past seven years and stopped being a total wreck, I’ve lost some of that spunk and spirit I had at 23. I’m proud of my ability to be financially responsible and to not be the drunk and sobbing girl at social gatherings, but I miss the joy I felt in taking time for things I’ve deemed silly, like art journaling and walking by the river.

My teacher observed that I’m prolific with words — I’m funny and witty and well-spoken, but it’s a deflection. She’s not wrong. This blog is a perfect example. I used to write just for me, about what was really going on and what I was feeling and over the past few years, I’ve worked to sterilize it as not to offend or upset or overshare. It’s embarrassing to admit just how much I depend on Facebook/Twitter/Instagram to bolster my sense of self, because it seems that people really like “Online Amy” and I worry about what people might think if they really knew me. I know I’m not alone in this. One glance at Pinterest reveals how many people are tying their lives and thoughts in pretty bows and posting them for all to see.

I think that the thing that makes me saddest is that when I was 23, coming through a divorce and leaving the church I grew up in and disappointing people I loved in a significant way for the first time, I swore up and down that I would never lose contact with what I felt inside ever again.

And while some of the things I fell in love with then have remained in tact, I’ve allowed the criticism and opinions of others to determine how I spend my time and what I share. A friend’s criticism about some art I’d made, an outburst about how what I write is ridiculous, some judgy looks about my choices have all been allowed space in my brain and caused me to change the way I spend my time. Someone I barely know disliking something I’ve said on Twitter can derail me for hours. A harsh word from someone I love can literally make me question everything I put into the world. While I’m no longer the little girl or broken young adult I once was, there is a huge part of me who is so terrified of letting my actual self out. I fear criticism, being disliked, saying anything controversial or upsetting others, whether they’re strangers or friends.

I’ve spent a long time pondering where to go from here. At first, I wanted a list of rules and things to do to prove that I was “getting back to my real self.” I wrestled with the idea of deleting my social media presence and changing a lot of things about the way I live. Obviously, those old habits die hard — I literally thought about how I could “win” the game of being present and real and living from my soul.

Andrew, who is the most real person I’ve ever known (and also a way better yogi than I am when it comes to yoga off the mat) suggested small changes and just feeling things out day by day as opposed to grand sweeping changes — after all, writing this blog makes me happy, as do a number of other things I was eager to cut right away. I was reminded of a phrase one of my teachers used repeatedly in a practice on Friday night: breathe and feel.

Breathe and feel. It’s that simple.

For me, that looks like putting away my phone every time there is a human being in front of me, and just enjoying the moment. It means worrying less about making sure all my posts look pretty and perfect. It means giving up things I hate but do because I think it makes me look “good” (namely: RUNNING. I hate that shit. Never again.) and filling it with things I love (like swimming and walking by the river). It means being a little bit quieter when I’m around other people. It means feeling my feelings instead of cracking a joke to detract from them, or trying to be the funniest person in the room. It means getting out my art stuff again and making things with my hands, even when that feels pointless or silly. It means really embracing the things I genuinely love, like green juice and healthy food, but refusing to beat myself up when I eat a burger. It means yoga and meditation, every single day. It means challenging myself to enjoy things I want to be better at, like photography, and to be less afraid of doing hard things. It means dressing my self in the way I feel like dressing, as opposed to a contrived sense of style. It means doing some things I’ve always wanted to do, but felt silly doing, like Zumba. It means crying when I feel like it, as opposed to trying to be so strong and stoic. It means embracing my hippie self, fully.

It means apologizing less and taking things less seriously. It means making time for the things that fill me up and leaving the rest alone.

It means listening to me. Again. And then acting from that place.

I realize that this post is stupid long already (thanks for reading, if you’re hanging in there) but I wanted to close with this quote I found yesterday. I love it. It’s exactly the place I want to live my life from.

“It’s extremely painful and incredibly humbling when we finally turn and face our soul. Because we immediately become face to face with the subtle and not so subtle ways we have consciously and unconsciously abandoned her. Like that time we kept quiet when we knew we should speak. Like that time we said yes, when we knew we should have said no. Like that time we took on that project despite the devastating toll it took on our body. Like that time we stayed in that relationship despite how unhealthy it was. Like that time we followed the crowd, instead of our inner guidance.

Entry into the life of the soul demands a steep price. What’s that price? Falsity. Everything that is not authentic. You see our souls don’t pay attention to the opinions, ideas, beliefs, trends, rules given to us by external authorities, such as the media, politicians, fashion magazines, doctors, spiritual gurus. They don’t seek approval, validation or acceptance from external sources. They know that true power does not come from anything outside of us. True power comes from surrendering to the divine authority within us. Embodying your soul is about living from the inside out. And requires that we ask ourselves on a daily, even an hourly, even a minute to minute basis…‘Does this person, place project, group, teacher, class, book, TV show…does this feel authentic to my soul?’ And then we have to bravely act on that answer.

Here’s to acting bravely, on my own behalf. This post is step one. It’s been so long since I’ve been afraid to hit publish.

 

Comments

  1. Shaba says:

    Bravo.
    I’m working through some of the same. We never stop discovering who we really are, do we? How ardorous a process. Today I’m acknowledging that though I’d really like to give up a bunch of stuff for lent (as well as add a bunch of daily practices) focusing on one or two changes is really what I need to do. And that I don’t like green juice. Even though I really, really wish I did.

    • admin says:

      It is arduous. Also rewarding, right? Good for you for realizing what you need. Thanks for the thoughtful comment <3

  2. Lisa says:

    Thank you for this post this morning, Amy. I definitely needed to read this. I am struggling right now as my life is going through a lot of shifting. There are a lot of changes happening, both big & small. I struggle daily with wanting to live a life that feels authentic & real & true to myself. Sometimes it’s nice to be reminded that it’s important to listen to that quiet inner voice. The one that is always whispering what it really wants. Anyway, I just want you to know that I love the little glimpses I get into your heart. You’re an inspiration and even though I don’t know you all that well, I appreciate & love you dearly. :)

  3. LofRede says:

    Oh honey, never be afraid to be yourself. You’ll get there

  4. Bethany says:

    Love. Love. Love.

    (And I’ll do Zumba with you)

  5. Jenn says:

    You know, the funny thing is that no matter how perfect we try to be online or in real life, someone still criticizes or dislikes us. So if we’re going to be criticized or disliked, it might as well be for something we truly believe in.

    Go get it girl. Love it.

  6. Katrina says:

    I really like Online Amy for posts like this. And for the fact that she hates running. I hate that shit, too.

  7. Elizabeth says:

    You know I love love love you so much, my friend. I really do. And the more Amy you are, the more I love you, not the other way around. I am so proud of you and so excited to see where you end up and so happy that you’re finding your way even when it gets hard.

    The running thing is the most perfect example. I could always tell that you don’t like it, and that your soul is meant to do yoga. I never said much about it because I don’t want to be discouraging, and who am I to say. But it’s obvious how much you don’t love running and how much you do love yoga. It’s your thing! And yet I could tell that you thought that you SHOULD love running and so you were going to MAKE YOURSELF DO IT, and I think it is JUST SUCH A GOOD SIGN that you can say, finally “No, I hate that shit.” and let yourself do something that you love for no other reason than that it’s the thing for you. Not because it’s the cool thing or because it’s the thing that people want to read about most on a blog or because other people think it’s great or WHATEVER REASON, but just because YOU love it. Your opinion of your life counts most. You’re the one who has to live it.

    • admin says:

      I love you so much, and I’m so grateful for our friendship because I know you love me, just as I am, all the time.

  8. Kim says:

    You have a true gift. I’ve been wanting to say these things about myself but I’m not quite as able to express it in such a meaningful way. I worry so much, so constantly, about what family, who read my blog will think. I worry that they will take something the wrong way. As a result, my blog has become very surface and I’ve become a very shallow version of myself. I hardly ever allow my passions to overcome me or my writing anymore. When I first started blogging, I wrote myself to tears sometimes and it felt so good. All those heartfelt posts are gone now, deleted out of fear of what others would think of me. I’ve been so sad lately that I’ve lost such an important part of myself and have been unsure of how to get it back. Thank you for being real. It inspires me to be brave, cut the shit, and find my true self again as well.

  9. Amber says:

    This post resonates so much with me you don’t even know. I have a lot of shit going on in my life these days that I can’t even begin to blog about or put online. I feel…lost… that’s the only word I can think of to explain it even though it’s not quite right either. I think a little more listening to my soul and just being is in order for me too. I will be re-transcribing that quote to refer to in the future. Also? Your posts about yoga teacher training and how much it is opening you up is making me want to do it sooner rather than later.

    • admin says:

      You’d love YTT. I’m so sorry you’re feeling lost…I understand. I’m always just an email away <3

  10. Lindsay says:

    i am so glad you wrote this. i needed to read it. real, messy, honest, heart-wrenching art like this is a thousand times more inspiring than any pretty picture on pinterest. thank you.

    • admin says:

      Thank you for reading. I’m trying to remember that part about real being better than perfect <3

  11. diana says:

    I’m so happy you hit publish. I believe in you, Amy, as “flowery” as that sounds.

    I always forget there’s “online” us and the real us. I’ve always seen you as a strong woman who doesn’t crap from anything, and I knew I was right, even if you’re just dusting off your old self. Also running- never again. I could give myself a black eye with my boobs. GUH.

  12. Kathleen says:

    Just wanted to say that I like all of the Amy’s that you’ve put out there, but it’s when you’re being real like this that I like you best. :)

  13. Jenna says:

    I may come back three times throughout the day to finish it, but that doesn’t mean an apology is in order or the post is stupid. your words take as long as they take, and i like them regardless of length.

  14. Thank you for being real, Amy. You often write posts that say exactly what I want to say before I know how to say it. I’m working on figuring out who that real “me” is, and in the mean time I’ve barely been blogging. I feel like I don’t know what to say, and the posts that I know might gain an audience are often posts that are made up by my online personality, the one who isn’t really me. And yet, at 28 years old I’m still trying to figure out who that is. There’s such a difference between us and who we want to be. How do we figure out the difference?

    Melanie Kristy

    • admin says:

      I wish there was a guide or plan to figuring it out. I’m just going by breathe and feel. We’ll see :)

  15. Erin says:

    I wrote a post the other day about carrying about what others think of me. I’ve changed a lot over the past year, for the better I think, but it’s definitely a different me. I spend time wondering what others think of this new me. I’m not being fake, I’m evolving and trying to become the best version of myself. But I still worry how others perceive me. Some “haters” have scoffed and commented that they barely know me any more. And as much as it hurts and I think about continuing to be the person they want me to be, I refuse to live in a box to satisfy someone else. Loved this post, Amy.

    • admin says:

      Haters gonna hate, right? I think when we change, it can make others uncomfortable because they have to consider their own choices. It’s a journey! Thanks for reading!

  16. Stephany says:

    I love this post so much. I love posts where pushing publish feels like the hardest thing in the world and being vulnerable like this is not easy at all. I’ve gone through valleys like this where I know I’m not being true to myself and I know I’m hiding my true self because of fear of what people will think. I’ve gotten negative feedback and comments that make me want to delete my blog and social media presence because they hurt my soul so much. So then I stop being so real, so me, and start writing easy things and the passion is just gone. I understand this a lot.

    Also, the running thing: JUST YES. I decided this exact same thing a few weeks ago. I hate it… so why do I do it? I WANT to love it and I WANT to be one of this super-cool runner girls… but it’s just not my path to take. It’s so freeing and powerful when we discover these things and let go!

    • admin says:

      It is freeing! To know I will likely never run again makes me so happy it’s kind of dumb, lol. Vulnerability is tough. I hope you’ll never let it crush you, ya know?

  17. Rebecca (Bearca) says:

    This is beautiful and so are you. Also, this hits way too close to home. Which means that somehow, in getting in touch with your own soul, you’ve somehow managed to touch mine, as well. XOXO

  18. Kam says:

    Amy, I rarely sit down and immerse myself in a long post like this. I usually brush it off, scoff, and say something extra-bitchy like, “LOOK, I ain’t got time for this!”. I am so happy that I forwarded myself this post to read while at work. Yes, I’m at work, totally on the internet when I’ve been told to lay off, because I knew this post deserved my full attention.

    You are an amazing writer. Your words are so well chosen that I don’t fee like you were taking the long way to say something simple…you simply say simple things in a beautiful way. You are brave for opening up and being honest about your feelings during your coursework, about the struggles you’ve lived through to become the badass-woman you are today. I’m sure you’re up to your eyeballs in positive affirmation commets right now, but you deserve them.

    Your post today reminds me of the story one of my teachers recited at the beginning of a particularly awesome vinaysa class a few weeks ago. Maybe you’ve heard it before:

    One evening an old Cherokee told his grandson about a battle that goes on inside people.
    He said, “My son, the battle is between two wolves inside us all.

    “One is Evil – It is anger, envy, jealousy, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, self-pity, guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, false pride, superiority, and ego.

    “The other is Good – It is joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, humility, kindness, benevolence, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion and faith.”

    The grandson thought about it for a minute and then asked his grandfather: “Which wolf wins?”

    The old Cherokee simply replied, “The one you feed.”

    Please keep sharing your words and your journey to your true self. You’re inspiring others to feed the Good.

    • admin says:

      I love that tale so much. It’s one of my favorites. Thank you for reading, and for such a thoughtful comment!

  19. Kate says:

    You = AMAZING + inspiring.

    • admin says:

      YOU are, too. PS, I still want to hang out!!! <3

      • Kate says:

        I would absolutely love to! Do you have my number? BTW, you and you alone inspired me to take up vinyasa flow, which I now do at this amazing studio, locally. Maybe I can head your way and try Zuda sometime, or vice versa for a class.

  20. kt says:

    Thank you. I needed to hear this. I have been struggling with how to remain friends with someone I care about but is incredibly, reflexively judgemental (not of me, but I take many of her comments personally anyway. and that part is my problem).

    I have been reflecting on something my studio posted the other day: “Judging a person does not define who they are. It defines who YOU are.”

    • admin says:

      I love that quote so much. I need to remember it more.

      Also, yeah…I need to not take everything so damn personally! It’s a process!!!

  21. Danielle says:

    This is so refreshing and really stuck a cord with me. I know for a fact that I’m not true to my soul – just as you describe. Always trying to please someone else and shying away from conflict. It has got to stop. This is serving as my reminder. Thank you.

  22. Courtney says:

    This post is incredible. Also, this line pretty much sums me up:
    “I fear criticism, being disliked, saying anything controversial or upsetting others, whether they’re strangers or friends.”

    I know that feeling so, so well. It’s really hard to overcome, and I applaud the enormous strides you’ve taken to do so. Seriously, I go to pieces over the smallest criticisms; even when I don’t make a big show about it, I’ll dwell on it for days. I’m working on letting things go, and it’s great to see how much you have too!

    • admin says:

      Learning to let it go is so hard. Not dwelling is so difficult. I hear ya. Thanks for your thoughtful comment!

  23. sizzle says:

    I hear you, sister, and commend you for speaking your truth. Every time I write a post that is from my heart/soul I worry about being that vulnerable but it’s always worth it. Every. Single. Time.

    I love seeing you in this place. It’s beautiful.

    (P.S. Zumba is fun. Go!)

  24. Robin says:

    Amy,
    Thank you… I really mean it. First of all, you’re the one who linked me to Tara Brach’s podcasts a couple of months ago, and as a result, for the first time in ever, there’s a source (that I trust) (that I feel safe turning to) that’s honestly helping me open myself up to the vulnerability of being present… and though so far, my trying to open up and be “real” has been tentative and reluctant, it’s giving me hope. (Yeah, I know, BARF… but this is not the time for cynical self-censorship…)

    I’m also realizing that, unlike just-about-everything I’ve succeeded & excelled at my whole life, I can’t get any better at authenticity and being present without (sincerely) letting go of the certainty, of the comforting, concrete, logical, external standards and validation… (which never fills me up; that makes me “need” to go get another fix, and another, and another. Right?) All that stuff that’s the REASON for my successes so far–it’s really hard to make myself believe I have to let go of it! But there’s the key: I can’t _make_ myself believe… so wherever I am is where I need to start… But I digress.

    I think I had a spark of recognition when you write “shit got real”… just being honest here, I’ve always completely loathed that phrase (!!) …but I feel like I recognize what you’re describing–a flash of terrifying understanding that none of the external validations/confirmations that I grasp at are really real… accompanied by an equally terrifying glimpse of profound freedom and possibility… And that bit of recognition, of a feeling of actual understanding of someone or something–that that might be the solid ground I can trust, that will actually provide what I thought all that chasing-after-the-A+ crap would give me. That might be worth chasing… (or, um, sitting quietly on a mat, as the case may be…)

    God, so I have a zillion doubts about posting (especially posting without revising 10000000 times!), but if I mean what I said above–and I think I do–it would be a crime (against my own soul) not to write and show a little of myself and say thank you.

    Thank you.

    • admin says:

      The validation thing really IS a fix — it’s addicting! Trying so hard to get away from it. Thank you for such a great and thoughtful comment <3

  25. Molly says:

    What a beautiful way to be introduced to your blog. Thank you for your genuine, tender, brave and open heart… and thank you for sharing it here!

  26. kim says:

    I’ll walk along the river with you anytime!

  27. A says:

    I love you, Amy

  28. Kathleen says:

    Long-time reader, first-time commenter.

    I just wanted to let you know I loved your honesty in this post. You are on a sacred spiritual journey, as we all are. I really like the self-authority you demonstrate here – it’s wonderful!

  29. Gina says:

    One of the best entries you’ve ever written!! So happy for your revelation Amy, you will remember this moment in time for years to come! :-) xo

  30. I don’t know that I’ve ever posted before, but I’ve been following your blog for a few months. Well said and well done. Totally resonated with my soul and I appreciate the authenticity here. Coming from a recent divorce, I’m “getting what you’re laying down” both from your description of your own situation back then and where you are now. Maybe there’s something about being 23? Because my 23 year was freeing, exhilarating, and completing inspiring too. :)

    • admin says:

      Thank you so much for your comment. I think divorce really rips you open in a way that’s hard to understand unless you’ve been there. It’s a blessing (and really hard!). Much love to you!

  31. I’m not sure I can adequately convey just how much I relate to this post, not the present of myself, but the past. I was where you are a few years back, realizing that I’d lost my center. That part of my self that was ME, and that stayed steady, and true to self.

    A long journey later, and I’m as much myself as I’ve ever been. And I’m so very okay with it, with myself, with all my vulnerabilities and foibles and idiosyncrasies and absolute ugly parts that annoy the shit out of people. I’ve lost friends, and moved on from relationships, but the ones I’ve kept are true.

    My point really, is just to say that I get it. That’s all.

    • admin says:

      I think you’re so brave and strong, and I’m glad (and hopeful) to know that at the end of the journey, I could end up like you <3

  32. Megan says:

    This is absolutely lovely. Thanks for keeping it real. I thought about ‘Breath and feel. It’s that simple.’ all day today.

  33. “I’ve allowed the criticism and opinions of others to determine how I spend my time and what I share.”

    YES. Oh man. Criticizing others generally makes the criticizer look ugly, not all insightful and “above it all.” And we all have our moments of being that girl, but damn. I don’t want to be that girl who just judges everyone else instead of living her own life. And I don’t want to be that other girl who lets the judgey girl affect how I live my life.

    I am not making sense, am I?

    I’ve gotten to the point where I just have to spend less time online. Or less of my LIFE online.

    Once you figure out how to use social media without taking some amount of pleasure in the validation, let me know, ‘kay? I’m bad at that. (Liiiiiiiiike me.)

    Also, you are fantastic. Every version of you that I know and love it wonderful. You have so much to offer the world. <3

  34. I loved this, which will probably not surprise you, as much as I’ve railed about all of this myself. I try not to get angry about lifestyle blogging, because I don’t really think my resentment is going to help matters for anyone. But the sterilized content just seems so … lonely to me. I don’t need pretty pictures that have been staged within an inch of their lives. What I need is to know others as real people, because that is what human connection requires in order to thrive.

  35. LOVE this. I wish there were more posts like this out in the blogosphere. Not that you can recreate what you wrote here, but I love the raw, honest, authenticity of this post. It feels real and these are the posts that keep people coming back. I think we all get caught up in doing things sometimes because it’s what others are doing or what others are telling us to do or what we should be doing to fit this mold of who we’ve professed ourselves to be.

    I feel like there is this unhealthy amount of pressure in life – both in real life and the blogging world – to be all OH MY LIFE IS SO PERFECT. Well, it’s not. No one’s is, at least I don’t think so. So we might as well ‘fess up when things aren’t going well and find a new direction… I have been struggling lately too because I feel like I have so many people telling me what they think I should do, and these are not light little comments, they are long conversations, some laced with guilt, and I don’t like feeling this way. I am making some major life decisions right now and I am thinking through all of it (at least I think I am) so I am tired of people either making me feel like I am making the wrong decision, or acting like I haven’t thought it through… I just want to wake up in July or something when some of the upheaval is behind me.

    Lastly – I met you in real person, and I like you just as much, if not more, in real life. I think you are thebomb.com. :)

  36. Kori says:

    I know I’m a little bit late on commenting on this, but this post brought me nearly to tears. I’ve definitely been there – in a place where everything was superficially right, and I was doing everything I was supposed to be doing, and on some level I was so deeply unhappy with all of that. Since then, I’ve tried to be okay with letting things be a little bit messy, letting myself be free to write and read and be a little bit volatile, and it’s definitely helped.

    But this isn’t really about me. It’s about you, and knowing you, I can tell you that I love the real-life Amy most of all. I know it’s been a while since we’ve seen each other, and since we’ve talked in a meaningful way, but I want you to know that your beautiful self is still on my mind and in my heart, and thank you for writing this post.

  37. Courtney says:

    Thank you for posting this! I’m constantly amazed by how truly difficult it is to discover our selves and then stay true to that person. There are many (many, many) times where I feel like I don’t know who I am (and, as hard as it is to say, I feel like I lost a bit of that person when I became a mother) and so I try to overcompensate and say things that, in my head, I know come off as contrived. I was even doing it with my online social media presence – trying to be a design/decor blogger when I wasn’t passionate about it. Perhaps it’s a by-product of wanting to be liked by all people and maybe I just shouldn’t give a shit but old habits die hard.

    Also, running, yeah, it’s a load of crap. :)

  38. Sarah Anne says:

    Thank you for writing this. For giving me hope.

  39. Eleni says:

    I’m late to the party but I’ve been catching up.and felt compelled to leave a comment. I’ve been going on a similar journey for a few years. Yup, it’s taking me years to figure out this authenticity business. Maybe I’m slow or maybe it takes that long, I don’t know, but I’m sticking with it.

    And I really believe that there are such few people in the world who struggle with these grand ideas of “being me” and who then have the guts to go and do the hard work of achieving it. (Achieving is the wrong word but I can’t think of another.) Anyway, my point is that this post really touched me by its honesty and I’m totally rooting for you. <3

    P.S Also, hi! Not a runner either. I'm a walker. And it was your yoga journey that inspired me to quit failing at running and start winning at walking. :)

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  1. [...] want to thank all of you who took the time to comment on this post about authenticity. WOW! I was overwhelmed with your kindness. I tried to reply to all the comments, but if I missed [...]

  2. [...] Amy writes a lovely post on being true to yourself [...]

  3. [...] post on being authentic and tapping into the real you hit me so hard. I loved every single word and found myself nodding along through the entire read. [...]

  4. [...] Amy wrote a wonderfully honest and authentic piece on how her yoga training is changing her life. [...]

  5. [...] week, I wrote about my teacher training and how I’m struggling to become more me. I wish I could say that I continued in my zen state of mind, happily continuing my journey to [...]

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