The Weeks Well

Kim Weeks

The Weeks Well is a podcast about being your best self. Hosted by wellness entrepreneur Kim Weeks, The Weeks Well brings you conversations on the practices in yoga and wellness, how to understand the deeper study of yoga, and how to learn about the best kind of yoga and mindfulness for you. What *is* the best kind of yoga for *you* to practice sustainably through your life? We strive to bring you the answer to that question in every podcast. Kim and The Weeks Well curate impactful conversations, with actionable takeaways for living an educated, embodied, and wellness-practiced life.

  1. 49. If I only had a year to live: A thought experiment with Ty Powers

    12/21/2023

    49. If I only had a year to live: A thought experiment with Ty Powers

    Thank you for bearing with me while I’ve taken a short break. I’ve missed doing this podcast, and I’m so glad that Ty Powers, mindfulness guide extraordinaire, is the person to bring me back and round out this year. "You live your values every day." I loved reflecting on this one sentence from Ty, even though so much else he shared is such a beautiful year-end gift. Ty has been working in the mindfulness, yoga, and Buddhist sphere for decades, alongside his wife Sarah who was a guest on this show in the fall. He works for Skillfullchange.org and is a change and transition strategist. We talked a lot about how modern life has blurred the seasons of our lives and how the information age has caused us to misalign our bodies from our minds. We discussed the challenges that modern life brings up and how we can continue to utilize the wisdom traditions to look inside ourselves to uncover and recover parts of ourselves we pushed to the side. Ty and Sarah call this work Internal Family Systems, in which you can imagine having a whole family inside of you with different personalities and stories. These two episodes with Ty and Sarah, who I’ve known for almost 20 years, feel like the best way to wrap up 2023. Stay tuned for a special episode next week on my year and my plans for 2024. And let me know what you think of this episode! ____ Terms and references: 1. ⁠Ty Powers⁠ 2. Skillful Change 3. Phillip Moffitt 4. Buddhism: a religion or philosophical tradition based on teachings from the Buddha 5. The three marks of existence: in Buddhism, everything is marked by three characteristics - impermanence, suffering or dissatisfaction, and non-self 6. Internal Family Systems (IFS) 7. W.A.I.T. Why Am I Talking? 8. A Book of Silence, by Sarah Maitland 9. Lojong: a practice in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition which uses various lists of aphorisms for contemplative practice; mind training 10. Seven Points of Mind Training 11. Sarah Powers episode on The Weeks Well ____ Episode credits: Original music by Kim's band Governess. Produced by Alyssa Yeroshefsky and Kim Weeks. ____ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Subscribe to the Weeks Well newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and to our latest regular content community, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. For more info on Kim Weeks, visit www.weekswell.com. Follow Kim on Instagram (@weeks.well), Facebook (@weeks.well), Twitter (@weeks_well), YouTube (@weekswell), Patreon (Weeks Well), and TikTok (@weekswell). Copyright © 2023 Weeks Well®.

    1h 1m
  2. 48. To grow on purpose, with Sarah Powers

    09/29/2023

    48. To grow on purpose, with Sarah Powers

    It feels at once difficult and incredibly easy to describe Sarah Powers and her work. She’s yet another beautiful embodiment of the intention of this podcast. A multidisciplinary practitioner, teacher, innovator, woman, mother, and global citizen, she offers 35 years of some of the deepest and most committed messages of interpersonal insight on how best for our species to thrive. This, all while we learn to survive and face the consequences of climate change and the many distractions we have invented to look away from ourselves, each other, and the planet. All of this has to do with the ground, as she describes in our conversation, of practice. One of the founders of Yin Yoga, author of Insight Yoga (2008) and Lit from Within (2021), and co-creator—along with her husband, Ty Powers—of the Insight Yoga Institute, her teachings are, in my mind, central to the importance and impact of modern yoga. Share this episode and Sarah’s work with everyone you know. The sound of her voice alone is worth taking in. That’s before you get to the import of her message, her life’s work. Enjoy! ____ Terms and references: 1. Sarah Powers 2. Insight Yoga, by Sarah Powers 3. Lit from Within, by Sarah Powers 4. Ida: one of the nadis, or channels of energy. Ida is the left channel, which has a moonlike nature and feminine energy. 5. Pingala: one of the nadis. Pingala is the right channel, which has a sunlike nature and masculine energy. 6. Sushumna: one of the nadis. Sushumna is the central and most important channel. 7. John Schumacher⁠ 8. Ty Powers 9. Iyengar yoga: a style of yoga, founded by B.K.S. Iyengar, focusing on the structural alignment of the body through the poses. 10. Ashtanga yoga: a style of yoga, popularized by Pattabhi Jois, consisting of six series with a fixed order of poses. 11. YogaWorks 12. Erich Schiffmann 13. Bernie Clarke 14. ⁠Paul Grilley⁠ 15. Paul Grilley on The Weeks Well 16. Psychosynthesis: a type of psychology focused on a purposeful future, giving individuals the capacity to reorient their lives in the direction of meaning and values. 17. Internal Family Systems 18. Vipassana: an ancient meditation technique focused on self-observation. 19. Tantric: a type of Buddhism that focuses on mystical practices and concepts as a path to enlightenment. 20. Dzogchen: utilizes methods of meditation and yoga that help one fully awaken from illusions of self and reality that cause suffering in life. ____ Episode credits: Original music by Kim's band Governess. Produced by Alyssa Yeroshefsky and Kim Weeks. ____ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Subscribe to the Weeks Well newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and to our latest regular content community, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. For more info on Kim Weeks, visit www.weekswell.com. Follow Kim on Instagram (@weeks.well), Facebook (@weeks.well), Twitter (@weeks_well), YouTube (@weekswell), Patreon (Weeks Well), and TikTok (@weekswell). Copyright © 2023 Weeks Well®.

    59 min
  3. 47. Yoga is a thing all by itself, with Paul Grilley

    09/22/2023

    47. Yoga is a thing all by itself, with Paul Grilley

    This conversation is one that I hope delights and inspires you. Always clear, succinct and, though he argues with this last point, original, Paul Grilley brought so much to the project that is The Weeks Well. I would call him—and Sarah Powers, who will be on the show in two weeks—the OG of Yin Yoga. In combining an East Asian word or concept with a South Asian word or concept, they have not only officially, through our industry’s nomenclature, broadened the definition and reach of yoga, they have underscored how yoga “is a thing in itself.” We talked about the chakras as the multiverse, your body as something akin to a kind of clay you are working with, and, coolest of all for me, about how the body is a battlefield between higher spiritual ambitions and animalistic instincts you need to survive in this world. Your sense of wellbeing is an even flow of energy. Learn more about what Paul and his many students and sub-students think about how to get there. Enjoy! ____ Terms and references: 1. Paul Grilley 2. Paul's recent essay on chakras, bandhas, and mudras 3. Sarah Powers 4. Bikram yoga: a system of hot yoga, founded by Bikram Choudhury, featuring a fixed sequence of 26 poses 5. Power yoga: vinyasa-style yoga focused on building strength and endurance 6. Ashtanga yoga: a style of yoga, popularized by Pattabhi Jois, consisting of six series with a fixed order of poses 7. Bernie Clarke 8. Hiroshi Motoyama: a Japanese parapsychologist, scientist, spiritual instructor, and author who focused on spiritual self-cultivation and the relationship between the mind and body 9. Meridian/fascia theory 10. Chakras: seven energy centers that run from the base of the spine to the top of the head 11. Mudras: signs, seals or symbols 12. Bandhas: locks 13. Samskaras: mental impressions or memories 14. Nadis: channels of energy 15. Sushumna nadi: the primary of the three main nadis in the body. 16. Chittra ni nadi: an energetic canal within the spinal column 17. Paramahansa Yogananda 18. Medulla oblongata: the connection between the brain stem and the spinal cord 19. Dharma: one's duty 20. Physicalism: the doctrine that the real world consists simply of the physical world 21. Idealism: the practice of forming or pursuing ideals, especially unrealistically 22. Prakriti: the Nature 23. Purusha: the divine Self which resides in all beings 24. Vin Yin Yoga: blends the yang elements of a vinyasa class with the restorative benefits of yin yoga 25. Rudolf Steiner: an Austrian occultist, social reformer, architect, esotericist, and claimed clairvoyant 26. Vinyasa: a style of yoga characterized by moving seamlessly from one pose to the next using the breath 27. John Schumacher 28. Savasana: corpse pose 29. Pranayama: breath control, one of the eight limbs of yoga ____ Episode credits: Original music by Kim's band Governess. Produced by Alyssa Yeroshefsky and Kim Weeks. ____ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Subscribe to the Weeks Well newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and to our latest regular content community, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. For more info on Kim Weeks, visit www.weekswell.com. Follow Kim on Instagram (@weeks.well), Facebook (@weeks.well), Twitter (@weeks_well), YouTube (@weekswell), Patreon (Weeks Well), and TikTok (@weekswell). Copyright © 2023 Weeks Well®.

    1h 5m
  4. 46. Wisdom in many places, with Tracee Stanley

    09/08/2023

    46. Wisdom in many places, with Tracee Stanley

    I learned about Tracee Stanley from Gail Parker. These are both names I hope you now know as you follow the conversations on this podcast and as we dive into what yoga lineage is and why or whether it matters. Tracee is the first teacher I’ve talked to who has come from the Himalayan Yoga tradition. I’m glad she’s the first and I am looking forward to more greats from that school. Tracee is an author, Tantrika, teacher and, as she underscored in our talk, a listener. She also strikes me as a nature goddess, as the images on her site show, and as she describes nature as the source of so much of her inspiration. We talked about her experience identifying as a post-lineage teacher and how she dips in and out of teachings from elders and wisdom practices that continue to connect her to the experience of remembering. We talked about the “industrial overculture” that doesn’t want you to find your true self, because that wouldn’t be such a productive discovery, probably.  She wrote her first book, Radiant Rest, from her “yoga nidra nest,” and her upcoming book, The Luminous Self, is a summary of many practices she has learned, taught, and witnessed in her decades of teaching. Enjoy! ____ Terms and references: 1. Tracee Stanley⁠ 2. ⁠The Luminous Self, by Tracee Stanley - use code LUM30 to get 30% off when preordering at Shambhala.com⁠ 3. ⁠Radiant Rest, by Tracee Stanley⁠ 4. ⁠Beryl Bender on The Weeks Well⁠ 5. Krishnamacharya 6. Tantric meditation: an energetic-based meditation based on Tantra, an esoteric yoga tradition 7. Kundalini Yoga: a type of yoga that involves chanting, singing, breathing exercises, and repetitive poses 8. Hatha Yoga: the physical aspect of yoga practice, including postures, breathing techniques, seals, locks, and cleansing practices 9. Yoga sutras of Patanjali, translated by Mukunda Stiles⁠ 10. Himalayan tradition 11. Koshas: the energetic layers, or sheaths, of the body 12. Swami Veda Bharati 13. Rod Stryker⁠  14. ⁠Doug Keller on The Weeks Well 15. ⁠Post-Lineage Yoga, by Theo Wildcroft 16. ⁠Gary Kraftsow 17. Rishis/rishikas: an accomplished and enlightened person; Rishika was a tribe in Central Asia and South Asia mentioned in Hindu and Sanskrit texts 18. Yoga nidra: also called yogic sleep, it is a state of consciousness between waking and sleeping, typically induced by a guided meditation 19. ⁠Chanti Tacoronte-Perez 20. Yoga Sutra 1:36 (from Swami Satchidananda' translation): "Or by concentrating on the supreme, ever-blissful Light within." 21. ⁠Gail Parker on The Weeks Well ____ Episode credits: Original music by Kim's band Governess. Produced by Alyssa Yeroshefsky and Kim Weeks. ____ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Subscribe to the Weeks Well newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and to our latest regular content community, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. For more info on Kim Weeks, visit www.weekswell.com. Follow Kim on Instagram (@weeks.well), Facebook (@weeks.well), Twitter (@weeks_well), YouTube (@weekswell), Patreon (Weeks Well), and TikTok (@weekswell). Copyright © 2023 Weeks Well®.

    58 min
  5. 45. Best of: The yoga sutras as zip files, with Dr. Shyam Ranganathan

    08/25/2023

    45. Best of: The yoga sutras as zip files, with Dr. Shyam Ranganathan

    💡For the month of August, we're re-releasing a few of our favorite podcasts from the 2023 season so far. Enjoy listening (or re-listening!) to these talks and, as always, tell us your thoughts and send over guest ideas. ____ Dr. Shyam Ranganathan holds an MA in South Asian Studies and an MA and PhD in Philosophy. He’s a strong voice on social media, and this is one of the few yoga handles that actually stops my scroll. That's for the same reason he kept me rapt in our conversation two months ago. We talked about his research on understanding how Non-Western traditions such as yoga are marginalized in a Western world and how BIPOC traditions of philosophy can help understand colonialism and inform our way forward and away from it. We discussed how he approaches the practice of yoga, which he basically equates with the word 'Bhakti' since both words point to devotional practices; he describes yoga as being about devotion to individual and personal autonomy or sovereignty. Since so many of us don’t speak or study Sanskrit as a language or study yoga the way Dr. Ranganathan has, it strikes me that there is a lot to learn here. He offers a fresh perspective on pre-colonial yoga and how we can reclaim threads of it into our modern understanding of what we’re doing and how we’re practicing. I absolutely loved this conversation and hope you do too.  ____ Terms: 1. Logos: an appeal to the audience's sense of reason or logic 2. Religio: A Greek term originally meaning an obligation to the Gods 3. Dharma: duty 4. Churning of the Milk Ocean: an event in Hindu mythology when the gods obtain immortality by consuming the elixir of immortality 5. Ishvara: in Hinduism, God understood as a person 6. Tapas: spiritual austerity 7. Svadhyaya: spiritual study 8. Samskara: mental impression 9. Puja: worship service 10. Virtue ethics: a philosophical approach that urges people to live a moral life by cultivating virtuous habits 11. Consequentialism: a theory that says whether something is good or bad depends on its outcomes 12. Deontology: the study of nature of duty and obligation 13. Bhakti: devotional worship directed to one supreme deity 14. Kaivalya: experience of absoluteness 15. Dharmamegha samadhi: cloud of virtue samadhi (contemplation); when you have lost even the desire for enlightenment 16. Brahmans: members of the highest Hindu caste 17. Asmita: ego sense 18. Vyasa: a revered sage in most Hindu traditions 19. Samkhyakarika: the earliest surviving text of the Samkhya school of Indian philosophy 20. Vrtti: modification ____ References: 1. ⁠Dr. Shyam Ranganathan's Yoga Philosophy website⁠ 2. ⁠Dr. Shyam Ranganathan's Instagram account⁠ 3. ⁠Hatha Yoga Pradipika, by Swami Muktibodhananda ⁠ 4. ⁠The Trauma of Caste: A Dalit Feminist Meditation on Survivorship, Healing, and Abolition, by Thenmozhi Soundararajan⁠ 5. ⁠Anjali Rao's episode on The Weeks Well ⁠ 6. ⁠Shannon Crow's episode on The Weeks Well⁠ ____ Episode credits: Original music by Kim's band Governess. Produced by Alyssa Yeroshefsky and Kim Weeks. ____ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Subscribe to the Weeks Well newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and to our latest regular content community, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. For more info on Kim Weeks, visit www.weekswell.com. Follow Kim on Instagram (@weeks.well), Facebook (@weeks.well), Twitter (@weeks_well), YouTube (@weekswell), Patreon (Weeks Well), and TikTok (@weekswell). Copyright © 2023 Weeks Well®.

    1h 7m
  6. 44. Best of: Jillan Pransky is passing on Pema Chӧdrӧn's teachings

    08/18/2023

    44. Best of: Jillan Pransky is passing on Pema Chӧdrӧn's teachings

    💡For the month of August, we're re-releasing a few of our favorite podcasts from the 2023 season so far. Enjoy listening (or re-listening!) to these talks and, as always, tell us your thoughts and send over guest ideas. ____ Have you ever thought about relaxation being a prerequisite to rest? Jillian Pransky does, and she says that relaxation is a prerequisite to listening. As we discuss here, it’s a process, and one that, thanks to science, we can now name and describe in detail. I would suggest that Jillian is part of a new cadre of experienced teachers exploring the art and practice of restorative yoga, which, yes, has its roots in Iyengar Yoga, but which is evolving beyond this original offering through such interdisciplinary health-span studies as the ones Jillian has been engaged in. Jillian's teaching is most influenced by the Tibetan Buddhist nun Pema Chӧdrӧn. We go deeply into her experience as the yoga teacher for Chӧdrӧn's years of retreats at Omega Institute, when she "rewired her brain" to teach the way she does now. Like many, Jillian grew up ambitious, athletic, and professionally successful, and what she has found through years of practice is a sweet spot of nervous system and body-based regulation that comes from aligning the somatic layers of the body—these in the South Asian philosophy and practice are the physical, mental, emotional, breath, and bliss layers, or the koshas. I can't recommend her Deep Listening enough, and I remain astonished that she was even able to use it as a title because isn’t that what all yoga practice is? I hope you enjoy this conversation as much as I did! ____ Terms: 1. Yoga asana: yoga postures 2. Guru/Shisya: spiritual guide or teacher 3. Tantra Yoga: a practice using yantra (a figure representing a particular aspect of the Divine) and mantra (a sound formula for meditation) to experience the union of the masculine and feminine within the individual 4. Chakras: seven energy points running from the base of the spine to the crown of the head ____ References: 1. ⁠Jillian Pransky⁠ 2. ⁠⁠Deep Listening, by Jillian Pransky⁠⁠ 3. ⁠Dr. Gail Parker on The Weeks Well podcast⁠ 4. ⁠Transcendental Meditation⁠ 5. ⁠Homecoming: Reclaiming and Championing Your Inner Child, by John Bradshaw ⁠ 6. ⁠Fit Nation: The Gains and Pains of America's Exercise Obsession, by Natalia Mehlman Petrzela⁠ 7. ⁠Alan Finger and Mani Finger⁠ 8. ⁠ISHTA Yoga⁠ 9. ⁠The Connected Yoga Teacher Podcast⁠ 10. ⁠International Association of Yoga Therapists⁠ 11. ⁠Jon Kabat-Zinn⁠ 12. ⁠Deepak Chopra⁠ 13. ⁠Omega Institute⁠ 14. ⁠Swami Vivekananda⁠ 15. ⁠Hatha Yoga Pradipika, by Swami Muktibodhananda⁠ 16. ⁠JJ Gormley⁠ 17. ⁠Tara Brach⁠ 18. ⁠Sharon Salzburg⁠ 19. ⁠Sylvia Boorstein⁠ 20. ⁠Seane Corn on The Weeks Well podcast⁠ 21. ⁠Metta Institute ⁠ 22. ⁠Eddie Stern on The Weeks Well podcast⁠ ____ Episode credits: Original music by Kim's band Governess. Produced by Alyssa Yeroshefsky and Kim Weeks. ____ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Subscribe to the Weeks Well newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and to our latest regular content community, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. For more info on Kim Weeks, visit www.weekswell.com. Follow Kim on Instagram (@weeks.well), Facebook (@weeks.well), Twitter (@weeks_well), YouTube (@weekswell), Patreon (Weeks Well), and TikTok (@weekswell). Copyright © 2023 Weeks Well®.

    1h 13m
  7. 43. Best of: Thought as medicine in yoga, with Doug Keller

    08/11/2023

    43. Best of: Thought as medicine in yoga, with Doug Keller

    💡For the month of August, we're re-releasing a few of our favorite podcasts from the 2023 season so far. Enjoy listening (or re-listening!) to these talks and, as always, tell us your thoughts and send over guest ideas. ____ Doug Keller's talks with me continue to be some of our most popular episodes. Here in his second episode, we explored what became a set of expanded precepts whose inclusion into modern practice could change yoga practice. ⁠Rather than the 10 yamas (restraints) and niyamas (observances)⁠ that nearly every yoga teacher at least touches on in a teacher training, he offered 20. These come from the Natha Yogis, who in the 9th-10th centuries carried on with these behavioral suggestions for living a good life and, in doing so, embraced the tradition in yoga of practicing, experimenting, sitting with those experiments, and practicing some more. I think it's time in modern yoga to consider what Doug and I explored here. We also got into politics and social issues! I hope this talk delights you as much as his first episode did! ____ Terms: 1. Prakriti: the Nature 2. Upanishads: Hindu religious texts in Sanskrit that make up the Vedas 3. Mahavira: founder of Jain spiritual system 4. Vedas: the most ancient Hindu scriptures 5. Mahabharata: a Sanskrit epic poem, which includes the Bhagavad Gita 6. Pada: portion 7. Kleshas: obstacles; the kleshas are considered the cause of suffering and are to be actively overcome 8. Henry Thomas Colebrooke: a Sanskrit scholar and orientalist 9. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: a German philosopher who is considered one of the founding figures of modern Western philosophy 10. Ralph Waldo Emerson: an American writer and philosopher who led the transcendentalist movement of the mid-19th century 11. Henry David Thoreau: an American wrier and philosopher who was a leading transcendentalist 12. Neo-Vedanta: also called Hindu modernism, the Hinduism that developed in the 19th century 13. Swami Vivekananda: the first Hindu teacher to arrive in New England, taught Vedanta 14. Chakras: seven wheels of energy in the body located from the base of the spine to the crown of the head 15. Hatha Yoga Pradipika: a 15th-century Sanskrit text on hatha yoga 16. Western Esotericism: combines spirituality with an observation of the natural world while also relating humanity to the universe 17. Samadhi: contemplation; the final limb of the eight limbs of yoga 18. Jivanmukta: someone who has gained complete self-knowledge and self-realization and has attained liberation 19. Dharma: duty 20. Kama: pleasure, enjoyment 21. Kaivalya: a state of liberation reached by realizing that one's consciousness is separate from Nature (prakrti) 22. Natha Yoga: a variation of Tantric yoga; melded principles from yoga, Buddhism, and the Shaivism branch of Hinduism 23. Bindhu: a point or dot 24. Purusha: the divine Self which abides in all beings 25. Muktananda: the founder of Siddha Yoga 26. René Descartes: a French philosopher, mathematician, and scientist 27. Tantra: a type of yoga using yantra (a sacred geometrical figure) and mantra (a sound formula) to experience the union of the masculine and feminine within the individual 28. Mukti: spiritual liberation ____ References: 1. ⁠Doug Keller 2. ⁠J-aim⁠ 3. ⁠Christopher Key Chapple⁠ 4. ⁠Raja Yoga, by Swami Vivekananda⁠ 5. ⁠The Weeks Well episode with Seane Corn⁠ 6. ⁠Doug Keller's guide to the yamas and niyamas⁠ 7. ⁠The Weeks Well episode with Eddie Stern⁠ 8. ⁠The Weeks Well first episode with Doug Keller⁠ ____ Episode credits: Original music by Kim's band Governess. Produced by Alyssa Yeroshefsky and Kim Weeks. ____ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Subscribe to the Weeks Well newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and to our latest regular content community, ⁠⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠⁠. For more info on Kim Weeks, visit www.weekswell.com. Follow Kim on Instagram (@weeks.well), Facebook (@weeks.well), Twitter (@weeks_well), YouTube (@weekswell), Patreon (Weeks Well), and TikTok (@weekswell). Copyright © 2023 Weeks Well®.

    1h 21m
  8. 42. Best of: Maturing from pain to purpose, with Seane Corn

    08/04/2023

    42. Best of: Maturing from pain to purpose, with Seane Corn

    💡For the month of August, we're re-releasing a few of our favorite podcasts from the 2023 season so far. Enjoy listening (or re-listening!) to these talks and, as always, tell us your thoughts and send over guest ideas. ____ Seane Corn is one of the most influential people in modern yoga. Her journey in yoga teaching and service work started after her teacher training and at the moment she "niched" into a student group she believed she could help. When she met her students at Children of the Night, a non-profit serving girls between 12-17 who had been sex trafficked, she says they served her, rather than the other way around. Since then she has taken her career into many important areas of the yoga market: She has raised millions of dollars for the various organizations she has founded and/or served (see: Off The Mat Into The World), written a popular book (Revolution of the Soul), and continued to teach her heart out. Now, after 25 years of teaching yoga, she is starting a teacher training program. In this conversation, taped in May, we dove deeply into the shadow work she has done to evolve her practice—to drive her pain into purpose. Seane talked to me about how wonderfully adjunctive both psychotherapy and the map of the energetic body have been as she continues excavating and embracing the fact that a spiritual path means recognizing that we’re all capable of hurting and being hurt. ____ Terms: 1. Vagus nerve: responsible for the regulation of internal organ functions, such as heart rate and respiratory rate, as well as vasomotor activity, and certain reflex actions, such as coughing 2. Tantrika: relating to Tantra (a practice using yantra and mantra to experience the union of the positive and negative forces within an individual) 3. Prana: the vital energy 4. Chakras: seven energy points running from the base of the spine to the crown of the head ____ References: 1. ⁠Seane Corn⁠ 2. ⁠Revolution of the Soul, by Seane Corn⁠ 3. ⁠Mona Miller⁠ 4. ⁠Yoga Sutras of Patanjali⁠ 5. ⁠Children of the Night⁠ 6. ⁠The Weeks Well episode with John Schumacher⁠ 7. ⁠The Weeks Well episode with Rob Schware⁠ 8. ⁠Kali (Hindu goddess)⁠ 9. ⁠The Weeks Well episode with Eddie Stern⁠ 10. ⁠The Weeks Well episode with Stephen Cope⁠ 11. ⁠Off the Mat Into the World⁠ ____ Episode credits: Original music by Kim's band Governess. Produced by Alyssa Yeroshefsky and Kim Weeks. ____ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Subscribe to the Weeks Well newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and to our latest regular content community, ⁠⁠Substack⁠⁠. For more info on Kim Weeks, visit www.weekswell.com. Follow Kim on Instagram (@weeks.well), Facebook (@weeks.well), Twitter (@weeks_well), YouTube (@weekswell), Patreon (Weeks Well), and TikTok (@weekswell). Copyright © 2023 Weeks Well®.

    1h 14m
5
out of 5
11 Ratings

About

The Weeks Well is a podcast about being your best self. Hosted by wellness entrepreneur Kim Weeks, The Weeks Well brings you conversations on the practices in yoga and wellness, how to understand the deeper study of yoga, and how to learn about the best kind of yoga and mindfulness for you. What *is* the best kind of yoga for *you* to practice sustainably through your life? We strive to bring you the answer to that question in every podcast. Kim and The Weeks Well curate impactful conversations, with actionable takeaways for living an educated, embodied, and wellness-practiced life.

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