img

 



INSPIRED LIVES
THE BEST OF REAL LIFE YOGA FROM ASCENT MAGAZINE
Edited by Clea McDougall

This is a collection of articles, photography, and illustrations by some of the most innovative thinkers writing about yoga, inspired living and the places where the two meet. Some books on yoga will teach you a posture, how to hold a pose. Through compelling exposition, artful photography and delightful illustrations, Inspired Lives teaches how people think expansively to bring yoga to their lives. The best from the Utne Award winning, ascent magazine, Inspired Lives presents dynamic stories in heartfelt prose that distills the essential teachings of yoga into the art of living life.


Paperback : CAN: $32.95, US: $25.95, UK: £17.99
ISBN #: 1-932018-11-5

Printed on 100% post consumer waste recycled paper



img

Order by Phone:

  • In Canada, call 1-800-661-8711
  • In USA, call 1-800-251-9273

Reviews

“In Inspired Lives, the experiences of the many distinguished contributors will stir readers to use their bodies, minds and selves in service to others, with love and dedication.”
 -BKS Iyengar

“I enjoyed reading the collection of stories, articles, and interviews, which
I found very down-to-earth and inspiring. The collection was very well-rounded in presenting a variety of real life spiritual teachings and perspectives from both East and West, which both transcended and united different religions like Buddhism, Christianity, and Hinduism. I greatly appreciated that the topics presented in the book examined divine qualities such as compassion, beauty, and simplicity in the midst of real life suffering related to poverty, despair, death and dying, and imprisonment. These stories and articles fanned the flame of my desire to be more socially active and more present in my daily life to embody happiness and heart-centered understanding.”
-John Friend, Anusara Yoga


“Showing up for your life—I mean really showing up—is the hardest part. But the
stories in this book, and the people behind them, reveal that showing up is not
only possible, it is essential. Warm, wise, beautiful, and deeply engaged,
Inspired Lives will transform the way you see the world, and your life.”
-Karen Olson, author and former editor of Utne Magazine
 
Excerpts

From “Ascension” by Clea McDougall

ascent had its name before I ever came along as editor in 1999. It had been around for 30 years at that point, as a small community newsletter for Yasodhara Ashram. We kept the name, but expanded out into an international, full sized, grown up magazine. I always liked the name ascent, because the first jazz record I ever bought, and subsequently fell in love with, was Ascension by John Coltrane. That record is said to be his step to liberty, from a structured chord based jazz to free jazz. It is a session of he and his musicians letting go in one of their first experimentations of pure ecstatic improv.

It’s not an easy record to listen to but as you are pulled into the pure chaos of it, you know these people are in touch with something beyond themselves. They were totally and absolutely, inspired.

I actually had no idea what the record would be like at the time I bought it, I was just taken in by the story of the Ascension session on the back of the record. I became a lover of free jazz after that. I loved the spirit of it, the willingness to let go, and the obvious devotion in the music.

I also had no idea what I was getting into when I took the job of editor at ascent magazine. It definitely wasn’t what I expected. I couldn’t have predicted the events of the years ahead of me, how ascent would change me, that the magazine would turn into what it is today, or how it could inspire such a fierce loyalty in its readers.

We just had a vision of how to explore yoga, what it could look like, how it could be lived, practiced, loved. We wanted yoga to go beyond doctrine or a system of stretches, but be about the way we live, how we encounter life. I wanted to find that, and celebrate the yogis, the people who were trying to live consciously, humbly, embracing everything that came to them. It was this largeness that we aimed for, this step into liberty, ascension, an aim towards inspiration, freedom. Idealists maybe, but that was the beginning, that was the spirit in which we entered in. The best of what came out of that are assembled in this book. …


From “Blemish: David Sylvian Interviewed by Marcus Boon”

David Sylvian:  I often feel that there’s a greater union between myself and my teacher when I’m not physically in their presence. There’s a whole other level of experience when I’m in their presence, but that sense of non-physical merging, of intimacy, is profound.

Marcus Boon   It’s surprising that you can visit someone who’s been dead for 600 years and burst into tears in their presence. That’s how I felt at Hazrat Allaudin Sabri’s shrine in India. They say that he was so fierce in his lifetime that the only person who could come physically close to him was a musician, who would sit fifty feet away and play for him. And you can still feel that fierceness today!

DS   That’s another element, isn’t it? The element of ferocity in the proximity of the guru, People talk about the experience of bliss, but the level of ferocity, the fire that one has to walk through, live through – that is also very intense. The degree of suffering increases as the experience of sadhana deepens, for me, because at first there’s less attachment to who one believes one is and it’s easier to let go of all the things that need to be let go of. As you move through different stages, the degree of fear increases because ultimately you’re getting to the root foundations of the ego which are unshakable. And there is real fear because you see the death of the ego approaching, and if you let go of that, what is there?

As you have to face your fears in the presence of your guru, you witness other people going through their experiences. There’s often this perception, “Why do I have to live through this fear? I’ll take on anybody else’s obstacles, but not this one!” [laughs]. It’s so pinpoint-perfect, it’s precision-made, this laser-like intensity focusing on just what needs to be focused on. Once you move beyond a given level of fear, apprehension, there’s an enormous release and a whole new world of possibility seems to open up. You live and breathe that for a while until you come up against that next obstacle.

MB   A lot of people like to think that a spiritual narrative consists in going from darkness and suffering to peace and equanimity, but I think of your music, and in particular of Blemish, which is so much darker than the records that came before. It’s still a record about sadhana …

DS   It’s darker than ever! But going through that experience of darkness at this point in my life was very different to before. First of all, there was a certain amount of objectivity, of being able to step back and say, all of this is just par for the course, it’s just part of the learning process, whatever comes out of this is just to strengthen me and help me to burn off whatever needs to be cleared away so that I can see things clearly.

And a lot of things that I couldn’t face in my life I could face in the studio environment. I would close that door and start working and open myself to whatever came through. And often it was very negative emotions. And I thought, well, I’ll just look straight at them, and more than that, I’ll take them even further than I feel them in my daily life, because I wanted to go as far with them as I possibly could. I felt very safe doing that. I felt that there was a strength inside of me that would allow me to pull back at the end of the day and be able to do away with those emotions. So I was pushing myself deeper and deeper into the negativity of the experience, wanting to know what that felt like, how does that surface and how do you give that a voice? It was a way of experiencing those experiences and giving them a new vocabulary that was pertinent for now.

MB   Now, as in our time?

DS   Yes. I was also feeling that all the familiar forms of popular song were no longer doing it for me. Even those evergreen artists that you go back to time and time again weren’t moving me anymore. The form had lost its potency; it had been exhausted. I was beginning to feel: what next, what do you do? And I felt that I personally had to find a new form for what I was experiencing. I feel it’s true of other arts, too: now is an important time to find vocabularies that are pertinent to our time.

Everything becomes a commodity. We’re told that if we understand someone’s taste in how they decorate their home, then we can probably guess what kind of music will go with that environment. Everything gets tied together in packages so we can all have what’s known as “good taste.” We can dress well, we have good taste in our cultural environment, we can participate in it but without any commitment, no going out on a limb, always tapping into something that’s termed “classic,” whether it’s a couch or a Marvin Gaye record.

But when we find something that challenges all of that in the culture, that’s when we discover who we are, and our response isn’t preconditioned. We don’t have the benefit of reading a review of this experience prior to having it. We have to comprehend it on our own terms, ask: “Why did I feel so irritated when I was provoked in that way?” I want to have that kind of experience. The one that isn’t scripted. The one that will throw you into the deep end of an experience and you just have to work it out for yourself. There is no right or wrong response, only your true response. And that’s what I try to find in my work, that true response. It doesn’t necessarily make it that comfortable an experience to listen to, but that’s not the issue here. It’s just trying to find a means to grapple with what it means to be alive in the here and now, trying to find a vocabulary for it, trying to press the right buttons in me, and hopefully that will communicate to others.


From “My Visit to California” by Sparrow

Because I live in a mountain town, I ride a bus into New York City to board an airplane to California. On the bus from Phoenicia to Manhattan, I wrote the following:

I enjoy watching a man read – it is often as engaging as reading oneself. Nathaniel's Story by Anne Whitehead is what the man in front of me holds in his hand.1

With his other hand (his right), he caresses his moustache. Then at times he rests this hand on his lip.

He reads slowly, drawn into the imaginary story.

The way he touches his facial hair is almost seductive. My wife touches my beard like that on certain nights.

Reading is self-romance. You believe two people in your chapter kiss, but really you are falling in love with yourself.

I learned all this from watching a man with a moustache read.

 
 
 

home | books | cds & video | where to buy | distributors | contact us | links

timeless books | 1-800-661-8711 | contact@timeless.org