Be Inspired by this Veteran, Warrior, Yoga Teacher, Resilient Man, Mr. Dan Nevins.

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Photo credit: Robert Sturman  

As the Fourth of July approaches, people all over our country prepare to celebrate with picnics, parades, and fireworks. Like many people, I get nostalgic around holidays, reflecting on the past, grateful for the present, and hopeful for the future. This weekend I have been thinking about Dan Nevins who I heard speak at the Wisdom 2.0 Conference.

Retired Army Sgt. Dan Nevins is an Iraq war veteran who lost both of his legs below the knee, due to an Improvised Explosive Device (IED).  Dan also had a Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) as a result of the explosion. In his talk at Wisdom 2.0, Dan spoke of his service, his love of country, his team in the Army, and his long road to recovery. He gave a great deal of credit for his physical and mental rehabilitation to the Wounded Warrior Project (WWP).  He told us the WWP was there for him throughout his recovery and that they helped him to realize his disability didn’t define him. He said “they taught me how I got define the rest of my life.”

Dan was honest and frank about his journey. The road was full of bumps and curves, but he had flourished and was very active with the WWP. Then another surgery was needed. Following this surgery, he couldn’t do all of the active things that he had become accustomed to and it was a dark time for him.

It’s estimated that over 400,000 veterans suffer from PTSD.

Over 300,000 have traumatic brain injuries.

Dan reached out to a friend who recommended he go to a yoga class with her. He laughed, thinking it wasn’t for him; he didn’t fit the prototype. However, she was able to convince him to try meditation. After experiencing positive benefits from meditation, his friend asked him again to try yoga.  This time he agreed. After only a few classes, Dan connected and healed through his yoga practice.

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Photo credit: Robert Sturman

Not only did he enjoy his yoga practice, but he went on to become a yoga teacher. With so many of our vets suffering in ways we can’t always see, Dan Nevins’ gives us the simple advice to…

Invite a veteran to yoga, you just might save their life.

You can watch Dan’s full talk here: Dan Nevins – Wisdom 2.0, 2016.

The picnics, parades, and fireworks will soon be over.  We will all go back to our daily/weekly routines, but maybe you’ll take Dan Nevins’ advice and invite a veteran to yoga, or meditation, or mindfulness, or MBSR, or whatever your contemplative practice may be.

“It’s not about what we have, or what we lack. It’s about finding a way to create what we want in our lives, despite not having what we may think we need.”  -Dan Nevins

Learn more about Dan Dan Nevins

 

A series of moments shifted my life and in a way I never imagined was possible.

Have you ever heard a saying that goes something like, when you quit trying to control your outcomes, the universe will give you what you need?  As a skeptic and someone who for years tried to control what was coming next, this wasn’t an easy concept to wrap my head around. Here’s my story of how I was challenged to face my own skepticism, and the direction of where I thought I was going.

I teach psychology at a Mt. Lebanon High School, and I’ve been interested in the topics of meaning and purpose, about how our brain works, what can we do to impact our brain function, Wisdom-2.0mindfulness, positive psychology and emotional intelligence for a number of years. Late in the summer of 2014 I heard about a conference called Wisdom 2.0.  I was drawn to attend. Many of the speakers were experts and researchers I admired and the topics aligned with my personal interest and so the moments began.

Eckhart Tolle, Jon Kabat-Zinn, Arianna Huffington, Sharon Salzberg, Shafali Tsabary, Congressman Tim Ryan, Michael Gervais, Joan Halifax, br. David Steindl-Rast, Dan Siegel, heads of companies like Google, Facebook, Zappos, and so many more; each talk – informative, each interaction, each connection – I savored them all. Being in the presence of great mindfulness teachers inspired me to go home and be more conscious about my life and more diligent in my practice. Dr. Shafali made me want to be a better parent, Dr. Dan Siegel taught me about the adolescent mind, Michael Gervais prompted me to share this information with our athletic department and coaches, Congressman Ryan compelled me to want to be an even more active citizen in fostering a Mindful Nation. Brother David Steindl-Rast, what a gentle soul; as he so wisely said “We may not be able to be grateful for everything, but we can be grateful in every momentiaian-thomas-quotes.” Arianna Huffington shared the story of how she collapsed and hit her head and how that moment was her entry point to her journey. She read the quote you see here from Iain Thomas, and that was the first of two entry points for me. I was always so busy, doing so much, but what was I really avoiding? This discovery, this is what’s important. My shift began at Wisdom 2.0 in February of 2014.

Over the next two years I delved into learning, practicing and trying to connect with others who shared my interests. This semester I’ve been on sabbatical studying Social Emotional Learning, Positive Psychology and Mindfulness and I returned back to Wisdom 2.0. This time I had the opportunity to visit with Facebook’s Compassion Team, with a group of Wisdom attendees. I was exposed to more speakers/researchers and making new connections. Since I was on sabbatical, I had more time and was able to also attend UCSD’s Bridging the Hearts and Minds of Youth Conference.

This leads me to my second entry point. The great mental coach to athletes and mindfulness teacher George Mumford, spoke at Wisdom & the Bridging Conference and I had the opportunity to attend an intimate workshop led by George on coaching and performance. In that workshop he spoke to me about right effort, right goals. It was in that workshop at that moment, I questioned what I had been doing. I sat there quietly listening and quite honestly with a few tears rolling down my cheek. I was trying (with the wrong effort) to control the outcomes. I needed to let go, to surrender trying to control what would come next, to put forth the right effort for the right goals. It was an “ah-ha” moment for me. (Read Mumford’s Mindful Athlete to learn about his personal journey and to learn from is heartfelt wisdom.) I’m fairly certain I can count on the likelihood that I will continue to have moments that wake me up, and that’s a good thing, I’m never done learning.

So this brings me back to my inner skeptic. It’s a process, a daily effort to let go. I’m living, still learning, doing my thing, practicing paying attention and being awake in my own life. I don’t want to miss it!  It’s hard, even for me, to admit that when I began to let go… events and opportunities that I never could have imagined presented themselves.

I have no idea where things are going to go, but what I can tell you is this …                         I’m Savoring the Dash.

Gratitude – teachings from Brother David Steindl-Rast

Last week marked the 10th anniversary of Brother David Steindl-Rast’s short audio meditation –  “A GoodBDVD Day.” It had a powerful impact on me then, and still does today. He’s taught me a great deal about gratitude. Two specific teachings I carry with me; the first one is that we may not be able to be grateful for everything, but we can be grateful in every moment. I think of myself as a realistic optimist. I have a generally optimistic attitude, but I understand the reality of the world we live in, the good and the bad, and the full range of emotions we feel. I relate the “being grateful in every moment” to resilience and perspective. No matter what happens there are still things to be grateful for, I just need to call on those thoughts. The second one is his famous quote “In daily life we must see that it is not happiness that makes us grateful, but gratefulness that makes us happy.” If you’d like to read a little more about research on gratitude and happiness, check out this NYT article from last fall “Choose to Be Grateful. It Will Make You Happier.”

Re-Fueling my Soul at Pacific Beach

I’ve loved the ocean for as long as I can remember. My earliest memories go back to early childhood & walking the beach in Wildwood Crest, NJ collecting sea shells with my mom. She loves the sea too, that’s probably where I got it from.

During a lunch break at a mindfulness conference I took a quiet walk along the sea shore. Rolled my pants up (still soaked them) & enjoyed the beauty in front of me. I was so moved, that’s why I captured it in video after the moment passed through me. The ocean gives me perspective, it reminds me how small I am in a vast world. The ocean seems to go on forever – beyond the horizon.

The ocean reminds me of how precious life is, my time here is so short, like a drop of water in the ocean. But the ocean also rejuvenates me, re-fuels my soul. I feel awe, my spirit renewed. Although my time on earth is limited, I’m determined to make the time I have count.

~Savoring the Dash ~