Wednesday, December 4, 2013
The Only Way Out is Through by Lisa Bachrach-Zeankowski
Lisa Bachrach-Zeankowski has been living with MS for 17 years. To read more, visit her blog at http://www.lisabachrach.com
It’s so easy to ask one’s self, why me?
The Only Way Out, Is Through
December 4th, 2013 | Author: Lisa Bachrach-Zeankowski
It’s so easy to ask one’s self, why me?
When I hear that question, even if it’s inside my own head, my response is always the same, if not you, then who?
There are many times in our lives we might ask ourselves that question, usually it’s during a time when things are just not going ‘as planned’ or how we ‘expect’ them to go, but there is lesson one right, let go of expectations and plans. I believe that when those things happen that the Universe, God, Spirit or whatever we want to call it, has another plan for us and while we might see it as an obstacle or a stumbling block it really is the beginning of our growth and most times, in a major way. The change, transformation or shift, while not obvious at first becomes the beginning of a life changer and if we allow it, if we don’t resist it and we take what happens as part of our journey and learning experience, it will become our greatest lesson and even sometimes reveal to us our purpose.
Many of us have heard the quote “The difference between stumbling blocks and stepping stones is how you use them.”
Life does throw us stumbling blocks and with each one we are given a choice, we are given the option to ask ourselves these questions, what is this here to teach me? What can I learn from this moment, from this bump in the road what is this here to show me? How can I allow myself to be utilized in a way that might help someone else? At least that is what I hear when I come upon the stumbling blocks in my path, which DO become my stepping stones through life.
When I was diagnosed some 11 years ago with MS, after a long time having been un-diagnosed and misdiagnosed, I could never have known then what looked like the biggest stumbling block would become, 17 years later from the onset, I can clearly see why I ‘stumbled’ into this disease, why I accepted this assignment of living with Multiple Sclerosis.
I say ‘accepted the assignment’ because I do believe we accept these things that come into our present lives, whether it be through Samskara (Sanskrit word meaning-impressions / lessons are the imprints left on the subconscious mind by experience in this or previous lives, which then color all of life, one’s nature, responses, states of mind, etc)…or it’s simply just what we are here to do, but have not yet learned or discovered why yet.
I could never have known 11 years ago, when I first began an online support group for those living or being diagnosed with MS, that would be the moment of discovering my passion which would lead to my purpose.
I began an online support group, to reach out as far as I could, simply to try to help anyone who might be going through the daunting process of getting diagnosed, my goal was to help guide them through the mundane process, hopefully saving them years of the same thing that I went through myself, not getting diagnosed and progressing in the disease. I met so many friends during those years that I ran that site online, many of whom are still friends with me today and for that I’m so grateful.
My journey of finding my passion and purpose didn’t stop there, I became a patient advocate speaking to others who have MS and how to live well with it and then eventually I began taking yoga, oh and that’s when the journey took a huge turn, I had NO clue what getting on my yoga mat for the first time some 9 years ago would bring to me.
It’s dawned on me that one can possibly see the yoga mat as a stumbling block, (something that one might think they can’t do) it’s not easy to approach even the idea of yoga especially when living with an unpredictable disease such as MS, or any chronic illness or injury for that matter, it can seem intimidating at first, simply because we have yet to learn that it’s not about anyone else’s practice but our own, we haven’t learned yet what yoga really means and to then to be in a room with others who are already familiar with the practice can seem especially daunting.
Crazy things happen when one is either suggested to do yoga or we might entertain doing yoga, the ego kicks into high gear, it starts to speak up, that crazy voice inside our heads trying to convince us that this is silly, you can’t do this, or even better, what the heck is this going to do for you? Well what didn’t it do for me? My mat, which seemed like a stumbling block at first became my stepping stone. It became the place that I first sat still and discovered inner peace, where I discovered that I can actually be one with my mind, body and spirit and the MS that was so noisy, first became quiet, it’s where I found balance, yes, not physical balance right away, but emotional and spiritual balance and yes eventually some physical balance. It became that space that I couldn’t stop returning to because it felt so good, I didn’t know why and I didn’t need to know why. Being on my yoga mat was like a magic carpet and eventually that magic seeped into my life, off of the mat, into my home life, when I was driving, sitting in traffic, waiting on long lines and especially when I’d have a flare up, instead of focusing on the fear, I learned to go to my breath and focus there.
After practicing for 4 years, the invite to participate in a teacher training was offered and after a lot of thought, and self doubt, (ego telling me that there was no way I could remember what was going to be taught), I took the training with absolutely NO intention of teaching…ah but the Universe knew better, there was a bigger plan, not only did I learn, was I able to retain the information taught to me, then I realized that I did want to teach, but not to the general public, there are plenty of awesome teachers out there who do that. I wanted to do something different, I have a gift of knowing what it’s like to live with MS, an invisible at most times, chronic illness and I knew what yoga can do to help those living with any disease or condition but especially MS and I wanted to bring yoga to those who are living with MS, gift it to them as it was gifted to me. Granted at the beginning I was afraid to actually teach (ego trying to convince me that I wasn’t good enough, sure enough, wouldn’t remember what I was taught, all self doubt),so I began a Free Yoga for MS Program with two amazing yoga studios who offered out their space and time to give free yoga to those living with MS, however I would only demo until eventually I was pretty much forced to get in front of the room and find my voice, it didn’t come easily but eventually it came. I began teaching and learning through my students as I taught and it was great!
Then as things would happen with a disease such as MS, I had a relapse, a stumbling block, the worst one ever and after being in the hospital and rehab coming home to limited PT, what brought me back was the same thing that taught me so much, my yoga practice, one pose every day until I built my strength up. It was as simple as sitting firmly in staff pose literally working to flex my feet and point my toes evenly up towards the ceiling, pressing my thighs into the ground and oh yes, grounding down through my sit bones while sitting up tall, holding myself up at the same time without losing my upright posture…staff pose (dandasana) soon became my greatest challenge, but with time I did it, then it was plank (top of a push up), holding it as long as I could, engaging every single muscle in my body, waking up all of my muscles that had become atrophied during the relapse. In time I came back and learned so much more about myself than I had known before, learned so much more that I could take back and share with people, the one major lesson is to never give up.
MS relapse’s ‘look’ like stumbling blocks, however they are stepping stones, they come into our lives for a reason, we can ask why me, why now but then the answer is, if not you, who and if not now when? Is there ever a good time? No there isn’t, but that’s the funny thing about life, we can’t ‘plan’ out every moment and yes life throws us stumbling blocks but these blocks are placed there for us to learn, to find out our strength and then to take what we learn and share it with others…
“When you learn, teach, when you get, give.” Maya Angelou
I’ve since discovered my passion and my purpose, I love to learn and I love to share what I learn, I teach, I advocate, for myself and for others. I try my best to help those who are newly diagnosed. I get the absolute joy of sharing the practice of yoga with others living with MS or any chronic illness and I get the amazing gift of seeing the shift, changes and growth as their practice unfolds for them as it’s meant to.I have MS for a reason and it’s a good reason, if I didn’t have it, if I wasn’t ‘living’ it, I couldn’t understand and I couldn’t be of service in the same capacity that I am now. It’s been a gift, having MS, I’ve said that before however I clearly see it more than ever now.
When life throws me a stumbling block, I ask myself, what is this here to teach me? What can I learn from this moment, from this bump in the road?
I listen for the lesson, then I stare right at it and step on it and then over it …because, the only way out is through...
Namaste
Lisa Bachrach Zeankowski
www.downdogboutique.com
Saturday, November 16, 2013
The Story Behind the Takrut Bullet
Founder of P.R.A.Y Jewelry
Now available at DownDog Boutique.com
The world is no longer separated by East and West. In today’s material-based society, the proliferation of Eastern concepts and beliefs are of tremendous value; spirituality, movement-based sciences, philosophy, and energy practices inform those more consciously inclined.
An aspect of Eastern-influenced Western society includes the $6 billion+ a year yoga product industry. Within this marketplace goods from all corners of the earth are sold for all reasons; boost spirituality, physical asana props, threads to wear to yoga class, and so on. Spiritual jewelry is a popular accessory in the yoga world, there are gorgeous pieces to choose, everything from emerald
encrusted Om’s, to malas for a specific chakra, to simple charms with Sanskrit and yogic-related symbols.
The question begs to be asked: can this billion dollar industry- DOES this billion-dollar industry – provide as much healing on a physical level, as the yoga practice itself?
Down Dog Boutique is amongst a select group of forward thinking companies with this intention in mind. Companies such this one, which support socially conscious brands that are eco-friendly, slow fashion, mindful of the Earth in production process, have as much in line with yogic philosophy as yoga itself, and it is such companies (Down Dog Boutique, and those it supports), which continue to bring deep purpose to yoga through a material world.
It has been a personal vision of mine for half a decade to bring powerful Eastern energy to the West in a widely accessible, material form; simple to use that a person could literally pick this “something” up, hold it in their hand (or wear it for that matter), re-balance and heal. What developed over the course of years was my line of healing jewels, and this fall I have been strongly drawn to create a modern healing version of the Takrut bullet amulets, which are grouped within the P.R.A.Y. Jewelry line as the Rapture Crystal Bullet Collection.
The world is no longer separated by East and West. In today’s material-based society, the proliferation of Eastern concepts and beliefs are of tremendous value; spirituality, movement-based sciences, philosophy, and energy practices inform those more consciously inclined.
An aspect of Eastern-influenced Western society includes the $6 billion+ a year yoga product industry. Within this marketplace goods from all corners of the earth are sold for all reasons; boost spirituality, physical asana props, threads to wear to yoga class, and so on. Spiritual jewelry is a popular accessory in the yoga world, there are gorgeous pieces to choose, everything from emerald
encrusted Om’s, to malas for a specific chakra, to simple charms with Sanskrit and yogic-related symbols.
The question begs to be asked: can this billion dollar industry- DOES this billion-dollar industry – provide as much healing on a physical level, as the yoga practice itself?
Down Dog Boutique is amongst a select group of forward thinking companies with this intention in mind. Companies such this one, which support socially conscious brands that are eco-friendly, slow fashion, mindful of the Earth in production process, have as much in line with yogic philosophy as yoga itself, and it is such companies (Down Dog Boutique, and those it supports), which continue to bring deep purpose to yoga through a material world.
It has been a personal vision of mine for half a decade to bring powerful Eastern energy to the West in a widely accessible, material form; simple to use that a person could literally pick this “something” up, hold it in their hand (or wear it for that matter), re-balance and heal. What developed over the course of years was my line of healing jewels, and this fall I have been strongly drawn to create a modern healing version of the Takrut bullet amulets, which are grouped within the P.R.A.Y. Jewelry line as the Rapture Crystal Bullet Collection.
The Takrut bullet, known outside of Thailand as "Tangkai", is surrounded by great legend due to its well-known abilities to protect, heal, and bring abundance to many great warriors and general public in Asia. The takrut is a scroll formed from an inscription of ancient text called Yantra, or Yant, onto a sheet of
lead, silver, gold or other material (old bullet shells and other recycled, vintage materials, in the case of P.R.A.Y.). A monk in the healing caste then constructs the amulet scroll according to arcane sciences during deep meditation. This intricate process produces a protective amulet that may be worn to ward off danger, increase serenity, and create good will and abundance.
The Yant and Takrut became better known in niche circles in recent years when a monk in SE Asia inked actress Angelina Jolie with a Sak Yant tattoo. The Sak Yant is the same as the Takrut Yant, except inscribed on the skin. Takrut amulets may be worn on specific body parts to protect or grant power to that particular
part of the body. These protective qualities are instrumental for individuals working with their energetic fields, whether in the lines of yoga, bodywork, energy work, or other healing modalities. Modern urbanites subject to every day imbalances and dis-ease in Western society are prime to benefit from the healing properties in P.R.A.Y.’s Rapture Crystal Bullet Necklaces. Upcycled, vintage Takrut bullets are reconstructed into edgy, modern designs contrasted with energy-conducting crystals to boost the Takrut powers.
Be sure to get one soon, they are rare, limited, and all one-of-a-kind. Most Takruts available in these designs date 20-50+years.
For questions about the Rapture Crystal Bullet Necklaces or P.R.A.Y. Jewelry,
please contact purerockangelyogi@gmail.com
To see the Rapture Crystal Bullet Necklaces or P.R.A.Y. Jewelry visit DownDog Boutique here:
Monday, October 7, 2013
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Living with MS and how Yoga saved my life. A guest post by Lisa Bachrach-Zeankowski
Since 2006 I’ve
found Yoga or I should say Yoga found me and that day changed my life. I was
diagnosed with MS in 2002 and for the first four years, like many, I allowed
the diagnosis of MS to define me and then one day I searched out a yoga class.
I had no idea what
it was, or what it would bring to me, all I knew is that I had this friend who
was remarkably calm and she did yoga.
What was it about
this practice that kept her so centered? I’d ask myself. I found a yoga studio where it was small and simple;
it had this amazing energy about it and wasn’t “selling” anything but
peacefulness.
I had no idea that yoga would bring me so much
more than strength and balance (which is what I thought I was looking for). It took me and still continues to take me on
an unbelievable journey of self discovery, stillness, inner peace and balance
of mind, body and spirit.
I took on a yoga
practice where most begin, at the beginning and eventually built up a strong
practice, however this didn’t mean that I could throw myself into a handstand
or many inversions that come so easily to many.
It means that I found this space on my mat that was quiet, balanced and
peaceful. I was not judgmental and I was
okay with wherever I was each day and I continue to practice yoga and life just
that way.
I was content with
me and the MS, it was quiet now sitting in the background and no longer
standing front and center, and no longer did it define me. Eventually this yoga
practice became a way of life. It’s not
just the asana’s (the physical practice or the poses) but it’s the way I live,
by the principles of self love, love of others, non-violence in my words and
actions and how I treat myself and others.
I literally,
without knowing it, took my yoga off the mat and into my personal world and
then out to the world where MS meets Yoga and beyond.
In 2010, yoga
teacher and then friend offered me to take part in her yoga teacher training,
if not to teach (which I had no intention of doing) but to truly understand why
I was doing what I was doing and also to deepen my practice. I accepted her invitation and in June of 2010
after 6 month training I graduated and became a 200 hour certified yoga
teacher.
I decided that
teaching the general public was not my purpose or my passion but sharing what I
had learned and who I was, the person living with MS discovered that yoga can save
the life of someone living with MS as well as significantly change that same
life in such a positive way.
I have been
actively involved in public service by being a team captain for the National MS
Society’s Long Island Chapter’s MS Walk and for the past 12 years have raised over
$80,000 collectively. I also ran a 3rd
party fundraiser from 2008 through 2012 called Healing and Moving for a Cure,
where all monies raised went to a program that I started to provide home health
aide assistance to those living with MS.
Then I chose to
start a program that offered free yoga classes to those, like me, who live on
limited income and have MS to have yoga in their lives. This program is offered
free to our local MS Society on Long Island in
collaboration with 2 other yoga studios in my area who have also offered their
time and selfless service and for that I’m so grateful. We run the program for 8 weeks twice a year and
during this time anyone who has MS, their friends and/or support partners are
offered the opportunity to take classes with yoga teachers that I’ve worked
with to find out what they can do rather than what they can’t do. I also teach one of these free yoga for MS
classes during these 8 week sessions twice a year. I am, like them, a body living with MS but I
am also an example of how we can learn to live well with MS. Yoga helped me find my way, my peace, and my
balance.
My hope and prayer
is that this program that I began here on Long Island
could reach across the country and that every yoga studio would offer such a
program from the perspective of someone living with MS. Unfortunately, I can’t be everywhere but I’m
hoping one day I can teach other teachers to teach from the perspective of
someone living with a chronic illness like MS so that it might open the door
for any ‘body’ to enter the yoga studio, knowing that it is a safe place for
them to help guide them to that place that is really within themselves but has
only yet to be discovered.
Teaching yoga to
someone living with a chronic illness can be challenging. There is a ‘knowing’,
a gift that comes from having this disease that allows one to offer out the
gift that yoga has brought and to be able to offer that out to others.
Yoga is balance. It is a moving, living meditation. It’s a way
to go inside and quiet the mind. For those moments we are on our mat, the MS or
the illness or trouble that one is living with can be quieted as well, if only
for a moment and hopefully longer. It
takes practice, life is practice...yoga is practice...yoga is where I find my
peace, my center and my balance.
For more
information, please visit my website www.lisabachrach.com
or feel free to contact me directly via email at lbloveslife@optonline.net. To see
the class schedule use this link:
http://www.lisabachrach.com/calendar/events/free-yoga-for-ms-program-schedule. If you live outside the Long
Island area and would like to attend a free Yoga class, please
know that you are welcome to join us!
The program is open because it is donated to the chapter rather than a
chapter run program.
Lisa Bachrach-Zeankowski
If you are interested in contributing a guest post to the Downdog Boutique blog and social media please contact us directly at namaste@downdogboutique.com or message us at the following:
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
A brief history of the humble Yoga Mat
While working on another blog post here at DownDog Boutique I became interested to learn about the origins of the Yoga Mat that many of us practice on.
After a little digging around I came across this post by Steve
at the http://theconfluencecountdown.com it seems to cover the topic nicely and briefly therefore no need to reinvent the wheel (or that mat) so here is the story:
Famously, ancient yogis practiced on tiger skins, if they were highfalutin, or deer skins, if they were closer to the 99% than the 1%. If you were near the bottom of the 99%, chances are you practiced on bare ground.
As yoga — speaking in terms of asana, now — got popular, newer practitioners began bringing along towels or cotton mats. As we all know, just putting a towel down on a wood floor is a recipe for yogic disaster.
Enter Angela Farmer. She seems to be credited with being the first person to grab a piece of “carpet underlay” — you know, that multi-colored squishy material — and cut it down to size. She did so when teaching in Germany in 1982, and when she returned home to England, the idea caught on in her local yoga scene. Her father then worked with the German manufacturer, and voila! The first yoga sticky mat (apparently in white) was born.
Hugger Mugger gets the nod for being the first mass producer or yoga mats, sometime in the early 1990s. In other words, 30 years ago.
But back to the rug. According to Nancy, you shouldn’t be taking time out in the middle of your practice to roll it out, or squirt it with water or anything else that draws away your focus and your breath. And being able to stay balanced on the rug is the point, and will help you build strength.
Check out a full range of Yoga Mats at www.downdogboutique.com
After a little digging around I came across this post by Steve
at the http://theconfluencecountdown.com it seems to cover the topic nicely and briefly therefore no need to reinvent the wheel (or that mat) so here is the story:
Famously, ancient yogis practiced on tiger skins, if they were highfalutin, or deer skins, if they were closer to the 99% than the 1%. If you were near the bottom of the 99%, chances are you practiced on bare ground.
As yoga — speaking in terms of asana, now — got popular, newer practitioners began bringing along towels or cotton mats. As we all know, just putting a towel down on a wood floor is a recipe for yogic disaster.
Enter Angela Farmer. She seems to be credited with being the first person to grab a piece of “carpet underlay” — you know, that multi-colored squishy material — and cut it down to size. She did so when teaching in Germany in 1982, and when she returned home to England, the idea caught on in her local yoga scene. Her father then worked with the German manufacturer, and voila! The first yoga sticky mat (apparently in white) was born.
Hugger Mugger gets the nod for being the first mass producer or yoga mats, sometime in the early 1990s. In other words, 30 years ago.
But back to the rug. According to Nancy, you shouldn’t be taking time out in the middle of your practice to roll it out, or squirt it with water or anything else that draws away your focus and your breath. And being able to stay balanced on the rug is the point, and will help you build strength.
Check out a full range of Yoga Mats at www.downdogboutique.com
Monday, May 6, 2013
Aspen Yoga Mats
Find Aspen Yoga Mats at DownDog Boutique.com
The inspiration for the designs and colors of Aspen Yoga Mats personalized mats reflects the original Aspen Idea of nurturing mind, body and spirit - something we are all trying to achieve on and off our mats. Aspen Yoga Mats come in five fashion colors. Choose your customized mat to match your personality or choose your mat to match your mood that day. Who says we can only have one mat?
Aspen Yoga Mats combines a practical, well designed yoga mat with the beauty and balance of everday life found in Aspen, Colorado. Each of the 5 custom colored mats has a unique embroidered icon to reflect your interests and energy. Our colors and embroidered designs help personalize your yoga practice. Choose your color...pick your favorite icon design....and your mat is uniquely yours!
Our Mats:
After years of practicing yoga, we understand how important it is to create a mat that is non-toxic and dense enough to provide stability and comfort. Our mats are made of pvc foam and are free of latex, heavy metals and phthalates (harmful chemicals). Whether you are practicing in a yoga studio or in your home, our mats will provide the needed support for your body in any pose. Before using your mat for the first time, we suggest wiping it with a damp cloth to ensure the surface is sticky. Aspen Yoga Mats are 24 inches by 72 inches, 1/4 of an inch thick and weigh 3.3 lbs.
Aspen Yoga Mats are embroidered with one of our 5 distinct designs: the Laughing Buddha, the Yin/Yang, the Orchid Branch, the iconic Aspen Leaf and the word BALANCE. And our mats are available in 5 unique colors: Pink, Turquoise, Tangerine, Aloe and Plum, creating 25 exciting options to choose from.
Find Aspen Yoga Mats at DownDog Boutique.com
Saturday, May 4, 2013
Joseph Pilates
I recently was followed on Pinterest by the Joseph Pilates Pinterest page from New York and discovered some great vintage photo's of Joseph and his methods (which I of course immediately pinned to our
Vintage Yoga Pinterest board.)
I had read a little about the great man and his work but this prompted me to look up his biography and reprint it here with some of the great photo's. Bio is courtesy of Wikipedia.
Joseph H. Pilates was born in 1883 in Mönchengladbach, Germany. His father was a prize-winning gymnast of Greek ancestry, and his mother worked as a naturopath. His father's family originally spelled its surname in the Greek manner as "Pilatu" but changed to "Pilates" upon immigration to Germany.[citation needed] The new spelling caused Joseph Pilates much grief as a child because older boys taunted him calling him "Pontius Pilate, killer of Christ".
Pilates was a sickly child and suffered from asthma, rickets, and rheumatic fever, and he dedicated his entire life to improving his physical strength. Besides skiing frequently, he began studying body-building, yoga, "kung fu" (probably what is now known as qigong), and gymnastics. By the age of 14, he was fit enough to pose for anatomical charts. Pilates came to believe that the "modern" life-style, bad posture, and inefficient breathing lay at the roots of poor health. He ultimately devised a series of exercises and training-techniques and engineered all the equipment, specifications, and tuning required to teach his methods properly.
Pilates was originally a gymnast, diver, and bodybuilder, but when he moved to England in 1912, he earned a living as a professional boxer, circus-performer, and self-defensetrainer at police schools and Scotland Yard. Nevertheless, the British authorities interned him during World War I along with other German citizens in an internment camp, first inLancaster Castle where he taught wrestling and self-defence, boasting that his students would emerge stronger than they were before their internment. It was here that he began refining and teaching his minimal equipment system of mat exercises that later became "Contrology". He was then transferred to another internment camp on the Isle of Man. During this involuntary break, he began to intensively develop his concept of an integrated, comprehensive system of physical exercise, which he himself called "Contrology." He studied yoga and the movements of animals and trained his fellow inmates in fitness and exercises. It is said that these inmates survived the 1918 flu pandemic due to their good physical shape.
After the war (WWI), he returned to Germany and collaborated with important experts in dance and physical exercise such as Rudolf Laban. In Hamburg, he also trained police officers. When he was pressured to train members of the German army, he left his native country, disappointed with its political and social conditions, and emigrated to the United States.
The year 1925 is the approximate time when Pilates migrated to the United States. On the ship to America, he met his future wife Clara. The couple founded a studio in New York City and directly taught and supervised their students well into the 1960s. His method, which he and Clara originally called "Contrology," related to encouraging the use of the mind to control muscles. It focuses attention on core postural muscles that help keep the human body balanced and provide support for the spine. In particular, Pilates exercises teach awareness of breath and of alignment of the spine, and strengthen the deep torso and abdominal muscles.
Joseph and Clara Pilates soon established a devout following in the local dance and the performing-arts community of New York. Well-known dancers such as George Balanchine, who arrived in the United States in 1933, and Martha Graham, who had come to New York in 1923, became devotees and regularly sent their students to the Pilates for training and rehabilitation.
Joseph Pilates wrote several books, including Return to Life through Contrology and Your Health, and he was also a prolific inventor, with over 26 patents cited.[4] Joe and Clara had a number of disciples who continued to teach variations of his method or, in some cases, focused exclusively on preserving the method, and the instructor-training techniques, they had learned during their studies with Joe and Clara.
Joseph Pilates died in 1967 at the age of 83 in New York.
Vintage Yoga Pinterest board.)
I had read a little about the great man and his work but this prompted me to look up his biography and reprint it here with some of the great photo's. Bio is courtesy of Wikipedia.
Pictured above is Pilates in 1937 at age 57
Joseph H. Pilates was born in 1883 in Mönchengladbach, Germany. His father was a prize-winning gymnast of Greek ancestry, and his mother worked as a naturopath. His father's family originally spelled its surname in the Greek manner as "Pilatu" but changed to "Pilates" upon immigration to Germany.[citation needed] The new spelling caused Joseph Pilates much grief as a child because older boys taunted him calling him "Pontius Pilate, killer of Christ".
Pilates was a sickly child and suffered from asthma, rickets, and rheumatic fever, and he dedicated his entire life to improving his physical strength. Besides skiing frequently, he began studying body-building, yoga, "kung fu" (probably what is now known as qigong), and gymnastics. By the age of 14, he was fit enough to pose for anatomical charts. Pilates came to believe that the "modern" life-style, bad posture, and inefficient breathing lay at the roots of poor health. He ultimately devised a series of exercises and training-techniques and engineered all the equipment, specifications, and tuning required to teach his methods properly.
Pilates was originally a gymnast, diver, and bodybuilder, but when he moved to England in 1912, he earned a living as a professional boxer, circus-performer, and self-defensetrainer at police schools and Scotland Yard. Nevertheless, the British authorities interned him during World War I along with other German citizens in an internment camp, first inLancaster Castle where he taught wrestling and self-defence, boasting that his students would emerge stronger than they were before their internment. It was here that he began refining and teaching his minimal equipment system of mat exercises that later became "Contrology". He was then transferred to another internment camp on the Isle of Man. During this involuntary break, he began to intensively develop his concept of an integrated, comprehensive system of physical exercise, which he himself called "Contrology." He studied yoga and the movements of animals and trained his fellow inmates in fitness and exercises. It is said that these inmates survived the 1918 flu pandemic due to their good physical shape.
After the war (WWI), he returned to Germany and collaborated with important experts in dance and physical exercise such as Rudolf Laban. In Hamburg, he also trained police officers. When he was pressured to train members of the German army, he left his native country, disappointed with its political and social conditions, and emigrated to the United States.
Pilates Own Studio
The year 1925 is the approximate time when Pilates migrated to the United States. On the ship to America, he met his future wife Clara. The couple founded a studio in New York City and directly taught and supervised their students well into the 1960s. His method, which he and Clara originally called "Contrology," related to encouraging the use of the mind to control muscles. It focuses attention on core postural muscles that help keep the human body balanced and provide support for the spine. In particular, Pilates exercises teach awareness of breath and of alignment of the spine, and strengthen the deep torso and abdominal muscles.
Joseph and Clara Pilates soon established a devout following in the local dance and the performing-arts community of New York. Well-known dancers such as George Balanchine, who arrived in the United States in 1933, and Martha Graham, who had come to New York in 1923, became devotees and regularly sent their students to the Pilates for training and rehabilitation.
Joseph Pilates with Opera Singer Roberta Peters 1951
Joseph Pilates wrote several books, including Return to Life through Contrology and Your Health, and he was also a prolific inventor, with over 26 patents cited.[4] Joe and Clara had a number of disciples who continued to teach variations of his method or, in some cases, focused exclusively on preserving the method, and the instructor-training techniques, they had learned during their studies with Joe and Clara.
Joseph Pilates died in 1967 at the age of 83 in New York.
To see more great Vintage Photo's see our Vintage Yoga Pinterest board here: Vintage Yoga
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Say Hello to Inner Waves Organics!
About Inner Waves Organics:
At Inner Waves Organics we work hard to do the right thing for our customers, our community and our world. We have been blessed with the opportunity to see, with great clarity, the precious nature of life and the impact that each of us can make through compassionate living and conscious choices. The mission of Inner Waves is to reinforce these ideals through our business.
We design and produce our exceptional organic clothing with great care in the USA. We use the finest organic and sustainable fibers and the most environmentally responsible production processes available. We create our clothing to move with the rhythm of our practice and our lives.
Inner Waves is a business that strives to share our passion for design, movement and beauty with our compassion for our community and our planet. We hope our yoga clothing inspires you as it does us.
See the Inner Waves Organics Womens Clothes Here:
CHOOSING ORGANIC
Organic Yoga Clothing supports your practice... on and off the mat. Through Inner Waves Organics exclusive use of fine organic cottons, environmentally safe dyes and responsible production practices, we work to restore harmony by protecting our soil, air and water and uplifting our community.
ORGANIC COTTON
DEFINITION: Organic cotton is grown and harvested without being sprayed with harmful pesticides, fungicides, herbicides or chemical fertilizers.
RESULT OF USE: This helps save our water, soil and overall environment. Organic practices help reduce the cause of serious health issues and provides a livelier place for us and future generations to live.
FACTS
You may be surprised to learn that conventionally grown cotton is one of the earth's most heavily sprayed crops and is one of the greatest users of synthetic fertilizers. In fact, the cotton in an average conventional (non-organic) T-shirt may have been produced using: 7 tsps synthetic fertilizers, 3/4 tsp of other active ingredients; pesticides, herbicides, insecticides, and defoliants
Average acre of California grown cotton:
200 lbs nitrogen
60 lbs phosphorous
40 lbs potash
46% of all U.S. counties contain groundwater that is susceptible to contamination by agricultural pesticides and fertilizers.
14 MILLION people in the U.S. may be exposed to herbicides through contaminated drinking water.
FARM WORKERS have the highest rate of chemical-related illness of any occupational group in the U.S.
MAJOR EFFECTS OF CONVENTIONALLY GROWN COTTON
Contamination of ground water, polluting wells and drinking water
Sterilization of soil
Air contamination
All three creating serious health problems
GOOD REASONS TO BUY ORGANIC COTTON
Reduces the market for products made with harsh chemicals that can harm the earth, air and water
Supports conscious living choices
Fabric is soft and durable
Supports local and smaller farm industries
Conventional cotton is the second most heavily sprayed crop and fourth heaviest user of synthetic fertilizer
POSITIVE ALTERNATIVES FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE
Buy ORGANICALLY GROWN COTTON or other Sustainable fibers:• Hemp • Tencel • Bamboo
STEPS TO INITIATE PARTICIPATION
Start by buying a few primary pieces of clothing that you use often and or close to your skin
Spread the word and learn more
Go beyond, extending your earth-healthy choices to organic foods, responsible products, and a sustainable lifestyle
Now is the time to educate ourselves about Organic Cotton and the role it plays for us all and our planet. As we learn how our choices effect the earth, our environment and our communities we take a step toward being even better stewards.
"The principal guidelines for organic production are to use materials and practices that enhance the ecological balance of natural systems that integrate the parts of the farming system into an ecological whole" *
- info from OTA, The Organic Trade Association is the leading business association representing the organic industry in the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
Monday, April 22, 2013
Welcome Jules our newest Brand Ambassador!
Growing up, I remember having a few things that I loved above all else...traveling (I was an Air Force brat whose parents believed in seeing the world), movement (I dreamed of being a prima ballerina), teaching (my younger brothers might call me bossy), and playing dress up (I had a chest full of costuming). As it turns out, growing older and finding my place in the world hasn't taken me very far from those beginnings at all. Hi, my name is Julia, or Jules to many, and I am a yoga teacher and a full time road rennie.
A what, you ask? A road rennie. That's my term for myself anyway. My partner and I work full time at renaissance festivals around the country, so we lead a nomadic life, picking up and moving every two months or so to the next festival on our circuit. We're part of an expansive and often far-flung community of artisans, performers, crafters, and shop workers of all sorts who work in some capacity at one or more of the forty-something major renaissance festivals that take place across the country each year. My "uniform" consists of bloomers, multiple skirts, a chemise, and a fully boned bodice.
I also teach yoga within the rennie community, leading practice on an empty stage or in a shop a few times each week. In many ways, the practice I lead is similar to those taking place in studios in towns and cities all over the place. I lead my fellow yogis through asana and pranayama and meditation and intention. In many ways, however, rennie yogis face a unique set of challenges every time we roll out our mats. Mainly because being outside without the protection of four walls and climate control makes for some pretty interesting practices.
I'll tell those stories another time, though. For now, I'd like to focus on the travel aspect of my not-quite-normal life (I always thought "normal" to mean "boring," anyway). Like I said, every two months my partner, A, and I wrap up the breakables, pack up the yard, hitch the trailer (aka our house on wheels) up to the truck, and drive to the next festival. The most recent version of this happened just a week ago when we moved from Arizona to Texas.
For most of our transitions, we have at least one weekend off and several days to make our trek. Our springtime journey from the Phoenix area to just south of Dallas every year is the exception to that rule, and a stressful one at that. It goes something like this...closing weekend of the Arizona Renaissance Festival on Saturday & Sunday; Monday-Friday to pack up, etc., drive 1000+ miles, reset everything back into place, opening weekend of Scarborough Renaissance Festival that very next weekend. I call it a five-day mad dash, and there's really nothing about it that I like.
Under the best circumstances, things go smoothly throughout the transition with no unwanted surprises. In fact, the standard farewell greeting between rennies at the end of a festival run is to wish them a "safe and uneventful journey." In the 7 months since moving up in the rennie world from tent-dwelling to being trailer owners, A and I have been lucky enough to experience just that...safe and uneventful travels. That's not quite the trip we had this time around, however.
In the week prior to closing the Arizona faire, we had dutifully taken the truck in for scheduled maintenance and gotten two new tires. Come Monday after closing, we set about the check list of packing up tasks. We even high-fived after successfully hitching the trailer to the truck in record time and with minimal frustration with each other. We stopped at the shower house on site to wash the desert off our sunburned skin as our last to-do item before saying goodbye to beautiful Superstition Mountain for another ten months.
A was driving as we headed out the gates and set our goal for the night for Las Cruces, NM. We got about a quarter mile down the road when the speedometer hit 40 mph and the trailer started swaying very scarily. Not good! If you've ever hauled a 30' travel trailer, you know that smooth and easy is how you want the drive to go. We know more than a few people with horror stories of flipping trailers and rolling vehicles. We were determined not to let that be us. I quickly posted an info SOS message to the rest of our community on Facebook, and as the helpful tips and suggestions came pouring in, we tried changing all the things our more experienced gypsies suggested. To no avail.
We turned around and spent Monday night in the festival parking lot.
Tuesday we were up with the sun to continue trying suggested fixes. The shop we potentially needed to get into for welding work couldn't fit us in for at least a week. The next shop I called referred us to another that referred us to another and so on and so on and so on. I lost track of how many mechanics I called.
Finally, on the suggestion of the last shop I tried, we went back to the tire store where we had just purchased the two new tires. After all, those tires were the only thing different from our last three hauls, on which we'd had no problems. Two hours later, we tried the highway again. We were now able to go 50 mph before the sway from hell kicked in, but were otherwise out of ideas. 1000+ miles at 50 mph? No problem. It would take forever, but at least we'd get there in time for work to begin again.
Several hours later, as we drove through the expanse of desert east of Tucson, a fellow rennie sent a message asking what mile we were at. He was only ten miles ahead and wanted to take a look at things to see if he might be able to help. While parked on a concrete slab in the middle of what used to be a nuclear testing site, he switched the new tires to the front and the old to the back. Problem solved! As it turns out, the new ones I was able to afford are not the same quality as the old ones and were unable to handle the job of hauling closest to the trailer. I learned days later that this particular fellow rennie was dubbed "St. Joe" years ago for countless similar acts of travel genius. He is my new hero.
Back on the road and once again able to cruise safely, A and I set our sights on El Paso for the night. I did some mental math and decided we were only a half day behind schedule and that we had plenty of time, so long as nothing else went wrong.
After filling up and checking on the cat in Las Cruces, we were just about to drive out and get back on the interstate when a kind man tapped on the window. With a thick accent and difficult English, he informed us that our trailer's running lights were so dim that we were almost invisible on dark roads. He worried that if we were continuing into Texas, we risked being pulled over. I worried for worse. So we took that as our cue that Las Cruces was our limit that night, and made plans to look for the mechanic he recommended at Exit 2 just across the state line first thing in the morning.
Up with the sun again the next day, we cruised into Texas and began looking for said mechanic. The only one we could find at Exit 2 only worked on commercial trucks for professional drivers. That is certainly not us. So while A navigated El Paso morning rush hour, I put my smart phone to use Googling trailer repair shops. The first one I called said they could see us immediately once we got to them. Hallelujah!
Less than an hour after pulling into their property, the wonderful mechanics at this shop had replaced the trailer-truck connection and rewired the 12v trickle charger (what should have been keeping our running lights bright) AND our trailer brake system, which had never been connected in the first place. YOU MEAN WE'VE HAULED THIS TRAILER WITH THIS TRUCK OVER 2500 MILES IN 7 MONTHS WITH NO TRAILER BRAKES?!? Apparently so. I don't think I'm going to tell my mother that last part. But, back on the road again with new electrical connections, not only was hauling and stopping much easier, but we were also getting better gas mileage. Sweet!
Fast forward fourteen hours of driving across the expanse of almost nothing that is West Texas, and A and I decided stopping 150 miles short of our destination was a good idea, especially since the Dallas area was set to see some severe spring storms that night.
Exactly one year prior, Dallas/Ft. Worth saw 17 tornadoes in one afternoon. I hate tornadoes.
We consulted our interstate guidebook and set our sights on a truck stop in Ranger, TX, which the weather radar said would be just outside the storm's reach. We pulled into the parking lot around 11 pm to find no spots open. *Sigh* 40 more miles got us to a rest stop, but again there were no spaces available to park 45' worth of truck and trailer. *Double sigh* Apparently all of the interstate truckers headed into Dallas had the same idea we did. The next truck stop was only 20 miles ahead, but in passing the rest stop on the other side of the highway, there appeared to be some spots not occupied by truckers. So I did what any exhausted and fed up gypsy would do, I exited and headed back in the direction from which we'd come, barely making it into the only open spot at the westbound rest stop.
The last day of travel on this particular journey actually was uneventful, thank goodness! We arrived at our destination with plenty of time to spare, paid our camping fees, and got the trailer parked in its new spot. We even got to be good Samaritans, lending our 4WD truck to a neighbor who was otherwise stuck in the infamous Scarborough mud.
It was only in retelling our adventures to friends that I realized how closely travel mirrors yoga. There were a few key things that I had to keep in kind during this last trip in order to maintain my sanity, and it turns out they're the same things I tell my fellow yogis and myself when on the the mat.
Breathe. Focus on the present; worrying about the future or dwelling on the past serve no purpose. Listen to your body (or trailer) and know when you can push a little further and when you need to back off. It's ok if you're not all the way there; you'll get there eventually, but maybe not today. Everything happens as it is meant to. Where you are today is exactly where you're meant to be, and that is perfect.
Namasté
www.downdogboutique.com
Monday, March 25, 2013
Namastay Yoga Towels
Tired of slipping on a sweaty yoga mat or a distracting towel that bunches on your mat? Imagine taking your yoga practice to a new level by using a plush NamaSTAY Yoga Towel on your yoga mat.
When you slide your yoga mat into the sleeves at the ends of your NamaSTAY Yoga Towel, you immediately realize your yoga towel will stay in place during your asanas. Throughout your yoga practice, you are able to maintain firm gripping traction on your NamaSTAY Yoga Towel with no slipping. Plus, your mat stays clean and protected, as this yoga mat towel traps germs, dirt and bacteria until it's washed.
Quick drying and extremely absorbent, this lightweight towel helps to keep you safe & confident during your yoga practice. You can finally focus on your poses without being distracted by a towel that bunches up on your mat. During savasana, you melt into the heavenly soft texture of this luxurious towel. Now that's the way yoga class should be! This 100% recyclable yoga mat towel fits all standard size yoga mats (68" X 24" Small OR 72" X 26" Medium). Plus, it's machine washable. Perfect for any style of yoga, including hot yoga or Bikram yoga.
Cherie Greenwald, Owner, NamaSTAY Yoga Towels, demonstrates yoga poses on a NamaSTAY Yoga Towel.
On NBC TV's "Weekends With Whitney", B. Solomon demonstrates dog yoga on a NamaSTAY Yoga Towel, which provides extra traction and protects the yoga mat.
A few Testimonials:
Len Mitchell of Irvine, CA wrote: "Yesterday was day three of using my NamaSTAY towels in Bikram. If I had to sum it up in a single word, 'phenomenal' would be it. The combination of the pockets on the end and the weight of the material keep it completely and firmly planted on my mat. Even after a really intense class (sweating even more buckets than normal!), the towel doesn't skip a beat. It's an outstanding product, very well done! Looking forward to ordering even more in the future!"
Maria Santoferrara, Yoga Instructor wrote: I’ve been test-driving my very own NamaSTAY towel for the past few weeks and absolutely love it. The fabric is super soft and feels downright luxurious under my feet and on my hands when I’m in downward facing dog. I believe this towel just may be responsible for improving my practice, as it absorbs the sweat and provides a firmer grip for my hands and feet. Even savasana is a little more yummy with this extra cushion of comfort on top of my yoga mat." (Read More)- Maria Santoferrara, Daily Downward Dog
Jacqueline Domnitz of Millbrae, CA wrote: "I had surgery on both feet & one knee. I cannot afford to have a slip; it could send me to the surgeon for sure! So when I saw your towel, I had to try it. It really is great. The other yogis know that I am very, very careful. I will be sure to spread the word about this amazing towel that allows me to do my standing poses without fear."
A little more about Namastay and giving back:
NamaSTAY™ Yoga Towels were created in Cleveland, Ohio by Cherie Greenwald. Cherie is an avid yogi who regularly practices Power Vinyasa Yoga, which is performed in a room heated to 90 degrees, making yoga towels a necessity! Since practicing hot yoga has given her so much, she wanted to contribute something comforting and safe to yogis everywhere. She came up with the idea of NamaSTAY Yoga Towels after witnessing yogis getting distracted by their yoga towels and continuously smoothing them out, as their yoga towels would get "bunched up" on their yoga mats. After much research and development, Cherie is excited to offer you an innovative yoga towel that has sleeves to hug yoga mats, so it always stays flat. This patented product is made of light-weight, 100% recyclable microfiber fabric that attaches to yoga mats and always stays in place, providing a safe and luxurious surface for practicing yoga. This yoga towel is receiving rave reviews from coast to coast! See testimonials below.
Since homelessness is an important issue that has impacted the lives of individuals we love, NamaSTAY Yoga Towels supports the Coalition for the Homeless. A portion of all proceeds from NamaSTAY Yoga Towels benefit this worthwhile organization. Additionally, NamaSTAY Yoga Towels have been featured in VIP gift baskets to benefit Russell Simmons' Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundation. We are proud to support these wonderful organizations!
Saturday, March 9, 2013
Kalso Earth Shoes
Kalso Earth Shoes
Get 20% off Kalso Earth Shoes this Earth Day! Just use code Earth20 at checkout
Find Kalso Earth Shoes at www.DownDogBoutique.com the best online source for Yoga lifestyle products.
It’s a story that goes back more than 40 years. Anne Kalsø, a Danish yoga master, made the insightful observation that the daily raising of the toes relative to the heels could actually help people attain a physical feeling of wellness like that experienced in the yoga position - ‘Mountain’ pose. Inspired by the thought that wellness, in its most organic form, could be part of an everyday experience, she set out to develop the very first Kalsø Earth® Shoe.
From those passionate beginnings now thrives an expansive collection of casual wellness footwear. Each and every one true to its roots as ‘the original wellness shoe’.
Designed by nature. Created by Kalsø.
See the collection here at DownDog Boutique
A little history courtesy of Wikipedia:
Earth shoes (also known as Kalso Earth Shoes) were an unconventional style of shoe invented in the 1970s in Scandinavia by Danish shoe designer Anna Kalsø. Unlike most other shoes, the soles were thick and the heels were thin (Negative Heel Technology), so wearing them one walked heel-downward.
The shoes were introduced in the United States in New York City on April 1, 1970. This was the first "Earth Day" and so the shoes became known as Kalso Earth Shoes.
The shoes surged in popularity and were prominently featured on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and TIME Magazine. Unable to keep up with demand, franchise owners pursued litigation against the United States distributor of Kalso Earth Shoes, and the brand discontinued being sold at retail by the late 1970s.
In 2001, Kalso Earth Shoes re-surfaced as the rights to the name, technology and branded properties was purchased by Meynard Designs, Inc.
Here are a couple of photo's of Ann Kalso in the 1970's with her shoes:
A little more detailed history courtesy of Earth Shoes:
It's a story that goes back more than 40 years...
Anne Kalsø was born in the Faroe Islands off Denmark in 1905. Her life was defined by a deep immersion in the study of yoga, and the fundamental belief that wellness principles needn't be reserved for just one aspect of an individual's life, but could be wholly integrated as part of an everyday existence.
Kalsø 's passion for yoga led her to study in Switzerland and eventually in Santos, Brazil. It was there, in 1957, that she observed the excellent posture of indigenous Brazilians, and the impressions left by their bare footprints as they walked through beach sand. She observed that the footprints laid were deeper in the heels than in the toes. This natural body position resonated with the thoughtful Kalsø . It echoed a formative yoga pose she knew well – Tadasana (the 'Mountain' pose).
As she herself emulated the pose of the native Brazilians, she noticed how her own posture improved, and how her breathing passages opened. She was inspired.
Returning to Denmark, Kalsø enlisted the help of a Portuguese shoe maker to begin what would become a 10-year process to design the original Kalsø Shoe. Although not a shoemaker by trade, Kalsø was deeply immersed in the process of shoe development -- even testing prototype models on long hikes that covered hundreds of miles. According to Kalsø , "it took numerous years of hard work before I reached the final form of my shoe that takes into consideration all the natural demands of the foot and body. It is only now that I know I have created something. It is no longer an idea in my mind, but is something that is thoroughly tested and proven."
Kalsø began selling her shoes from a modest storefront in Copenhagen. Those who discovered her shoes became passionate about their benefits. Many reported that the shoes helped ease chronic foot and body problems. Expectedly, people from around the world inquired about the shoes. But Kalsø insisted that they be experienced in-person prior to being worn.
Even with such interest and fervor, it was not until the mid-to-late 1960's that Kalsø entertained the idea of expansion – ultimately exploring retail beyond Denmark. And specifically in the United States.
April 1st, 1970 would mark the much-heralded opening of the first United States distribution point for Kalsø 's shoes. Coinciding with the first Earth Day, the name of the shoes - on the spot – was changed to "Kalsø Earth Shoes" and capitalized on the youthful movement and energy that defined the day. The trajectory of a wellness enterprise was underway. With much thanks and credit going to a Danish yoga instructor, a belief that wellness could be part of everyone's daily existence, and a simple shoe.
Kalsø Earth Shoes. Designed by Nature. Created by Kalsø.
Kalsø 's passion for yoga led her to study in Switzerland and eventually in Santos, Brazil. It was there, in 1957, that she observed the excellent posture of indigenous Brazilians, and the impressions left by their bare footprints as they walked through beach sand. She observed that the footprints laid were deeper in the heels than in the toes. This natural body position resonated with the thoughtful Kalsø . It echoed a formative yoga pose she knew well – Tadasana (the 'Mountain' pose).
As she herself emulated the pose of the native Brazilians, she noticed how her own posture improved, and how her breathing passages opened. She was inspired.
Returning to Denmark, Kalsø enlisted the help of a Portuguese shoe maker to begin what would become a 10-year process to design the original Kalsø Shoe. Although not a shoemaker by trade, Kalsø was deeply immersed in the process of shoe development -- even testing prototype models on long hikes that covered hundreds of miles. According to Kalsø , "it took numerous years of hard work before I reached the final form of my shoe that takes into consideration all the natural demands of the foot and body. It is only now that I know I have created something. It is no longer an idea in my mind, but is something that is thoroughly tested and proven."
Kalsø began selling her shoes from a modest storefront in Copenhagen. Those who discovered her shoes became passionate about their benefits. Many reported that the shoes helped ease chronic foot and body problems. Expectedly, people from around the world inquired about the shoes. But Kalsø insisted that they be experienced in-person prior to being worn.
Even with such interest and fervor, it was not until the mid-to-late 1960's that Kalsø entertained the idea of expansion – ultimately exploring retail beyond Denmark. And specifically in the United States.
April 1st, 1970 would mark the much-heralded opening of the first United States distribution point for Kalsø 's shoes. Coinciding with the first Earth Day, the name of the shoes - on the spot – was changed to "Kalsø Earth Shoes" and capitalized on the youthful movement and energy that defined the day. The trajectory of a wellness enterprise was underway. With much thanks and credit going to a Danish yoga instructor, a belief that wellness could be part of everyone's daily existence, and a simple shoe.
Kalsø Earth Shoes. Designed by Nature. Created by Kalsø.
1971The Kalsø Earth Shoe becomes the symbol of the 'casual revolution' started on college campuses around the country. Comfort and wellness inform the thinking of many progressive young people nationwide.
1975The Metropolitan Museum of Art places a Kalsø Earth Shoe in its permanent collection, securing its place as an icon that balances both form and function.
1990'sRestoring the name and its technologies, the Kalsø Earth Shoe is re-scoped and re-vitalized under a new company -- Earth, Inc. New fashion-forward styling and an expanded assortment - all of which features the Kalsø Earth Shoe's signature "negative heel" – provide the underpinnings of the new enterprise.
2003Kalsø Earth Shoe distribution expands into markets including Canada, Japan, Italy and Australia.
2008Reputable industry trade publication, Footwear Plus, honors Earth, Inc. with an "Excellence in Design" award.
1970The first Kalsø Earth Shoe store opens on East 17th Street in New York City, coinciding with the world's first celebration of Earth Day.
1974TIME Magazine publishes an extensive story on the Kalsø Earth Shoe. Demand soars. A full-page ad appears in national publications stating, "Please Be Patient. We're Making Our Shoes as Fast as We Can!"
1980'sUnable to keep up with demand, the Kalsø Earth Shoe in its first incarnation is no longer able to be sold at retail in the United States. Regional networks of consumer loyalists develop – petitioning to bring back the Kalsø Earth Shoe in some form.
2001The Kalsø Earth Shoe is officially re-launched. Noting its re-emergence, famed European shoe designer, Manolo Blahnik, remarks in a June TIME Magazine article "… the Kalsø Earth Shoe was the first shoe to ever make a social statement …"
2004Leading the sustainable footwear design evolution, Earth, Inc. becomes one of the first shoe manufacturers to introduce water-based adhesives throughout 100% of its line.
2010Leveraging the 40th Anniversary of Earth Day, Kalsø Earth Shoes celebrate their 40th birthday.
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