fitness · holiday fitness · holidays · meditation · stretching

Making Space 2025: December 1

Hi everyone!

Welcome to another year of finding some space for ourselves and our needs amidst the hustle and bustle of the end of the year.

Whether you are celebrating a holiday this month, whether it is the last month of the year, or whether it is just a string of ordinary days in an ordinary month, the ambient hurrying stressfulness of this month can get to us all.

In the face of all of that, my Making Space posts are not about giving us something ELSE to do.

Instead, I am hoping they can be a reminder that you deserve space in your own life, that you don’t need to dedicate every second of every day to everyone else’s needs and wants.

I want to encourage to take a break in whatever form works best for you whether that includes the exercise/meditation videos I share or something else entirely, I am wholeheartedly encouraging you to make more space for yourself in your own life.

That might mean saying no to some things.

It might mean choosing not to do some other things.

It might mean scaling some things back.

It will definitely mean being kind to yourself.

So, with all of that said, let’s get started on the Making Space 2025 project with some stretching and a short meditation…or with whatever makes you feel like yourself today.

Wishing you ease 💚

Your movement practice for today:

This video 5 minute Daily Stretch is from Kayleigh Cohen Strength. The still image shows the instructor in a black shirt and green leggings in their living room with their arms stretched over their head. There is a dog sleeping on a green couch in the back on the right and on the left is some wood paneling and some plants.

And here’s today’s meditation:

This Meditation for Deep Calm is from Sarah Beth Yoga and the still image shows the instructor from the waist up sitting with their head bowed and their hands in prayer position in the centre of the screen. In the background, which is slightly out of focus, is a yoga mat, a coffee table and some plants.

PS – Katy Bowman of Nutritious Movement is hosting an advent calendar of exercises again this year. Her 2025 focus addresses the stress that tech can put on our bodies.

fitness · meditation

World Meditation Day is here again– let the people say Om…

Well, it’s here again– May 21, and with it whooshes in World Meditation Day. I came to awareness of this day a couple of years ago, so had to blog about it. I’ve posted them below.

This morning, I did one of my favorite first-thing-in-the-morning meditations, a gratitude one. It’s basically a three-step meditation.

One: notice what is going well in your body and in your awareness at this moment; no need to reach for anything grand or cosmic. I often feel gratitude for wiggling my fingers and toes while still in bed, for example.

Two: reflect on what you have to be grateful for in the next hour. It could be morning coffee or tea or cereal, or people or creatures you wake up to. For me, it always includes the light in my apartment, which makes my plants very happy.

Three: broadening a bit, notice what in your life you are generally grateful for. This could be a job, a home, community, health, creativity, or even your meditation practice. For me, this varies, but I don’t sweat it coming up with a list. I just let my mind float and alight on whatever it wants. Then I’m done and ready to start my day.

Here are a couple of blog posts I’ve written about World Meditation Day. Feel free to check them out, it you’re not already busy celebrating with your own plans.

It’s World Meditation Day! Can I get an Om up in here?

aging · death · fitness · meditation

Chronicles of 50, part 1: Kim reflects on dealing with loss and coming to terms with profound change

by Kim Solga

(This is part one of a two-part post about Kim’s turning 50. CW: talk about eldercare and subsequent death)

Sam and Tracy started this blog two years ahead of their 50th birthdays. Their goal: to be their fittest selves at 50, and to show the world how it’s done, the feminist way. I started following them early, and Sam invited me to join the blogging team in 2013. I’m younger than many of the bloggers here: when I started writing for FIFI I was 38, a long distance cyclist, and cocky as hell. One of my first posts was report on what remains one of my proudest cycling achievements: in July 2013, for the disability arts charity SCOPE, my then-husband and I rode the 450+km from London (UK) to Paris, France in 24 hours and 14 minutes.

Last September, the day before my 50th birthday, I climbed Jordan’s highest mountain, Jamal Umm ad Dami, on the border with Saudi Arabia. (I was hiking the country along with eight other adventurers and a hilarious and kind guide called Mahmoud. For the mountain climb, we were also joined by an insanely fit young Bedouin guide called Mohammed.) On my birthday morning, I woke up at 5am to ride a camel into the desert sunrise; it was magical. It was also still late evening in Montreal, where I was born, so *technically* I was still 49 at the time. And don’t think I didn’t tell people.

As that day progressed and we traveled the highway to the Dead Sea, I felt the ache of the previous several days’ hiking in all of my bones, and especially in the ones connecting my left leg and hip to my spine. I’d crashed my road bike in early July, requiring surgery (and a lot of metal props) to repair my shattered left radius. My left hip, already a liability of sorts because of my joint-munching autoimmune disorder (Ankylosing Spondylitis), had been giving me extra trouble ever since. What’s worse, that crash was avoidable. It happened close to home, in my local park, because I was over-tired from attempting to ride 157km solo across June 30 and July 1, to mark not Canada’s birthday (of course not!) but rather 157 years of… settler colonialism.

Cate and Susan teased me a lot about that one; dumb idea all around, Kim.

I had to admit they were right, and not just because my made-up justification sounds, well, REALLY BAD when you say it out loud. The truth was that 38-year-old Kim would not have minded at all 157km in one go. Kim at 43 would have groaned but done it anyway. Forty-seven-year-old Kim would have been daunted, but she would have made.

And nearly 50-year-old Kim? She was nervous. And so decided she had to do it anyway.

To prove nothing had changed. To prove she was the same woman, same athlete, as ever.

To prove her body was still hers to boss around and control.

Except it wasn’t. It isn’t.

***

I was away two months last fall; that’s one of the benefits of my incredibly good, very lucky job as a university professor. I was on sabbatical, and because I have tenure I didn’t need to hunker down and write a new book. I’d long decided that this was the sabbatical I was going to gift myself self-care; in fact, I’d made that a promise to my rheumatologist when I saw her in the spring.

You see, the thing a lot of folks don’t tell you about reaching this age has to do, intimately, with care. If you are a woman reaching this age, you probably won’t have been thinking much about care in the years leading up to and through perimenopause, because, well, you’ll have been too busy doing it. If you’re a woman my age with kids, those kids are finally launching (if you are lucky). However, at the same damn time, your parents are aging, and fast.

I’ve got no kids, but in April 2023 I was a parent to an extremely old doggo called Emma that I loved more than anything, and two elderly parents who refused to look their endgame in the face. I helped Emma pass on 1 May 2023, and I’m proud I gave her such a good death, because at the time I was fighting my dad on literally every care decision we were trying to make as we navigated his rapidly plunging heart and lung health and my mother’s wheelchair-bound semi-mobility. He wouldn’t accept care for her; he insisted on doing it all himself. He wouldn’t accept care for him, either. He refused to say anything was truly wrong.

I was swimming in the ocean off the coast of Cornwall in June 2023 when my mother emailed me to say that dad was in the hospital. Less than a week later I was flying back to Toronto; he had been admitted to palliative care. The next few months are a blur. I took over my mother’s life management, realizing with horror how little she knew of bank accounts, bill payments, and What Happens Now. By hook, crook, and the help of an amazing Senior Move Specialists called Janice, by Christmas we had her safely moved into a wonderful new care facility. She had her own apartment (for the first time in her adult life!), and, briefly, I felt easy. Then, in April 2024, she had a bad fall; she was not wearing her alert button. She lay half-dressed in her bathroom for what we guess was about 16 hours; she went from the tile floor to the ICU, and she never came home again.

***

In Buddhist traditions, practitioners learn to value the present – to be here now, as they say. The present moment is the one we occupy this very minute, and it is all around us, in all oof our senses. It’s not in our phones and it’s not in our other distractions. It’s also not the moment that was the present of our past selves, past bodies, or past expectations. Those moments are gone; we may have learned from them (if we are lucky) but whether or not we did, they are the past now.

I’m trying hard to be more Buddhist these days; I’ve been practicing in the Plum Village tradition of Thich Nhat Hanh for a couple of years now. In Plum Village, we often say: present moment, wonderful moment.

But who am I now, in this new present moment?

***

What happened after mom died? I’d been a wreck so long, managing eldercare and trying to do my job alongside, that initially, briefly, I felt free. But then I started to notice things. For the first time in a long time I was paying closer attention to my self: my body, my heart, my injured soul. I began to realize that I wasn’t just getting older – I was there. I could see clearly that I was in perimenopause, and that I probably had been for some time.

I began to realize that I was more tired than ever. I reasoned, of course: you’ve been to the wars, Kim. It’s only natural you need to rest! But resting had never before been in my vocab; like so many people my age (so many women my age!), rest is defeat. Keep going, keep hustling, keep riding and lifting and burpee-ing until you drop. That, to me, was my superpower.

I did not drop – I could not drop.

Until now.

ADHD · advice · meditation · mindfulness · self care

Christine’s Jumbled Brain Seeks Calm

My brain has been VERY jumbled for the past few days.

On top of all of the things going on in the world as a whole, several friends are going through some heavy things so I am trying to be there for them, and, of course, I have some very ordinary (but still quite present) brain-jumbling stresses:

There was a mix-up with my prescription for my ADHD meds and I had to do without them for three days, I had a migraine, my back and my knee were both giving me trouble, I had a lot of finicky-detail work to do, we’ve had a lot of the kind of wind that puts my nerves on edge, and, through no fault of my own, all kinds of small things have gone awry in ways that required me to do a lot of back-and-forth to get them fixed.

By today (Monday), my brain had just noped out.

It would only do what absolutely HAD to be done and even some of that was kind of a hard sell.

Luckily, while puttering this morning, I came across a note-to-self from a while back that said, “If you can’t do your work, give yourself permission to play. No point in just being annoyed, might as well make something fun.”

My brain felt kind of thick and stubbornly refused to suggest anything to make but then I found a YouTube video by Amy Tangerine called “1000+ pages in journals done with one simple trick” in which she invites the viewer to gather their supplies and make something while she talks.

So I made this. It’s not finished – it needs something horizontal and somewhat rectangular to go over the spot where the dark blue meets the light blue there in middle near the bottom. I haven’t found the right thing yet, but I will.

a piece of multi-media art with torn paper, stickers, markers and paint that kind of looks like a landscape in blue, green, gold, and black
Can you spot where I got smears of paint on my desk from trying to clean off the spots of paint that landed beyond the paper when I flicked by brush to make the dots? I am a true artiste! image description: a mixed-media image that is sort of a landscape in black, green, gold, and two shades of blue. On the upper left is a black moon with tiny torn pieces of green paper overlaid like clouds. On the upper right is a cloud cut out of scrapbook paper that kind of looks like an old letter. The bottom right is a larger piece of torn green paper that forms a kind of a slope with two flower stickers and a butterfly sticker on it. The bottom left is painted light blue and a there’s a darker blue mass and in combination it kind of looks like a blue iceberg floating on water. There are thin gold and black lines extending from the left of the paper to the dark blue. Everything is outlined in gold and there are blue flecks of paint all over the white background.

Focusing on that small creative project helped a lot but it occurred to me that I have been feeling extra jumbled quite often lately and I have saved quite a few things that seemed helpful.

So, I thought I would share them with you in case you have been feeling extra jumbled lately, too.

Remember that the goal of all of this isn’t to push away our feelings or to pretend that everything is fine all the time. This is all about trying to create space for us to deal with stress, with our emotions (and with all of the damn things that are cluttering up our brains) in a way that is more effective and less overwhelming.

Now, speaking of overwhelming, please don’t make the mistake that I tend to and attempt to try everything here all at once or all in one day.

Just pick one thing that has some appeal and see how it feels.

Give it a real chance though, at least a few minutes. Sometimes when I feel jumbled, I expect instant results and then I kind of hop from attempted solution to attempted solution without really getting into any of them.

Guess what? That makes me even MORE jumbled and then I get annoyed, which is not a good combination.

Anyway, here are some of the things I am keeping on hand for my own jumbled brain. I hope they help and/or they inspire you to create your own resource list.

I wish you ease, my friends.

*****

Here’s a video from Yoga with Adriene that I find quite soothing:

And this guided meditation for stress relief is helpful:

And you know I am a fan of this breathing exercise to calm anxiety – I’m sure I have posted it a dozen times!

These tips from Anna the Anxiety Coach on Instagram have a lot to recommend them:

The Shabby Creek Cottage posted some excellent advice in this series called ‘How to Calm Your Ass Down’:

This journaling video has some good ideas as well.

And, finally, I’ve heard that ‘heavy work’ exercises can be helpful. A young friend of mine was told that taking action when anxiety strikes can help ground you in your body. They were advised to do squats, to push hard on the wall, or to carry something heavy up and down the stairs and it really seemed to help them in the moment. Here’s more advice on that topic.

Feel free to add your own suggestions in the comments.

fitness · holiday fitness · holidays · meditation · mindfulness · rest · self care

Making Space 2024: December 31

Hi Space Makers,

Well, here we are at our very last day of Making Space in 2024.

I hope that my posts throughout December gave you a little room to think, a little room, to breathe, and helped you have a little more space for yourself in your own life.

And I hope that my enthusiasm for your space-making efforts helped you to feel supported and helped you to find a little more ease as you made your way through the month.

As we move into a new year (and as I move into creating Go Team! posts for January), I hope that you can take some of that spirit of ease, that sense of space making, that determination to create a little more room for yourself, into your day-to-day.

I truly wish more ease, more relaxation, more personal energy, and more of whatever kind of space you want for yourself for you in 2025.

As I often say in people’s birthday greetings – May the year ahead bring you plenty of time to spend as you choose and may you have plenty of energy to enjoy it fully.

And since this wouldn’t be a Making Space post without some suggested practices, here are a few for you to choose from. (And, as always, you are free to choose something else entirely – you are the boss of you!)

For today, I decided to offer a variety of things – some are long, some are short, some are relaxing, and some are energizing. It’s a ‘take what you need’ kind of thing around here today.

First up, we have our movement practices.

Here’s a relaxing Vin Yin- Relax & Flow 30 Minute Yoga Practice from Yoga with Adriene.

still image shows the instructor lying on her back on a yoga mat with her legs bent at the knee and leaned to one side while she rests her hands on her belly.

And a short Relaxing Yoga Before Bed practice from Yoga with Uliana

still image shows the instructor lying on her back on a yoga mat with one knee bent (foot flat on the floor) and the other leg bent with the bottom of her foot pointed towards the ceiling and she is holding that foot in both hands.

If you are looking for some extra oomph, this Energy Boosting Cardio Jumpstart – Total Body Warm Up from Fitness Blender might be just the thing.

still image shows the instructor standing with one foot further ahead than the other and her arms are in positions they might be when running – one bent at the elbow at her side and one bent at the elbow in front of her.

If you are looking for a longer workout, this PS Fit 30 Minute Energizing Cardio Workout with Amanda Butler is worth a try.

still image shows three happy looking people in exercise clothes demonstrating exercise punches towards the camera

And here are our mindfulness practices.

First up, in case you have a little extra space (or need a little extra space!) we have a 20 Minute Meditation for Inner Strength and Peace from The Mindful Movement

still image shows a photo of two mountaintops on the right and an expanse of pale blue sky on the left and overlaid on the image is the logo for Mindful Movement (overlapping Ms with a purple lotus on top and the word Meditation beneath) and the words Mountain of Strength.

If you are looking for a shorter meditation, then Circles 5-Minute Guided Mindfulness: Relax, Recharge, and Refocus could be just the thing!

And if you aren’t looking for movement or meditation but you want to have something kind of friendly on in the background while you read, rest, do crossword puzzles, or do some handiwork, I have been really enjoying The Dead of Night‘s Ambience videos this month and you might like them too. (If that channel’s videos don’t draw you in, there are tons of other ambience channels you can explore.)

still image shows an animation of a roaring fire, a purring cat, and a cup of tea in a candlelit room that seems inviting (at least to me!)

And that’s it for our Making Space posts for 2024.

Thanks for reading!

May you have ease, joy, and strength in 2025.

advice · holiday fitness · holidays · meditation · mindfulness · self care

Making Space 2024: December 30

Hey there, Space Makers!

Here we are at the last Monday in 2024, the last Monday of this Making Space series, and at the beginning of one of those weird feeling weeks because somehow today is supposed to be a regular day but tomorrow night is festive and Wednesday is a whole new calendar year. Go figure!

So, on a pretend-normal day at the beginning of an odd week, I’m recommending that we create space for ourselves by having some extra fun.

Yeah, I know, you probably have to work or maybe you are thinking about future things, or planning how to spend New Year’s Eve, or juggling various things for kids, relatives, and yourselves, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t add some fun.

Not ‘feels like a whole other job’ level fun, but something that feels doable.

Maybe you blast your favourite music in the car on your way somewhere.

Maybe you draw on your post-it notes for a few minutes.

Maybe you have something special for your lunch.

Maybe you watch a cartoon with the kids over supper.

Maybe you play a board game, or tell some joke, or read a funny book.

Maybe you call a friend and keep each other company while your do some filing or do the dishes or fill out grant applications.

Maybe you gather a few favourite memes and send them to your friend group.

Maybe you lie on the floor with your dog and tell her that she is the best pup.

Really, you can do anything at all as long as it falls into the range of ‘fun and not very much hassle to arrange.’ After all, this is about creating SPACE not about creating extra work.

However you decide to add extra fun to the last Monday of the year and the first day of this odd week, I wish you ease in the process.

And, of course, I offer a couple of possible practices in case you want to create space with movement or with mindfulness. Remember, that these are just suggestions – you are the boss of you!

Our suggested movement practice for today is The Most Fun 15 Minute Cardio Dance Fitness Workout EVER The Studio by Jamie Kinkeade (I don’t know if it’s the *most* fun ever but it IS pretty enjoyable!)

I’m having trouble embedding this video so if it doesn’t show up, here’s a link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yN3GgCUmmXw&t=12s

And seeing as we are working with fun as our theme, here’s Add Fun to Your Life (Guided Meditation) from Inner Space Meditation. We might as well add fun wherever we can, right?

advice · fitness · holiday fitness · holidays · meditation · mindfulness · self care

Making Space 2024: December 29

Hello Space Makers!

As we get closer to the end of 2024, the posts about resolutions, making changes, and “self improvement” are getting more frequent and more intense.

If planning new things is appealing to you at the moment, then have it.

I don’t object to the practice, I object to the idea that we have to have everything figured out right now, that we have to take ourselves away from holiday, end-of-year mode and jump right into something new.

And I hate the ‘do it now!’ ‘last chance!’ ‘be better!’ tone of a lot of those posts.

Please don’t let all that pressure crowd into your space.

It’s ok to be seeking rest, to be reflective, to take things as slowly as feels right to you. It’s ok to keep making space for yourself to be the way you want to be right now.

And whether or not you feel like moving into goal-setting mode, please remember that there is nothing wrong with you, that you aren’t a project, and that you do not need to be fixed.

If you want to add something new to your life, if you want to change something about your systems or your processes, or you want to make your life better in some way, and the new year seems like a good time to do that, please forge ahead.

Just be kind to yourself in the process.

But if all of these posts and ideas about resolutions and changes just feel like more pressure and if they make you feel like you’re not getting enough space, then you don’t have to change anything.

You don’t need resolutions just because there’s a new calendar year.

You don’t have to be on a constant mission of self improvement.

You do not have to add more tasks just for the sake of adding them.

And if you think you might like to make some changes, or to add some more interesting things, some more fun or some more challenges to your life, you do not have to start on January 1.

You can pick a convenient time of your own choosing when you feel you will have the resources to follow through on your plans.

As you may know, every January, I write a series of Go Team posts that are about encouraging you to start the year with self-kindness, to be realistic about your interests, your capacity, and your time, and, if you are trying to build new habits, that it’s ok to go gently.

Within those posts I like to remind people that I’m there to provide support and encouragement, not pressure. No one has to start anything new in January. They can start whenever they like.

Personally, while I start some things in January, I have also labelled the month as Planuary because that’s when I like to sit down and think about the months ahead the best I can.

So, keep in mind that this is your life and these are your plans.

Trying to cram yourself into someone else’s idea of what you should do won’t leave you with a lot of space for yourself.

So I hope that you will reject, to the best of your ability, any outside pressure to proceed in a way that doesn’t serve you well.

I hope you’ll take up the space and time that you need to figure out what you want to do and how you want to do it.

And I wish you ease throughout that process.

With all of that said, let’s check out the suggested practices for today. After all, we need space both now and in the future and sometimes we have to work on both of those things at once.

Our suggested movement practice is a Short Wake Up Flow from Yoga with Adriene

Still image shows the instructor in a low lunge with her hands in prayer position in front of her chin/chest. She is on a yoga mat in front of a window. The words ‘Wake Up Flow’ are overlaid on the image.

And our mindfulness practice is Evolving Through Life’s Cycles from Great Meditation

Still images shows an cartoon-style illustration of a young person with long hair sitting cross-legged with their arms resting on the tops of their legs, fingers curled, hands are palm upwards. There are illustrations of swamp-style plants in the background and around the edges. The title of the video is in dark green in the upper right.
ADHD · advice · fitness · habits · holiday fitness · holidays · meditation · mindfulness · self care

Making Space 2024: December 28

Hi Space Makers!

Before we get to today’s suggested practices, I’m inviting you to give some thought to future you. *

And the future you I’d like you to consider is the person who will be trying to get things done next December.

What does that person need to know?

What have you figured out in the process this year that you want to make note of for the future?

What expectations (yours and others’) can you work to change now, so that future version of yourself can have things a little easier?

What reminders can you set for future you?

A few years ago, I got into the habit of putting reminders into my calendar for this time next year and it has made a huge difference.

One year I set a reminder for myself to buy new Christmas lights at the end of November the following year.

Another time, I put a reminder in my phone telling me where I was storing the Christmas tablecloths so that future me wouldn’t have to scramble to find them.

And I have also included reminders to help somebody with something earlier in December then I did this year, reminders of when to do specific holiday related tasks, and reminders of tips for gift shopping.

Even though I often have trouble envisioning a future time, this time of year seems to be an exception.

There’s something about being in the thick of it right now that makes it really clear to me what I will need next time December rolls around. Right now, it’s much easier to imagine a future version of what I’m doing at the moment, especially a version that I could shape to make things more straightforward for future me.

Every time I have done this, it has both come in handy and I have been surprised by the information. I always completely forget that I’ve set these reminders and then I’m really grateful to past me when they pop up.

And on top of the straight-up utility of this process, it feels really good to take good care of myself this way. I can only assume that it would be the same for you. And, obviously, I’m all for things that help us feel better in the moment and in the future.

As for feeling better in the moment, I have included a movement practice and a meditation practice below. You are free to choose either or both of these or to choose something else of your liking to create space for yourself today

No matter what you choose to do, please take good care of yourself and be kind. May you have ease today, and always.

Our movement practice for today is A Quick Individual Medley Workout from Ella’s Wheelchair Workouts

Still image is of the instructor, wearing exercise clothes and sitting in her wheelchair, leaning to one side as she ‘swims’ one arm forward. She is smiling and looks like she is enjoying herself.

And our mindfulness practice for today is Guided Breathing Meditation To Relax And Be Calm from Mindful Peace

Still image is of a ring of light with a dark centre with beams emanating from it and the words ‘Just Breathe (Calm and Relaxed)’ overlaid in white.

*If today isn’t the right day for this, consider doing this type of thinking sometime soon instead. And, of course, be kind to yourself when and if you do this type of thinking. The goal is to make next year easier while this year’s events and activities are fresh in your mind, this is not about adding complications for future you.

advice · fitness · habits · holiday fitness · holidays · meditation · mindfulness · motivation

Making Space 2024: December 27

Hello Space Makers,

Today is a good day to practice checking in with yourself.

It’s all too easy to just let yourself get carried along with whatever is going on, to carry on with you to do list, to get caught up in someone else’s plan.

This is especially true at this time of year when there is a lot going on, a lot of traditions, a lot of expectations, and a hearty dose of ambient stress.

If we don’t check in with ourselves, if we don’t make a little space, we can build up a feeling of being out of sorts, jangled, or distressed and not even realize it until we are overwhelmed.

Checking in with ourselves from time to time can help us to feel steadier, more at ease, and less likely to get tossed about by an unexpected storm of emotions.

Please note: This is as much of a ‘note to self’ as a note to you. I do NOT remember to do check-ins all the time but when I do plan some throughout the day then it really helps.

You don’t have to create an elaborate check-in ritual (but you can if that’s helpful!), all you need to do is pick a few times to pause (I use a timer or an alarm on my wrist spy) and ask yourself: How am I feeling? Is there anything I need?

Maybe all is well and you can carry on with what you were doing.

Maybe you need a few deep breaths or a few minutes to yourself.

Perhaps you need to stretch or get moving a little (or a lot).

Maybe you need a glass of water, a cup of tea, or a snack.

Maybe you need to get away from that friend or relative who is taking up your physical or mental space at the moment.

Maybe you need a nap.

Whatever your check-in reveals, start by giving yourself a gold star for checking in -⭐️-then do your best to give yourself what you need in the moment.

And, yes, I know that it won‘t always be possible to give yourself what you need but I have often found that identifying what I need helps even if I can’t have it right now.

For example, if my check-in reveals that I need some exercise but I can’t take the time to really dig into an exercise session right now, I’ll do a few stretches and maybe dance around a bit. AND I’ll be aware that I am a bit out of sorts because I need exercise so I should be extra patient with myself (and with others) until I can really meet that need. I don’t always succeed with my planned patience, of course, but it works often enough to be worth it.

Whatever you do today, I hope you can make space for yourself and that you can find some ease.

And if your space making includes movement or mindfulness, here are your suggested videos for today:

For our movement practice suggestion, here’s Loosen Hips and Remove Low Back Pain from Kaleigh Cohen Strength

Still image shows the instructor in exercise clothes sitting on a mat with one leg extended and the other folded as it would be if she were sitting cross-legged and she has one hand pressing gently on her knee and the other pressing gently on her calf.

And for our mindfulness practice, here’s Tara Brach with Arriving in Mindful Presence

Still image is a photo of a filed of grass lit by the rising sun.

Wishing you ease, fun, and peace of mind, today and always. 💚

advice · habits · holiday fitness · holidays · meditation · mindfulness · self care

Making Space 2024: December 23

Hi Space Makers,

My initial plans for today’s post were lost in the hubbub of pre-holiday traffic (a.k.a. my errands took so long that I ran out of time to follow my initial plan.)

Sooooooo…

I’m back to being a good example.

Well, ok, let’s just say that I am definitely an example of some sort and forge ahead.

Once I realized that I couldn’t do my initial plan and since I have promised myself that I will minimize feeling rushed whenever I can, I switched to my backup plan – figure out 3 things.

In practice, that works like this: I can’t follow my plan so what three things will let me call this post done?

Thing one: A self-kindness reminder

Thing two: A movement practice

Thing three: A mindfulness practice.

So, I decided to use my three things plan as my self-kindness reminder. Scaling back this post, accepting that I couldn’t follow my plan, and recognizing that imperfect but done is much better than perfect but unfinished are all part and parcel of me being kind to myself.

Then I searched for videos of practices that appealed to me at the moment, popped them in this post and added all the connecting bits. And I’m done with a few minutes to spare!

So, space making friends, if your day is getting a little out of hand and your time is tightening around your tasks (and probably around your brain), then I invite you to consider a similar procedure for your plans for today.

Acknowledge the need to change the plan, scale back to 3 (or so) things that will get the thing done, be annoyed at having to be imperfect but do it anyway, and be kind to yourself about the whole process and feel good about having done what you set out to do.

Wishing you ease and space today, no matter what procedures, processes, or plans you follow!

Sidenote: If the thing you were working on turns out to not be all the important, you also have the option to ditch it completely! Tell ’em I said you could!

Today’s movement practice is the happy result of a YouTube search for ‘fun dance workout’ This is Lift and Bloom‘s 10 Minute Christmas Dance Workout.

Still image is of a woman in exercise clothes and a pair of headband antlers, she is smiling at the camera. The name of the video is on a card overlaid on the left side of the image.

And for something a little different today, here’s a Movement Meditation from Living Bliss Yoga.

Still image is of a woman in exercise clothes standing on a yoga mat in between two windows in a studio. She is in motion with her arms raised to shoulder height and her hands in front of her.