Moonflower Yoga
2093 Bellmore Avenue
Bellmore, NY 11710
Phone: (516) 557 2206
Email: moonfloweryoga@optimum.net

Spring: New Beginnings by Nancy Weshkoff

April 13, 2021 by  
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Spring: New Beginnings

By Nancy Weshkoff

Spring is my favorite time of year.   We shake off the remnants of winter.  All around you, life is starting to come alive gain.  The trees start to bloom, lawns and shrubs are turning green, spring bulbs are blooming, and the weather is warmer.  We have more daylight and start to feel more alive than when it is dark before 5 PM.

With a year of living with the Covid pandemic that has gripped the world, spring takes on added meaning for me.   I start to feel that we are leaving the darkness of the Covid winter behind us and are moving into the light and to better days ahead.  With spring’s arrival it is time to dust off the cobwebs of winter and start to feel renewed and refreshed.

With the warmer weather ahead, you start to wear thinner clothes.  Wouldn’t it be great to feel toned in those lighter clothes?   A great yoga class can help you tone and stretch your muscles, as well as improve strength, flexibility, and balance.  Yoga and meditation are also wonderful for stress reduction and helping us cope with these challenging times.   If you are a beginner, there are beginner-level yoga classes on the Moonflower Yoga schedule 6 days a week.  And while the studio doors remain closed for the time being, you can still enjoy a great yoga class with one of our great yoga teachers, as you join us online from the comfort of your home using Zoom.

In addition to the daily yoga classes, there are also some great meditation activities on the Moonflower Yoga schedule including a weekly Relax and De-Stress with Guided Meditation class on Mondays at 7 PM, as well as a deep, relaxing monthly Yoga Nidra (yogic sleep) with Jackie Lee, and a fascinating monthly evening of Guided Meditation with Bhante Sujatha, a 30+ year Buddhist Monk who is singularly focused on adding more love in the world.  Bhante teaches loving-kindness meditation to people around the globe for all those seeking the art of happiness and contentment.  Discover how meditation can help you relax, reduce your stress levels, and put you on a brighter path.

Perhaps you would also like to learn something new as part of a spring renewal.   There is a monthly “In the Kitchen with Bob” cooking workshop where you cook in your kitchen, while we simultaneously cook from our kitchen.  We supply the recipes in advance, and have a blast cooking delicious, plant-based, healthy recipes together in our respective kitchens.  At the end, we enjoy sharing our meal together using Zoom.

For the month of April, we also added a “New Beginnings for Springtime” workshop with clinical herbalist, nutrition educator, and author Jovanka Ciares on Friday, April 23rd.  In this workshop, Jovanka will discuss how to use foods and botanicals to support our natural detoxification system and help improve our well being.

Come join us this spring at Moonflower Yoga and take a step towards renewal for yourself!   Using Zoom, you can join us from a wider geographic location and are no longer limited to only the Bellmore, Wantagh, Merrick, Seaford, or East Meadow vicinity of Nassau County, Long Island.    We have people joining us from other parts of the United States, including mothers and daughters from different states enjoying a class together.  I hope you can join us too and have a great start to your spring!

 

March: One Year Later – The “New Normal” by Nancy Weshkoff

March 6, 2021 by  
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March: One Year Later and the “New Normal” 

By Nancy Weshkoff

This March marks the one-year anniversary of the studio closing its doors to in-person classes.   It is hard to believe that one year has passed.

Thinking back to March, 2020, it started to become apparent by the middle of the month that New York was in a bad situation.  People were getting sick all around us.  Hospitals were filling up and beds became scarce.  Health care workers bravely and tirelessly put their lives on the line to help as many people as possible.  And we faced shortages of supplies such as toilet paper, as well as masks to protect us from the virus.   On March 16th, I made the painful decision to close the studio doors due to the pandemic and cancelled the future in-person activities on the schedule.

When I went home that March night, I shed many tears.   What I had worked so hard to build for 8 years just disappeared overnight.   How did we get here?   I went into a depressed state starting that evening and had difficulty getting out of bed.   I could not face what was happening.   The world that I loved had just turned upside down.

After several days of this, I received a phone call from another studio owner who I had met through training programs.   She gave me a jolt to get out of bed and save Moonflower.   She told me about the online Zoom classes that she was starting up at her studio.   I then investigated Zoom and decided to give it a try.  That competitive studio owner, who did not need to help me, gave me some tutorials on Zoom so that I could start offering online classes.  I will always be grateful for her kindness and advice.  I also decided to attend the tutorials that Zoom provided to help me further understand Zoom, and I am blessed to have an amazing partner in Bob who is IT savvy.

Next came the outreach to the great teachers who had supported Moonflower, and we agreed on new online class offerings to accommodate the Zoom technology.   I did test classes with each of the teachers so we could practice working with Zoom.  By the end of the month, I was ready to give online classes a try, and I made the announcement of the new online schedule to the Moonflower Yoga community.

There were some hiccups at first.  One-on-one Zoom tutorials were offered to some Moonflower clients who needed help navigating Zoom.   But overall the launch was a success.   Once that was in place, I started to offer some online Zoom workshops and relaunch the Moonflower Yoga Book Club and Needle Arts Group.

And here we are one year later.   I never thought I would be spending more than a year in Zoom world – the “new normal” .

Many wonderful things have happened as a result of Zoom.   There is no longer a geographic or size limitation to the yoga or meditation classes.  Students join me from other states, not just from the local Nassau County or Long Island, New York communities of Bellmore, East Meadow, Merrick, Wantagh, or Seaford.   Classes are not limited to 6 people, and several popular classes have more than that number attending.   Most importantly, I can still stay in touch with each of you, the Moonflower Yoga community that I love.   Social distancing is important to prevent the further spread of the virus, but it can create loneliness.   Through the Zoom rooms, we can safely and happily chat before/after class and not feel so lonely and isolated.  And, of course, the Zoom classes provide an opportunity to take care of our physical bodies as well as provide relaxation and enable us to de-stress as we cope with our changed lives as a result of the pandemic.

With all the snow that we received in February, having the Zoom classes was a godsend, as we can still hold classes despite the bad weather and not worry about roads being plowed and parking being available.   And some of the meditative activities such as Cathi’s lovely Relax and De-Stress with Guided Meditation class on Monday nights, or Jackie Lee’s monthly Yoga Nidra work very nicely when done at home as you can be reclining in your own bed as you de-stress and not lose that relaxation by having to drive home after class.  The In the Kitchen with Bob cooking workshop series is a lot of fun, as we connect in our respective kitchens and then enjoy sharing via Zoom the meal we just prepared.  Bhante Sujatha, who offers such wonderful wisdom through his monthly meditations for Moonflower Yoga, teaches these meditations from Sri Lanka or Chicago – something that would not have happened in the physical studio world.  We have witnessed sunrise over the mountains of Sri Lanka during Bhante’s meditation.  Jessica, who taught for the studio for years before becoming a mom and then relocating to South Carolina, can now reconnect with the studio with 2 great weekly yoga classes due to Zoom.

It is also fun to see have some of our furry friends joining the Zoom classes.  Walter, the dog, and Daisy, the cat, and others enjoy the Zoom classes also.

There is sadness too.   I loved the sound of that creaky studio door opening to signal someone was entering, and I loved popping up from my desk to greet people.   I miss giving someone a hug who was having a bad day.  I miss handing out essential oils and cards with messages from the universe when people settled into the Moonflower Yoga studio room.    I miss doing Reiki training which is not safe to do while the virus is prevalent.  And while we do have the Moonflower Yoga Book Club and Needle Arts Group online, I miss the Moonflower Yoga Mah Jongg Club and the new Moonflower Yoga Canasta Club where we had laughs and which must be on hiatus for now.

Like many small businesses, these are challenging times financially.  We are doing everything we can to survive the pandemic and keep our heads above water until the pandemic is behind us.   It is why I ask you to please support a small business if you can.  The dollars that small businesses receive stay in the community to pay for schools, police, sanitation, etc.  Small businesses are the lifeblood of our neighborhood.

So what does the next year hold for Moonflower Yoga?   Well, it is a continuance of online classes, workshops, and the Clubs for a few more months.   I have repeatedly stressed “ahimsa” – kindness.   That means I need to keep the teachers and the students safe from the virus, which I cannot due at the moment if the studio doors reopen to in-person activities.  We need to have more people vaccinated and for the numbers to drop significantly before I will consider reopening the doors.  I do think that will happen but it will take time.

I am so very grateful to those of you who have continued to support Moonflower Yoga through this challenging time.  THANK YOU!   And for those of you who have not yet tried an online class, I encourage you to give it a try.   It is just $11 for a great 30-40 minute online yoga or meditation class with NO contract to sign.   Or join us for a great workshop where you learn something new and have fun.   The Schedule tab on the moonfloweryoga.com website provides the calendar of upcoming activities.  I look forward to seeing you soon!

 

Moonflower Yoga feature on News 12 Long Island: One Year Later By Nancy Weshkoff

February 17, 2021 by  
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Moonflower Yoga feature on News 12 Long Island: One Year Later

By Nancy Weshkoff

 

One year ago, in February 2020, Moonflower Yoga was selected by News 12 Long Island for a piece which aired about Women and Heart Health.  The piece was hosted by Shari Einhorn of News 12, and it focused on the positive benefits of yoga and meditation on heart health, particularly for women.   I was so thrilled and honored that Moonflower Yoga in Bellmore was selected for this piece amongst all the other yoga studios in Long Island, New York.

The News 12 piece featured 2 classes: one was a traditional, beginner-level yoga class.  The second one was a Chair Yoga class which I taught.   Shari joined us for the Chair Yoga class.  As a Reiki Master Teacher, I also incorporated some Reiki into the Chair Yoga class that I taught, as well as brief meditation.

The response to the piece which News 12 Long Island aired was fantastic, and it was such a great day. We were able to all be in the same room together, enjoying the practice, as well as laughing at the end and even sharing some hugs.  For those who love Bob’s desserts, there was also his delicious homemade lemon lavender cake to share at the end of the filming.

If you would like to see the piece that aired on News 12 Long Island, here is the link:

http://longisland.news12.com/story/41735495/relax-and-destress-yoga-and-heart-health

We did not know at that time what lay ahead of us with the pandemic the next month.

So many of the simple things that happened that day, such as being all together in one room, not worrying about the spread of the virus, no social distancing, no mask wearing – all of these feel so alien at this point in time.

I am feeling nostalgic for that day in February when Moonflower Yoga was featured in the News 12 Long Island piece.

It is hard to imagine how much has changed in one year.   Online Zoom yoga and meditation classes are now the norm at Moonflower Yoga, as the studio doors remain temporarily closed for in-person classes.  Through Zoom, I am still able to stay connected with the Moonflower Yoga community of students, as well as the great yoga teachers who comprise the staff at the studio through daily online yoga classes via Zoom.  Moonflower Yoga was also able to switch to a live, online version of some of the great workshops, as well as the Moonflower Yoga Book Club and Moonflower  Yoga Needle Arts Group.   I am very grateful for this ability to still stay connected with the group of students and teachers who I have come to love, as well as have some fun in the online Moonflower Yoga Clubs.

I am also very grateful to Shari Einhorn of News 12 Long Island and her crew for selecting Moonflower Yoga and coming to the Moonflower Yoga studio in Bellmore to film the piece.

In addition to being grateful, perhaps, most importantly, this one-year anniversary of the News 12 piece is a reminder to appreciate every day that we have.  TODAY is the only day we can control.  As my yoga gurus before me have often emphasized, TODAY is the most important day of your life.   Enjoy and appreciate it.   Namaste.

 

Heart Disease and Women by Nancy Weshkoff

February 9, 2021 by  
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Heart Disease and Women

By Nancy Weshkoff

Heart health is something I take very seriously.  And while it is important to focus on heart health year round, the month of February is Heart Health Month and part of the American Heart Association’s Go Red for Women Movement.  I am therefore writing this blog to discuss this very important topic.

Let’s begin with these key factors about heart disease in women:

–Heart disease is the NUMBER ONE killer of women in the United States.

–If you stacked up ALL cancer-related deaths for women together (breast, lung, ovarian, liver, skin cancer, etc), all of these cancer-related deaths together would still be number two behind heart disease.

– One in three women in the United States will die every year from heart disease.  If you were sitting in a group of women and looked to your right and to your left, sadly one of you will die from heart disease.  And of this number, more than 1,800 of these women who die from heart disease will live here on Long Island in New York.

-If you have heart disease, you are at a higher risk of contracting COVID or having serious complications related to COVID.  With the spread of coronavirus, it is even more important to pay attention to your heart health.

– Did you know that you can help PREVENT yourself from becoming one of these very sad statistics by proactively taking steps to lower your risk?

While there are some things that you cannot change, such as your family history of heart disease, there are several things that doctors all agree that you CAN do to lower your risk of having a heart attack or stroke.  These include:

– Engage in moderate exercise on a regular basis.   Sitting on a couch and not moving is bad for you in so many ways.   Spending long hours in front of a computer screen without moving is not good for you.  Your body needs to move.   Yoga is extremely helpful in helping you with your fitness goals.   The postures in a yoga class will build strength and flexibility, stretch your muscles, and at the same time, the deep breathing techniques (pranayama) used in a yoga class increase the flow of blood to your heart and your organs.

– Reduce your stress levels.  This can be particularly challenging in this coronavirus period where we might find ourselves multi-tasking.  It makes it even more important to notice how you cope with stress.  Being in a “fight or flight” mode, which is how our body reacts when our stress levels are high, is putting a huge strain on your body functions – including your heart. Meditation is a wonderful tool to help you lower your blood pressure and stress levels.  Yoga classes also help you reduce your stress.   The online yoga and meditation classes at Moonflower Yoga can get you on the path to accomplishing your stress-reduction goals.  Perhaps you do not have a lot of spare time right now with multi-tasking due to the pandemic.  I would suggest that it is so important to take even 30 minutes FOR YOU which helps lower those stress levels and enables you to better cope with life’s challenges.  Moonflower Yoga currently has great online yoga and meditation classes which you can do from the comfort of your home to help you lower stress and help your heart health.  The Schedule tab on the moonfloweryoga.com website lists the daily options taught by our great yoga and meditation teachers.

– Learn to be “in the present moment”.  We often worry unnecessarily about things from our past that we cannot change or things in the future that MIGHT happen but have not happened yet and may never happen.   In our classes and workshops at Moonflower Yoga, we teach you ways to be more in the present moment and let go of unnecessary worries bringing you more peace and calm.

– Lower your blood pressure:  Moving more, decreasing your stress levels, and using tools such as meditation and yoga mentioned above can all help you with this.  How about learning something new?   Spending some time reading a great book or engaging in a fun activity can help lower your stress levels.  We have several great online activities that you can do from home including two fun “Clubs”.  In the Moonflower Yoga Book Club, we have fun going on a journey with a new book which helps you discover something new. There is also the Moonflower Yoga Needle Arts Group where you crochet or knit (very meditative!) while enjoying each other’s company.  With the Moonflower Yoga Needle Arts Group, we also donate some of our beautiful creations to various charities.  And there are great yoga workshops, as well as crafting workshops where we make beautiful jewelry.  We have online meditation classes, as well as regular guided meditation workshops.  There is also a monthly online yoga nidra evening, which is deep relaxation “yogic sleep”, a wonderful way to de-stress.  One hour of yoga nidra = four hours of sleep!  These types of interesting and meditative activities can help you on the path of stress reduction, lowering your blood pressure, and having fun – all great things for your heart.

– Fighting loneliness:  In this coronavirus period, it is very important to practice social distancing to prevent the spread of the virus.  But social distancing often creates loneliness.  We need social interaction.   Online yoga, meditation, and other activities via Zoom are a great way to combat loneliness and help you feel better.  Before and after each online class, there is a Zoom Room where you can safely see and chat with fellow attendees, have a laugh, or share a story.   It makes a big difference to have this social interaction and help you feel better, thereby reducing your stress levels.

-Are you eating a healthy diet, or are you eating fast food or other unhealthy foods that are high in fat and cholesterol?  Eating unhealthy foods can clog your arteries and increase your risk for heart disease.  One fun, new online activity that we offer at Moonflower Yoga is a monthly “In the Kitchen with Bob” cooking workshop where we connect online via Zoom, and we cook healthy meals together during the workshop and then enjoy the finished product at the end of the workshop. These delicious recipes are plant-based, low in fat, and heart healthy.  And we have a lot of laughs cooking together – a great stress reducer.

As someone who has a history of heart disease in my family, I take heart disease very seriously.   My stress levels and blood pressure were very high – all red flags for being on the path to a heart attack or stroke.    Through yoga, meditation, learning to be more in the present moment, and spending time in engaging activities such as reading and needle arts, I have been able to lower my blood pressure to normal.    You, too, can lower your risk.  We hope to see you soon at a great online yoga class, meditation, or workshop at Moonflower Yoga.  With online yoga and meditation classes offered via Zoom, there is also no longer a geographic limit to Bellmore, Wantagh, Merrick, East Meadow, Freeport, Seaford, Massapequa, or other towns in Nassau County, Long Island.   We now have students joining us from states other than New York including Florida, California, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and Vermont. It is great to connect with new people!  All are welcome!

Please take care of yourself and reduce your risk of heart disease, or the risk of heart disease for a special woman in your life.   I hope we will see you soon for a great online yoga class, meditation, or other activity as you take positive steps to lowering the risk for heart disease!

 

What is Shavasana and why is it important? by Nancy Weshkoff

October 20, 2020 by  
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What is Shavasana and why is it so important?

By Nancy Weshkoff

 

Shavasana is the final relaxation pose that is part of a yoga practice.  It is also referred to as “corpse pose”.   Of all the poses that comprise your yoga practice it is the most important one.  Why is that?

Let’s start by thinking about what a normal day is like for most people these days.   We are often multi-tasking.   In today’s environment, you may find yourself juggling your work responsibilities with home schooling responsibilities for your children.   Have an elderly family member who is staying home bound these days?  Perhaps you are also doing shopping for that family member.  Or you are multi-tasking in a a work meeting reading and answering text messages instead of concentrating on the meeting.  Our bodies are tense from all these responsibilities, and our minds are racing a mile a minute thinking about things that need to get done.

As a yoga student for years, and later as a yoga teacher at Moonflower Yoga, I have seen it happen where a student attends a yoga class and when it is time for that final relaxation on your mat in Shavasana, the student leaves because they have so many things to do.   I am so sad when this happens.  You are missing the most important part of your practice when you skip this!

Most yoga classes begin with some breathing exercises and then move immediately into “asana”, which is yoga movement.   These movements can be seated or standing.   This is also important because it enables you to release muscle tension in your body and stretch your muscles.   By focusing on alignment and working on your breath, you should find some joy in the movement of your body.

But asana is that steppingstone that opens the door to the loveliness of Shavasana.  The great yogi sages put the movement first so that you could release tightness and relax in Shavasana.  Shavasana is where you let everything go.   In a traditional Shavasana, you are reclining on the floor on your back resting on your yoga mat.   It is important that you be physically comfortable, so you can add some comfort by placing a blanket or folded towel under your head or perhaps a rolled blanket or towel under the knees.  In the cooler months, you may wish to cover part of your body with a blanket.   For some people, having the weight of a blanket can also help you feel more grounded.

Once you are in your set up, you then begin to scan your body and let everything go.  In the classes I teach, we start slowly scanning each part of the body to release muscle tension.   If anything is still tight, you can send a signal to your brain to relax that area.   Just sink into the ground and let the ground support you.   The next part is a challenging one for some people: quieting the mind.  Thoughts might pop up about things on your “to do” list.  Here is where the practice of pranayama – breathing techniques – can help.  Focus on your breath to shut off the chatter in your head.   Something as simple as saying to yourself “I breathe in, I breathe  out and relax” while performing these breathing techniques generates relaxation.   For some people, they may find it helpful to replace a negative thought or worry that is popping up in your mind with a positive mantra such as “I love myself” or “everything will be okay”, etc.  Once you are settled, then spend at least one minute of Shavasana for every 10 minutes of asana movement, i.e., 50 minutes of asana movement should be at least 5 minutes of Shavasana.   If you can stay longer in Shavasana, that’s great.

When you are ready to move out of Shavasana, you should do so slowly.  Bring some gentle movement back to the body, and then ever so gradually roll over to one side into a fetal position.  Take several breaths in fetal position, and when you a ready, you will slowly come into a seated position for several breaths.  Take this time to continue be in the present moment and enjoying this lovely feeling of relaxation before slowly starting to “return to the room” and end your yoga session.

By taking these several minutes of Shavasana for yourself, you are doing positive things for your mental and physical health.   It brings you relaxation and can help to balance the right and left sides of the brain.  The practice gives you a clearer perspective and helps you better cope with challenges that come your way.  You can feel so much calmer from those few minutes of Shavasana.

In the yoga classes that I teach at Moonflower Yoga, I make sure that we focus on this important part of your yoga practice.   For now, the Moonflower Yoga studio doors in Bellmore, Nassau County, Long Island, New York are closed due to the coronavirus.  Moonflower Yoga is instead offering daily online yoga classes.   Come give one of these great online yoga classes a try!  Online, remote yoga classes via Zoom offer a nice advantage for Shavasana.  Once you are ready to come out of Shavasana, you do not need to get in your car and drive in traffic back to your home, losing some of that quiet relaxation.  Instead you can continue to enjoy that relaxation from a great online yoga class in your home to give you a more peaceful remainder of your day or evening.

I hope you will join me or one of the great yoga teachers at Moonflower Yoga for a wonderful online yoga class and always remember to take time for YOU to reduce  your stress in your yoga postures including Shavasana.  Namaste!

 

It is Moonflower Yoga’s 8th anniversary! by Nancy Weshkoff

September 8, 2020 by  
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It is Moonflower Yoga’s 8th anniversary!

By Nancy Weshkoff

This week marks another milestone for Moonflower Yoga – it is our 8th anniversary!    When I embarked on the journey of opening a yoga studio 8 years ago in Bellmore, Long Island, New York, I was not exactly sure how things would progress.  I will be the first to admit that some things did not go as  planned.   But I am happy to say that many things did.   The vision that I had of building a community where people could come together to practice yoga and meditation but to also make friends and expand horizons through the   Moonflower Yoga Clubs such as the Moonflower Yoga Book Club, Needle Arts Group, Mah Jongg Club and Canasta Club have all happened.    And we have all had fun and learned something new in the great workshops including cooking workshops, jewelry workshops, yoga-related workshops, and much more.   Reiki became an addition to the schedule, and many people  have become trained in this calming healing system to help the practitioner learn tools for stress reduction and relaxation.  And, of course, the yoga classes which were just a handful of classes at first but have grown to a wonderful variety of daily classes.  I have personally witnessed students of all ages who were not familiar with yoga fall in love with yoga as they become stronger, more flexible, improve balance, take care of themselves, and make friends with their fellow attendees.

I could not have done all of this without the great yoga teachers who join me in offering an amazing variety of yoga and meditation classes each day.   To those who provide these great yoga classes and help students improve their practice, I thank you for your dedication!

Most importantly – THANK YOU to the people who have walked through the doors of Moonflower Yoga and now join us on a regular basis via great online Zoom classes.   Your support of Moonflower Yoga and your friendship have created a very special place.

These are challenging times for small businesses as we cope with the pandemic.   With your continued support, we can weather the storm and look forward to clearing skies in the future.   THANK YOU for 8 wonderful years!

 

 

Today’s Super Women by Nancy Weshkoff

May 9, 2020 by  
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Today’s Super Women

By Nancy Weshkoff

 

On this Mother’s Day weekend, I would like to wish a very Happy Mother’s Day to the amazing women who are part of the Moonflower Yoga community.  I am astonished by your strength and multi-tasking.  With social distancing in place, many women face even more challenges: maintaining a busy career while tele-commuting, home schooling your children because the schools are closed, juggling household tasks, keeping a healthy relationship with a significant other, checking in on elderly, quarantined relatives using remote tools, etc.

And for those in the health care field who are sacrificing so much to help people in this crisis, they are superheroes!  Thank you for everything you do to help those in need.

Life for many women today can be overwhelming.    This is why it is so important to remember that you need to take care of YOURSELF first.   If you don’t take care of yourself, there is no energy left to take care of the other responsibilities in your life.  As flight attendants would say: In the event of an emergency, put the mask on yourself first and then put the mask on a child traveling with you.

During this coronavirus period of our lives, Moonflower Yoga is offering great 30-minute online yoga and meditation classes which you can do from the comfort of your living room.  Giving yourself the gift of 30 minutes to relax, unwind, and stretch tired muscles with a great yoga teacher is a wonderful way to take care of yourself and reduce stress.   You don’t need to be in Bellmore, Nassau County, or even Long Island to join us.  You can be anywhere in the US and join us remotely.   You’ll feel refreshed and ready to put on your super cape again.

Hope you have a great Mother’s Day!

Small Businesses in a Coronavirus World by Nancy Weshkoff

April 26, 2020 by  
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Small Businesses in a Coronavirus World

By Nancy Weshkoff

These are very difficult times for so many of us.   This is particularly true of small business owners.   Small business owners form the backbone of our local economy.   They are your local restaurants, hair salons, service stations, and businesses such as Moonflower Yoga.  They greet you when you walk in the door of their business because you are special to them.  We are the people you meet on the street when walking through your neighborhood.   We live in the community and we pay taxes in the local Nassau County, Long Island community to support the schools, parks, police, and other services.   We are the stores you see on Main Street, and we are essential to keeping our communities flourishing.

I fully support the need for social distancing in our current Covid19 world, as it is vital that we stay safe.  The health and safety of the Moonflower Yoga students and teachers is of the utmost importance to me.   While we are following these social distancing protocols, it is causing a financial hardship for many of the local businesses in the community.   We need local businesses!    The owners of the small businesses are also paying salaries to their local workers to help those workers feed their families and have shelter.   Local businesses give you the special attention that you do not get when ordering from giant online services.  When this crisis has passed, we need local businesses to still be here.   Sadly I think some of us will not survive this.

YOU can make a difference in helping to keep these local businesses still alive.   Some local restaurants are staying open for take-out orders or curbside pick-up.   Support them by ordering from them.   I order my fresh produce from a local Wantagh business that offers curbside pick up.  Service stations are still open to take care of your automotive needs.  If there is a local business that can be open during this crisis, please help them.

As for Moonflower Yoga, while the doors of the studio are not open for physical classes in the Bellmore studio space, I am still running Moonflower Yoga, and the great yoga teachers you know and love are still teaching great yoga classes for Moonflower Yoga through online class offerings via Zoom.    The people you have met at Moonflower Yoga are still around, and you can see them and speak with them in the chat area before the online classes begin.   You may be feeling isolated and alone these days, but you are not alone.   Join us remotely for a great yoga class, workshop, or Club event from the safety and comfort of your living room and connect with the people and teachers you have met through Moonflower Yoga.   Some of the “snowbirds” who are in Florida and California are joining in.  By attending a great online yoga or mediation class, you are doing 2 important things:   Firstly, you are taking care of YOU by taking steps toward stress reduction in this challenging time, as well as moving your body which might be getting less physical activity than normal as we stay indoors.    Secondly, you are helping a small business such as Moonflower Yoga, which supports the local community, survive.    Small businesses such as Moonflower Yoga need you!   Please help small businesses survive this challenging time and keep our local Long Island communities alive.  Thank you!

 

Remembering 9/11 by Nancy Weshkoff

September 11, 2019 by  
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Remembering 9/11 by Nancy Weshkoff

On this anniversary of 9/11, I am re-posting a blog that I wrote 7 years ago that pays tribute to those who lost their lives on this September date.  Like so many other people, 9/11 is a day that I will never forget.  May those who lost their lives rest in peace.    And here is praying that we can live in peace rather than in senseless destruction.

18 years ago, on the morning of September 11th, I remember my husband and I waking to a beautiful September morning.  The weather was absolutely perfect, and we remarked that it was probably one of the 10 best days of the year.    We both worked in Manhattan at that time and headed to work from Long Island and arrived in our respective office buildings shortly before 8 AM.   The office buildings had beautiful views of Manhattan including the World Trade Center.     Little did we know that in a few short minutes so many lives would change forever.

When we heard about the first plane crashing into the World Trade Center, like so many others, we thought this must be an accident.   Sadly, as events unfolded, we realized it wasn’t an accident.    From our office buildings, we could see the World Trade Center on fire.     I remember being filled with shock and horror.  Just like me, so many innocent people had gone to work that day, but in a different office address, and they were now dying or trapped in the towers.

As no one knew what might happen next, every office building in Manhattan was evacuated and all the public transportation in/out of Manhattan was closed.   This resulted in millions of people emptying on to the streets of Manhattan.   What happened next made me even prouder to be a New Yorker.    There were no riots despite huge crowds.   Instead we cried in the streets together and consoled and helped each other watching the smoke from lower Manhattan and praying for those who were in the buildings.

There were so many acts of bravery.     I think about those heroic first responders who knew they were probably going to die but risked their lives anyway going into the burning towers to try and help people.   I think a lot about the victims and their families.     Family members stood on street corners after the attack holding pictures of their lost loved ones with messages such as “have you seen my daughter who was on last seen on x floor of 1 WTC.”     Those pictures were later placed all over Manhattan on lamp posts and in the huge transportation hubs such as Grand Central Station and Penn Station.    The victims became even more real as you looked at their smiling faces and knew they were senselessly killed that September morning.

My heart goes out to the victims and may they rest in peace.    My heart also goes out to the families of the victims as they continue to find the strength to carry on.

One lesson that I learned from 9/11 was to live more in the present.  Sadly we never know what will happen to us when we begin our morning.    So we must make the most of each day.    Don’t put off doing something that you’ve always wanted to do.   It could be a simple thing such as spending more time with your family or it could be something bigger such as taking that special trip somewhere.     After 9/11, I organized a trip to Disney World with my family because I wanted to create a happy memory.

Deciding to start my own yoga studio, Moonflower Yoga in Bellmore,  in Nassau County on Long Island, took some courage as I left behind the life I knew best.   Yet I know that the courage to start a new venture was only a very small fraction of the courage of those brave first responders who sacrificed their lives to save others on that beautiful September morning and to the 9/11 families who have learned to cope with this tragedy.     May all the victims of this sad event in our history be forever remembered.   And may we always remember to enjoy the blessings we encounter every single day.

Spring is a Time for Renewal by Nancy Weshkoff

April 17, 2019 by  
Filed under Blog

Spring is a Time for Renewal

By Nancy Weshkoff

 

Spring is a wonderful time of year.   The plants and trees shake off remnants of winter and start to come into bloom.   We have more daylight and start to feel more alive than when it is dark before 5 PM.

And, just like the plants and trees, spring is a time of renewal for us.  Maybe you were more housebound and inactive during the winter months.  With spring’s arrival it is time to dust off the cobwebs of winter and start to feel renewed and refreshed.

With the arrival of warmer weather, you start to wear thinner clothes.  Wouldn’t it be great to feel toned in those lighter clothes?   A great yoga class can help you tone and stretch your muscles, as well as improve strength, flexibility, and balance.   If you are a beginner, that’s not a problem at Moonflower Yoga.   We love beginners and offer beginner-level yoga classes 7 days a week.   Remember EVERYONE was a beginner at one point.  Just take that first step and you will feel amazing.   Our yoga instructors give you personal attention to help you as you begin a yoga practice.

Clearing out the cobwebs is not just about our physical body.   It is also true of our mind and thoughts.  Do you brood about things from the past, which you cannot change because the  past is over?   Do you obsess and worry about the future, which you also cannot control?   Stress is a leading cause of heart disease, and heart disease is the number one killer of women in the United States behind all cancers combined.   So what can you do to stop obsessing about past events and the future, reduce your stress levels, and work towards a healthy heart?

Having a meditation practice is a wonderful way to start taking care of your stress levels and feeling good about  yourself.  Moonflower Yoga offers several meditation classes including “Stretch and Meditate 101” on Thursdays, “Chair Body Stretch and Meditation” on Wednesdays at 6 PM, and a monthly “Less Stress” meditation on Tuesday nights.  Plus the weekly Kundalini yoga classes on Thursday and Sunday offer some meditation in the practice.   There are also great workshops on the Moonflower Yoga schedule which can help with stress reduction.   And Reiki, which is offered at Moonflower Yoga, is a great way to take care of YOU.

Come join us this spring at Moonflower Yoga and take a step towards renewal for yourself!   We are located in Bellmore, on the South Shore of Long Island in Nassau County, but we welcome students from all over Long Island including the neighboring towns of East Meadow, Merrick, Wantagh, Seaford, and Levittown.   We look forward to guiding you to a great start to your spring!

 

 

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