Make your life happen
When Alex Biondo came to work for me at Yogahealer.com, she was "letting life happen to her instead of making her life...
When Alex Biondo came to work for me at Yogahealer.com, she was "letting life happen to her instead of making her life...
I wanted to share with all y'all this note from an old friend (who wants so remain anonymous to keep...
Dear fans and rebels: Admist gads of requests for the free well-th to wealth workshop), I've had a few emails and...
Thanks rebels for the huge response to the free workshop. Every line was taken. For those who missed it the...
Being an Ayurvedic Pracitioner in many ways is getting easier. 10 years ago most gyms didn't have a decent yoga program. Most people now can recognize triangle pose a mile away. This shift into yoga has paved the way for us Ayurvedic Practitioners. Our neighbors are discovering their interioirty... their inner body... their subtle physiology. Our hospitals have mind-body stress release programs. Our communities are starting to wake up and look around for who is producing food locally.
Over the past few years, my husband and I have had a few dinner table conversations about who thrives and who struggles. We've noticed a few industry trends. My career in yoga and ayurveda became full time when I was 27. Now I'm 37 and I'm very interested in supporting Ayurvedic Practitioners and yoga teachers in reaching deeper into their communities. To do so, though, we might need an additional skillset to our healing and preventive medicine skills.
This new skill set requires creativity, connection, communication, marketing, and basic online and offline business skills. We need a head for business. I never studied business before I went into business. I went to a liberal arts college and the closest I could come to a business class was Economics. That's not close.
We need to study business and marketing and the new economy as if it were the 8th chakra.
Here are my 3 tips for Ayurvedic Practitioners in 2011