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Issue 35
Los Angeles Edition
September 2005

how fashion got its soul back
Inside Yogi Times

editor's word

cover story

How Fashion Got
Its Soul Back

health

Aromatherapy Neem 12
Ayurveda Elememtal Wisdom
Color Me Healthy
22

yogi lifestyle

YT About Town
Main Street Santa Monica 14
Yogi Yummies
Mint Zucchini Salad
24
Behind The Scenes
Visions of a Brighter Future
26
Yogi’s Om
“Green” It’s the New Black
30
Yogi Fashion
Summer Rayne
All Season Long
34
Yogi Fashion
Grace in Harmony
44
Retail Bliss
The Age of Reinvention 52
Yogi Beauty
6 Divine Natural
Skin Care Lines 56
Spiritual Arts
Living Life in Two Worlds
58
Ask Yogi Marlon
Express Yourself 70
A Little Humor Cover Girl 74
A Little Humor Yoga Yenta 83

yoga

Deepening The Practice
Find Your Alignment
16
Series Love Your Knees 54
Exploring The Classics
Global Guru
66
The Asana Page
Virabhadrasana III
68

kids on the mat

Breathing Colors 76
Kids’ Fsahion 78

community

Teacher Profile Jill Miller 20
Community Feel
The Panchachuli
Women Weavers 64
Spa Review Aris Institute 80
Restaurant Review
Astroburger 84
In Your Neighborhood 85
In The Spotlight
Shakti’s Elements 90

yogi times recommends

Listening/Reading/
Viewing
56

for the soul

Meditation
The Luxury of Less
28
Deepak and David
The Union of
Inner and Outer Beauty
94
Special Guest Interview
Blue Canoe’s Laurie Dunlap
96
Chakrastrology 98

for the mind

Meditate On This 3 Gurus 62

color me healthy

by mary thompson

the power of color to balance and beautify

We feed ourselves through all five of our sense organs. By what we take in through our mouths, we can heal and build the body. But what we take in through our other senses is just as influential to our state of health. We take in sights, smells, sounds and sensations, and all of these provide for subtle shifts in healing that can have profound effects. The treatment of the physical and emotional state by taking in specific light and color is termed chromotherapy, and has been shown to heal the physical body and to balance the emotional state.

Chromotherapy has long been used as a healing modality. All colors come originally from the light of the sun. By accessing colors, we access the healing properties of the sun. Ayurvedic practitioners of old used colors as they were found in nature to facilitate healing. When Newton discovered that the light ray could be broken up into its colored spectrum, the colors of the rainbow became accessible through a prism.

Colors begin to affect our mental state immediately and their effect is long lasting. When using color therapy, consider the colors in the home and wardrobe as a starting place for assessing and changing use of color. People may surround themselves in healing color, incorporate color in meditation, or even in what they eat and drink.

Ayurveda recognizes that the colors have profound and often immediate effects on our mental states. We call the potential mental states sattva (calm leading to clarity), rajas (activity leading to distraction), and tamas (inertia leading to ignorance). Colors are assessed for the effect they have on our mental state, and are chosen to enhance our state of mind. Most will benefit from choosing sattvic colors for the home and wardrobe: white, blue, gold, green and violet are considered sattvic.

When working with color, shading and tone play a significant role. To make the energy effect of a color softer, lighten it; to dull the effect, darken it. Specific colors have specific actions, for example:

Red is a hot color. It is considered rajasic (activating) and raises physical and emotional heat when used. When you think of the effect this color has on bulls, you begin to see the power of this color as a motivator.

Orange is a warming, stimulating, rajasic color. It can motivate creativity and sexual expression. Orange draws attention, and indicates informality.

Yellow is also a warming, rajasic color. It is mildly stimulating, though uplifting. It increases joy, expansiveness and lightness.

Green is a neutral color. It is considered sattvic (clearing) and healing. Spending time with plants and trees, or beside water are excellent ways to incorporate more green into your life and begin to heal on a subtle level.

Blue is a cooling, calming, expansive, sattvic color. Its use counters the fight-or-flight response of the sympathetic nervous system. This color is also found widely in nature, in water sources and in the sky.

Violet is a neutral, sattvic color. It has a high vibrational frequency and is often considered a spiritual color.

White is a cool, sattvic color representing purity and clarity. Meditation on the color white expands the consciousness.

Black is a cool color. It is tamasic (dulling) and creates separation; it is a color of divisiveness, and can draw one deeper into his darker nature. It can be used as a color of renunciation to enhance spiritual practice by encouraging separation of the self from one’s surroundings.

As a general rule, vata (expansive, frenetic) energy is pacified by warming colors, such as yellow and orange and is disturbed by cooling colors and is aggravated by the use of blue and white. Pitta (focused, fiery) energy is pacified by cooling colors, especially blue and white, and is disturbed by heating colors and aggravated by the use of red and orange. Kapha (steady, stagnant) energy is pacified by stimulating colors, such as red and orange and is disturbed by dull colors and aggravated by the use of brown, gray and black.

By starting with the home and the wardrobe, we can affect fundamental shifts in our color consciousness. By incorporating accent colors that are beneficial to our constitution, healing can begin on a subtle level that will affect change throughout our lives.

© 2005 Yogi Times. All rights reserved. - Updated on July 12, 2005