Monthly Archive for July, 2009

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The Hoopla: Playful Ritual at Its Best

The Hoopla Hoop that was decorated at our housewarming party a year ago.

My roommate Katherine just left on a potentially life-altering trip to Germany. Since we’re both play-and-ritual junkies, this morning we had fun acknowledging her big transition in style.

Breakfast

First, I made a delicious french toast breakfast.

German Prayer DieThen for a blessing, we rolled a large wooden die with German meal prayers on each side. (Little known fact: this was the original inspiration for the MuseCubes). Because Katherine had bought the die on a previous trip to Germany, this blessing was especially meaningful today.

IMG_1746Instead of an “Amen,” we shared a MuseCube moment which consisted of jumping and giggling in the middle of the kitchen.  It turns out MuseCubes are a highly flexible tool for creative living (not just for stuckness). Thus inspired, we ate our breakfast while discussing theology, romance, and travel tips.

Hoopla

A hoopla is a playful ritual designed to celebrate and affirm the hoops that we jump through in our lives. Click here to see Cynthia Winton Henry describe the first hoopla.

Last year at our housewarming party, we invited fellow revelers to decorate our hoola hoop (pictured above).  Whenever there is an occasion worthy of marking, my housemates and I improvise a hoopla.

Today in honor of Katherine’s big trip, I held the hoop at the threshold of our front door. She left the house by leaping through the hoop head first. We hugged, and she drove off!

Gratitude

The Hoopla is brilliant partially because it’s so ridiculous. I mean, it’s a hoola hoop, for goodness sakes!  It’s playful, unpretentious, and ultimately profound. In our household, most of our hooplas take less than 2 minutes.  Each is unique. They often occur in the kitchen (where we share stories about our day while we cook).

Gosh, I love living with women who co-create such depth, richness, and proFUNdity. Thank you, Kelly and Katherine. On this, the one year anniversary of our housewarming, I’m so grateful to be living with you! (By the way, Kelly did not get to participate in this particular hoopla because she was off to Napa Valley for wine tasting, lucky gal. But she was definitely here in spirit).

Wreck This Journal, Week Five

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Sr-ABPl_78]

Presenting…A Tale of Two Roommates!

I’m sooooo digging being a part of Jamie Ridler’s inspiration-infused The Next Chapter discussion group. Every Friday when we share our latest wreckage with each other, I’m always revved up to try new things with the book Wreck This Journal.

Last Friday was no exception. After watching several of my fellow wreckers submerge their books in water (swimming with your book!? really, Jenn!?), I decided it was time to bravely waterlog my own.

My roommate Katherine got home from work thoroughly exhausted. As you can see from the video, she was in no shape to go to the beach (my first request), but she was willing to try the front yard.

After true confessions around the water bucket, the wreckage began…

~tomato (and journal) watering!
~book throwing!
~page sponging!

What I didn’t include in the video, though, was my bravest moment: soaking the journal in a water-filled bucket! It took 3 days of sun bathing to get the book dry again. And she’s not nearly as pretty as she was last week:

Wreck This Journal WreckThisJournal2

Sigh — most of my braids tore off! Aren’t I doing a good job of letting go? Choosing non-attachment is harder than I thought it would be. But I’m trying…

The entire wrecking experience took about 20 minutes, but wow! Both Katherine and I felt so incredibly rejuvenated after wards. Perhaps this is because of the sheer playfulness of the activity. And the extreme focus. Oh — and a playmate doesn’t hurt, huh?

So, last week several people had trouble uploading my video. I promised them I’d reprint the poem that I made by repositioning the words in the acknowledgments page. Enjoy…

>>>>>>Ooh no! I just opened the journal to retrieve the poem and — ack! — all the words clattered out of it. Apparently, glue does not hold up well after being soaked in water. What was that I said about non-attachment!!!??? I’ll try and recreate it anyway.<<<<<<<

From the beginning

Gratitude rips me wide open.

My full and daring life

A constant inspiration

People from all over the world help brainstorm ideas

And believe in my artistic/creative vision.

Believe

Follow

Continue

Help

Thanks.

The Inspiring Science of Fitness & the Brain

I think I’m in love with Dr. John J. Ratey. What’s not to love about this declaration:

What I aim to do here is to deliver in plain English the inspiring science connecting exercise and the brain and to demonstrate how it plays out in the lives of people.” p. 7, Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain

Amen!! Now that I’ve just outted myself as an ecstatic nerd, let me explain.

Lately I’ve been on a crusade to get more people “using the brains in their whole body.” This is a deeply personal crusade, as well as a professional one.

PE Classes That Teach Kids to Think!?

As an educator, I got especially excited about Ratey’s case study of a revolutionary approach to PE classes. Imagine–  heart rate monitors replacing dodge ball:

The essence of physical education in Naperville 203 is teaching fitness instead of sports.  The underlying philosophy is that if physical education class can be used to instruct kids how to monitor and maintain their own health and fitness, then the lessons they learn will serve them for life. And probably a longer and happier life at that. Spark, p. 12

Ratey presents study after study that proves that fitness is essential to maximizing not only people’s health & happiness — but also their smarts. Turns out we think especially clearly and effectively after we engage in:

  • 30 minutes of aerobic activity, and
  • complex physical tasks.

This kind of fitness literally builds new neuropathways in our brains, as well as strengthens old ones. As the coaches in Naperville 203 are fond of saying, “in [the PE] department, we create the brain cells. It’s up to the other teachers to fill them” (Spark, p. 19).

MuseCubes Help Us Remember to Move

I’ve known through experience that movement effects my thinking. In fact, the more I move, the more I experience freedom, passion, balance, and productivity.

What’s amazing to me, though, is how often I forget to move! Yesterday I spent over 6 hours on the computer. I woke up this morning in physical pain, emotionally drained, and without an ounce of alertness.

As a heady intellectual, I’m constantly looking for ways to be more embodied. That’s where MuseCubes come in.

Now, a MuseCubes break takes 30 seconds, not the recommended 30 minutes.  However, I notice this: the more I remember to roll the MuseCubes, the more I choose to move in other aspects of my life, too.

For example, on days that I wiggle and howl with the MuseCubes, I’m more likely to take a 10 minute dance break, and then ALSO go on a longer walk. Movement inspires more movement, which eventually builds up to fitness! Ahhh, I love incrementality.

Ratey himself says that “the most important thing is to do something” (Spark, p. 250). And if that something ultimately adds up to six hours a week of exercise on behalf of your brain — well, that sure is smart!

OK, speaking of moving, I’m gonna finish this blog post and walk to the library to return Ratey’s book. What are you going to do to exercise today?

Oakland Tweetup Makes History

The first ever Oakland tweetup in twitter history happened this week!!!

A tweetup is an event where people who twitter gather to meet each other in person.  Hosted by the serene and scrumptious Numi Tea, we introduced, shared, laughed, colored — and even danced and yelled, thanks to MuseCubes. Don’t we look like we’re having a great time?! (Thanks for documenting, Naomi).

Naomi @nthmost
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Christian @cstiehl
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Laurel @AngelLaurel
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Kira @Kiramau
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Ren @RenDodge
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Dorothy @DorothyFun
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Jen @jenrudolf
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Chris @wildheartqueen
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Julie @juliedaley
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Gretchen @gwegner
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