20
January
2012

A combat vet with PTSD contacted me recently.

  I recently received an e-mail from a combat vet with PTSD.  He wanted to make sure that the yoga locations who haven't had a single vet ask for free classes not to worry.  Using himself as an example, he said that his PTSD made it very hard to go into a room full of strangers and especially a new environment like a yoga studio.  He thinks that over time, more vets will ask for yoga as their symptoms become more manageble.  He also gave me a big Thank You to the yoga community.  It was really a "wow" moment for me because although I served 5 years in the Navy I dont have any  combat experince or PTSD.  I never considered being in a room full of strangers as a reason that a vet wouldn't  take free yoga.  I've heard the typical ignorant comments like yoga is just stretching or it is for girls.  This recent vet opened up a new scenario to me.  He asked that I mention this in the blog so that yoga teachers wont get discouraged.  Typical combat vet, thinking of others before himself.  So, there you go, the yoga teacher (myself) became the student.  As long as there are war vets I want Yoga For Vets to be around so when a combat vet with PTSD decides that he or she is ready to take a yoga class, they will be able to find one on our website.

Shanti (Peace),

Paul

Categories: blog

08
December
2011

Thank you Connected Warriors

Yoga For Vets is getting a lot of new teachers sign up to offer 4 or more free yoga classes lately. So many that I estimate we will top 400 different locations and teachers before the end of 2011. This blog post mentions Connected Warriors with good reason. While they are not officially partners with Yoga For Vets, the teachers who get certified by Connected Warriors are offering free yoga to vets also and because of that, we list their names and locations. I am pointing them out because they reflect a trend in the right direction by the yoga community. One of our goals is to get the entire yoga community to offer at least 4 free classes to our vets. Connected Warriors is helping to make that happen and I wanted to use this blog to personally tell them thanks and how grateful I am for their service to our deserving military. You can see their link under the resource section of our website as well as other great organizations who help our vets with free yoga.

Please dont think this is a time to sing Kumbaya or give Hooaahs because we have a long way to go. In fact when I recently posted an artlcle on our Facebook page which mentioned a Marine drawdown in Afghanistan starting in 2012 a military spouse quickly posted a response that tersely said: Now our work really begins. That comment reminded me that like a marathon runner who doesn’t run fastest in the beginning of the race, neither should we. Yoga For Vets is handled by me and only a few other people who lend their advice when they have an opportunity so sometimes the pace of our growth seems slow to me. However, I expect this organization to keep going for a long time so that someday when we are no longer at war EVERY vet who wants to take free yoga knows where and when the next class is. Seems simple, just like a troop drawndown. Shanti (Peace), Paul

Categories: blog

16
November
2011

A Smile

This website is all about the combat vets but a close second are the yoga teachers who want to help say Welcome Home.  Recently, I asked all yoga teachers to support not just the vets but Yoga For Vets also by donating a portion or all of the money collected on Veterans Day so we can continue to grow.  The financial response was as I expected, mixed.  See, the fact is, some teachers who are listed at our website still have not been contacted or approached by a single vet despite being listed for years  so some teachers on Veterans Day held special classes where the turnout yielded not a single vet. To them I say it was a great effort and intention, despite the outcome.  Others had very nice turnouts of both vets and civilians alike.  The point I am trying to make is we are doing just fine.  Vets don’t need to take yoga for us to be successful, vets just need to know that we exist, we care and they can have free yoga classes if they wish.  In the next year we are going to grow tremendously, mostly due to word of mouth.   We are quickly approaching 400 listings from around the U.S. but when you think of how many yoga teachers there are, we can easily go into the thousands.  If you are a yoga teacher inspired by what you are reading, sign up.  If you are a vet reading this, tell your military friends to check us out.  Lastly, to the people reading this who simply fall into the category of "I care" please spread the word or make a donation to us. I will end this entry with a recent e-mail I received that includess the teacher and studio location.  I think Beth is a great example of the caring spirit of yoga teachers who despite having no military background can really have a great effect on our deserving combat vets. She deserves credit here on our website as does that Vietnam vet who attended her class despite being a little unsure but stayed till the end.  Enjoy.

My name is Beth Jones.  I teach yoga at The River Studio in Hallowell, Maine where I offered two free yoga classes to veterans and their families on Veteran's Day.  While I teach veterans in Trauma Sensitive Yoga classes, too, this felt very special and very sacred.  As we centered and quieted down the breath to begin, we brought hands in prayer to our hearts and concentrated on why we were there, who we were practicing for and we prayed for those who were being deployed.  It got very still and very focused in the room.  Only two veterans were there.  The rest were non-veterans who made the effort to attend and make donations.  A Vietnam veteran who wasn't sure he should be there had the most beautiful practice.  Though he was in true physical pain, he made small, careful movements, with mindful breaths.  And then I caught him smiling.  That right there--that made my day.”  

Peace,

Paul

Categories: blog

04
October
2011

A call to arms.

This morning I checked my emails and Facebook and found that my friend who is a great writer and military wife Kanani Fong wrote in her blog about Yoga For Vets.  She quoted me as saying I want vets to have a good night sleep.  Well, this only tells a small part of the story.  I want vets to feel a warm "welcome home" that our Vietnam vets never felt didn't get from most of our Country.  There is also the healing side of yoga that I want all vets to feel: less stress, less anxiety and more fun and fitness.  In Kanani's blog she mentioned that some vets who survived combat are coming home and committing suicide.  I cant help but wonder if any of those vets tried yoga before.  I am not saying that yoga prevents suicide (although some yogi/vets have suggested otherwise). All vets should have the opportunity to try yoga where they live for free.  So yes, I want our vets to sleep better and yoga may help but there is more to Yoga For Vets than just a good night sleep.  I hope all combat vets will find out for themselves about yoga and decide for themselves what the benefits are.

Categories: blog

28
June
2011

Rant and Rave!

Haha.  Did that title get your attention?  Of course I am not going to rant.  It is not my style...anymore.  Well, okay, a small rant.  I hate when yoga teachers tell me, I just found out about you.  The reason this is bad is because that means there must be combat vets who don't know about us either, not to mention we have been around for a while.   Vets who might want to take free yoga might not even know we exist.  Oh well, eventually, the whole United States will know that free yoga is available to our combat vets.  Until, then I will need help from you to spread the word about us.  Here are my top three suggestions to easily spread the word about Yoga For Vets:

1)Facebook. tell 20 or 2000 of your closest friends about Yoga For Vets and our FB page www.facebook.com/yogaforvets

2)Call your Aunt or Uncle.  Most family members know at least one combat vet.  Ask them if they know about Yoga For Vets and direct them to our site.

3)Email your Ashram.  Okay, this applies only to  yoga teachers.  Email the friends you graduated with and and tell them you support Yoga For Vets and ask them if they will too.

Now the the Rave part of this entry.  We are growing!!  I  just had a studio in New York City sign up and last week a yoga teacher extended a generous offer to help.  She is listed on our site and she will help me organize and promote an upcoming fundraiser. She also agreed to be a guest blog writer and her entry will be posted here soon.

Have a great day everyone.  If you see a vet, tell them Welcome Home for me.

Shanti,

Paul

Categories: blog