Showing posts with label Nia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nia. Show all posts

Friday, July 1, 2016

Nia at Scrubs Camp

Winona State University hosted Scrubs Camp for High School students to learn about health, wellness and medicine.  I got the opportunity to introduce students to the exercise and healing practice of Nia.  Nia is a movement practice that involves the dance arts, martial arts and healing arts.  For three days, students could choose to take a Nia class for 50 minutes to get energized for their day.



On Monday, the class was full of young women and men who were trying Nia for the first time.  On Tuesday, several of the male students were back and their counselor invited them to be up front to show every one how to do it.  I took the pressure off the guys by telling everyone, that it was a different routine so all were new to what we were dancing.

In Nia, we use our voice to make sounds of  "Ha" or "Rah" when we kick or make a strike martial arts move.  The guys enjoyed that very well and used their strong voices to get every one energized.


There was lots of laughing with some of the movements.  The students kicked, shimmied, turned, danced, did planks, and moved their bodies.  Nia encourages movement to be done for pleasure and not pain.


Several Nia classes are available in Winona and the area.  Find Nia classes for your own health and well being.   See you on the dance floor!

Saturday, January 16, 2016

A Design System for Sustainablity in the Body

Great video on the ways Nia sustains the body




Sunday, January 10, 2016

7 Tips for Beginning Nia


Laurie Bass, Nia dancer, teacher, somatic practitioner and yoga teacher writes about how to come to a Nia class.  This photo and article are from her website: Laurie Bass: Living Well

Nia’s way of getting fit, dancing barefoot, “like nobody’s watching” is a tune up for body, mind and spirit. If you are new to Nia, you may have noticed a very passionate community of movers around you. To put you at ease, here are 7 simple tips to maximize your experience as a beginning student:

1. Relax. Breath. Welcome to your practice. Enjoy being new to something. Start with smaller movements, allowing your body to adjust to moving the Nia way. Allow your breathing to support you. As you learn the steps, add range of motion and intensity when you feel ready.

2. Be in the moment. In Swahili, Nia means moving with purpose. Dedicate each moment to moving with the power, pleasure and purpose of being in your body – in the NOW. Minimize your inner critic, judge, or saboteur, maximize your sense of adventure.

3. Tune in. Always listen to your body. Allow Nia to move you from the inside-out toward pleasure, “body-based” sensations. If a move doesn’t feel right for you, tweak or adapt it – move smaller, slower or take fewer steps. Always move away from pain. Movement is medicine.

4. Start with your feet. Capture the rhythm of the feet and leg movements first, then slowly add the core, arms and hand motions. Keep your feet under hips and your joints “spring-loaded” to ease your knees. Over time, your body will learn the language of Nia, the language of the body and love the dynamics infused into the movement. 

5. Go Barefoot. Experience the 7000 nerve endings in your feet to help you move in safe and efficient ways from the ground up. While barefoot is best, you can wear shoes with a soft flexible sole for comfort or support for medical purposes. Moving barefoot develops foot strength and whole body balance.

6. Seek “Dynamic Ease.” Never force a motion. Avoid getting breathless or fatigued. Move within your own comfort zone. Move with energy efficiency.

7. Express Yourself. This is your dance. Express your own unique rhythm and body language within the moves. Be jazzy, luscious, lyrical, snappy or sensual. Most of all, be yourself and have fun.

Visit the class finder at NiaNow.com to begin your journey!

Laurie is a creative mover, athlete, artist, yogi, somatic educator, wellness coach and member of the Nia Training Faculty. She is a teacher-trainer of the Nia White Belt and Nia 5 Stages programs. Her collegiate education includes degrees in Mathematics and Psychology from Pacific University. Laurie lives near Portland, Oregon, home to the international headquarters for the Nia Technique where she teaches classes, workshops and holds trainings both locally at StudioNia, home to Nia international headquarter in Portland and global, traveling to Australia, New Zealand and Europe.

 

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Once A Day




 Michael Franti and Spearhead

Once A Day’ is about unexpected moments in life. Some days we have unexpectedly beautiful moments and others that are unexpectedly challenging. Last year I had a really challenging moment when my son was diagnosed with a kidney disease called FSGS (Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis). We thought it would break our family apart, but moving through the initial tears, made us realize life is precious and that we need to hug, kiss and be close to each other every day and through that we could ‘rise up’ and face his illness together. I hope that Once A Day brings inspiration to anyone in this world who is going through challenging times. Through music, dance and gratitude for this life we can all ‘Rise Up’!”

#OnceADayTour #LoveNow #RiseUpMusic video by Michael Franti & Spearhead performing Once A Day. (C) 2015 Boo Boo Wax, under exclusive license to Concord Music Group, Inc

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Nia with Laurie Bass

Feel Good, Look Good

And maybe you too can move around in speed motion!  And then smile!!!!

Nia makes you feel good!




Wednesday, August 6, 2014

30 Seconds in Winona

Mary Lee Eischen
Nia Instructor and Mixed Media Artist



My friend Jade Fang, Jade Community Acupuncture Clinic created this 30 second video of me for our Frozen River Film Fest 30 Second in Winona Videos.  It a mini film festival benefit for Frozen River Film Fest that will be August 23 at 7:30pm at the Winona Lake Bandshell. 

Nia is a movement practice that involves the Martial Arts, Dance Arts and Healing Arts. It is based on nine movement forms.  It is danced to fun soul stirring music.  And anyone can do it!

Come try out Nia in Winona at the Friendship Center, Manitou Martial Arts and Wellness Center, the YMCA and at Winona State University.

Find Nia in your area.  Nia is practiced in 48 countries.  Hope to dance with you soon.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Don't Stop Dancing Girl

Nia Dance Flashmob, Turku, Finland

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Dance your Passion


Dancer at 93 years young.  Everyone can dance.


 






Thursday, June 27, 2013

The Architecture of Human Bones

Nia White Belt Principle 10 X-Ray Anatomy


We created shapes making lines of horizontal, vertical, and diagonal with our bones during a study of X-Ray Anatomy.  Here are some of the shapes that we created.  Quite  beautiful results.
Photographs by Mary Lee Eischen and Jamie Klausing.















Nancy (in pink) entering


Rachel exiting














Seven bodies with our teacher & photographer, Jamie Klausing













 


 




Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Nia and it's time to move your body









Dancing, shimmying, laughing, sounding, and feeling good in my skin.  Nia gives a great cardio-vascular workout along with the feeling a pleasure to be alive.  Join us Thursday, 4:15pm at Simplicity Yoga to experience the joy of movement.  Guest Nia instructor, Kendra Dicker Deutsch takes us on an adventure with ‘Fly’, one of the newest Nia Routines. 




Simplicity Yoga and Wellness is located at 601 E 5th St, Winona, MN 55987. Cost is $5.00.

New to Nia.   Nia is for everybody.




 



Sunday, January 20, 2013

Nia at Rejuvenation Station of Frozen River Film Festival

Here are some things that people say about  Nia:

"I feel good when I do it."

"I like how my body feels."

"I leave after a Nia class feeling more alive."

"Nia wakes up my body to sensations of pleasure."

Two Nia classes  at Rejuvenation Station,  the Frozen River Film Festival

Saturday, January 26, 1:00pm with Jacque Paulsen
Sunday, January 27, 1:00pm with Mary Lee Eischen

Integrated Wellness Center, Room 127



Celebrate the joy of movement.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Nia Winnipeg with Tamara

 
The components of Nia are about moving your body with ease, comfort, strength, and support.  The exciting and enthusiastic Tamara Hajsky talks about Nia and shows footage of dancing Nia all over Winnipeg - classes and demos - for a visual of Nia. 




Find classes, teachers, trainings, and other events at:
www.nianow.com




Friday, October 19, 2012

The Squat Song

Brought to you today by Nia Blue Belt Instructor Ta Ma Ra from Winnipeg, Canada. This video will bring a smile to your face!


Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Nia from Toronto

This two minute video gives a  bit of a Nia class with Martha Randall from Toronto, Canada.  I like that there are many shapes of people and that there is lots of smiling.  Pleasure in the movement is one of the principles in Nia.  She involves her students with a bit of contact dance; this is not part of my classes at this point.  

Monday, June 18, 2012

Artist Spotlight: Jacqueline Markevitch Paulsen


Jacqueline Markevitch Paulsen

Jacque took a little time out of her busy schedule to talk with me about her passion for movement with dancing  Nia, teaching dance, and balancing life in relationship with her family as a mother, wife, and friend.

Jacque has been dancing and moving her whole life.  Moving in her body has been a calling; and seems to take new shape and form as she dances through life.  Dancing in studios and in troupes has been part of her history from being a backup dancer for a hip hop group out of Detroit called Slice to dancing with a dance company out of Rockford, Illinois called Midwest Movement.  As a young dancer, she was asked to dance in ways that stressed and injured her strong body. At one point she suffered a shoulder injury that did not allow her to raise her arm.



When she began dancing the Nia Technique, the joy of movement was a new concept for her.  The Nia Technique encouraged people to listen to their bodies and to move in ways for pleasure instead of pain.  An appreciation and a love for her body began to grow.


Nia is a sensory-based movement lifestyle that leads to health, wellness and fitness. It empowers people of all shapes and sizes by connecting the body, mind, emotions and spirit. Classes are taken barefoot to soul-stirring music in more than 45 countries worldwide. Trainings are designed for those seeking personal enrichment and professional development. Every experience can be adapted to individual needs and abilities.”

 
Though the students are following Jacque’s lead in the class, each is following their body’s way.  And some of the movement can create some laughter.

The Nia Technique is a combination of dance arts, martial arts and healing arts.  Nine movement forms make up Nia. 

Dance Arts:

Modern
Jazz
Isadora Duncan

Martial Arts:

T’ai Chi
Tae Kwon Do
Aikido

Healing Arts:

The Alexander Technique
The Teachings of Moshe Feldenkraise
Yoga

If a person wants to go deeper in the practice of the Nia Technique, the trainings build like a martial art belt system.  The first belt is the White Belt.  Jacque took the White Belt intensive training in 2010 with Winalee Zeeb at Heartdance Studio, in Lansing, Michigan.  In the White Belt, there are 13 fundamental principles of Nia.  This training was very embryonic for Jacque.  It was life changing; a portal back into her body.  She found truth about her body.

In the 2011, Jacque took the Green Belt training at Studio Nia in Portland, Oregon with Britta von Tagen.  This training was challenging.  It cleaned up her technique of Nia.  She enjoyed taking the training at the Nia Headquarters and home studio of Debbie Rosas, co-founder of the Nia Technique.


Jacque’s life is full to overflowing as a Nia and Modern dance teacher for adults and children.  She is pursuing a master’s degree at Winona State University.  In her home life, she is married and has two young boys.  How does Jacque balance all the complex parts of her life?  She schedules it.  She consciously holds space for each role.  Whether it is dancing with a friend to practice the craft, or taking a hot tub, Jacque builds these things into her schedule.  She sets clear boundaries to make her life work.  Her life with her family must come first.  Her work with Nia in the Winona Community and her vision for health and movement are high on her list, following family.


In Nia, Principle Five of the White Belt is called Life as Art.  For Jacque that means living in each moment.  Sometimes it seems that life is too busy to integrate that into consciousness.  Her little son, Zephyr, reminds her to stop each time they come to a flower to have a sniff.

One of her favorite parts about dancing Nia is that no matter what she feels like before coming into a class, afterward she feels great.  Dancing gives her a sense of submission to her body’s way.  There is nothing else going on for one hour except to dance.

 

One of Jacque’s favorite movement forms is Feldenkraise.   Sensing how the body moves is powerful work.  The Feldenkrais Method® of Somatic Education says
 “Learning to move with less effort makes daily life easier. Because the Feldenkrais Method focuses on the relationship between movement and thought, increased mental awareness and creativity accompany physical improvements. Everyone, from athletes and artists to administrators and attorneys, can benefit from the Feldenkrais Method.”

Duncan dance was one of Jacque’s least favorite movement forms due to what she perceived as a lack of structure.  As she realized that it had everything to do with sensation, she has grown to appreciate it.  Duncan dance is an “in-road” for some people into Nia.  The freedom makes it more accessible.  Lori Belilove writes about Isadora Duncan:  “Virtually single-handedly, Isadora restored dance to a high place among the arts. Breaking with convention, Isadora traced the art of dance back to its roots as a sacred art. She developed within this idea, free and natural movements inspired by the classical Greek arts, folk dances, social dances, nature and natural forces as well as an approach to the new American athleticism which included skipping, running, jumping, leaping and tossing.”

Photographs were taken in a Nia class with Jacque at Winona State University in the Integrated Wellness Center in spring 2012. 



 
The Alexander Technique is about moving from the top.  Joan Arnold says, “The relationship between the head and the spine is of utmost importance. How we manage that relationship has ramifications throughout the rest of the body. As the boss -- good or bad -- sets the tone for an organization, the head / spine relationship -- compressed or free -- determines the quality of the body's overall coordination.  Our neuromuscular system is designed to work in concert with gravity. Delicate poise of the head sparks the body's anti-gravity response: a natural oppositional force in the torso that easily guides us upward and invites the spine to lengthen, rather than compress, as we move. Instead of slouching or holding ourselves in a rigid posture, we can learn to mobilize this support system and use it wherever we go -- in the car, at the computer, in the gym.”




Child’s Pose, pictured above, is an asana, a posture that is held in Yoga.  The pose has a calming and restorative effect on the body.
To find out where Jacque is teaching Nia and learn more about Nia including classes and trainings in the area, go to the Nia website:

www.nianow.com

How do you like to move your body?  What are your favorite movement forms within Nia?  Curious about what rocks your world. Leave a comment or two and let's get a conversation going. 



 

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