Balance

What is the Core?

The core is not one single thing.

It is a mixture of beliefs, physical structure, human desire, mystical dreams, personal strengths, and perceived weaknesses. Infuse this medley with individual perceptions and learned behavior, and you get a multi-faceted core system.

I have had a real challenge writing this blog entry. It should be easy to write – after all, I have attended so many fitness courses on strengthening the core, moving from a strong core, strong core – strong back, and so forth. I could write many articles on different techniques and exercises to build a strong physical core. All of that is valid and important, but somehow does not feel necessary to explain. It does not further our understanding of what our core truly means.

We live in a culture that is somewhat obsessed with six packs, rock hard abs, and designer belly button rings. The core is much more than that. Physically a healthy core includes everything from your shoulder girdle to your pelvis. When the structure of our body is in balance and aligned, we will move from a much stronger and stable place. Although many crunches might make it look like your core is strong, you could be creating an imbalance in your back muscles that may put your back and hips at risk. I think balance is a better way to look at the core: physical, emotional, and spiritual balance.

Our core beliefs are instilled in us through learned and perceived experiences. This is an area of thought and exploration that fascinates me. The thought that we each view the world through our own lens of core beliefs, seeing something that is unique and impossible for another to experience in the same way, boggles my mind. It is like trying to wrap my head around quantum, infinity, or the black hole. The line of thinking that “my way is the only way – because that is what my world shows me” – just does not fly. If my belief is the only way, then how can there be so many other people surviving and thriving by living through their core belief systems. I have gone down this rabbit hole of thought so far, that at times I have lost my footing, and questioned all that I am, and all that I know. Again it comes back to balance. Balancing the unknown with the known, trusting my gut to know the difference between what feels right for me, and when I am being swept away in the murky waters of other’s confusion.

Spirituality is part of the web of our core. Being a spiritual being is just as much a part of our core as denouncing spiritually can be. It still makes up the essence of who we are. Once again, I return to thoughts of balance.

The image of core that comes to mind is an apple core. The shape is wider at the ends, tapering in to a rounded middle section – filled with a hard structure, and some seeds. The seeds are placed to plant new ideas so that our structure and beliefs never become old and stale. The hard structure is the support that keeps us strong and upright. The curves keep us fluid, so that we can bend, twist and turn. The apple core is always part of the apple, even though we cannot always see it. It does not matter if it is a big juicy apple, or a small compact apple, if it is living, it has a core, grown in the same natural pattern, but each develops to be unique.

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Where and What is Balance?

balance
Balance by Hartwig HKD (CC BY-ND 2.0)

Balance by Hartwig HKD (CC BY-ND 2.0)

We live in a time of health related catch phrases. Words like holistic, wellness, authentic, intention, manifest, and abundance come to mind. I know that I use them within my teachings, and hear them from others. The frequent usage of the words can override any real meaning or valid connection to the situation. One such concept that has recently gotten me thinking are the words and ideas related to balance. The common adage seems to be that if we live a balance lifestyle, health, happiness, and success naturally fall into place. I seem to be hearing the word “balance” everywhere, as if it is the balm for everything that troubles us. What does this really mean? If we successfully stand on one foot will we be overcome with a utopian sense of being? Will we feel complete as human beings when we can successfully balance a teeter-totter in the local playground? Or does it mean that we must do equal parts work and relaxation in order to be healthy? These questions come to mind when I hear the phrase, “life-work balance”.

We know in our bones when life is tipped too far one way. We may feel overwhelmed, stressed, tired, and ill when we are spending too much time in one area of our life while neglecting another area. We many even become hyper, overactive, and scattered. The trick is to notice when this happens, and then to actually examine why we feel this way, and what we might be able or willing to do about it.

Balance – what image does it evoke for you? Is it something you have, or something you want, or is it just an overused, abstract notion that holds no interest?

The Sapphire Island theme for the month of April is the exploration of balance, through our physical, emotional, and spiritual bodies. As we are all unique individuals, balance will hold a different meaning for each of us. Let’s embrace those differences, while being open to discovering what will enrich our lives. Let’s explore what it means to have that elusive “life, work balance”. Imagine finding the center point in the teeter-totter of life, and from there feel safe enough to let it tip from one side to the other, knowing that the center point is just a breath away.

Through the month of April the discussion of Balance will take place through various social media applications, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube. Look for articles, images, meditations, and yoga flows to help you discover what being balanced looks like to you.

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