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A statute of poet Edna St. Vincent Millay in Harbor Park, Camden, Maine, from my summer sojourns. Millay is the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. She grew up in poverty and lived a brave and unconventional life.
Fear Not

I was staring at a bumper sticker on the car in front of me the other day, saying “Jesus is Coming. Are you Ready?” It’s a common enough message in the Evangelical Church. Some in this community believe that Jesus will scoop up “believers” while the rest of humanity is subject to horrible tribulations. In the book Exvangelicals: Loving, Living and Leaving the White Evangelical Church, author Sarah McCammon describes how one day as a young girl, she came home to find no one there. Frantic, she ran around fearfully searching everywhere until finally, quite distressed, she found her mother hiding in a closet. Her mother then admonished her about whether or not she was ready for Jesus’ coming. If she wasn’t, her mother said, she’d be “left behind.”

 

These days, fear seems to be the emotion that’s driving the bus. When protestors recently packed Tel Aviv square demanding a cease fire, Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s Prime Minister, said those calling for an end to the war without the defeat of Hamas were ensuring that the atrocities of October 7, 2023, would recur again and again. To date, the war has ended 62,000 lives and wounded 160,000; Doctors Without Borders has described the conditions as among the worst they’ve ever witnessed and they say the situation is “…a systematic total destruction of health care and disregard for civilian life.”

 

Last week brought the death of Evangelical James Dobson, author of The Strong-willed Child, and with it, testimonies from adults who survived the trauma of their parents’ beatings at the behest of Dobson’s child-rearing advice. One woman described being spanked repeatedly as she passed out again and again; she said her parents would only stop when they felt she was truly contrite. This crushed her will and spirit, she said, as Dobson had convinced her parents that as a two-year old, she was desperately wicked and needed to be “broken.”

 

These situations beg the question: Is fear the basis on which we want to live our lives? Or on the belief that a returning “Savior” will arrive to protect “the faithful” and brutally punish the rest? Or on the necessity of pounding our enemies and their children into dust? On the surety that physically beating our children into submission will somehow create peace?

 

The most-stated phrase in the Bible in various forms is “Fear Not” or “Do Not Be Afraid.” We now know what fear does to our bodies: It hijacks our brain, putting us into sympathetic arousal (fight or flight), activating our amygdala and shutting down our cerebral cortex, which impairs our capacity to think clearly. Research now shows that even many hours of using smartphones creates anxiety in our bodies, releasing cortisol into our systems and activating our stress response.

 

As we address our profound anguish, how do we have any meaningful impact in the present moment in this morass of fear and retribution? I did a meditation today (on the Insight Timer app, which I highly recommend) where the teacher said many of us are hoping that the calvary will arrive (soon, please!) and make everything alright. But the reality, he said, is that we are the calvary. Our actions, day in and day out, and our capacity to stay present, even when it’s difficult and uncomfortable, can build bridges of hope between us – instead of fear.

 

As one of my favorite authors, Kristin Du Mez (author of Jesus and John Wayne), said in her recent Substack blog “ Infiltrating the Kingdom of Fear”:

 

Friend, you weren’t merely born, you were sent.

 

You’re not just living a life; you’re on a mission.

 

Your purpose is not so small as to avoid death

 

or even to enjoy life, but to embody resurrection.

 

To offer healing and peace. To seed the world with love.

 

To be, in words and deeds, a proclamation – 

 

living proof – that the Reign of God is here.

 

All the love you’ve received has prepared you for this.

 

All the wisdom you’ve been given goes with you.

 

You are surrounded, supported, cheered, aided

 

by millions, unseen yet connected, and present.

 

We are not-so-secret agents, infiltrating the Kingdom of Fear

 

on behalf of the Realm of Grace. 

 

You are sent, guided and protected by the Spirit of Love.

 

Be not afraid. I am with you. Go.

 

 

For me, the daily practice of Yoga and Qi Gong release fear from my body and bring me the security and stability I need to be present. I believe it is in this presence that we can find our way home, not only to ourselves but to each other and to our beautiful planet.

 

Peace,

Anne

Online Classes

Email Anne for the class Zoom link for any of the following:

 

Mondays 9:30 – 11:00 a.m. Multilevel class in functional movement and energetic centering

 

Tuesdays 9:30 – 11:00 a.m. Seated, standing and reclined movement (in that order) offering therapeutic movement. One Tuesday per month, class is in person at the Chardon United Methodist Church.

 

Fridays 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Chair Yoga

Upcoming Events
Pair of Seated Luohan Figures, China, Song-Yuan dynasties (1100s-1300s). On display now at the Cleveland Museum of Art. From their site: These large gilt-bronze figures are  luohans, or  arhats in Sanskrit, followers of the Buddha who have achieved enlightenment and have been freed from the cycles of rebirth. While both seated figures have the serene expressions and clean-shaven heads typical of monks, their robes are different. The Chinese-style monastic robe covers both shoulders of the arhat on the proper left, while the other arhat's robe leaves the right's shoulder and upper torso exposed, more typical of monks' attire in India. 

In-Person Restorative Yoga

9/24/25 12:00 – 1:30 p.m. @ $25
Wild Nurturer, 9930 Johnnycake Ridge Rd., Unit 2-F

Four spots available; register by emailing Anne

 

In-Person Restorative Yoga

12/3 12:00 – 1:30 p.m. @ $25

Wild Nurturer, register by emailing Anne 

 

The Anatomy of Mudras with Anne & Esther Lutes, MD

In-person & online

11/1/25 12:30 – 3:30 p.m.

Studio 108, 6487 Brecksville Rd., Independence

For yoga teachers & interested practitioners

3 hours CE credit available with teachers with Yoga Alliance

Sign up with this link: https://www.wellnessliving.com/rs/event/yoga_108_with_tracy_rhinehart?k_class=838192&k_class_tab=38366

 

Come and learn how to incorporate mudras into your personal yoga practice and, if you teach yoga, into your classes. Mudras are an easy addition to asana, pranayama, and meditation and they provide significant, desired shifts in our mind, physical body, and nervous system. These hand postures are readily accessible when asana is prohibited either by situation or physical limitations. Learn how these ancient hand postures improve our wellbeing, enhance our mental clarity and revive our cellular pathways for health.

 

Anne will be presenting with R. Esther Lutes, M.D., who has 30 years of experience in Emergency Medicine, and 25 years of subtle body training and practice including Urban Zen Integrative Therapy, Yoga Nidra, and Ayurveda.

 

Fall On-Line Free Restorative Yoga

10/1 @ 7:30 - 8:45 p.m.

11/12 @ 7:30 – 8:45 p.m.

12/17 @ 7:30 – 8:45 p.m.

Email Anne for Zoom link

 

Fall Connect, Write, Read

Try your hand at free writing on a topic in response to prompts in a meditative state @ $15/session. Email Anne for Zoom Link.

9/25 @ 7:30 – 9:00 p.m.

10/30 @ 7:30 – 9:00 p.m.

11/20 @ 7:30 – 9:00 p.m.

 

Interested in trying Kundalini Yoga?

Teacher Mike Boyes’ is starting a new class 9/4 on Thursday nights at the Community Church of Chesterland from 6:00 – 7:15 p.m. Every last Thursday of the month, the class will be two-hours and will include a sonic bath. Sign up at: https://sovereignsoulkundalini.com/appointments-4-3

New Location for Private Clients!

I’m delighted to be seeing clients at Follow Your Heart Consulting, 831 South St., Chardon, on Wednesday and Thursday afternoons. This space belongs to my dear friend and Yoga Teacher, Social Worker and Consultant Melanie Hale, who is becoming a Neurokinetic Therapy Practitioner (NKT). If this location is more convenient for you, let Anne know.

 

Anne continues to see clients at Awareness Massage in Concord Township on Monday, Tuesday and Friday afternoons for private sessions.

What I'm Reading

Is A River Alive? By Robert MacFarland

I can’t recommend this book highly enough. MacFarland asks what seems (at least to his son) a simple question. But this question, if answered in the affirmative, has enormous ramifications. The book includes how several countries have given legal protection or “Rights of Nature” to rivers and other elements of nature. The prose is gorgeous, and the topic revolves around whether we will be able to continue to inhabit our beautiful earth home or self-destruct.

 

The Lioness of Boston by Emily Franklin

A novel recounting the life of Isabella Stewart Gardner who, at the turn of the 20th century, scandalized Boston society and created a legacy in art.

 

The Spy Coast by Tess Gerritsen

A group of retired CIA operatives on the coast of Maine. What could go wrong?

 

The Orchid and the Dandelion: Why Sensitive Children Face Challenges and How All Can Thrive by W. Thomas Boyce, MD
Dr. Boyce, in examining the radically different outcomes of his life and the life of his sister, uses the metaphor of an orchid and a dandelion in describing children who are more affected by their surroundings and those who seem to just carry on.


Here is his TEDx Talk as well:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_vcWB43W7Y

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1002 Hawthorne Dr., Chardon, OH, 44024


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