Creativity in Motion
Dancing Through Life with Nia
By Gail Condrick
Article published in all 55 Natural Awakenings magazine franchises in the United States in September, 2009
Looking for a cardio workout that engages both mind and body with a side order of consciousness? The Nia Technique may be just the ticket. In each hour-long Nia class, enthusiasts experience the creativity of dance, the precision of yoga and the power of martial arts, as they move to music that rocks the body and soothes the soul.
Nia blends the energy forms of Tai chi, aikido, tae kwon do, Duncan dance, jazz, modern dance and yoga into a holistic, self-healing experience. The underlying principle of it all is finding joy and pleasure in movement.
Renowned physician Christiane Northrup characterizes Nia as “a total mind, body, spirit celebration.” In her book, The Secret Pleasures of Menopause, she notes that regular exercise can add 20 years to a life and encourages individuals to get moving.
A Nia class “celebration” is an active, sweaty, cardiovascular workout currently practiced in 39 countries. In Sarasota, Florida, students ages 16 to 81 dance enthusiastically to music that ranges from inspirational to funky and primal, accented by kicks, blocks, punches and jazzy showmanship. Each person moves at their desired level of intensity, adapting the 52 moves of the form to their body potential. Each hour-long session ends in freeform stretching and relaxation and an invitation that students apply the movements to their daily lives.
Matt McCord, 53, an actor and certified nursing assistant, finds that Nia inspires his art and his work. “Nia engages my creativity,” shares McCord. “When I am moving, my brain gets out of the way and my body dances freely. I am learning how my body wants to move and bringing that lesson to my nursing clients. Now, I feel that I am guiding, rather than forcing, self-healing.”
Awareness makes a difference. In Excuses Begone! Wayne Dyer, Ph.D., concludes that it is this conscious awareness that boosts effectiveness of such physical exercise and creates the potential for self-healing.
Lynn Gillis, 48, an artist and personal trainer in Fairfax County, Virginia, and longtime Nia practitioner, elaborates. “Nia keeps you in shape, yet it’s so much more,” she explains. “It gives your mind a chance to rest and lets your spirit out to play.”
The “more” delivered in Nia class comes courtesy of licensed Nia teachers, extensively trained in the technique’s multiple disciplines, and so able to address a student’s needs, both physically and energetically. At a studio in Asheville, North Carolina, 13 people are dancing to a strong bass and bongo beat. Suddenly, trainer Denise Medved instructs five people to “Freeze!” In the silence that follows, everyone else is invited to look closely at the bodies caught in motion, the details of veins in the hands and the beauty of human living sculpture.
“Nia
is a moving awareness practice,” observes Medved. “Through
Nia, you become present and conscious in your body and connect to life as
art.”
Finding art in the human form and elevating fitness to a conscious,
self-healing practice have been the work of Nia founders Debbie Rosas Stewart
and Carlos Rosas for more than 25 years. They say that Nia enables students
to use movements learned in class to enrich all aspects of their lives, inside
and outside the studio.
“The Nia practice, what we call ‘dancing through life,’ is choosing to make every movement a dance of self-healing,” explains Debbie, who lives in Portland, Oregon. “When I wake up in the morning, I can jump out of bed any which way or I can connect to my body and move organically, the way the body moves naturally. As I move through my day, I can create pleasure by adjusting my movements and practicing a kind of living meditation. All of it adjusts my perspective of life as art.”
Students may not know how Nia works, but they feel it. “After two classes, I feel wonderful,” comments Diane McKay, a 44-year-old organizational consultant and a new student of Nia in Sarasota.
Nia’s blend of conscious awareness, dance fitness, martial arts and healing philosophy easily puts one’s own creativity into motion. Carlos warns: “Watch out, this can change your life.”
Copyright © Gail Condrick, 2009
Gail Condrick is a writer and lover of all things earth and ocean living in Sarasota, Florida. Write to Gail
Tips for Dancing Through Life
Nia practioners stay fit in and out of the gym through a three-stage process called “Dancing through Life.” You can learn to stay connected to life through bodily sensations, reap the benefits of traditional meditation and find beauty and inspiration in every facet of your life by following these three dance steps.
Dance through Life ~ Turn everyday movements into a continuous dance of fitness. Get in touch with your body’s sensations and make small adjustments to feel more pleasure. Reaching up becomes your opportunity to stretch, swinging your arms releases tension in your back and trying a new way of moving brings awareness and breaks habits. Build body consciousness and activate greater self-healing as you learn to move with pleasure.
Practice Living Meditation ~ Stop the ceaseless inner dialogue in your mind and find moments to rest mind and body while moving through your day. At a traffic light or waiting for an elevator, let everything stop and move into meditative non-doing. Relax your shoulders and jaw, feel the sensations of a neutral mind and capture a moment of stillness while being in the world, but not of it.
Appreciate Life as Art ~ Slow down and view everything you see and experience with wonder and admiration. As you change your perception, ordinary life can become as inspiring as drinking in a masterpiece. Breathe in the good energy of the world and become the art and artist of your life.
Source: Adapted from The Nia Technique: The High-Powered Energizing Workout that Gives You a New Body and a New Life, by Debbie Rosas and Carlos Rosas.