Three Winds
is an outpouring of pretty much everything I have come in contact
with through the years so far --- from an ecclectic mixture of studies,
to multitudes of people and experiences... My sense of what I hope
to share and make available to people through Three Winds is both
an offering and invitation to play with words like essence, foundation,
fundamentals, as well as resonance, intent, heart, Source, life...
These are words that are the inquiries that fuel the work at Three
Winds... I have been fortunate to have found other like-mindeds to
work and play with as students, teachers, friends and colleagues.
Below I have attempted
to weave a bit of the fabric that makes up Three Winds... There are
integral threads in this tapestry that are missing --- many of the
people with whom I have wandered as fellow-explorers, colleagues,
and intense personal companions... While my words convey the general
directions and surface of what has happened through the years to bring
Three Winds into being, these persons hold the deeper stories, and
have witnessed and been a major part of the weaving of
this tapestry. I hold both gratitude and respect for
all they have supported, created and made possible.
So, here you find me and
the development of Three Winds...
At 17 years old I began to study astrophysics and also to meditate.
Somehow, these felt like old friends who belonged together. At 21
and 22, with the birth of my sons, I became interested in herbalism
and yoga. While I still pursued studies in sciences (physics, ecology),
my career chose me when my yoga teacher asked me to sub for her one
class. I was nervous, horrible at teaching, and loved
it. It took that first year of trial-by-fire to find
my heart and feet as a teacher and settle into what I have been doing
ever since. A year and a half into teaching, I took a teacher-training
(somewhat ass-backward, but so seems to be my path in life...).
In 1998, I was approached
by several students to offer yoga teacher training. I requested 6
months to develop something, and in the fall of 1998, offered the
first teacher training program. Half way through the program, I began
to realize the responsibility I had really taken on. I spent a month
contemplating and inquiring into what we were doing --- what was the
essence of what we were studying and exploring together? This was
the birth of Yanumoja Yoga, which has had its own history both as
a style of yoga and an association of students and teachers.
In the meantime, I was working with clients individually. Again, this
work found me --- mostly it grew out of students who
wanted to work more intensely and directly with things they were encountering
in class --- whether it was physical, emotional or spiritual issues.
I was offering therapeutic yoga and a mixture of other modalities
I had studied, but felt called to work more "hands-on" with
clients --- I just didn't know what that might look like.
One day, while looking
through a Kripalu course calendar, I came across a description of
a Thai massage course being offered by Kam Thye Chow. I looked it
up on the internet, and discovered that Kam Thye actually lived in
Montreal, very close to where I am. I had never recieved a Thai massage,
but knew in my heart this is exactly what I had been seeking. Off
to Montreal I went, somewhat ignorant of what I was getting into.
Kam Thye's teaching carried
me deeply into a practice that has become an integral part of my spiritual
expression --- the communing with another through touch and heart,
the deep relatedness with life... Interwoven with the coming together
of all the other studies and practices I had encountered so far, Thai
massage also become an integral part of my work life. It was also
through encountering Kam Thye that I grew an interest in studying
Ayurveda, which brought me to both divergent and harmonising places
in my life, professionally and personally.
I struggled
deeply with Ayurveda --- despite studies and travels,
there was something missing internally in the connection of Ayurveda
and Thai massage. Certainly Ayurveda took on a completely different
flavour and depth when I was in India --- living more fully in the
encounters with people, their struggles and their stories, than it
did in the text books and theory...
Upon return to home, I
knew there was also something to be found in understanding Thai massage
and Ayurveda in context to Thai culture. I had already been approached
by students and begun to offer course work for Thai massage training.
But to be more effective and to be true to this tradition, I wanted
to offer something more than what I had put together at that time.
This is where I approached Tao Mountain and Pierce Salguero.
When I first spoke with Pierce, it was over the phone. His easy manner
and his sincere and diligent interest in preserving the integrity
of traditional Thai massage and medicine as a system in and of itself
was compelling. I signed up for the teacher training in fall 2005.
Completing this training
has filled in holes I didn't know were there in my work and teaching
of Thai massage. It feels like lakes of knowledge have
now been connected by flowing rivers, where I had been
previously struggling to dig canals with a small shovel. My relationship
with Thai massage has opened and expanded exponentially, and I also
feel like I am truly just at the beginning of this journey and exploration.
I am ever grateful to Pierce --- both for his diligent work and studies
in this field, as well as his genuine and easeful presence as a teacher
and fellow-explorer...
In university I wrote a
thesis exploring traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) and Western
science and developing guidelines for how to "manage" co-management
policy... Bottom line, it became clear that the integrity of each
system (as defined by the peoples who develop/live it) needed to be
maintained and supported while also recognizing that each could complement
the other in the management of natural resources on shared land.
It is this philosophy, combined with lived-inquiries into spirit and
essence that form the basis of Three Winds and the systems we explore.
In September
2008, the training programs I developed through Three Winds Academy
were recognized by the B.C. government, and I started to teaching
Canada's First College Accredited Yogatherapy and Thai Massage programs
at Pacific Rim College in Victoria, BC. All of the essences
of Three Winds Academy programs are now reached at 2-year Diploma
course at college. I am thrilled with the opportunity
to offer programs at this level of recognition, and excited to contribute
to the ongoing development of education in the field of energy medicine.
It is truly an honur to have Three Winds continue to breathe into
life…