​​​​​​​Cheryl Fenner Brown C-IAYT​, E-RYT 500, YACEP
yogacheryl.com
  • CONTACT
    • Chat with Cheryl >
      • Yoga Therapy Consultation
      • Reiki Consultation
      • Teacher Chat
    • Bio
    • Resume'
    • Press
    • Join Mailing List
  • BOOK NOW
  • YOGA
    • Schedule >
      • Yoga Nidra Series
      • Scholarship Application
      • > Prop Recommendations
    • Yoga Therapy
    • Seasonal Self-Care Challenges >
      • 5 Days to Intention & Personal Mantra
      • 21 Days to Spring Self-Care
      • 21 Days to Summer Self-Care
      • 21 Days to Autumn Self-Care
      • 21 Days to Holiday Bliss
    • Introduction to Yoga Course
    • Exploring Your Chakras Course
    • Custom Yoga Nidra
    • Thai Yoga Massage
  • REIKI
    • Reiki Sessions
    • Chakra Balancing Reiki
  • TEACHER TRAINING
    • Mentoring
    • Cancer Teacher Training
    • Yoga Nidra Training (10 hrs)
    • Subtle Practices Training (15 hrs)
  • CANCER
    • Cancer Teacher Training >
      • 60-hr Cancer Certificaiton Training >
        • Cancer Training Intro and Q&A
        • Client Application for Teacher Practicum
      • Cancer Immersions
    • Classes for Patients & Survivors >
      • Private Cancer Facebook Group
    • Private Yoga Therapy for Cancer
    • Teacher Registry
    • Cancer Survivorship Home Practice Course
    • Yoga Nidra for Cancer
    • Articles & Sequences
    • Yoga Research
    • Cancer Patient Resources >
      • Cancer Resource Request Form
  • YOGA NIDRA
    • What is Yoga Nidra?
    • Setting Your Sankalpa
    • Free Body Scan
    • Free Yoga Nidra
    • Buy Yoga Nidra MP3s
    • Yoga Nidra Scripts
    • Yoga Nidra Training (10 hrs)
  • YOGA ENCYCLOPEDIA APP
  • BLOG
  • STORE
  • CONTACT
    • Chat with Cheryl >
      • Yoga Therapy Consultation
      • Reiki Consultation
      • Teacher Chat
    • Bio
    • Resume'
    • Press
    • Join Mailing List
  • BOOK NOW
  • YOGA
    • Schedule >
      • Yoga Nidra Series
      • Scholarship Application
      • > Prop Recommendations
    • Yoga Therapy
    • Seasonal Self-Care Challenges >
      • 5 Days to Intention & Personal Mantra
      • 21 Days to Spring Self-Care
      • 21 Days to Summer Self-Care
      • 21 Days to Autumn Self-Care
      • 21 Days to Holiday Bliss
    • Introduction to Yoga Course
    • Exploring Your Chakras Course
    • Custom Yoga Nidra
    • Thai Yoga Massage
  • REIKI
    • Reiki Sessions
    • Chakra Balancing Reiki
  • TEACHER TRAINING
    • Mentoring
    • Cancer Teacher Training
    • Yoga Nidra Training (10 hrs)
    • Subtle Practices Training (15 hrs)
  • CANCER
    • Cancer Teacher Training >
      • 60-hr Cancer Certificaiton Training >
        • Cancer Training Intro and Q&A
        • Client Application for Teacher Practicum
      • Cancer Immersions
    • Classes for Patients & Survivors >
      • Private Cancer Facebook Group
    • Private Yoga Therapy for Cancer
    • Teacher Registry
    • Cancer Survivorship Home Practice Course
    • Yoga Nidra for Cancer
    • Articles & Sequences
    • Yoga Research
    • Cancer Patient Resources >
      • Cancer Resource Request Form
  • YOGA NIDRA
    • What is Yoga Nidra?
    • Setting Your Sankalpa
    • Free Body Scan
    • Free Yoga Nidra
    • Buy Yoga Nidra MP3s
    • Yoga Nidra Scripts
    • Yoga Nidra Training (10 hrs)
  • YOGA ENCYCLOPEDIA APP
  • BLOG
  • STORE

3/13/2025

0 Comments

What Do I Do with All this Anger?

 
Recorded on February 9, 2025 a the Eno River Unitarian Universalist Fellowship in Durham, NC
Picture
Let’s talk about anger. Anger is a normal, healthy human emotion that arises when we feel threatened, powerless, injustice, pain, trauma, stress, and even hormonal imbalance. It is a sign that something is not right. When we feel safe to be openly angry, it can be expressed directly.
But when we unconsciously deny our anger, it often leaks out indirectly and in unexpected ways such as high blood pressure, heart disease, insomnia, headaches, digestive issues, depression, numbness, passive-aggressiveness, perfectionism, isolation, procrastination, and sarcasm. Repressing anger is an unconscious reaction and often results from past trauma, fear of rejection, and self-preservation.

Ok, those are the facts, now it is time to get personal.

I am a conflict averse person, always have been. When anger is directed toward me, my whole body will freeze up. I feel powerless and that tension stays in my body in my shoulders, jaw and lower back. Rather than expressing the anger, I turn it toward myself as self-criticism, I isolate myself from the source of anger and it takes a long time for me to feel comfortable again. I was never taught how to express anger; I was brought up hearing “Go to your room” if I had any type of negative reaction. Does that sound familiar?

I used to think this made me a stronger person because I could turn the other cheek. I would justify the other person’s anger and attempt to cultivate compassion. But there is a difference between compassionate acquiescence and compassionate action.

Over the past month, I have purposely been avoiding the news out of self-preservation and thought I was adequately protecting my mental health. However, the collective fear for the future has become the water in which we all swim. These emotional vibrations are moving through all of us and my emotion repression “skills” have been seriously put to the test.

I have been experiencing something far deeper than fear and anger – it is rage. Rage that I misplaced on others, rage that I turned toward myself, rage that I did not know what to with. And since my internal coffers were already stuffed full of decades of unrepressed emotion, the rage stayed at the surface. It has been scary to live with so much rage, what am I supposed to do with it? I am terrified to let it out, to witness the damage it could do, but I cannot hold on to it either.

Rage is like a match, after it is struck within us, it burns hotly but is short-lived. What if we could harness the rage into positive action rather than internalize it or turn it on others? Use rage as an impetus to act:
  • Act physically by rage-cleaning or rage-organizing something, scribbling madly on paper, working out, taking a brisk walk, going to a march, volunteering, or dancing around your living room to your favorite song.
  • Act verbally by speaking out where it matters (not on social media), making calls, talking to a trusted friend or therapist, or screaming into the void.
  • Or Act mindfully by consciously choosing a response rather than reacting unconsciously.

Let’s try something together now:
  1. Put your feet on the floor and hands on your belly.
  2. Close your eyes and notice that you are breathing.
  3. Observe the sensations you feel in your body - the floor and chair beneath you, any sensations of tightness in your chest, belly, or jaw.
  4. Notice your belly rising and falling in synchrony with your breath.
  5. Whatever is present in your emotions or mind, do not assign value to it, it is neither good nor bad, it simply is.
  6. Take 3 more breaths, then open your eyes.

​This exercise is far easier to do here while we are together, but you can use it even during moments of high emotion. Once the intensity has passed, you may be left with an exhausted kind of spaciousness. A different kind of quiet that comes from using that energy for good and then letting it go.  

0 Comments

1/10/2025

0 Comments

Variations on Balasana (Child's Pose)

 
Picture
This week in my public classes we explore Child's Pose or Balasana. This tucked posture reminds our bodies and brains of being safe in the womb. We can draw our awareness away from outer stimulation toward how the body and breath feel in this pose. Below you will find a short video exploring many different variations of Child's Pose, from reclining on the back, reclining on the side, sitting, and kneeling. There is a position here that everyone can get comfortable in!

Read More
0 Comments

1/7/2025

0 Comments

The Eternal Now

 
Picture

All we can truly experience is the present moment. 

​At the start of a new year I often contemplate the concept of time. The time of the year just completed, and what is coming in the time of the year to come. So often my mind focuses on something that has not happened  yet: an idea, a list, a wish, a dream. I plan and think about all the ways in which the future might turn out. Admittedly my mind often goes to negative outcomes before I can catch myself and redirect my thoughts. Equally as often, my mind will remember the past with longing or regret, both creating negative impressions and taking me out of experiencing what is happening right in front of me.  

Read More
0 Comments
Previous
    Picture
    Cheryl Fenner Brown, C-IAYT
    I am an integrative Yoga Therapist with over 20 years of experience working with beginners, older adults, and cancer patients as well as teaching teachers adaptive asana, pranayama, mudra, sound, and Yoga Nidra to help special populations.
    • Asana
    • Anatomic Focus
    • Chair Yoga
    • Chakras
    • Eight Limbs
    • Koshas
    • Prana Vayus
    • Pranayama
    • Sun & Moon Salutations
    • Therapeutic
    • Vowel Spiral
    • Yoga for Cancer 
    • Yoga Nidra
    • 2015 India Trip

    Categories

    All
    Asana Practices
    Breath Practices
    Healing Yoga For Cancer
    India
    Mudra Practices
    The Chakras
    The Vayus
    Yamas & Niyamas
    Yogic Reflections

    Archives

    March 2025
    January 2025
    September 2022
    August 2021
    August 2020
    February 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012
    May 2012
    April 2012
    March 2012
    January 2011
    September 2008
    August 2008
    July 2008
    June 2008
    May 2008
    April 2008
    March 2008
    February 2008
    January 2008
    December 2007
    November 2007
    October 2007
    September 2007
    August 2007
    July 2007
    June 2007
    May 2007
    April 2007
    March 2007
    February 2007
    January 2007
    July 2006
    June 2006
    May 2006
    April 2006
    March 2006
    February 2006
    January 2006


    RSS Feed

    I attend Cheryl's class regularly and feel that my practice has improved immensely over the past few years due to her expert coaching. Her teaching style is clear and compassionate and her previous experience in teaching adults is evident in her organized approach and easy to understand instructions. I also appreciate that Cheryl not only teaches us about how to correctly position ourselves, but also touches on many aspects of yoga philosophy, which in turn has deepened my personal practice and heightened my awareness of the connection between mind and body, breath and relaxation.​
    - L.G.

Vertical Divider

​Chat with Cheryl
   |   ​Bio   |   Press
Contact   |   ​Join Mailing List
Vertical Divider

​Classes & Workshops
   |   Self-Care Courses   |   ​Private Yoga Therapy      Reiki
Vertical Divider

​Mentoring   |   Teacher Training
​Yoga for Cancer   |  ​ Yoga Nidra

Yoga Encyclopedia App
​
​Blog   |    ​​Store   |    Malas  


Picture