Organic Solstice Donation Campaign

Published on December 6, 2012 by in Uncategorized

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3HO International strives to provide as much organic ingredients for our Solstice menu as possible.
Purchasing organic ingredients costs 30-40% more than conventional ingredients.

In past surveys you voted not to increase the cost of Solstice registration, but to ask participants to donate what they can to cover the costs.

If each person contributes $20 we will be able to cover the increased expense.

Thank you for making your contribution to this program and for co-creating the best sustainable practices for 3HO events.

DONATE NOW

 

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Hari Kirin Kaur

Published on November 7, 2012 by in

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Monday, December 17, 2012
3:00pm – 5:00pm 

The Healing Power of Yoga and Art Hari Kirin Kaur, (KY) Water Tent
Experience simple yet profound Kundalini Yoga techniques and creative arts exercises to access your inner wisdom and creativity. Hari Kirin, Lead trainer, Creative Arts Therapist and author of KRI’s bestselling Art & Yoga, Kundalini Awakening in Everyday Life, guides you through this deep exploration of your own unknown. Beginners are welcome, as are accomplished yogis and artists. Leave with completed image and three simple guidelines for incorporating the arts into your practice and teaching.

Hari Kirin has been a professional artist since finishing her BFA at Hartford Art School in 1976. Her twenties were spent between NY, at the School of Visual Arts or Columbia University, and Hartford, CT, where she participated in Real Art Ways. During this time she met Yogi Bhajan. In 1986 she moved to Cambridge MA to pursue her interest in art, healing and spirituality. In 1988 she received an MA in Creative Arts Therapies from Lesley University. At Lesley she was deeply influenced by psychologist James Hillman and writer Thomas Moore’s ideas about images. She began exploring these ideas in her painting, collaborative group performances, and therapeutic art events. She returned to graduate school and received an MFA degree from Vermont College in 2001.

Recent Public installations include Office Hours, 360 oil paintings in the Dublin, Ireland Immigration office; The Flag Project, a community expression of diversity in the State Legislature in Concord NH; Axis Mundi, a 40 day meditation with local teens on a toxic site in Wilton NH, and MudMural, a collaborative organic Mural. Hari Kirin has shown her paintings in one-woman shows at The Brattleboro Museum, VT, The Mariposa Museum, NH and The Open Center NY, and Group shows in the Attleboro Museum, MA, and Liberty gallery Dublin, Ireland. Her work has been reviewed in CIRCA, Resurgence, Yoga International and Aquarian Times. Recent lectures include the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Hofstra University, and the One Earth conference. She has been a visiting professor of Contemporary Art History at Marlboro College VT, and an artist teacher for Vermont College and Maine College of Art MFA programs.

Hari Kirin lives in New Hampshire with writer Thomas Moore and their two children. http://www.artandyoga.com/

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The Winter Solstice Experience

Published on February 24, 2011 by in

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Please take the Winter Solstice 2012 Survey

The Organic Solstice Food Campaign

Why Attend Winter Solstice? Find out from 2011 Attendees

Soldier Saints Needed – Serve on the Security Team

 

 

 

 

Winter Solstice is an intertwining of three ancient yogic traditions: Kundalini Yoga as taught by Yogi Bhajan®–power of discipline in body, mind and soul; Karma Yoga–mindfulness in action through service; and White Tantric Yoga®–deep transformation and renewal. These teachings—and the Solstice celebration itself—are among the many legacies of Yogi Bhajan, who dedicated his life to the creation of a healthy, happy, and holy humanity. 

An opportunity to immerse yourself in the 3HO Healthy, Happy, Holy lifestyle!

Spend the season of gratitude and giving with friends old and new in the beautiful landscape of Central Florida. Renew the bonds to your higher self amidst an international spiritual community of inspired souls. Expand your inner light with experiences that will prepare you for 2013.

FEATURED TEACHERS

 

“Winter 2010 was my first ever Solstice celebration. I will not miss another! I felt totally at home and loved. Every set of eyes smiled at me and welcomed me. People I had never seen before came up and hugged me on a daily basis. I had more fun than I had ever had in my life.
~Rickie Dickerson, Riverside California, 2010 Winter Solstice attendee


 

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The Solstice Diet

Published on February 24, 2011 by in

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The Solstice diet is a simple, nutritious, and cleansing yogic vegetarian diet (much of the diet is vegan). Yogi Bhajan designed this diet to support the Solstice experience. The spicy soup for breakfast and spicy mung beans and rice served at dinner are part of his recommendations. A non-spicy version of the soup and dinner dish will be available to anyone who can’t tolerate spicy food.

NEW! Organic Food Upgrade Meals are included in the registration fee, and much of the food at solstice is organic. However, we’ve had overwhelming requests for more organic food at Solstice. Since using organic food and ingredients significantly increases food costs, please consider a $20 or more donation to support organic food at Solstice (rather than raising the price for Solstice). If eating organic is important to you, please contribute to support organics at Solstice.

Please bring reusable/washable cups, dishes, utensils, and cloth napkins for your own use at meals. Cups, dishes, and utensils may be purchased on-site for a nominal fee.

Menu

Breakfast: A potato, celery, and onion soup is served with bananas and oranges on the side.

Lunch: Quinoa tabouli, baked potatoes or baked sweet potatoes, stuffed grape leaves [note that because Yogi Bhajan did not design a lunch menu, this meal may vary somewhat.]

Dinner: Mung beans and rice with lettuce, steamed beets and carrots, and hot sauce served on the side. A special meal is served for dinner on the night before camp ends.

Yogi Tea: Yogi Tea with soy milk or cow’s milk (upon request) will be served twice daily: after Sadhana and nightly at the Yogi Tea Café. There are also hot water and alternative Yogi Tea options provided all day long. On White Tantric Yoga® days, Golden Milk will be added to the menu. Golden Milk is a traditional recipe for joint health. It is a delicious combination of milk, turmeric, cardamom, and almond oil.

Special Dietary Needs:

If you have special dietary concerns, we cannot support them in the kitchen. You may bring dry foods, however please do not bring anything that requires refrigeration. We also suggest you keep any food items in a tight lidded container so animals cannot get into it.

Solstice Diet Recipes:

Solstice Potato Soup

Mung Beans and Rice

Solstice Hot Sauce

Yogi Tea

Golden Milk

Tantric Burger ingredients

More about the Solstice Diet:

“Yogiji designed the Solstice diet to support the transformation that occurs there. A physical, mental, spiritual, and emotional shift happens from Solstice, and the diet allows for maximum balance and integration of these changes. The mung beans, rice, and vegetables, and the potato-vegetable soup are easy-to-digest meals (for most) that quickly restore our energy. This diet is also alkaline, which enhances the functioning of our glands and soothes our nervous system.” ~Jot Singh, Solstice Kitchen Manager

The Solstice Diet By Jot Singh Khalsa, Millis, Massachusetts, USA, who has served as the Solstice Kitchen Manager for over three decades.

Yogi Bhajan was a man of great vision. He told us that everything would be taken care of if we would revolve our lives around attending Summer and Winter Solstice. He designed the Solstice experience to challenge us, for he was preparing participants to serve, be exemplary for, and lead the future. Yogi Bhajan came to teach and be with us year after year, until his health would no longer allow. He did not wish for Solstice to be vacation-like. He wanted us to vacate our routines, to cleanse our bodies, clear our minds, and elevate our Spirit.

When Yogi Bhajan came to the Solstice site, he would always request the food that we were making and serving for the camp dinner that day; our traditional mung beans and rice, hot sauce, beets, carrots, and lettuce. It was extra incentive for us in the kitchen that “we better get it just right” for the Master would be eating the food. Sometimes he would visit the kitchen, just checking to see that everything was clean and orderly. All of that helped to establish the highest standards in the kitchen.

Yogiji designed the Solstice diet to support the transformation that occurs there. A physical, mental, spiritual, and emotional shift happens from Solstice, and the diet allows for maximum balance and integration of these changes. The mung beans, rice, and vegetables and the potato-vegetable soup are easy-to-digest meals (for most) that quickly restore our energy. This diet is also alkaline, which enhances the functioning of our glands and soothes our nervous system.

After sharing with the Master that many were seen at the local Subway sandwich outlet during lunchtime one Winter Solstice about ten years ago, a tasty and digestible lunch was introduced (in previous years there were just two meals per day!). Increased requests for raw food options inspired us to add a salad at dinner in the summer of 2009 that had been introduced at Winter Solstice 2008.

Food of the Yogis: An Ayurvedic Perspective on the Solstice Diet By Jai Dev Singh

 

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