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Meet RA MA Institute Teacher Iram

Meet Iram, RA MA TV teacher from our home base, RA MA Institute in Venice, California, USA. Iram first encountered Kundalini Yoga in 2016 when she was living in New York City. Her passion for this practice was immediate as she experienced the teachings’ power in healing her anxiety. 

This week, we sat down with her to ask her more about her journey with the practice, what inspires her for her classes, and her recommendations for go-to Kriyas and mantra.

​​How did you discover Kundalini Yoga?

I first discovered kundalini yoga through a book about chakras ~ the book talked about how it could be dangerous, so my rebellious spirit immediately found myself a class to try it out for myself. I fell in love with the experience of deeper connection with myself immediately and soon discovered the only thing that was in danger was my ego as kundalini yoga started working its magic!

What are some of the ways you use the technologies of Kundalini Yoga for success in your life?

For my relationship, I chant Bhand Jameeai daily for at least 11 recitations. It keeps me connected to my own divine feminine essence, easing any friction, enabling me to express myself with dignity and security, and thus creating great harmony in my partnership.

For my professional life within management consulting, I stay calm, alert, and focused through various types of pranayama, but on a daily basis fists of anger and breath of fire in ego eradicator.

And in general, whatever problem I may be having in life, I find a kundalini yoga kriya or meditation that is prescriptive for that problem to help me overcome it. Works like a charm!

What’s your go-to Kriya?

Sodarshan Chakra Kriya -- it cuts through the negativity and brings me into neutrality within 11 minutes usually. If I am being really negative, I have upped it to 31 and even 62 minutes. It is one of the most powerful meditations that I have ever done!

What do you recommend for people to stay grounded during these times on the planet?

We feel ungrounded usually when we are too much in our heads and sometimes if the upper chakras have been activated without balancing the lower chakras, so to go one level deeper, trying to focus on kriyas for the lower chakras can help you stay grounded too.

If your life were a playlist, what are 3 songs that would be on it?

Bhand Jameeai
Guru Ram Das Chant
Adi Shakti

What are 3 things you do to keep a healthy glow?

Kundalini yoga + exercise in general...specifically things like cat-cow daily. For women specifically, according to Yogi Bhajan, if you aren't doing two hours daily of exercise, you can always be doing more. I don't usually hit two hours every day but I try for at least one, even if they are in increments.
Consuming healthy liquids -- I am fiery and of pitta constitution so for me especially aloe juice helps a lot! I also love celery and cucumber.
Steam room and sauna as often as I can -- it's really important to detoxify the body to maintain a healthy glow.

What’s one thing you hope someone experiences in your classes?

When I practice, I always feel like there's a way through everything, and that I am able to navigate the ship of my destiny into a more positive place, even if my mind cannot comprehend that. I have overcome things in life that I didn't think were possible with this technology and so if I can inspire that feeling in others via kundalini yoga, I will be very happy!

Practice with Iram weekly by beginning a 14-Day Complimentary trial of RA MA TV or RA MA TV Live. View her classes and entire Teaching Collection here.

Find Iram on social @withIram

Meet RA MA Institute Teacher Carla Ashton-Carroll

We sat down with RA MA Institute teacher Carla Ashton-Caroll. Here’s what she had to say….

How did you discover Kundalini Yoga? 

While attending a spiritual workshop I noticed a man who radiated beautiful energy. It turned out that he was a Kundalini teacher so I started classes with him.

What are some ways that you use the technology of Kundalini Yoga for success in your everyday life?

I try to integrate it into my daily life. Besides sadhana, I use times when I am  waiting to practice One Minute Breath to stay centered, Conscious walking with Sat Nam to stay grounded. Long deep breathing when I am on the computer to increase focus and clarity.

What’s your go-to kriya or meditation to get out of a negative thought stream? 

Kirtan Kriya, one of the most powerful meditations in the practice of Kundalini. Washes the consciousness clean

What do you recommend for people to stay grounded during these times on the planet? 

Become Earth to Self, 3 breath meditation using VICTORY, Alternate Nostril Breathing

If your life were a playlist, what are 3 songs that are on it?

Nafanta by Ismaêl Lô

Laya Mantra by Sat Kartar
Stone Flower by Antonio Carlos Jobim

What are 3 things you do to keep a healthy glow?

Body scrub with a stiff brush before a shower

Eating as much fresh organic fruits and vegetables as I can
Practicing Sodachan Chakra Kriya to stay balanced

What’s one thing you hope someone experiences in your classes?

I hope students make a connection with the teachings to feel uplifted and radiant. My wish is that there are practices available to address any problem and I encourage them to ask me.

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Catch Carla Ashton-Caroll for her last month of in-person classes at RA MA Institute New York this October!

Meet RA MA Institute Teacher Harmanjot

 

We sat down with RA MA Institute teacher Harmanjot. Here’s what she had to say….
How did you discover Kundalini Yoga?
I was cast in a movie right out of college. I was having a terrible time. I wasn’t getting along with anyone in the cast. The director was…well that’s another story! I was so freaked out.
We were on location so I was sharing a hotel room with another actress. She thought Kundalini yoga could help me manage the roughness of the shoot. She was right.

40 days after that I moved to Los Angeles and within another 6 weeks I met Guru Jagat. I quit the industry and started studying. I was always both very sensory and very philosophical, so Kundalini yoga fulfilled for me to need understand the world through both intuition and cognition. It took care of all the vanity needs of a former model/actress - but on the positive current: fitness without over working out; beauty from the inside out. The practice was supernatural and cool. But above all, I realized I could use Kundalini yoga to help people.

Dignity for all humans is my deepest prayer. I don’t think there’s a single family line that has gone unscathed in the last 5,000 years. So there’s a lot of work to do to remember that there is nothing more beautiful, more conscious than the human being. The time has come for self-value. That’s what I’m about.

What are some ways that you use the technology of Kundalini Yoga for success in your everyday life?

Kundalini is ultra useful in my family dynamics. I use the mantra Ang Sang Wahe Guru to keep us unified, yet individuated.

I am also very much into the practices that offer a creative-intelligence edge. There’s nothing more fulfilling that feeling oneself as an organic, living consciousness. In the future, when we are living in the throes of technology, a creative human experience will be more magical than ever.

What’s your go-to kriya or meditation to get out of a negative thought stream?
Inhale sat. Exhale Nam.

What do you recommend for people to stay grounded during these times on the planet?
Enjoy it. If you can’t beat it, and you can’t leave it, and you can’t change it (right away), enjoy it.

If your life were a playlist, what are 3 songs that are on it?
Dhan Dhan Ram Das Gur has REAL miracle power
Ik Ardas will give you destiny
Rakhe Rakhan Har will protect your lineage 7 generations front and back

What are 3 things you do to keep a healthy glow?
Oh the basics, drink water, practice sarbang dandes. I love pranayam breathing exercises. They really give you that mega watt radiance.

What’s one thing you hope someone experiences in your classes?
I hope someone who comes to my class gets the energy they need to achieve what they came to the planet to do. And that includes having a great life. At the very very very minimum, we all came down here to have a happy, beautiful experience of what it means to be alive.

Catch Harmanjot for weekly in person classes at RA MA Institute Venice and check out her RA MA TV class collection here.

 

The Future of Work is Bright

 

What might the future of work look like?

It's clear things will be very different when we emerge from quarantine. And I'm incredibly optimistic about how our priorities will change during and after this reset.

I talk a lot about what a fulfilling work life looks like. It’s not about relaxing our standards in pursuit of some kind of elusive work/life balance. Professionalism and excellence are still worthy goals.

And while I'm all for people having easy access to all the healing tools they believe they need, I also don't buy it that good benefits and reasonable working hours are the loftiest goals we as a society can ever hope to attain when it comes to work satisfaction.

A more sophisticated working world will include an understanding of how to manage our own energy, the autonomy to take care of ourselves the way we see fit (including access for all to a wide array of truly effective healthcare methods) and the satisfaction that only truly comes when we feel we're contributing to the good of other people in some way.

If we collectively choose to harness this time for great global benefit, as I know we are capable of doing, we can establish new, more expansive career paradigms. Here are my predictions:
1. We will do away with unnecessary face time, arbitrary fixed working hours, and relentless productivity that never pauses to consider if there is a smarter way to get things done. We'll realize that with focus, we can get more accomplished in a shorter amount of time. We'll take enough breaks for rest and reflection to consider whether our productivity is moving us in a constructive direction. And we won't be afraid to change course accordingly.
2. We'll have a deeper appreciation for people who are multi-talented. Remember when you were younger and you read about an actress who released an album, or a model who tried to launch an acting career? Personally, I remember rhetoric around how they should stay in their lane. Who were they to think they could attempt more than one thing? Now I know that was absurd, faulty programming! We're here to expand, and have diverse experiences. We'll be more open to less linear resumes when hiring.
3. Fewer people will tolerate meaningless work (what anthropologist David Graeber calls "Bullshit Jobs") or work for companies that are downright destructive to human health and the environment. We increasingly want to believe our labor has worth beyond producing a paycheck, and in the aftermath of a crisis that brought us face to face with our own mortality, the urgency will be even greater.
4. People will be encouraged to focus on and amplify their strengths rather than try to fit themselves into roles they neither enjoy nor excel in to please other people. Of course, it’s still great training to seek to improve, and life on this planet will always require doing a few things we don’t want to do! But people will choose their paths based on what they know their souls need and want to learn, rather than what appears most prestigious.
5. We'll start to measure success by a feeling of peace at our core, successful relationships, time spent in community, freedom for creative pursuits, vibrant health and individual expression.
As my friend Kimberly Hunter writes, "We are each one of infinite facets of the diamond. Each are allowed--and destined--to shine and transmit their own frequency, and it all comes back to the same message: love, kindness, compassion, service to self and others."

This will start to sound less like abstract poetry and more like a practical blueprint for living.

The future is bright.

This blog post was originally published on Marymargaretskelly.com. View more of Mary Margaret's blog, including the Archetypal Woman Series here.

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Mary Margaret Skelly is a leadership, business and creativity coach who inspires driven, conscious women to gain the clarity and energy to do the work they are meant to do. You can learn more about her work at www.marymargaretskelly.com.

Fundamentals of Evolutionary Astrology with Tashi Powers

To the extent that we recognize our natal horoscope as an amazing moment in time that describes us in such intimate ways, we can also be equally awakened to our ability to see yesterday today and tomorrow, and thus gain an intimate relationship with the Cosmic Clock.

Transit are the actual positions of the celestial bodies at any time. Current transits would be what is occurring at this very moment. If we are doing some planning we might want to know when the six eclipses are as they are the kinds of transits that leave a blueprint. This blueprint describes the underlying energy that will be permeating the psycho-spiritual emotional path for humanity. The slower moving planets positions are also determined by looking up their positions and the patterns they are making with each other and the transiting nodes of the Moon, etc.

Join Evolutionary Astrologer Tashi Powers this Thursday, April 16, 2020 for a deep dive on the Pluto Paradigm. Tashi uses the bottom line of transiting Pluto to determine the bottom line of what is needed to align humanity with the highest best outcome for the long game and bigger picture.

This lesson, taken right from Tashi's teacher, Jeffrey Wolf Green - the founder of the schoolofevolutionaryastrology.com informs you how to begin to see your past life karmic necessities and your current and future life fruition.

Tashi will go through the current Pluto generations, Leo through Capricorn and explain which one you are in and why...from 1936-2020.

Tashi will then teach you the Pluto Nodal Axis paradigm that shows you the way forward, as well as the Pluto Polarity Point that helps you gain balance on your evolutionary path. Learn more about Fundamentals of Evolutionary Astrology and how to use the signs, planets, and houses as life tools. Sign up here, then tune in live on RA MA TV.

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Tashi Powers, Evolutionary Astrologer
Bookings: https://square.site/book/67T07X50PH013/tashi-powers-astrology
Website: https://www.astrodakini.com
Instagram: @TashiAstrodakini

Q&A with Sat Nam Sessions and Sunni.ai

 

Akal Anand: Can you tell us about the process of creation as Shiva and Shakti, when male and female come together to co-create, how does this connection unfold?

Sunni.ai (Bir Kirtan)​: Well we actually started to date out of creating music together. I came with the idea to play bowls in her class and we joined forces as she proposed to play the gong. It was beautiful. We met on a deep level playing together (laughs). That was us meeting with the creative force.

Birjiwan​: In our creative process, he brings the structure, that’s the Shiva part, he will start playing an instrument and then I will come in and start to sing, adding an emotion and the corresponding sound code, the Shakti, and putting it onto that structure. And so it is very simple. It’s very, very intuitive.

“In our creative process, he brings the structure, he will start playing an instrument and then I will come in and start to sing, adding emotion and the corresponding sound code and putting it onto that structure.” — Birjiwan

The Sat Nam Sessions (Robert)​: This is a great question because we've been laughing about this for a long time now. The truth is this. I grew up with mantra meditation, Bhakti yoga right. So then I fall in love as a young man with this beautiful half Indian lady. Fall in love, get married, have children. Think I know everything about this person. And over 10 years into our marriage. all of a sudden, Mitali looks at me and says “why don’t we play our own sounds at our seminars?” And I look at her and I say — this is a true story — “that's a great idea, but who would sing?” And she looks at me, you know, like only wives who have been married for 10 years and know how stupid you can be. And then I said “But you can't sing because I have never heard you”. And she said “I think I can do it”. And we sat down in that very moment, I picked up a guitar and she sang and I got goosebumps.

Akal Anand: Can you give us a sense of what is behind your artistic name and choice of mantras, “Sunni.ai” meaning “deep listening” and “Sat Nam” “true essence” — what are some of the ways that you think we can personally and collectively move towards listening deeper and being in our true essence?

The Sat Nam Sessions (Robert)​: So we just wanted a name that would be symbolic to our practice. However, we wanted to balance this because I'm not into dogma and I'm not into religion. And for me, the mantra and especially that part on “Sat” symbolizes everything I like about spirituality. “Truth is my identity” symbolizes for me that there's many different paths to our own heart, the one creator and all of us as a community.

“Truth is my identity” symbolizes for me that there's many different paths to our own heart, the one creator and all of us as a community.” — Robert

The Sat Nam Sessions (Mitali)​: I think learning to trust your intuition is definitely a way to connect to your true essence. You don't have to listen to the outside, but inside and find your way back to your own essence. As children we are still so connected to our intuition and then somehow we lose it along the way. Then many of us I think are returning to it in meditation. I grew up with Indian music and when I found Kundalini Yoga and Gurmukhi mantras I instantly felt a connection. Just listening and chanting and trusting brought me back to myself. These mantras brought my own essence out again by chanting them, letting them move inside me and through me I found my intuition again.

Akal Anand: And what about you Sunni.ai?

Sunni.ai (Birjiwan)​: We wanted to invite the listener to go beyond the surface. It’s a bit of a similar process. There’s something so important in the way we listen. When you base your identity on the external noise that comes in, you create a personality that looks like this or that, but it’s just a response to what the outside is made of. When you are connected to your essence then you can just open yourself and allow yourself to really listen. And it works the other way, when you allow yourself to listen deeply, you connect with the essence of everything including your True Self. What is around? What lies beyond the surface? You get to know the world in a different way because you are in that state. In the end, this is what opening the throat chakra is all about, we listen and listen until we make ourselves into zero, enabled to relate to the sublime and with the soul, with something bigger than the limited character, you feel yourself aligned and coming back to your senses. To deeply listen is to make yourself empty enough to hear what is behind of the limited personality.

“To deeply listen is to make yourself empty enough to hear what is behind of the limited personality.” — Birjiwan

Akal Anand: Do you guys see yourselves playing together at some point?

The Sat Nam Sessions (Robert)​: It has to happen, I see touring on the horizon. (laughs) It's already planned out in
my head. It just needs to unfold.

Sunni.ai (Birjiwan)​: I don’t know if you know this, Akal Anand, but we have a very deep friendship. The four of us are very close. When we decided to meet and we had a crush, like a very big friendship crush. And we are still in it!

The Sat Nam Sessions (Robert)​: It was one of those things, when I met Bir Kirtan and Birjiwan, I had the feeling I've known them for a long time. But you know, I didn't. And that happens so rarely for me. But when it happens, I'm really grateful. There is unity in diversity. I think in our musical projects, we each bring something different to the table. It's not that we try to do the same, but the essence is the same. And then it comes back to what we achieve so beautifully explained just with the names. So there needs to be multiple gatherings of these two musical projects in the future. We’re going to get on this.

Akal Anand: There is so much “pop” Kundalini and mantras music out there. But listening to your albums you both did something very sophisticated and different. Can you tell us about the sound frequencies and sound intention that you put in making this music?
Sunni.ai (Birjiwan): ​You know when we create, it’s like we want to deliver something. And you just know that what you are doing is beyond. It’s not just me or him delivering something, it’s our interpretation of something that is bigger than us.

The Sat Nam Sessions (Mitali)​: I feel exactly the same. I feel like it's not really mine. It's just like it's an offering. I know it's me, but it feels like, no, this is just here for you. It's an offering.

The Sat Nam Sessions (Robert)​: I think you can also feel a little bit of the punk background, even though it's not punk music, it's the way I play guitar. And I think that's the first thing Guru Jagat picked up on. When she heard it, she was like “I love it. It has a punk spirit.” And what I mean is it has an independent spirit, it sounds a little different than a lot of the other mantra music out there. And I think both music acts achieved this.

Sunni.ai (Birjiwan)​: Also what you can feel in both is the purity of the intention.

The Sat Nam Sessions (Mitali)​: And the difference might also be that both projects are created by couples. And I feel like there's such high love frequency that the music transmits that this might make it a little different from some solo artists.

Akal Anand: So in the process of creation, where so many things go into this time capsule, into your individual growth and also your growth as a couple. How does it feel to suddenly have that time capsule out in the world, and have your music felt and interpreted by thousands of people?

The Sat Nam Sessions (Robert)​: It's weird for sure. (laughs) Because it's a representation of your love, of your relationship. But on a different level than it is if you would just meet us in person. I think sound surpasses a lot of other things. Like, I could try to explain what I love about Birjiwans and Bir Kirtan’s achievement and unity. However, I could never explain it as well as just putting on their song. The songs carry more weight than our words.

“I could try to explain what I love about Birjiwans and Bir Kirtan’s achievement and unity. However, I could never explain it as well as just putting on their song.” — Robert

Akal Anand: So a song speaks louder than words.

The Sat Nam Sessions (Robert)​: It really does.

Sunni.ai (Birjiwan): ​It’s an authentic renaissance. You have two entities and then this music we create would be a third entity. And it's a renaissance that you want to nurture. And when we nurture it, we let it flourish in the moment, we make time to create together, we make time to bring that all together in the studio. I really want to spend time every day with him to create.

The Sat Nam Sessions (Mitali):​ To feel the love that we have for each other and the love we have for the music. If we could make one person‘s day a little bit brighter as they feel a love frequency when they listen then that is already more than enough for us to be so grateful for.

Akal Anand: I definitely did. I've been singing on Ang Sang Wahe Guru all day. (laughs) Guys - what do you feel most grateful for at this point?

Sunni.ai (Bir Kirtan): ​We listened to it so many times. And we would always go and change something. And then we looked at each other and we said, ok it is ready. There's is this small green button and once we push it. That’s it. (laughs) There’s a lot of letting go in this process. And so the energy that we share now, which is not ours, which is healing, it's just vibrating everywhere. And it is this feeling we are so grateful for.

3 Reasons Why You Should Come on a RA MA Yatra

Without question, RA MA Yatras fulfill the definition of “yatra” that Yogi Bhajan gave in 1997 – a yatra is “nothing more than a man going to his higher self”. I’ve been on a few RA MA Yatras at this point, and each one has been an accelerant for deepening into my soul.

It’s an inner excavation of sorts when we go to the most energetically rich power-places on the planet – and Guru Jagat, Harijiwan, and the RA MA Crew know how to give you the best opportunities to get the most out of your epic adventure.

Here’s what you can expect –

1. You get access to hidden temples and secret places of power...

RA MA Yatras are not your average “tour” group experiences, and because of this, you’ll get to traverse places outside of what is typically on an itinerary for tour groups.

In Tibet, we were able to meditate in Milarepa’s Cave – and the few hours that we spent there alone changed my life. The great yogi’s cave is not something that you can simply do a Google search for – and it required us to drive through tiny villages in rural Tibet as our guides knocked on locals’ doors to ask for directions to this secret place. We eventually found ourselves driving up a steep, winding road to then hike up to this magnificent powerpoint.

2. Speaking of itineraries, you won’t get one...

This is one of my favorite things about RA MA Yatras. Because the primary intention is always about getting you to the most sacred, energetic places possible, you’ll often go off-script and will get to flow with the poetic spontaneity of these trips.

The non-linear nature of these high-energy places often requires a different kind of fluidity, as many of them don’t operate on Western 9:00am – 5:00pm hours. In fact, (as was the case of Milarepa’s cave), many places aren’t even open to tour groups at all and will involve an extra amount of intuitive guidance from Guru Jagat and Harijiwan.

So be prepared to surrender to a flow that will lead you to the deepest, most sacred places along your journey. Plus, part of what makes a RA MA Yatra so special is that you’ll never go to the same place twice. So if you feel the call to join, do it, because the crew likely won’t be back!

3. The group energy creates an incredible energy field….

Without fail, every single RA MA Yatra group that I’ve been present for has been an amazing combination of people from all over the world who have come together to reach new realms of consciousness.

You’ll spend a week or more together transforming in ways seen and unseen – traveling through scenic landscapes, meditating at sacred sites, decoding ancient mysteries, and so much more.

Will you be a part of the next group? RA MA Yatra is headed to Egypt February 27 – March 7, 2020. Like all RA MA Yatras, it’s a once-in-a-lifetime trip, learn more about RA MA Yatras here.

Archetypal Woman Series: Nicole Sollberger

This is a repost from marymargaretskelly.com

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The most fulfilled women are constantly creating in multiple areas of their lives, whereas burnout often happens when we feel like the routine of our day job is all we have time for. The Archetypal Woman Series exalts inspiring women who rearrange time and space to explore and excel in a range of activities. May their stories encourage you to expand into your own uniqueness for the benefit of you and everyone in your orbit.

Editor's note: I'm so excited to kick off the Archetypal Woman Series with a truly impressive woman, Nicole Sollberger. Nicole is just as practical and savvy as she is unafraid to evolve beyond conventional ideas of what's possible. A top-notch, UCLA-trained entertainment lawyer, Nicole is also an entrepreneur, having founded an astrological consulting business that serves Fortune 500 companies. Read on for her thoughts on astrology as a business tool, how the legal world needs to change, and the tangible workplace benefits of meditation. ~ Mary Margaret

This series tells the stories of creative women. Women often tell themselves they aren’t creative if they aren’t painters, or actresses, or into arts and crafts. But I consider you creative for the way you’ve navigated the corporate world. How do you express your innate creativity in your role as Corporate Counsel for Dish Network?

I consider one of the most worthwhile creative endeavors to be finding novel ways to eliminate dualities between the material and spiritual realms, and the divisions between various spheres of human experience. Especially as women, we often feel we need to hide the softer sides of our personalities in the workplace, or our creative or emotional expression. But if we are able to share these parts of ourselves in creative, rather than destructive ways, I believe it actually makes us better employees and leaders.

For example, my office is a very creative space - there are crystals, thangkas, essential oils diffusing, mantras playing. When I first decorated, people would stop as they walked by, some judgmental, but mostly complimentary. Now many of my coworkers regularly come by my office when they are seeking relief from a stressful day.

I have also offered free mini astrology readings at our business and legal retreats, which have had a great response. People are so much more open than we realize, and more hungry than ever for this type of information and experience. I believe much of creativity in the corporate world has to do with removing self-imposed limitations or accepted standards of thought and behavior.

Earlier in your career, you were in entertainment law. Is it as glamorous as it sounds?

Technically, I am still in entertainment law! Though now I am in the (even less glamorous) role of content distribution. Previously, I worked with a lot of big-name artists such as Diplo, ODESZA, Barbra Streisand, the Dixie Chicks and Neil Young. However, for an associate (rather than a partner), this just means I worked with the artists' managers and, if I was lucky, got to attend some free shows. Probably the most “glamorous” event I got to attend was the 2017 Grammy Awards.

There is a well-known Bob Donnelly quote - “Become an entertainment lawyer - touch paper touched by superstars,” which sums entertainment lawyer life up pretty well.

You are also the Managing Director of Selenic LLC, a consulting firm that provides strategic business advice using metaphysical tools such as astrology and numerology. It’s not well known, but powerful institutions have relied on astrological power days for centuries. JP Morgan is reported to have said, “Millionaires don’t use astrology. Billionaires do.” How can businesses benefit from astrology?

There is a myriad of ways that businesses can benefit from astrology. Astrology is really a tool of self-knowledge, evolution, and the maximization of potential. The most successful businesses are able to constantly evolve, and astrology helps to predict cycles of micro- and macro- trends and human behaviors on the planet.

Common sense, as well as organizational research, tells us that people perform best when they know why they are doing what they’re doing. Because each company has its own astrological chart, we can identify the company’s core evolutionary “purpose”, and sync up this information with individual employees’ drives, passions, and skill-sets to best serve both the organization and the employees.

And you do not have to “believe” in astrology for it to be useful to think about your business in creative ways. Astrology challenges us to get out of status-quo thinking, remove preconceived notions, and take an aerial view of things. It is agnostic to labels of “good” and “bad”, and so permits an individual or organization to look at all aspects of a situation without judgment. This is incredibly useful for strategic decision-making.

Some practical applications of these tools include choosing an optimal date to incorporate a business, launch a product or service, or make an IPO; synergistic assessment of potential mergers or new hires; market or location-based growth analysis; and team-building. What kind of reaction do you get when you market your metaphysical services to traditional businesses? Do you think astrology will become a mainstream business tool in our lifetimes?

It’s already happening and fast. When I brought this idea to my friends and coworkers in 2017, they all said the same thing - you’re nuts, but where can I invest? Since then, astrology has exploded onto the mainstream, particularly in 2019, with a number of popular apps securing investment from major players in the VC and media spaces. The fact that no one has blinked an eye at me providing astrology readings for a Fortune 200 company in Midwest America is telling.

You went to undergrad at USC and law school at UCLA. Did you experience any culture shock when you moved to Denver last year? How important do you think it is for people to settle in the right geography for them?

From a metaphysical perspective, there are a number of reasons that geography is important. I felt the pull to Denver before I realized that my Chiron line runs right through it. We all have a number of connections to various locations based on our natal charts, and can identify and analyze optimal locations for various endeavors based on something called a relocated chart.

From a more esoteric perspective, there are certain “power centers” around the globe that contain vortexes or other generally-applicable energetic fields. However, you might be more or less impacted by these energies depending on whether or not you have any karma or past-life connection with a particular location.

Bringing it back to earth - I was surprised to find quite a difference in culture between LA and Denver. I was not expecting such a large shift in values from career-focus to family-planning and settling down. People come to LA with big dreams; people come to Denver to be close to nature while staying connected to the “real world”. Both have their advantages and disadvantages.

That said, the startup scene in Denver is strong, much of which is centered on environmentally-conscious companies doing very interesting and important work in the world. The “down-to-earth” attitude has its benefits as well. In LA, people are often flaky because they are looking for what they can “get” out of any situation or person. In Denver, you can actually expect to keep plans that you make with people.

One of the most refreshing things about Denver is that it is a mixture of Red and Blue transplants. There are the oil and gas folks from Texas, a lot of Florida, Ohio, Midwest, etc., mixed together with the liberal Los Angeleans and New Yorkers. Everyone is pretty well-educated, and can connect over a common affinity for nature activities. You can actually have a conversation between a Democrat and a Trump-supporter not end in a shouting match, with both people learning something. Not so easy in the echo chamber that is LA.

The clarity of mind meditation brings is a distinct career advantage in this age of information overload. How does your meditation practice serve you at work?

In so many ways, but I think much of it comes down to efficiency and effectiveness. I waste very little time on things that don’t matter. For example, I have always been good at taking criticism, but after owning it with grace in the presence of the other person, I would internally beat myself up over the mistake for hours on end. That’s time spent at work which could have been used for finishing other deals or doing something else that I enjoy. Sometimes I feel that I am not working hard enough, but I’m just working smarter.

Because I am fulfilled and not burned out from spinning my wheels, I have the clarity of mind to do my job better - catch mistakes, easily find the most concise way to communicate an idea, help a coworker with a tough situation.

We’ve talked before about how the traditional view of a spiritual person is someone who is too pure for the real world. The stereotype is someone who quits the corporate job in dramatic fashion and becomes a psychic in Sedona, or a Tibetan monk. But you have been clear that you can help the most people by opting in, and by staying in your sphere of influence. How, specifically, have you made an impact?

I remember when I first got into yoga, I told my yoga teacher @caleyalyssa, “I wish I could just go up in the mountains and meditate and focus on my spiritual growth.” She told me, “that’s easy.” What’s difficult is holding this space that you’ve found in all of the hustle and bustle and complexity and “rub” of the physical world. THAT’s yoga.

To me, there is nothing more spiritual than holding the vibration of a yogi in relationship - in relationship to a business, to a culture, to another person, etc. You can work on your emotional responses all you want in a room with a therapist, but if you don’t test them against real people in the real world, how much are you really growing?

Being unable to handle the “real world”, or participating in the apparent separation between inner world and outer world is not a sign of spirituality, but of weakness or apathy. This goes back to the benefits of a strong yoga and meditation practice - you have to have the energy to bring to the situations that you will be faced with as a conscious human being moving through the corporate world.

Recently, my company instituted Keurig machines in our corporate headquarters. Concerned about the mountain of K-cup trash this could create for a company with 17,000 employees (even the inventor of Keurig has expressed regret at having made these machines), I was faced with a dilemma: speak up and risk some form of backlash (or discomfort at the very least), or do nothing and sit with the feeling that I could have done something.

Being that the yogic teaching is that it takes the same amount of energy to do the thing as to keep yourself from doing the thing, I chose the former. I emailed everyone in my group and on my floor offering suggestions for biodegradable and reusable K-cups. The response I received was overwhelmingly positive, including a thank-you from the head of our department.

Many employees wanted to talk with me about the ways in which they could reduce their environmental footprints. One employee worked with me and the facilities team to put up signs in front of the machines advising employees to consider the environment in their choice of K-cups. It also gave me the opportunity to connect with other employees working on environmental efforts behind the scenes so that we may pool resources and find additional solutions for making a difference.

If we’re not in the spaces where these decisions are made, how can we have an impact? I understand the law is changing rapidly to keep up with client demand for different billing practices as well as technology that renders some lower-level work obsolete, among other things. Are the changes you’ve seen for the better?

I am hopeful that these changes will eventually be for the better, but right now we are in the awkward and painful adolescent phase. The traditional law firm model is broken and sick. Prior to the heightened billing scrutiny by clients, BigLaw associates could just churn hours and this was good for the associate (making her hours, which means making her bonus), the partner (making her numbers), and the firm (making its profits). What has happened with the different billing practices and technology is an incredibly heightened amount of pressure on associates and partners, resulting in a lot of serious problems.

Many older partners like to play the “when IIIII was an associate” game and say that millennials are lazy. But when they were associates, there were no cell phones - when they went home, they got to go home and turn off. When they were associates, they had secretaries to do their time and non-billable tasks, whereas increasingly associates are expected to do their own time with clunky technology, and often don’t even have secretaries. Associates are also expected to participate in client development and recruiting efforts at a more junior stage, and are pressured by partners to under-bill because partners get dinged for “wasting resources” if the associate bills the actual amount of time it takes to complete a project and writes it off because they expect the client won’t pay. In my experience, these requests are more frequently directed at female associates.

And as secretaries are forced to take more and more partners onto their shares in order to save costs, the other thing female associates get asked to do by male partners is secretarial work. This is un-billable time that then results in women having to put in more hours at the office (agonizing over whether or not to mention that it is inappropriate, actually having the conversation and/or doing the actual work), in order to get the same amount of billable hours as men.

You combine all of this with extremely high stakes work, a culture that rewards sick behavior - canceling important events with families and friends, drinking, taking stimulants, not sleeping, and the stigma against lawyers as “bad people”, and it’s no wonder that lawyers have a much higher rate of depression and suicide than the national average.

It’s a system that has to change, but it’s also exciting because there is a huge opportunity for innovation.

How do you measure success? When will you feel like you’ve “made it”?

I don’t think I’ll ever feel like I’ve “made it”. That is, until it’s my time to go. I take note of each little victory along my hero’s journey - to me, that’s success. Being able to see how each so-called pitfall or tragedy has assisted in the culmination of some great achievement.

I’m in the process of creating a social movement called #porcupineproject, inviting the younger generations to write letters to corporations (or create art) asking questions about known practices that harm the environment and offering solutions. Remember when CVS stopped selling cigarettes as “the right thing for us to do for our customers and our company to help people on their path to better health”? If a middle school student’s letter could be the impetus for a grocery chain eliminating the sale of meat and dairy products as the “right thing to do” for the health of our planet and its humans, that’s the type of success I’m interested in.

But while I love business and career, the biggest achievement for me will be to have a successful and loving long-lasting relationship that supports me on this journey. So for me, I will know I’ve “made it” when I am on my deathbed looking into the eyes of my loved one and we can say together, “we did a good job.”

Nicole Sollberger is an accomplished entertainment attorney, with a J.D. from UCLA and B.A. in Communication and Music Industry from the University of Southern California. Prior to becoming in-house counsel at DISH Network in Denver, Colorado, she practiced at a top Los Angeles-based law firm, working with multi-platinum recording artists such as the Eagles, Fortune 100 companies, and international brands such as Red Bull. Nicole is also the Managing Director of Selenic LLC, a management consulting company that provides C-suite executives bespoke strategic business advice using metaphysical tools such as astrology and numerology. She is a public speaker, visual artist, published poet and journalist.

Find her on Instagram @nicolesollberger.

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Mary Margaret Skelly offers personalized career advisory for driven, conscious women, inspiring them to gain the clarity, energy, and creativity to do the work they are meant to do. Book a session or learn more at marymargaretskelly.com.

She also curates the Archetypal Woman Series as a tribute to inspiring women who rearrange time and space to explore and excel in a range of activities. May their stories encourage you to expand into your own uniqueness.

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