Tu B'Shevat Yoga & Meditation
Tu’ B Shevat is the New year for the trees, celebrating the ascension of the ‘Saraf’ (Hebrew for ‘sap’) up the tree, infusing the Tree with a renewed life force. Tu B’Shevat is when the trees begin to awaken from the death and coldness of winter. It is the earth’s beginning of health, healing, and wakefulness. The ‘Saraf’ is the heart of the tree that sweetens the tree’s waters, and reveals itself into an expression. The tree’s expression is fruit; our expression is some sort of breakthrough, insight, imagination, word, or action. One lesson of trees is that the more rooted we are, the higher we can rise and express our greatest potential. It says in Devarim, “Man is a tree of the field.”
We both have roots, trunk, branches, fruit.
What are your roots?
What is your trunk?
What are your branches?
What are your fruit?
Twin Trees
Our breathing meshes with the breathing of trees in exchanging oxygen and carbon dioxide. Our respiratory system is even shaped like a tree! We hold an upright posture and vertical spine like a tree. We even share about 50% of our DNA with trees. The inside of a tree's ring resembles a human fingerprint. Spiritually, A tree stands tall , reaches its branches long, and opens its leaves to receive sunlight. Reflecting the verse, "A man is a tree of the field", we stand tall in prayer, raise our arms to our Creator, and open ourselves to receive the Light from Above.
Jewish Tale
"He shall be as a tree planted beside streams of water, which brings forth its fruit in its season. Its leaves do not wilt, and whatever it does prospers." Psalm 1:3
When we are dry or hollow, we cannot bring forth fruit. The imagery of the tree here is moist and watery. The hydration and life-giving waters of the tree is what allows it to grow, thrive, and survive droughts. On the verse above, Rabbi Neril teaches that trees are one of the most resilient organisms against drought. One of the gifts of yoga is that when we are 'dried out' or uninspired, we can shift our energy and enter a new state of being. Yoga increases our resiliency: we don't get stuck when we know how to enter that "flow state". When jaded, we can receive the life-giving energy from the Trees to bounce back with freshness and aliveness. A walk through the forest, a meditation under the tree top, or a deep tree-hug can help us resiliently return to our inner chosen state of being.
Full 100 page yoga and meditation manual for Shevat available as part of the Virtual Jewish Yoga Course
Reading Recommendations for Shevat:
Full 100 page Jewish Yoga Manual for Shevat by Jenna Zadaka on the Jewish Yoga Course
Seven fruits of the land of Israel by Chana Bracha siegelbaum
The Month of Shevat by Rav Pinson
Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer
Yoga with Trees by Jenny Garrison
Eco Bible by Rabbi Yonatan Neril
Eating as Tikun by Sarah Yehudit Schneider
Food for Thought - Hazon's Sourcebook on Jews, Food & Contemporary Life by Nigel Savage
Tu B’Shevat Video Practices Below:
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