Category >> Conscious Living
A Vegan Yogini's Radiant Shiva Bliss on Mt. Shasta!
Posted by: Tejaswini on Sep 09, 2011
Tagged in: Vegan Information/Ethics , Practicing Kirtan/Chanting , Neem Karoli Baba , Gratitude , Ammachi (Amma)
What the word “fun” means now to this vegan yogini…
Posted by: Tejaswini on Aug 09, 2011
Teja Collaging Top Five Passions & Taking the Attwood’s Passion Test Profile Questionnaire
Posted by: Tejaswini on Aug 06, 2011
Tagged in: Vegan Information/Ethics , Spiritual Practices , Reiki Healing , Practicing Kirtan/Chanting , Organic Food , Gratitude
Humor & Gratitude with Clearing Out Clutter!
Posted by: Tejaswini on Aug 03, 2011
Teja's Red Dragonfly Darshan
Posted by: Tejaswini on Jul 27, 2011
New Teja Blog Feature: Ask Teja!
Posted by: Tejaswini on Jul 25, 2011
Poppy Prose (inside my head while walking barefoot to work yesterday)
Posted by: Tejaswini on May 27, 2011
Teja’s Reflections After Only Two Days Away from Facebook
Posted by: Tejaswini on May 24, 2011
Featured Spiritual Journey: Prema Gaia's Amazing Story
Posted by: Tejaswini on May 16, 2011
Jai Krishan’s Reasons for Walking Barefoot
Posted by: Tejaswini on May 13, 2011
Teja Shankara Books on Facebook
Latest Blog Entry
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A Vegan Yogini’s Time-Out-of-Time Spiritual Practi ...
People often ask me how I am
so grounded and vibrant on a
vegan diet. The answer is
simply that I prepare healthy
foods and I focus on spiritual
practices that keep me
centered. I choose vegan foods
t ... by Tejaswini
Readmore...


Lately I’ve been thinking about the word “fun” and what it means to me now, at 41 years of age. I mean, what I consider to be fun now is very, very different than what I considered to be fun twenty years ago! Back then I was a party girl, and even though it wasn’t deeply fulfilling, I thought it was great fun to go out drinking with friends. Now I haven’t had a drink, not even a glass of wine, for almost four years, and the thought of drinking does not sound at all fun.
Last week I saw an ad about an evening lecture at our local food co-op. It was called “Collaging Your Top Five Passions!” and it was being offered by Belle, Sharry Teague, and Sheila Filan. I wasn’t able to attend the evening, but I was inspired to do the things on my own, so I wrote out my top five passions and a list of 10 simple statements beginning, “When life is ideal I am…” And then I made this collage to reflect what I had written. A few days later I googled “
The quote in the center of this photo reads “Too many activities, and people, and things. Too many worthy activities, valuable things, and interesting people. For it is not merely the trivial which clutters our lives but the important as well. We can have a surfeit of treasures—an excess of shells, where one or two would be significant.” ~ Anne Morrow Lindbergh






This was my second day of taking a break from Facebook, and already I understand how necessary this break is for me at this time. I really enjoyed the Facebook playground for more than two years, but over the past few weeks I noticed that my system was feeling overloaded, and I intuitively sensed that Facebook was one of the biggest contributors to that overload. So yesterday, on my first day since deactivating my Facebook accounts, it felt a little bit strange to not be going on Facebook, but then it also felt like a huge relief. And right away I witnessed two things: 1. There is a lot more time in the day now… I cleaned off the piles of clutter on my kitchen counters for the first time in over six months! And 2. It is a lot quieter now… Both my personal energy field (around my physical body) and my living space are quieter!
I believe that we choose the families we are born into, and that the challenges I experienced growing up were exactly what my soul needed to bloom into fullness during this auspicious time in planetary evolution. I experienced my childhood as being love-starved, lonely and heart-breaking, but looking back now, and reflecting on how magical life has become, I can’t help but trust with my whole heart that this was all part of some kind of beautiful Divine Contract that my Higher Self consciously requested. My childhood experiences served to strengthen my intuitive and empathic gifts and enabled me to experience my feelings and interactions with others in a deeply soul-stirring and heart-penetrating way for which I am truly grateful.
By the time I finished university, I couldn’t wait to move to Los Angeles and try my luck working in modeling, music videos and anything in the entertainment industry – a dream that I had secretly been harboring for years. I signed with an agency in L.A. and landed a few TV commercials and music videos, and catalogue modeling jobs for a few different companies. I got a job as the assistant to Jay Bernstein, a famous Hollywood talent manager, and got an inside look at the lifestyles and tribulations of people whom I had grown up watching on TV.
The walking pilgrimage was sometimes ecstatically liberating, sometimes exhaustingly intense but always magic-filled. On the third day, I had the unprecedentedly cosmic event of meeting my soul twin: we seemed to have known each other from a past life and had some kind of soul contract to meet up at this particular point in our Earth Walks and transmit wisdom and inspiration to each other. It was amazing: everything we shared with each other was like the missing puzzle pieces to all the spiritual questions we had both been internally pondering in the preceding days.
I was feeling drained and dismal from hitch-hiking around and sleeping outside in order to visit spiritual teachers on a zero-dollar budget. Sometimes I felt such deep loneliness and isolation that it was almost too much to bear. I felt direly in need of some grounding and a sense of belonging. But where on earth could I possibly fit in? The one place that I felt safe, welcomed and resonant was a freegan, eco-activist, bike-loving Zen meditation community in Portland, Oregon, which I joined for seven months in 2009. The community woke up at 4:45 am and meditated five times a day, did tai chi, yoga, chanting, studied raga music, ate a strict sattvic vegan diet and lived a monastic lifestyle. Our accommodations ranged from squatting in a dilapidated house, to sleeping in our friends’ backyards, to doing retreats in the forest. We cooked over a tin can stove, dumpster-dived much of our food, and were active members of ‘Food Not Bombs’. Like many women in the community, I chose to shave my head as a symbol of renunciation and letting go of my ego. I was in the middle of a three-year period of celibacy, totally focused on spiritual practices, and felt very identified as a nun at the time.
After posting my last blog article, “