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Uptight Blogger Seeks Mindfulness

Meditation Workshop at OI

By Laura Jackson Roberts

Oglebay Institute offers a heck of a lot of classes. Art, dance, acting, nature—a wide array of choices. There’s something for just about everyone. If you want to make art glass, they can arrange that. If you want to identify birds, they can help you. Build a rain barrel? Stay tuned for the May blog on that one. And last Sunday, I attended a Meditation, Mindfulness, and Energy Medicine Workshop.

It’s no secret to those who know me that I’m wound a little tightly. My friends and family toss around words like anxious, neurotic, and obsessive-compulsive. I like to have things done on a schedule, well ahead of time, and I plan for every possible contingency. Flu running around? I’ve got your biohazard suit. Possibility of escaped rhino? There’s a rhino-tazer in my car. And if an asteroid ever hits the earth, come to my house. I’ll have you covered.

But all of this high-strung energy isn’t really a beneficial thing. In my quest to be ever-ready and on alert, I miss out on some of life’s quiet, joyful moments. I’m so busy trying to survive my day that my body remains in a state of tension. Often I feel run-down and generally exhausted. This mindfulness thing that everybody’s talking about, how do I get some?

The answer is meditation. Studies show that regular meditation lowers blood pressure, beefs up your immune system, and improves concentration. It’s been shown to lessen pain, and,  as a significant stress-reducer, can positively affect many health conditions including heart disease and ADHD.

woman_meditatingI’ve meditated in the past. In fact, several years ago I kept a regular meditation schedule for several months, and I felt great. But, as with all good habits, we must remain devoted to their practice. It’s hard to put down our devices and find a quiet fifteen minutes, time that could be spent paying a bill, taking a power nap, or defrosting a pot roast. Predictably, I fell off the meditation wagon and have been meaning to climb back on for two years now. It’s been on my “to do” list forever. Tomorrow I’ll meditate, I always think.

In reality, we often need a little help maintaining good habits. Enter Dr. Rebecca Fahey, a medical doctor of public health and epidemiology as well as a meditation and health coach. She leads this workshop at Oglebay Institute on the first Sunday of each month. She’s had shamanic training and lives with her husband and young daughter here in Wheeling.

The class was held at OI’s School of Dance where we found comfortable places to sit and chatted amongst ourselves. None of the participants had much meditation experience, so Rebecca began by explaining why we were there. “Mind needs structure,” she told us. “Mind needs order. And once we begin to do that within ourselves, then the outside world becomes more of what it is in reality: a reflection of your soul lessons. We’re not humans having a spiritual experience; we are spiritual beings having a human experience. You have a soul. You’re here to learn those lessons and heal.”

Dr. Rebecca Fahey, a medical doctor of public health and a meditation and health coach, instructs a Meditation Workshop each month at Oglebay Institute.
Dr. Rebecca Fahey, a medical doctor of public health and a meditation and health coach, instructs a Meditation Workshop each month at Oglebay Institute.

Before the traditional meditation exercises began, we did some physical energy work, tapping at meridian endpoints, moving our bodies, and envisioning chakra colors. I closed my eyes and saw blue, the color of the fifth chakra, which means that I need to work on my communication skills, to speak my truth with conviction. It also means I say yes too often, which, as a people-pleaser, I do. Rebecca told me that I was in charge of my own growth, and with practice, I would indeed grow. She designs her meditations to be repeated at home.

When we were all grounded and centered, we lay back and listened as Rebecca led us through Saint Germain’s Violet Flame meditation, during which we envisioned a violet light moving down through our bodies and focused on our breathing. I felt myself retreating into stillness, and the sounds of the world faded into the background.

By the time we sat up, we were quiet and relaxed. For the first time in ages, I didn’t feel the pressing need to get up and move along to my next task. In fact, as I walked home, I just let myself walk in the present. That night I slept like a log, a very rare occurrence.

Rebecca’s meditation wasn’t complicated. She taught us that our thoughts will come and go, and as we practice, they’ll fade into the background. The key word here is practice. I won’t achieve proficiency overnight. But with a little encouragement and the opportunity to quiet my mind, maybe I can slow down a bit and take a much-needed breath.

(Meditation, Mindfulness, and Energy Medicine Workshops will be held on Sunday, May 1 and Sunday, June 5 from 6-7pm at Oglebay Institute’s School of Dance. The May 1 workshop will feature special guest and Certified Medium Amanda DeShong. Workshops are $25. Call 304-242-7700 to register or go to OIonline.com.)

OI’s McCracken Joins Fitness Challenge for Executives

Business executives embark on fitness, nutrition program to inspire others

Oglebay Institute president Danielle McCracken is among 20 Ohio Valley business, education and municipal leaders participating in the first-ever Community Fitness Challenge (CFC) for executives. The three-month fitness and wellness journey launched April 1.

Thanks to the support and guidance of designated professional trainers and nutritionists with the Ryan Ferns Healthplex, the group will participate in 5 a.m. workouts three days per week in addition to a weekly nutrition class over the course of a 12-week period, driving each toward what is anticipated to be a “total health transformation.”

CFC_2_SmallWith West Virginia leading the nation in heart disease, high blood pressure, and diabetes, a tailored wellness program like this could have a major impact, says Community Fitness Challenge founder David McKinley, CFP®, president and managing director of McKinley Carter Wealth Services.

“I founded the Community Fitness Challenge because I saw an opportunity to bring together busy executives who, like me, are looking for ways to improve the lives of people all around them while taking care of their own health,” McKinley said. “The friendly competition among peers working toward healthier lifestyles, and the sharing of ideas and experiences along the way, will benefit everyone.”

McKinley, who has volunteered to be a CFC competitor, admits he hasn’t focused enough on his own health and wellness over the course of his adult years. “Like many of the competitors, I just don’t find time to exercise on a regular basis and I don’t really focus on eating right,” he said. “So I’m enthusiastic about this program and working with others who have similar goals and needs, and to inspire one another and hopefully the community at large.”

An additional element to the challenge is that each participant will be competing on behalf of a charity of their choosing. Each competitor has donated $1,000 to the CFC charity pool, and at the end of the competition on June 30, an overall winner will be determined and $20,000 in cash will be presented to his/her charity to use to enhance client services or programs.

McCracken’s charity is Oglebay Institute. “I am competing to support our mission of providing the highest quality arts, cultural and nature programming to the more than 85,000 people we serve each year. I am eager to achieve my self-improvement goals and will be working hard to bring the prize to support the programs and facilities of OI,” she said.

CFC_1_Small“Involving charities is a significant aspect to this competition and an obvious source of even more motivation to stick with the program,” McKinley said. He added that he will be competing for the Oglebay Foundation for the benefit of furthering projects to maintain and improve community services at Oglebay Park.

Ryan Ferns, owner of The Ryan Ferns Healthplex, is a major sponsor for the event and has created the customized three-month Community Fitness Challenge program. He has designated King’s Daughters Child Care Center as his charity in the competition.

“The Ryan Ferns Healthplex was designed to be able to provide lasting health and fitness changes in the lives of everyday people,” Ferns said. “The CFC is an incredible opportunity for the Healthplex to showcase what we can do for executives who we know have limited time to dedicate to their well-being. Our goal is to target the leaders of these local companies and organizations, which we believe, in turn, will impact all of their employees and customers throughout the Ohio Valley. I am honored to be a part of an event of this magnitude.”

The estimated impact of this event is significant when one considers not only the employee numbers at each of the competitors’ own businesses (5,000+), but also the number of customers, clients, alumni, students, and constituents of those same organizations, not to mention the numbers represented by the charities involved. The potential reach of the CFC—through its competitors, their companies, and their designated non-profits—could well be over 250,000, including nearly every resident of the Wheeling area and beyond.

Jim Pennington, president and CEO of The Health Plan, has also agreed to participate in the CFC as both a competitor and corporate sponsor.

“I agreed to participate in the Community Fitness Challenge for two primary reasons. Personally, I want to take my fitness to another level and develop a consistent wellness strategy for myself,” Pennington said. “And professionally, with 19 other local leaders participating, I feel it sends a strong message that our respective organizations are committed to a healthier atmosphere at our companies and in Wheeling.”

Pennington has chosen to compete on behalf of Wheeling Health Right. “Wheeling Health Right is a community partner whose mission complements that of The Health Plan in striving to manage and improve the health and well-being of our community members,” he said.

In addition to McKinley, McCracken, Ferns and Pennington, other CFC “executive” competitors (and their designated charities) include Lisa Allen of Ziegenfelder Co. (Crittenton Services); Lawrence Bandi of Central Catholic High School (Wheeling Jesuit University); Michael Caruso of OVHS&E (Harmony House); Todd Clossin of WesBanco Inc. (American Heart Association); Father James Fleming of Wheeling Jesuit University (Central Catholic High School); Steve Greiner of West Liberty University (WLU Foundation); Fire Chief Larry Helms of Wheeling Fire Dept. (Wheeling Health Right); Dr. David Hess of Reynolds Memorial Hospital (Young Life of Marshall County); Kim Miller of Ohio County Schools (Ohio County Schools Foundation); Bryan Minor of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston (WV Catholic Foundation); Mark Peluchette of Liberty Distributors (Central Catholic High School); John Reasbeck of Omni Strategic Technologies (St. Vincent de Paul Parish School); Police Chief Shawn Schwertfeger of Wheeling Police Dept. (Special Olympics and Make A Wish Foundation); Rob Sincavich of Team Sledd (Catholic Charities of WV); Erikka Storch of Wheeling Area Chamber of Commerce (The Linsly School); and Will Turani of Orrick (St. John’s Home for Children).

Event organizers are also proud to have additional corporate backing from Wheeling Island Hotel – Casino – Racetrack and the Wheeling Area Chamber of Commerce. Both sponsors are providing significant financial and administrative support toward the success of the CFC.

Throughout the competition, weekly updates on competitors’ progress will be posted on the CFC Facebook Page. In July, an awards ceremony will be held to crown the Challenge and charity winner.