Summer Black Bean Salsa Recipe

Summer Black Bean Salsa Recipe

Summer Black Bean Salsa Recipe by Annie B Kay - anniebkay.com
Summertime!
While we may be having a little taste of what I call winter-summer (it has been freaking freezing this week…I remember we had a summer-winter in the Shire last year), I trust that warm weather is on the way. This is one of my favorite recipes – light, tasty, spicy and perfect for the season. I serve it as a side or main dish, with my current passion – sprouted corn tortillas warmed with a bit of cheese between, quesadilla style.

Summer Black Bean Salsa Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 can (16 oz) black beans (I used Eden brand)
  • 1 cup frozen corn
  • Juice of 2 limes
  • Two or three slices of red onion, chopped, makes about 1/4 cup
  • 1/4 red pepper, chopped
  • 1/2 cup fresh cilantro
  • 1/2 tsp tobasco sauce
  • 1/3 cup cold-pressed EVOO
  • Plenty of salt and pepper (to taste)

Directions

Could not be easier. Toss and enjoy (this is a recipe that while delicious, can be better the second day due to marinating).
Enjoy!
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How Do You Really Feel About Nature?

How Do You Really Feel About Nature?

How Do You Really Feel About Nature? by Annie B Kay
Last year when I went to my plant spirit teacher’s retreat in Vermont, to the land of nature – outdoor showers, sleeping in bunks, and composting toilets, she asked us: How do you honor your indigenous self?
After a couple days of crud, I felt her – my indigenous self.  As I got a little grody, I definitely got more ecstatic. It felt good to lie on the ground, wash in the stream and not worry so much about how I smelled. Something inside me became quite a bit happier than I usually am in my day-to-day connected life.
The more I’m outside the better I feel. But when I work (inside) a lot, I feel myself becoming outdoor averse – a little nature fear sets in – I get goo-averse. It’s not that I’m afraid of getting hurt outside, it’s more my aversion of being slightly uncomfortable. Then I think about bugs – then I think about Lyme’s (a real concern), and poison ivy (I am +++ allergic and have been hooked up to an IV for it). That is usually enough for me to excuse myself from what I love – to be close to, connected to, in and touching nature.
AHA!  Classic resistance. There she is! Talk about our indigenous self! My negative fearful resistant brain, convincing me it’s too inconvenient and the benefit (happiness) is not worth the cost (bugs or…well, dirt…the whole outside is made of that!).
A wise friend told me that when working with these things – emotion, resistance, the following 3 step process can be helpful:

Feel it. Honor it. Release it.

I add step four: Repeat.

Feeling resistance, like fear of getting outside, could be a sign – I call them indicators – that it’s time for self-examination. Time to question and lean in, and in this case, get out(side). I know that if I feel the resistance and do it anyway, most often I will be glad I pressed through, worked through and did it.
Am I the only one who gets nature-averse while loving nature? What’s your experience?
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Minted Snow Pea Recipe

Minted Snow Pea Recipe

Minted Snow Pea Recipe by Annie B Kay - anniebkay.com
Food fresh from the garden doesn’t need much help to taste great and nourish you deeply. Our fresh peas often don’t make it into the kitchen because we snack away right in the garden. Here’s a simple recipe for snow peas with mint.

Minted Snow Pea Recipe

Ingredients

  • Snow peas or fresh spring peas – about 2 cups, cleaned
  • Fresh mint, cleaned and chopped
  • High-quality olive oil (like CA organic cold-pressed)
  • Squeeze of fresh lemon
  • Salt and pepper to taste.

2Directions

  1. Grow peas! Or, locate fresh snow or sweet peas at a farmer’s market or grocery.  They are an easy grow, and I love that they are best planted just as soon as the earth is thawed enough to work. So, either pick your own or you can get them at a farmer’s market or grocery (…growing your own is cheaper though more time-intensive, but the benefits are manyfold).
  2. Place a medium skillet over medium-high heat, add olive oil and peas, sauté 2-3 minutes.
  3. Add chopped mint & a squeeze of fresh lemon. Saute another minute.
  4. Dress with salt and pepper and enjoy.

Tip: the key is not to overcook the peas…literally sauté for just a minute or two to keep that lovely sweetness and crispness. Enjoy!

Minted Snow Pea Recipe by Annie B Kay

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Your Dreams are Alive. Now What?

Your Dreams are Alive. Now What?

Your Dreams are Alive. Now What? by Annie B Kay
What if your dreams are as important and as real as your waking life? What if your dreams are alive?
Leading psychologists actually say they are. Dr. Stephen Aizenstat (as well as many great yogis and thinkers such as the Dalai Lama and Eckart Tolle) says that you can awaken to your dreams, be deeply informed by them, and even change the outer world through your dreams.
This blows my nutritional biochemist’s mind! I want to learn more, hear what he has to say and explore it in my own dream life.
Sing it with me people – you know the tune:

Row, row, row your boat,

gently down the stream.

Merrily merrily merrily, merrily,

Life Is But A Dream!

Are you interested in awakening to your own dream life? I’ll be teaching with Dr. Aizenstat and the great yoga scholar, Stephen Cope, the last weekend of April at Kripalu – Yoga and the Global Dream Initiative.
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Feel Achy? Here's How to Fix It

Feel Achy? Here's How to Fix It

Feel Achy? Here's How to Fix It by Annie B Kay
Feeling more generally achy and tired? There is a magic pill to fix that – it’s called movement.
As I’ve gone through midlife, my former athlete’s mindset is no longer in the house. I used to jump out of bed and run around the block, then do an hour of vinyasa yoga to start my day. Slowly (no, pretty quickly), those movement habits slipped. I often would just rather stay in bed. I tell myself that in this time of life, constructive rest is necessary.
While constructive rest and contemplative practices ARE essential for a vibrant second half of life, so is movement – maybe more than ever. But in midlife and beyond, wise active lifestyles require us to move, skillfully, even when we’d rather not. Here is the self-inquiry: when is movement fueling my life force, when is it draining my life force? The same thing goes for rest: when does rest fuel my life-force, and when does it drain? In mid-life as our bodies change, discerning how and how much to move and to rest may be the biggest factor that determines how you feel on a daily basis.
That feeling – that I’d rather just stay in bed feeling – is the feeling of our body’s mitochondria (the very energy centers located in our muscles that keep us feeling and operating well) slowing down and shutting down. Yep – that’s what’s happening on the physical level, inside. What’s happening in our mind is resistance – it’s easy to tell ourselves that we can’t or maybe will later. As we age, our body’s ability to recover needs help. From us. If you stop moving before or after menopause, you begin to age more rapidly – mitochondrial slow down happens more quickly as your muscles atrophy. That makes you feel old, tired, achy.
So, even if you are not feeling motivated. Even if your bed is comfortable and you have nice sheets and the TV is right there. If this is you, repeat this phrase:

Skillful movement begets ability to move. I am worth it. I am worth it right now, in this moment. 

Maybe you stay in bed and do some abdominals, and aim to move each joint in your body. Maybe you get up, clean and vacuum. Maybe you start with a walk around the house. Maybe you do a modified version of the scientific 7-minute workout. These movements won’t restart years of slow moving mitochondria (you might need to get a smidgen more vigorous), but it is the first step to get there. Just take the first step. No matter who you are, what age, what ability, you can move. If you are in a wheelchair, wheel and move what you can as you are able to feel better.
As we age, our exercise needs are different than earlier in life. Injuries can last longer. Recovery may happen a little more slowly, but is important – stretching is important. Movements that gently explore and maintain range of motion are critical. Warming up stiff joints with heating pads before moving them can be helpful, as can prophylactic anti-inflammatories before a walk. If you can afford a massage on a monthly or even weekly basis, great. Or try self-massage – Abhyanga, the Ayurvedic practice of self-massage, has improved the quality of my life – I recommend it!
There is nothing wrong with feeling lazy, feeling tired. Our chaotic and difficult world can make us tired even after a perfect night’s sleep. But we do need to get over the fact that we used to be able to recover from pretty much anything with a day of vegetables, water and rest, and perhaps we don’t anymore.
So, I pledge to you that I’ll do it too – get up & out, and exceed the national movement recommendations and move for at least 30 minutes each and every day. Today it’s a modified scientific 7-minute workout and some yoga OR I’ll go to the gym with my husband.
How about you?
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