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Hendersonville, Tennessee, United States
“I believe in the power of yoga,” says MPC YOGA FOR ALL founder Michele Priddy. “I have seen lives change, including my own, in deep, transformative and real ways.” Michele, who holds a Master’s degree in Special Education from Middle Tennessee State University and certification as a RYT-500 from Yoga Alliance, has more than two decades of experience helping adults and children of all ages and abilities reach their maximum potential. Her highly-individualized yoga classes, workshops and in-service training programs are more than just opportunities to for her students to move: they are transformational experiences made even richer by Michele’s deep understanding of yoga movement, breath work and philosophy coupled with an encyclopedic knowledge of anatomy and physiology. In addition to teaching yoga at Middle Tennessee’s most respected yoga schools, Michele has led workshops for children with disabilities, teachers, social service workers, parents and others on a variety of topics including Yoga for Children, Yin Yoga, Mindfulness, Adaptive Yoga and Vinyasa Flow.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Call to Action - Part 1

“Be strong and courageous and do the work. Don’t be afraid or discouraged by the size of the task for the Lord God, my God is with you. He will not fail you or forsake you. He will see to it that all the work related to the temple of the Lord is finished correctly.”
~1Cronicles 28:20



These are words spoken by King David to his son Solomon as he was instructed to complete the task David started: to finish the Temple to house the Ark of the Covenant. God had instructed David to gather all the materials, each carefully selected and stored. But David was not to build the temple, that task would be left to his son. David recognized that Solomon would need words of encouragement if her were to complete this daunting task. Solomon would need to know that if he continued with the task god had instructed him to do; god would give him the strength and courage to follow it to completion.

How many times do we need this same encouragement? Many! Beginning something that seems big, with an uncertain outcome can be frightening. To be fearful is a normal reaction to an unfamiliar task. We ask ourselves, “How will I ever manage to complete this? Am I really supposed to do this?” Our typical response is to stop the progress, to run away, to quit, giving up. Wee justify our actions by claiming, “I wasn’t supposed to do that anyway. Someone else can do it better. I just don’t have the time.” We allow our fear to take over; we forget that if God is with us, if we are doing god’s work in our lives he will give us the strength to follow our plans to completion.

If tragedy, illness, or poor choices come into our lives God offers us hope. He recognizes being human is often difficult. Life can place some very challenging situations in our path: death, illness, disability, divorce. We will often make mistakes in the way we choose to handle these situations. We become absorbed by the self and we forget we are to do God’s work. If life is falling apart, God gives us a way out. We are responsible to rebuild our lives. God gives us all the tools to do that. He wants us to value ourselves and build a “Temple” in which he can dwell.

God also asks us to build temples in community. God didn’t leave David or Solomon to do the enormous task in front of them alone. He gave them thousands of followers to do the task. Each individual person was to play a vital role in bringing the task to completion. I am seeking to build a temple within my community. It has become my vocation to work toward the betterment of the lives of those with disability. For too long they and their families have lived in social isolation, being rejected in the communities of church, work and school. Those with disability and their families long to participate in activities with others, however physical and attitudinal barriers often keep them from doing so. As a parent of a child with a disability and inclusion specialist I have experienced these things in my own life as I struggle to participate. What is preventing your workplace, school, or church from designing fully inclusive environments that honor individual differences?

We can remember and use the instructions David gave his son Solomon as he was instructing him on how to build the temple. We can be assured that God will see to it that the work we set out to do in service to him will be finished correctly. We can be assured as we go out in service to God and work to build our lives, communities, churches and schools to be temples in which God resides that: “Every part of this plan… was given to me in writing from the hand of the Lord.” ~1Chronicles 28:19

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