
Hani Khaursar
The other day while mingling at a dinner party, I met a man (letʼs call him Jim) who after a few moments of explaining how he had been traveling for a year, decided to tell me about his life back home. Jim was on his last leg of his travels and within a month he would be heading back home to get back into the ʻreal worldʼ to get a ʻrealʼ job that would ʻsuckʼ and leave all of this behind. He was complaining about how thereʼs nothing much back home because all his friends are now married and starting a family and essentially, there is no one left in his little ʻcommunityʼ.
I asked him why didn't he just get a job that he enjoys doing? The look on his face was that I must have been crazy. He said that doing something you like didn't happen in the ʻreal worldʼ. So I gave him a challenge. I told him that I knew someone who was looking to hire someone like him and all he had to do was to go to the web site and apply.

Because of the overwhelming response we've had to our post on Super Brain Yoga, we'd like to introduce you to an amazing study conducted in the field of meditation. For the first time there is scientific evidence that meditation does indeed affect the physical structure of the brain.



