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Maggie Lyon is a writer, speaker, mother, Zen Buddhist practitioner, yogi, and holistic consultant. Maggie profoundly believes in supporting her readers and clients alike in embracing the sweet depth of their essential selves and learning to say YES to life, no matter what. She draws on her training in natural health, holistic nutrition, energy medicine, intuitive wellness, and LIFE to guide others on their individual quests to thrive in tune with spirit as means for self-empowerment and transformation.
In addition to her blog MaggieLyonLight.com, Maggie is a featured contributor on Positively Positive, Owning Pink, ExperienceLife.com, and DrFrankLipman.com. She has also been a frequent contributor to The Huffington Post, Feminist.com, and Donna Karan’s Urban Zen Foundation website. In addition, Maggie has been featured in Vital Juice NY, Black Ink, and Japanese Jane, and has written for Yoga Journal and TheBeautyBean.com.
Maggie lives in New York City with her husband, two kids, and a third one on the way.
Visit Maggie at www.maggielyonlight.com, friend her on Facebook www.facebook.com/MaggieLyonLight or follow her on Twitter @MaggieLyon.

Awakened Hearing
Maggie LyonAugust 14
What does it mean to listen deeply? How does deep listening steer us towards a truer expression of who we really are?
We have, as a culture, grown increasingly deaf to our inner selves. With frenzied minds, surface attachments, and noise levels on the rise, we are moving ever further from tuning in to the temples of our bodies.
In response to this loss, I’d like to make a counter plea for the cultivation of deep listening, as an act of dropping the brain, sinking into a subtle quiet place, and awakening receptive awareness. Dropping the brain is no small feat. Still, we must get out of our ego-driven ways to become open to the divine messages within us. The irony here is that we so often reel from the pain of not having been heard in our lives, yet we do such lousy jobs of hearing our innate wisdom. I do however believe that when quiet, we instinctively trust in the guidance of sacred voices far more profound than what our bullying heads would have us heed.
It has taken me many painful, searching years to fully appreciate deep listening as the nexus or tie to witnessing what is really going on inside, and to tapping the intuitive broadcasts from the subterranean. Deep listening often requires silence and stillness, or movement imbued with such mindful grace that it holds stillness within itself.
Hence, sitting and yoga practice are for me, the two venues that enable dropping in, and from this drop, the glowing connection with the rhythmic heart and cavernous belly. For you, it may be something entirely different. What’s important is to identify and put into play the practices that sink you in to your receptive self, and that allow for deep listening to occur.
Some call the gift of awakened hearing intuition. I call it translating the language of spirit. Regardless of names, deep listening cultivates our attention to the present moment and teaches us to open to the vastness of our inner lives and also to the clamor of the outer world. This presence in essence yields compassion; and compassion, as any aspirant to saving the suffering can attest, is the answer. I am reminded of this daily by the serene face of the large Buddha on the altar at which I sit, his long wise curvaceous ears at once loving and open to the woes of the world.
Imagine our own trained energetic ears ballooning and stretching to hear the cries of the beleaguered children dying of starvation in Somalia, and all the other cries for help from around the globe, including our own. Imagine our skillful listening springing us collectively into conscious action. Isn’t this subtle dialogue between the inside and outside really what living is all about?
It all hinges on listening, deep tranquil listening.