ABOUT US

 

Walking Into Healthier Tomorrows with Strolling Skye

Chandra has traveled the world, from Amsterdam to Armenia, Switzerland to Spain, and all 50 United States. Having lived abroad, as well as all over the United States, she has gained a wealth of real-world experience learning how many different people relate.

She has also traveled her inner world, venturing to places known and completely uncharted. Without a guide, and equipped with tools of more than forty years of therapy, a dedication to physical fitness and a determined mindset of freeing herself from trauma that was stored in her physical body from early childhood.

It is this lived experience that makes her such a unique and important voice in the peer coaching world. She has studied PMDD (Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder), exploring every bit of information known about a condition that is mostly uncharted. In response to an absence of support and research, she co-created an online peer support group specific to PMDD. She now donates her time running a peer support group in
partnership with IAPMD (International Association for Premenstrual Disorders) to continue learning how ovulators around the world are coping with this condition.

She is setting out to coach OBGYNs and General Practitioners on PMDD so that they can be better informed in their treatment of PMDD warriors.

She has integrated the Pilates Method into her self-care routine in an effort to find wholeness and stability, healing herself from the chronic pain of hip dysplasia, a mechanical defect that at one time had her relying on a cane. Her dedication to physical fitness has lasted almost two decades.

Separate from these two monumental accomplishments, she chose divorce as a means of literal self-preservation, transforming the tremendous pain of separation into a life of her own design. Her travels have taught her so much, and now she is bringing that experience to sufferers throughout the world.

Living in Wichita, KS, Chandra supports older/sick folks as a caregiver, makes PMDD a prominent figure in her efforts to give back, teaches Pilates to low-income folks recovering from addiction, writes an online blog and creates art in whatever media inspires her at any given time. The life she is creating is as colorful and multi-textured as her work.

Where there was once a woman living in despair, with a light that had almost gone out, there is now a woman with an inner megawatt shine. Grab a pair of sunglasses and learn how you can shine too!

Embracing the Beige: Reflecting on Life’s Moments

I just finished watching Matt Spicer’s “Ingrid Goes West” released in 2017. To say I am chilled to the bone is an understatement. Aubrey Plaza’s Ingrid is painfully relatable. Not because I can relate to how far the character goes down the rabbit hole, but because I could feel the pain, loneliness and self-loathing seeping out of her on the screen. Plaza’s depiction of this unstable, grieving, frantic woman was superb. She hit me in all of the awkward places that told me that my survival depended on others accepting me.

As I try to watch a mindless comedy to calm my mind and heart before going to sleep (unsuccessfully), I am wondering if we aren’t all a little bit like Ingrid in this modern age. Maybe not to the degree of battling Borderline Personality Disorder, but in the small still voice that pushes the falsity that we are unworthy of existing as we are?

#onlygooddays

How many of us post only the best moments, with witty hash tags to prove to the rest of the world that we’re living our best lives? How many of us pretend we don’t sit in traffic, take a shit, and pick veggie fibers out of our teeth? How many of us are vulnerable enough to tell the world when we make a misstep in our relationships? Use a word incorrectly? Eat luke-warm grubhub on an evening when depression is weighing us down? According to my mindless scrolling, not nearly enough. Not even a sliver of my feed, anyway.

We’re all frauds to some degree. We rationalize that in posting only positive spins to our otherwise mundane moments, we are truly living a quality life. We want to look at the bright side. We are even chastised or judged by others if we get too real. Like, ‘Whoa man. Don’t be bumming anyone out with your sincerity.’

We want to post our best selves. But it never just ends at the post. What comes after that post? Checking to see how many people liked/commented/reacted to it? Does that somehow legitimize us? No. Does it make that moment of our short life official, if someone has signed off? No. There is no intrinsic value in anyone’s opinion on our realism. I’ll admit I’ve checked. The more raw and vulnerable my post, the more often I check, as much as I cringe to admit it. I cannot pretend I am any better than the next bear.

Lipstick on the Pig

What is it about external validation that feels so significant? Why isn’t the lived experience from our own perspective enough? Why do we feel we need to push a false narrative instead of just admitting our life may feel mundane, or even not-so-great that day? Why do we feel the compulsion to remove ourselves from the beautiful and perfect moments in life to make sure we can frame it in the right aesthetic? Why do we pretend we aren’t living life as it really is, which is sometimes painfully boring? And conversely, when we have a moment that is spectacular and perfect, why do we allow ourselves to be robbed of it, to make sure we are broadcasting it in a way that is palatable to people who truly DO NOT CARE?

I will never forget one sunset in particular that illustrates this absurdity. I was sitting on a Honolulu beach on a mild October evening. A warm breeze could be felt, carrying the smell of the ocean with it. The sky was painted in bright purples, oranges and reds. The sun dazzled as it finally sank over the Pacific. It was absolutely mesmerizing. As I looked around at the hundreds of people sharing that sand with me, I was disheartened to see that every other person was holding their phone in front of their face, reducing that colossal ball of fire into a hashtag on their 4X5 screen. Completely missing the sunset, in order to preserve it for a day that would most likely never come. I was literally the only person without a phone to log it. To this day I can recall how bright and fierce that dying sun was. I hope the moment never leaves me. It was perfect.

Beige is Beautiful Too

Here I sit now, wearing sweats because I feel bloated. I’ve got a bit of a hormone headache, I haven’t hydrated enough today, and my legs have about a week’s worth of hair growth on them. And that, my friends, is just fine with me. Because I am perfect as I am. Whether or not this post gets a like, or any reads for that matter. I invite you to be your mundane, cringey self too. Life can’t always be in Technicolor, so, love yourself now. As you are. Whether or not anyone notices, likes, or cares. Don’t be Ingrid. Love yourself in all of your moments. The bad, the beige, or the spectacular.

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