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' Open Up helps people with disabilities access art and wellness through inclusive yoga classes
by Amanda Waltz
August 30, 2019

Photo: Open Up
As the body positivity movement grows in Pittsburgh, people are looking for more inclusive alternatives to the often toxic culture familiar to the fitness scene. This is one of the reasons why Marissa Vogel turned her attention away from running her vintage lingerie shop Calligramme to focus on her other venture, Open Up, a local nonprofit dedicated to empowering those with disabilities through yoga and theater games like improv.
“Through inclusive, engaging, enjoyable activities including yoga and improvisational theater games, participants explore new tools to help navigate social settings,” says Vogel, who co-founded Open Up with Tessa Karel in 2014 and now serves as its executive director. “While yoga and improv are two separate disciplines, they both encourage the development of joy, interconnectivity, and deeper self-understanding.”
From the beginning, Open Up has worked to bring its programming to public schools throughout Pittsburgh. Now Vogel says One Up is ready to expand its programs in the arts and wellness scene with Connection, an inclusive community yoga class opening Sat., Sept. 7 with music by the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. Connection will mark a new chapter in Open Up’s development and close the Access + Ability exhibit at the Carnegie Museum of Art, where the class will take place.
Vogel says the decision to expand came in May 2018, when a student in their Yoga for Schools program said there were no places for him to keep doing yoga outside of the classroom.
“He said, ‘I love doing yoga here with friends, but there's no place for us in the community. I'd like to be a yoga teacher someday, but no teachers look like me,’” says Vogel.

Photo: Open Up
by Amanda Waltz
August 30, 2019

Photo: Open Up
As the body positivity movement grows in Pittsburgh, people are looking for more inclusive alternatives to the often toxic culture familiar to the fitness scene. This is one of the reasons why Marissa Vogel turned her attention away from running her vintage lingerie shop Calligramme to focus on her other venture, Open Up, a local nonprofit dedicated to empowering those with disabilities through yoga and theater games like improv.
“Through inclusive, engaging, enjoyable activities including yoga and improvisational theater games, participants explore new tools to help navigate social settings,” says Vogel, who co-founded Open Up with Tessa Karel in 2014 and now serves as its executive director. “While yoga and improv are two separate disciplines, they both encourage the development of joy, interconnectivity, and deeper self-understanding.”
From the beginning, Open Up has worked to bring its programming to public schools throughout Pittsburgh. Now Vogel says One Up is ready to expand its programs in the arts and wellness scene with Connection, an inclusive community yoga class opening Sat., Sept. 7 with music by the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. Connection will mark a new chapter in Open Up’s development and close the Access + Ability exhibit at the Carnegie Museum of Art, where the class will take place.
Vogel says the decision to expand came in May 2018, when a student in their Yoga for Schools program said there were no places for him to keep doing yoga outside of the classroom.
“He said, ‘I love doing yoga here with friends, but there's no place for us in the community. I'd like to be a yoga teacher someday, but no teachers look like me,’” says Vogel.

Photo: Open Up
Forwarded from 🔊 @PittsburghIPR • Collaborative Media • Intuitive Public Radio Pittsburgh Pennsylvania • IPR •••
With that in mind, in January 2019, Open Up launched its Inclusive Community Yoga program as a way to break down the barriers people have to participating in activities like yoga. Over the past eight months, Open Up has held 25 no-cost classes at ADA-accessible spaces, including Pittsburgh Ballet Theater, Lululemon, Autism Connection, and One Point One Yoga Studio. The team also worked with various community institutions, including the Carnegie Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped.
Vogel says that in order to best serve students and other participants, they tailor the yoga postures, breathing exercises, and mindfulness activities to meet individual ability levels. Sessions also center on bringing “levity and joy” to exercises.
Vogel, who has a Masters in Education of Students with Disabilities from the University of Pittsburgh in addition to her business background and has spent years working in public health, believes there needs to be more of an effort to make Pittsburgh’s wellness scenes available to everyone. She claims that when Open Up conducted a focus group and interview data collection, the nonprofit found that people who identify as living with disabilities feel “unwelcome, uncomfortable, and unsafe in wellness spaces and community health events,” an outcome Vogel blames on fitness culture’s history as one of “elitism, exclusivity, and critical judgement,” such as fat shaming.
While she has seen some progress in making physical spaces more ADA compliant for those with limited mobility, she believes attention must be paid to improving programs and events. In order to do that, Vogel says Open Up developed a Yoga Alliance RYT (Registered Yoga Teacher) 200 Teacher Training, a program that not only better enables training yoga teachers how to teach inclusive populations, but teaches people with disabilities how to be yoga teachers and providing a supported platform to center them. The first cohort is set to begin in January 2020.
Vogel believes this approach would offer a better quality of life and help eliminate the stigma for people living with disabilities.
“Through increased visibility and targeted work to lower the divide between people who identify as living with disabilities and those who do not, Open Up believes the problem of segregation between the aforementioned communities can begin to be addressed,” says Vogel.
EVENT DETAILSConnection: An Inclusive Community Yoga Class

@ Carnegie Museum of Art
4400 Forbes Avenue
Oakland
Pittsburgh, PA
When: Sat., Sept. 7, 11 a.m.-12 p.m.
Price: Free '
https://www.pghcitypaper.com/pittsburgh/open-up-helps-people-with-disabilities-access-art-and-wellness-through-inclusive-yoga-classes/Content?oid=15742570
Vogel says that in order to best serve students and other participants, they tailor the yoga postures, breathing exercises, and mindfulness activities to meet individual ability levels. Sessions also center on bringing “levity and joy” to exercises.
Vogel, who has a Masters in Education of Students with Disabilities from the University of Pittsburgh in addition to her business background and has spent years working in public health, believes there needs to be more of an effort to make Pittsburgh’s wellness scenes available to everyone. She claims that when Open Up conducted a focus group and interview data collection, the nonprofit found that people who identify as living with disabilities feel “unwelcome, uncomfortable, and unsafe in wellness spaces and community health events,” an outcome Vogel blames on fitness culture’s history as one of “elitism, exclusivity, and critical judgement,” such as fat shaming.
While she has seen some progress in making physical spaces more ADA compliant for those with limited mobility, she believes attention must be paid to improving programs and events. In order to do that, Vogel says Open Up developed a Yoga Alliance RYT (Registered Yoga Teacher) 200 Teacher Training, a program that not only better enables training yoga teachers how to teach inclusive populations, but teaches people with disabilities how to be yoga teachers and providing a supported platform to center them. The first cohort is set to begin in January 2020.
Vogel believes this approach would offer a better quality of life and help eliminate the stigma for people living with disabilities.
“Through increased visibility and targeted work to lower the divide between people who identify as living with disabilities and those who do not, Open Up believes the problem of segregation between the aforementioned communities can begin to be addressed,” says Vogel.
EVENT DETAILSConnection: An Inclusive Community Yoga Class

@ Carnegie Museum of Art
4400 Forbes Avenue
Oakland
Pittsburgh, PA
When: Sat., Sept. 7, 11 a.m.-12 p.m.
Price: Free '
https://www.pghcitypaper.com/pittsburgh/open-up-helps-people-with-disabilities-access-art-and-wellness-through-inclusive-yoga-classes/Content?oid=15742570
Pittsburgh City Paper
Open Up helps people with disabilities access art and wellness through inclusive yoga classes
As the body positivity movement grows in Pittsburgh, people are looking for more inclusive alternatives to the often toxic culture familiar to the fitness scene....
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We have developed a robust medicinal kitchen to help people get off sugar and stabilize their preferred way of eating for complete physical health.
It's the only way I can stay away from sugar, for this reason:
If I am malnourished, some of my microbes say they want to live even if I'm going to die.
So if I cannot get other food reliably enough... they make my body eat sugar without my consent.
When we are fed well and cared for in community, we don't need refined sugars at all.
We get the sugars we need already -- without this refined thing that unbalances everything.
Similar dynamics apply to other food components that people find themselves eating uncontrollably.
When people have different conditions at hand, it can be a different conversation -- and everybody thinks that they can get away with having a little bit.
But each time we discuss more extensively, we find out that we cannot even have a little bit.
As it turns out over and over, we've been deluding ourselves because we're trying to solve the problem while isolated -- rather than being in direct support of one another as we would be if we weren't separated by so much out-of-balance capitalist stuff.
This base medicinal kitchen prototype has common, accessible, modular adjustments for people's different bodies, different experiences, and different needs.
We bring it to different physical kitchens in welcoming locations, and adapt it to the needs of the people there.
Making menu plans and figuring out how to travel with it; it needs to be a functional medicinal kitchen while on the road.
In the meantime, it is very functional in any individual location.
If someone is part of community efforts to make sure all of us are fed well, their body does not deviate towards refined components that cause microbial commensal overgrowth / imbalance.
This problem has been framed as addiction or personal weakness, which is bullshit.
People need to be fed in safe communities. Period.
It's the only way I can stay away from sugar, for this reason:
If I am malnourished, some of my microbes say they want to live even if I'm going to die.
So if I cannot get other food reliably enough... they make my body eat sugar without my consent.
When we are fed well and cared for in community, we don't need refined sugars at all.
We get the sugars we need already -- without this refined thing that unbalances everything.
Similar dynamics apply to other food components that people find themselves eating uncontrollably.
When people have different conditions at hand, it can be a different conversation -- and everybody thinks that they can get away with having a little bit.
But each time we discuss more extensively, we find out that we cannot even have a little bit.
As it turns out over and over, we've been deluding ourselves because we're trying to solve the problem while isolated -- rather than being in direct support of one another as we would be if we weren't separated by so much out-of-balance capitalist stuff.
This base medicinal kitchen prototype has common, accessible, modular adjustments for people's different bodies, different experiences, and different needs.
We bring it to different physical kitchens in welcoming locations, and adapt it to the needs of the people there.
Making menu plans and figuring out how to travel with it; it needs to be a functional medicinal kitchen while on the road.
In the meantime, it is very functional in any individual location.
If someone is part of community efforts to make sure all of us are fed well, their body does not deviate towards refined components that cause microbial commensal overgrowth / imbalance.
This problem has been framed as addiction or personal weakness, which is bullshit.
People need to be fed in safe communities. Period.
Forwarded from Max Morris
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