At one end of the question, if I said to myself, "I can't gain spiritual enlightenment from an Indian practice because that's not part of my ethnic heritage," it would be a racist, therefore unethical statement. At the other end, I don't like yoga classes that are geared toward exercise/weight loss, so I don't take those classes. Since I'm only responsible for my own words and deeds, and not those of others, I'm entirely unconcerned about whether or not other people take part in such classes. As far as balance, that's something the practice of yoga helps us attain. The dirty, stinking, asana-striking hippies got it right again: If it feels good, do it.
Haha... charles thinks they'd take a police report. Nope, there's an online form that nobody's going to read. Also, most people have a deductible higher than what it'd cost to replace your average rear window.
Unless it's a yoga mat.Even apcray you don't think is valuable might be interesting for an opportunistic/desperate thief.
or maybe they did. it was an 8 gb 1g touch...
Aren't you always?
It is interesting but you left the statement without any explanation, conclusion etc etc.
So yoga is mostly white. So?
http://www.seattle.gov/police/report/def…
Car Prowls (under $1500)
Auto Accessories
(under $1500)
I'm agreeing with "it's tough to flip a yoga mat into money for meth".