Close
Welcome!
Login|Signup
Login|My Dashboard|Register
Logout|My Dashboard
June 19, 2013
Contact | About | Subscribe | Advertise | Work for The Explorer | E-Edition | Newsletter Signup
Clear
100°
Clear
Googleplus Facebook Twitter Mobile Version Facebook
  • HOME
    • CONTACT
    • ADVERTISE WITH US
    • ABOUT THE EXPLORER
    • SUBSCRIBE
  • NEWS
    • TODAY'S HEADLINES
    • ORO VALLEY
    • MARANA
    • ANNOUNCEMENTS
    • SUBMIT NEWS

    Top Story

    • Beloved Safeway manager says farewell

      As Oro Valley Safeway Manager Mike Hennings prepares for retirement after 42 years with the company, he says the career is all he’s ever known.

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • With new budget in place, state session ends

    • Foothills Optimist Club donates money for underserved youth

    • Summer heat brings a wave of pool activities in Oro Valley

    • Splendido resident displays Arizona landscape photography

  • BUSINESS
    • LOCAL BUSINESS NEWS
    • STOCK MARKET
    • SUBMIT RELEASE

    Top Story

    • Summit Hut expands into the Northwest

      Originally opened by two teenagers back in 1967, Summit Hut has kept its customers happy by providing quality outdoor products and services. T…

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • AZ Massage Center focuses on reflexology for total foot relief

    • Karate 4 Kids Martial Arts to Relocate to Plaza Del Oro Shopping Center

    • Epazote Kitchen & Cocktails working to draw in local diners

    • Beat the heat at Epazote Kitchen & Cocktails

  • SPORTS
    • PREP SPORTS
    • UA WILDCATS
    • TUCSON PADRES

    Top Story

    • Former Dorados return to help with football camp

      Nearly three dozen soon-to-be high school students had a chance to learn from some of Tucson’s best football players while participating in Ca…

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Sports Perspective: Beating the Heat

    • Padres beat Las Vegas 5-2

    • Padres beat Reno 5-1

    • Padres lose to Reno 18-7

  • FEATURES
    • NORTHWEST CHATTER
    • AGING WELL
    • REAL ESTATE
    • POLICE & CRIME

    Top Story

    • Police Reports -- Week of June 16

      Marana

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • 2011 drive-by shooting suspect arrested

    • Connect with Your Grandchildren Outdoors

    • How to Protect Your Family’s Skin from Summer’s Scrapes, Bites and Burns

    • Introducing the new Arizona Living Collection

  • LIVEN UP
    • CALENDAR OF EVENTS
    • SCREENING
    • NOURISHMENT
    • SCENE 1
    • VENTURE OUT
    • LISTEN
    • WRITTEN
    • SUBMIT A REVIEW

    Top Story

    • Readers will laugh, cry and remember a deep love for reading in the book

      I am a little late coming to the party with the “Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society”. It was a sensation when it was released in Ju…

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • ‘Man of Steel’ is an exciting reboot

    • Prime Time Review: Electronic Entertainment Expo reveals the next generation of home entertainment

    • Happenings -- Week of June 16

    • Friday Night Live coming June 21

  • OPINION
    • COLUMNS
    • LETTERS TO EDITOR
    • SUBMIT A LETTER

    Top Story

    • Sharp’s reporting structure

      This week’s Oro Valley Council meeting could be interesting, as it appears council members Mike Zinkin and Bill Garner finally got their way o…

      • Updated: 9:20 am
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Oro Valley Town Talk: What is and why is a General Plan?

    • Guest Column: A message on the privacy debate

    • My two favorite dads

    • Guest Column: The outing of Common Core Standards (Part 1)

  • MARKETPLACE
    • CLASSIFIEDS
    • SHOP CATALINA
    • SHOP ORO VALLEY
    • SHOP MARANA

    Most Recent

    • Opportunity knocks at Koko FitClub

      Many Oro Valley residents are dealing with the frustration of their gym simply closing its doors.  Here today, gone tomorrow. Others are deali…

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    • Kyger Orthodontics: Phase I Orthodontic Treatment

    • Tips for small business owners to face today’s new challenges

    • Catalina Marina

    • Catalina Community Services

  • BLOGS
    • THE DOCTOR IS IN
    • GADGET MAGNET
    • WHAT'S UP UA
    • MUSIC LANDSCAPE
    • PET NEWS
    • PRIME TIME REVIEW
    • SUCH THE SPOT

    Most Recent

    • Pet News - With Fourth of July coming, Pima Animal Care Center shares tips to find a lost pet

      It is frightening and heartbreaking to lose a pet. Fortunately, Pima Animal Care Center is seeing a 6 percent increase in happy reunions this …

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    • Gadget Magnet - Data Doctors on dealing with dead pixels

    • Pet News - Philanthropy with Phlavor

    • Such the Spot - Please don't feed the children

    • Pet News - YOGA for HOPE

  • VIDEO
    • BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT

    Most Recent

    • Country Thunder, Day 3: Brice and Keith steal the show

      Toby Keith and Lee Brice will be a tough act to follow today, the final day of Country Thunder in Florence.

      • Updated: May 28
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Country Thunder: Day 2 wrap-up: Eric Church shines

    • Country Thunder starts out with a bang

    • Cadets attend academy

    • Pilates instructor helps her clients improve strength

  • SPECIAL SECTIONS
    • GO! EXPLORE
    • KIDS CAMP
    • CATALINA STATE PARK
    • HEALTH & WELLNESS
    • BEST OF THE NW
    • ACTIVE LIVING
    • HOME & GARDEN
    • AUTOMOTIVE
    • WOMEN IN BUSINESS
    • DISCOVER THE NW

    Most Recent

    • Connect with Your Grandchildren Outdoors

      Do you have treasured childhood memories of spending time outdoors with your parents or grandparents? Take the time to share this experience w…

      • posted: June 16
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Three top tips for summer travel

    • Disneyland is just a short ride away from Tucson

    • Westin La Paloma makes summer plans

    • Summer heat wears down the automobile

  • JOBS
  • Home
Search
Advanced Search Options
Date Options
Sort Options
Extended Filters








Displaying results 1 - 2 of 2 for jessica stebbins. Subscribe to this search

  1. article Yoga Program Honors Memory of UA Student

    Saturday, January 26, 2013 9:06 am

    Jessica Stebbins's eventual legacy would begin with a simple idea to establish a yoga class at the University of Arizona that would benefit individuals with disabilities and low mobility.

    Stebbins, who used a wheelchair, was quite fond of yoga, but she found it was not always approachable or accommodating for those with limited mobility. She began speaking about the issue with her peers in the UA Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, which eventually led to the creation of a club and yoga class that now is being offered at the University.

    "She saw something in yoga that could be beneficial or helpful for people who used wheelchairs," said Sheila Parker, a lecturer in the Health Promotion Sciences Division at the College of Public Health who taught one of the last classes Stebbins would take.

    "She wanted to increase the awareness of what yoga is and what health benefits exist," Parker said. "That goes beyond what one does in the classroom."

    Stebbins died suddenly in December 2011. But driven by her memory and motivated by her infectious enthusiasm, a group of UA students continued working toward introducing an adaptive yoga class on campus.

    And after her peers founded a club and spent more than one year learning about the practice, gaining professional training and conducting an assessment for need, they also completed protocols necessary to launch a course.

    The class named after the club, Yoga for Any Body, will be offered beginning Feb. 1 through UA Campus Recreation.

    "I didn't meet her, but I felt so motivated by her," said Karen Rios, a public health senior and the club's president.

    For their work, the club's members earned the UA's Inclusive Excellence Award, which goes to individuals and organizations who make important contributions to creating and enhancing a diverse and inclusive community at the University. 

    With a flush face and eyes filling with tears, Rios said she could feel the passion Stebbins carried even after she was gone and despite having never met her.

    It was by interacting with her collaborators – including UA alumni Drew Donnellan; students Elizabeth Brewer,  and Blanca Delgado; Honors College student Megan Morales as well as Eve Hampton, an academic adviser – that Rios began to rethink how she conceived of disability and ability and how she could continue to aid in launching the course.

    "It's not about targeting a specific group," Rios said, speaking about the club and class. "It's about the unity of everyone; of everyone being able to participate in the practice of yoga."

    Jessica's wish

    Stebbins had been friends with Brewer for years through their studies in the College of Public Health. It was after Brewer began giving presentations on the benefits of yoga that Stebbins learned she practiced and taught yoga.

    Eventually, Stebbins asked Brewer to teach her. Later, Brewer approached Parker about completing an independent study with Stebbins on the benefits of yoga for individuals with physical disabilities, said Brewer, the club's vice president. 

    Stebbins died shortly thereafter, and on the night of her death, Brewer reached out.

    "I invited group members working on a project with the two of us who were having a difficult time dealing with Jessica’s passing to come to my yoga class that evening," said Brewer, a public health senior who has been teaching yoga for four years.

    "After class, they came up to me and said, 'What was Jessica’s dream?' This was a moment I will never forget," she said. "After Jessica passed, I knew I couldn't do the independent research project on my own. I asked them if they would help me follow through with Jessica's dream, and they said 'Yes.'"

    At that moment, Brewer, Rios and others pledged to establish what would become Yoga For Any Bodyand would later connect with other students who either knew Stebbins personally or were devoted to her idea.

    "Before I knew it, there was a large group of them interested," Parker said, adding that eight students committed to the independent study. "They are very much a self-propelled group of students. I have never had a group of students so motivated."

    Parker guided Brewer and the other students through a general needs assessment and additional research about launching a club and eventual course at the UA.

    After a major drive to raise funds, and having earned a grant from Mel and Enid Zuckerman, three of the students traveled to Minnesota during the spring of 2012 to study with nationally known yoga instructor Matthew Sanford, founder of Mind Body Solutions.

    "Although Jessica is no longer in our lives, we have brought her dream to life," said Brewer, a certified PiYo instructor who completed the adaptive yoga level one teacher training for disabilities with Sanford.

    "Bringing yoga for every single body, whether standing or in a wheelchair, to the University of Arizona is a contribution I am proud to be bringing to this very special school," Brewer said. "Yoga is not only a practice, it is a way of life and everyone should be able to have the joy of practicing. This is one of the sweetest joys of my life."

    Creating a class for any body

    Yoga for Any Body soon will launch at Campus Recreation. "There is a lot of emotional excitement around the launch," Rios said.

    After receiving their training in Minnesota, the student leads returned to Tucson, teaching student volunteers how to serve as grounding assistants, individuals who will aid others with upper and lower body moments during the class and ensure their safety. Of about 45 club members, 12 are serving as trained grounding assistants.

    "You can feel the impact of the yoga, and not just the physical impact, but the emotional and meditative impact," said Rios, one of the trained grounding assistants. "It is very meditative and relaxing."

    The class, which will be offered Friday evenings through April 12, will cover the centuries-old practice of yoga, offering sessions in the seated position for both able-bodied individuals, those with disabilities and others with mobility challenges due to conditions like arthritis, for example.

    "Spreading loving kindness is my personal mission in life. As an instructor, I have the opportunity to teach loving kindness everyday," said Brewer, who is also certified through the Aerobic and Fitness Association of America as a personal trainer and group fitness instructor.

    "I plan to use yoga as an expansion beyond the classroom into all areas of our community as a vehicle for wellness, healing and personal transformation," she said.

    Brewer said she hopes that, above all, those who participate will be able to experience "'metta,' which means loving kindness, toward themselves their mind and their body."

    Alan Beaudrie, who worked with Stebbins after she switched her major to public health in the spring of 2011, said it is one of the strongest examples he has since of students organizing around a shared idea.

    "They continue to amaze me. This is something unique, but I can see that this is something that could easily be replicated on a national level at universities across the U.S. I believe that," said Beaudrie, the assistant director of undergraduate advising.

    "They're not doing this just because they want to start a club and put it on their resume. It's a different attitude and a very good one, in a positive way," Beaudrie said. 

    He recalled Stebbins and her desire to help others through the health profession.

    "I think this may have been the start of something she, herself, could have gotten into. Not just with yoga, but with working with people with disabilities and helping them to live healthy lives," Beaudrie said.

    In the end, Parker said she was even more impressed with the group because not only are they working to manifest an idea, but also because they took a course project and transformed it into a long-standing commitment.

    "Some were new to yoga; others were involved for some time," Parker said. "They are just wonderful examples to other students of what you can do when you put your minds and hearts to it."

     

    1 image

  2. article Whats Up UA? - Yoga Program Honors Memory of UA Student

    Wednesday, January 30, 2013 2:30 pm

    After the death of their UA classmate, Jessica Stebbins, a group of students brought to life her dream of creating a yoga program designed for individuals with low mobility. A little more than one year after Stebbins's death, UA students have founded the Yoga for Any Body club and a class under the same name.

    1 image

Watch Now

youtube

youtube DZ3MN3nxCxo

AZ Massage Center read more

AZ Massage Center

AZ Massage Center

AZ Massage Center

Northwest Chatter

  • Oro Valley Town Talk: What is and why is a General Plan?

    Joe Hornat/Special to The Explorer

    • icon posted: June 19
  • Guest Column: A message on the privacy debate

    Dave Safier, Special to The Explorer

    • icon posted: June 19
  • Sports Perspective: Beating the Heat

    Evan Hoffmann,Special to The Explorer

    • icon posted: June 19
  • Sharp’s reporting structure

    Thelma Grimes, The Explorer

    • icon Updated: 9:20 am

Featured Videos

youtube

youtube KiOELMlZ808

Authorities identify suspicious package at NW fire station read more

Earlier today, the Pima Regional Bomb Squad responded to the Northwest Fire District's station at the corner of Ina and Shannon roads in response to a report of a suspicious package in a car. The package turned out to be a laptop. Read the Story Here: http://bit.ly/1bttmJW

Authorities identify suspicious package at NW fire station

Earlier today, the Pima Regional Bomb Squad responded to the Northwest Fire District's station at...

TODAY Rogue elephants, humans, in deadly battle

In Northeast India, rogue elephants are killing 100 people a year, as elephants who have lost the...

More Featured Videos

This week's e-Edition

Follow us on Facebook

Sections

  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Features
  • Liven Up
  • Opinion
  • Marketplace
  • Blogs
  • Videos
  • Special Sections
  • E-Edition
  • Online Features
  • Weather

Services

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Subscription Services
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Career Opportunities
  • Submission Forms
  • Site Index
  • Add Search Toolbar

Contact us

explorernews.com

Explorer News
Phone number: 520-797-4384
E-mail: editor@explorernews.com
Address: 7225 N. Mona Lisa Road, #125
Tucson, AZ 85741

Search









© Copyright 2013, The Explorer, Tucson, AZ. Powered by BLOX Content Management System from TownNews.com. [Terms of Use | Privacy Policy]

Forgot?
Now I remember!

Or, use your linked account:

Need an account? Create one now.