Marin Independent Journal

How to create a safe space, one downward dog at a time

- By Corinne Purtill

LOS ANGELES >> Leah Rose Gallegos paced the library at Accelerate­d Charter Elementary School. In 15 minutes, the room would be full of fifth-graders in sneakers and school uniforms, arms raised overhead, dutifully following her instructio­ns to breathe, stretch and look inward.

But first it was time for a consecrati­on of sorts.

Gallegos stepped around the yoga mats spread on the floor, leaving drops of rosemary and lavender oil near the desks pushed against the wall and bookshelve­s stuffed with textbooks, board games and a row of mesh bug habitats housing newly hatched moths.

“It's aromathera­py,” explained Gallegos, as the scent wafted around the room. “It's one of the tricks that we do. When they walk in, they can feel like they're somewhere else.”

The choice of rosemary was a deliberate one, she said; the resilient, sun-loving herb grows all over Los Angeles. In a later class, she will bring in a sprig of the live herb so kids will recognize it. She'll teach them how to transfer its fragrance to their fingertips with just a gentle touch, so they don't have to wait until her next visit to experience that sense of calm.

This is what her mindfulnes­s class is meant to do, she said: “The goal is to give them as many tools as possible to help themselves.”

Gallegos — who founded People's Yoga with Lauren Quan-Madrid in 2014 in East Los Angeles — was at Accelerate­d Charter for the first mindfulnes­s class of the 2022-23 school year, a monthly offering for students in transition­al kindergart­en through sixth grade.

Gallegos and fellow instructor­s from People's Yoga teach children yoga postures, deep breathing and meditation techniques. In a world that can feel scary and out of control — especially lately — the class aims to teach children how to create a safe place of their own.

“I don't tell them, `It's going to make you feel good.' I say, `See how you feel,'” Gallegos said. “I really want them to reclaim the power of their own body, and of managing their own emotions.”

The stresses of the last two years have prompted a nationwide crisis in children's mental health that hasn't spared Accelerate­d Charter, a short walk from Exposition Park and USC. The school's roughly 500 students in transition­al kindergart­en through sixth grade

have collective­ly mourned family members lost to COVID-19 and watched parents who are essential workers risk exposure to the virus, while navigating the chaos, uncertaint­y and isolation of online school and pandemic life.

No monthly meetup alone can heal those hurts. But since the mindfulnes­s class started, teachers and administra­tors at Accelerate­d Charter have noticed a subtle shift in the way students respond to stress and to the

strength of their own emotions.

“At the beginning, it was, `Yoga? What is that? What's going on?'” said Nestor Alas, the school's dean of culture. “Because they have this perception, this mentality, about yoga being like, `Oh, that is for other types of people. That is not for us.'”

A year later, Alas said, “kids are using the strategies in yoga to deal with stuff outside the classroom — any problem, any issue.”

Earlier that week, Alas

found a kindergart­en student in tears over a lost lunchbox.

“What do you think we can do now?” Alas asked.

The boy looked at him with a tear-streaked face. “Breathe in,” he replied.

Together they took three deep breaths — in through the nose, out through the mouth, just like the child had learned. “I feel better,” he said when they were done, then returned to the hunt for his lunchbox.

When Accelerate­d Charter's

South-Central campus fully reopened for in-person learning for the summer 2021 program, Principal Karin Figueroa could see right away that her students were going to need extra support.

COVID-19, she said, “was like a new layer of trauma” on top of what kids were already dealing with.

Nationwide, pandemic-fueled disruption­s to education have undermined years of progress in elementary math and reading skills. Those losses have been most acute in communitie­s of color and those with high rates of poverty.

The vast majority of students at Accelerate­d Charter identify as Latino, and more than 90% of the school's families qualified for free or reduced-priced meals prior to the pandemic, Figueroa said.

Figueroa hired a counselor and a social worker. She also wanted to go a step further.

“With younger children, they're not able to verbalize [stress], but they will display it in different ways, whether it be a push or a yell. That's the only way that they know how to express it,” she said. “So our job is to equip them with the words, techniques and strategies that they can tap into to cope with whatever it is that they're feeling.”

 ?? AL SEIB — LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Children participat­e in yoga postures, deep breathing and meditation techniques.
AL SEIB — LOS ANGELES TIMES Children participat­e in yoga postures, deep breathing and meditation techniques.

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