Mariel Hemingway is an American actress born on November 22, 1961. She gained fame for her role in the film Lipstick and received an Academy Award nomination for her performance in Manhattan. As a member of the famous Hemingway literary family, she has also authored several books on health and wellness. Mariel is known for her advocacy work in mental health and environmental issues, using her platform to promote positive change. She remains a respected figure in both film and literature.

"Well, I was passionately curious about what my body was doing, and when I got the lessons on how to meditate, it seemed really solid to me. It seemed real."



"I did Star 80, which was a magnificent experience as well, but still, I was at the height of my career at the beginning. Then I had to jump down the ladder and climb back up again, which I didn't understand. That was very hard."



"I don't have to go to church. The church is within me and the experience is my own. It's my life experience."



"But the experience that I had, which was basically just feeling loved and taken care of in a room full of thousands of people I didn't know, seemed to be a pretty strong sign that what I was doing was a good thing."



"Starting out in a beginner class and really understanding the fundamentals of yoga is really important."



"I wanted to share the experience of how yoga and meditation have transformed my life, how they have enabled me to observe who I am, first in my body, and then emotionally, and on to a kind of spiritual path."



"The experience of getting my Kriya, which is the meditation process that I do, was very powerful for me - though, as I explain in the book, I was really suspect of that kind of thing."



"Cancer came back into my life twice in order for me to understand something, and I guess I still wasn't getting it. And my husband wasn't getting it, either."



"When child actors act well they're just reacting to situations, and they're acting very real because their life experience is so short; there's no history to fall back on."



"What they were giving me seemed incredibly real to me, so I'd react to it in a very real way. That was frightening for me, especially because of the subject."



"For me, first, it's finding quiet in my life - and I do that through yoga and meditation. It's also been a matter of changing the way I eat, because I think what we eat can inform who we are; food is a chemical and a drug to a certain extent."

