Yoga in the sky

April 21, 2009

Good morning yoga lovers, what a great experience I just had!

Last night I took a hike up to Malibu Canyon and with no sound, no people, and the view of our mother ocean in front of me, I took this amazing opportunity to move forward in my personal yoga journey in the clouds. For over an hour I moved along my chakra points while practicing deep meditation in each point, along with yoga postures that helped me realize ever cell in my body, amazing! You should try this too, as our journey through our mind, body, and life does not start and end with an instructor putting us in child pose and ending it with Namaste…Namaste is the thanks you give from within and intention you bring to the world.

 

Be sure to add me as your twitter friend and visit us on National Yoga Month facebook page.

Namaste

Yoga Man

Bikram Yoga–Perspire to Happiness

July 31, 2008


Count on breaking a sweat when practicing Bikram Yoga. The 26-posture series developed by Bikram Choudhury is taught at a piping 105 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius) and 40% humidity. Choudhury affectionately calls his own studio "Bikram’s Torture Chamber." Still, the heat actually helps loosen muscles for intense stretching and protects against injury.

The series evolved from Choudhury’s own experience with a weight-lifting injury. Doctors said he wouldn’t walk again, but he refused to hear it. Instead he returned to his childhood teacher, Shree Bishnu Charan Ghosh, for six months of yoga therapy. When Choudhury completely recovered, Ghosh encouraged him to open yoga schools of his own.

Choudhury designed his signature series to sequentially stretch and contract the total body in 90 minutes. The practice, taught in Bikram Yoga studios worldwide, makes the physical and spiritual benefits of hatha yoga accessible to beginners, but also promises to challenge more advanced students.

Bikram Yoga exploits the "tourniquet effect." After an opening pranayama breathing exercise, the sequence unfolds into 24 poses handpicked for stretching, balancing, and creating pressure. Each posture specifically stretches the body to prepare it for the next one. The series closes with a detoxifying breathing exercise.

The patented Bikram Yoga routine is rooted in Patanjali’s tradition of the Yoga Sutras. Choudhury does not claim these classical poses are his inventions. Instead he emphasizes the order in which the postures are strung together as his method’s distinguishing feature.

Rather than demonstrating each asana, Bikram Yoga teachers guide their students with their words. Verbal instructions and adjustments help each student find her pose. Studios offer mirrored walls to encourage physical and spiritual awareness of one’s practice.

Though new students may find sauna temperatures stifling, drinking more water throughout the day can help these feelings fade. Concentrating on normal breathing even while fighting through a posture alleviates nausea. It is not unusual to feel exhausted after the first few classes, but regular practice awakens reserves of energy.

It’s common to inadvertently memorize the basic series, but there’s still much to learn from repetition. Micro-adjustments can further improve familiar poses. Rather than jump ahead in anticipation, the trick is to synchronize movements with the teacher’s instructions. Every posture becomes an opportunity to engage with a beginner’s mind.

Practice draws the student into their inner life and fosters mental calmness. Choudhury breaks it down into the five aspects of mind: Faith, Self-control, Determination, Concentration, and Patience. A dedicated physical practice helps the student build self-esteem and cultivate strength of mind in turn.

Bikram Yoga both energizes and calms the mind-body. After powering through a killer back bend, you cherish every second in the resting pose that follows, even if it only lasts for a breath and a half. Other times you may teeter out of a balancing pose into an unsuspecting neighbor. If you can laugh it off, the rejuvenating benefits of this cleansing practice will keep you coming back to take the heat. 

Why Restorative Yoga Rocks by Bekah Finch

July 7, 2008

My introduction to yoga was in a basement classroom at a community college. I was so impressed by the girl in headstand I began to seek out studios. The first studio I went to was a Bikram studio. Then I found Ashtanga.  I spent the next three years in love with the physical benefits of yoga. Power yoga, Vinyasa flow, Anusara and whatever level 2/3+ class I could find was where I put my mat. I had no interest in slowing down. I used to come to class five minutes late and leave five minutes early so I could miss the “breathing” and the “savasana.”

When I did teacher training in 2004 I had my first intro to “restorative” yoga. I thought it was okay, but not the workout I thought Yoga was. To me, Yoga was handstands, sweating, drop-backs and arm balances. I actually felt sort of bad for the people who couldn’t practice advanced levels.

In early 2006 I made some life changes for the better; however, without the self-medication I was used to, I began having panic attacks. A lot of them. Every day. I could barely function, none the less do a handstand. I was shaking and scared and miserable.   After two months of doing nothing but short walks and long naps, I crawled into a restorative yoga class. It was the first time in sixty days my heart beat slowed and I could breathe fully. As fate would have it, there was a workshop the next week on Yoga for anger, anxiety and depression and then on restorative yoga. My boss, a close friend who was aware of my condition, sent me to this workshop. It changed my life.

Nearly three years later I teach 3 restorative classes a week. I practice restorative yoga at least 30 minutes a day. Not only did Restorative yoga help calm my nervous system, it put me in touch my with my body and breath more than I ever could have imagined.

I learned that Yoga is not just about handstands- it’s about creating balance within your body and your life. We all have different bodies with different needs. Restorative yoga treats the parasympathetic nervous system (the system that keeps the nervous system out of fight-or-flight mode) and it is a tricky little asana practice- even though you don’t get the cardio you get in some asana classes, restorative still incorporates backbends, inversions, twists, and foreward folds- all the movements necessary to keep the spine healthy and flexible. Another secret of restorative is that we rarely are able to relax in this day and age- even sleep is not relaxing for some of us- but restorative is meant to relax the body, which allows the systems to do their jobs better. My metabolism increased from a more gentle practice because my body was not constantly thinking it had to stay in fight-or-flight and needed to hold on to everything I put in it.

The benefits of a restorative practice for anyone- from brand new to yoga to injured to overweight to overworked to the “advanced” yogi are numerous. There are so many lovely restorative teachers, classes, books and articles out there and I strongly urge everyone to try a class. It changed my life and saved my yoga practice. Don’t get me wrong, I still love a good handstand and a flow class but I will scream it from the rooftops, “restorative rocks!”

 

What is Anusara by Meagan McCrary

July 3, 2008


Founded in 1997 by John Friend, Anusara (“to flow with grace”) is a powerful hatha yoga system grounded in the precise science of biomechanics and a life-affirming spiritual philosophy. At the core of the practice – open heartedness.

Anusara aspires to awaken and express joy. It’s a celebration of the divine within each student, and the path of recognition is through the heart. Teachers honor and respect individual student’s differences, abilities, and limitations, and are trained to see the beauty and perfection already present in each pose.

Bottom line, the practice is up lifting, the philosophy empowering, and the alignment superb.

Every class begins with a centering invocation and incorporates a heart-oriented theme, typically centered on cultivating a virtuous quality, meant to give students an attitudinal direction or intention to be embodied in each pose. Classes are typically fun, light-hearted and can be very communal and extraverted; it’s not uncommon for students to assist one another or be called on to demonstrate a pose followed by applauds to celebrate the accomplishment.

There is a playful quality to each class, but that doesn’t mean it’s not challenging. Thanks to Anusara’s Universal Principle of Alignment even the most advanced poses are made possible, and during class students may attempt backbends, handstands, demanding arm balances, and every variation in between. Without a set template or sequence, Anusara teachers are encouraged to express their creative freedom offering lessons from their own experiences. 

Designed by Friend after years of studying yoga – primarily Iyengar – as well as biomechanics and kinesiology, the Universal Principles of Alignment are just that, simplified principles applied universally in all poses to achieve optimal alignment.

Requiring a high level of studentship, Anusara practitioners learn how to change their bodies so that the more difficult poses are no longer just accessible to the really bendy, strong people. Therefore, Anusara yoga is effectively therapeutic and physically transformational – repeating the mantra good alignment is good therapy.

One of the most distinctive attributes of Anusara is the Tantric philosophy of intrinsic goodness that is skillfully woven into each class. Unlike a Classical Yoga philosophy that emphasis Pantajali’s Eightfold Path to reach freedom from embodiment or bondage, a Tantra-based yoga seeks freedom in embodiment through recognition. The body (and ego for that matter) is no longer a problem or something to transcend, but divinity itself – in Anusara everything is divine. Therefore, the asana practice becomes a celebration and each pose a creative expression of divinity.

Another distinguishing factor of Anusara is the heavy emphasis on community. Just like Anusara classes, the Anusara community (kula) is inclusive, life-affirming, evolving, and celebrates individual differences and creative freedom. The kula is an organized network of highly trained teachers and fun loving students held together by everyone’s alignment to the Anusara philosophy, such as celebrating beauty in all its diversity.

For more information, or to find an Anusara teacher in your area, please visit www.anusara.com.