Ashtanga Yoga is more than just asana, as there is a family of practitioners, not only in your home town, but a worldwide community.
I have just returned to Brighton, the most Bohemian and possibly most yogacentric city in the UK, and having established a Mysore practice with a beautiful, friendly and passionate group of ashtangis over 2 years I have made many yogi mates.
And wandering around the town over the past week I have met a few of these fiends, one whop has just returned from a months intensive retreat in Maui, Hawaii with Nancy Gilgoff, another who has just returned from 6 months in India, and another who has just had a baby... Not static people.
And this energetic and powerful moving family are all creating waves around the planet, learning, through their practice, to be gentle with their bodies and the Earth upon which they tread, and to pass through this life with consideration and understanding.
For the practitioners of Ashtanga Yoga are a special creed, a dedicated and intelligent family, each striving for growth and development, and willing to make sacrifices to create better health for themselves and also educating others by their learned expressions.
And through the connections we make, in yoga, we connect to a larger family, worldwide, with a trust and fellowship, arisen from shared experience and shared wisdom... To my brothers and sisters, I salute you! Namaste!
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Saturday, 17 April 2010
Thursday, 8 April 2010
AN ASHTANGA DIARY 10
I have been approaching my practice with dedication and integrity this year, knowing that I have to re-establish both neutrality and strength within my physical body.
Extending my awareness throughout my body, evenly distributed with softness and passivity, but, with the best will in the world I reach areas within my body that seem to defy my efforts to clear, and this creates a tendency for the area to be even more isolated, a bit of a catch 22 situation.
So, when this happens, or when I take notice that it has happened, it is time to seek expert advice, and not necessarily from a yogi. I choose to visit a therapist, trained in both Bowen Therapy and Emmett Technique, a man called Ray Smith, and this is his website - Feelsbetter Therapies
And what he does is quite astonishing for a yoga practitioner. He helps to identify the emotional aspects associated with the individual blockages and obstruction, and he will explain where these are within the body, and with a combination of manipulation and healing will penetrate and soften these areas, in a manner that might have taken 3 months of yoga to reach, thus enabling the yoga practice to be eased through the change, rather than the yoga practice causing the change.
It does, in effect, create a doorway through which one can travel with yoga, and once traversed, can be maintained through practice, not to return again. I will say that I do not have this treatment often, but when I feel my body burdened with emotional backpacks and burdens, it is Ray who lightens my load, explaining aspects of my physicality that I was completely unaware of.
The man with X-Ray hands...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Extending my awareness throughout my body, evenly distributed with softness and passivity, but, with the best will in the world I reach areas within my body that seem to defy my efforts to clear, and this creates a tendency for the area to be even more isolated, a bit of a catch 22 situation.
So, when this happens, or when I take notice that it has happened, it is time to seek expert advice, and not necessarily from a yogi. I choose to visit a therapist, trained in both Bowen Therapy and Emmett Technique, a man called Ray Smith, and this is his website - Feelsbetter Therapies
And what he does is quite astonishing for a yoga practitioner. He helps to identify the emotional aspects associated with the individual blockages and obstruction, and he will explain where these are within the body, and with a combination of manipulation and healing will penetrate and soften these areas, in a manner that might have taken 3 months of yoga to reach, thus enabling the yoga practice to be eased through the change, rather than the yoga practice causing the change.
It does, in effect, create a doorway through which one can travel with yoga, and once traversed, can be maintained through practice, not to return again. I will say that I do not have this treatment often, but when I feel my body burdened with emotional backpacks and burdens, it is Ray who lightens my load, explaining aspects of my physicality that I was completely unaware of.
The man with X-Ray hands...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Saturday, 3 April 2010
AN ASHTANGA DIARY 9
And in savasana, then what? What are you supposed to do?
There is an opportunity to withdraw the sense awarenesses, starting from the outermost layers, where the hairs of the body experience the air around the body, this being the primary physical encounter with that which lies external to us, the bridge from the inner to the outer worlds.
Then drawing inwards, to the skin, that which comprises and contains our shape, our form and to a large extent, our identity, and then inwards through the first layer of fat, and into the muscles that lie below.
Those muscles, which following practice are engorged with prana, and vibrational resonances, and then on into the bone structure, the skeleton that dwells within. Recall and identify as many as you wish, from memory of those illustrations we all know so well, and mapping internally too.
Yes, know your skeleton well.
And, then conatined within the structure are the vital organs, from the brain and eyes in the skull, and the heart, lungs, digestive systems and more within the torso, and, this all fed with a network of veins and arteries, carrying the life giving blood throughout the body.
Yes, know your system well, and feel it by knowing it.
And, then deeper within, are the nervous systems that carry information and data about the entire body, at lightning speeds, and follwing practice allow the mind to become more familiar with the mapping, that is loosely aligned with the physicality of the body.
These pulsating and resonating systems are highlighted immediately after practice, and this is an opportunity to know, to feel, that which we normally ignore, and then, deeper still, the subtle body...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
There is an opportunity to withdraw the sense awarenesses, starting from the outermost layers, where the hairs of the body experience the air around the body, this being the primary physical encounter with that which lies external to us, the bridge from the inner to the outer worlds.
Then drawing inwards, to the skin, that which comprises and contains our shape, our form and to a large extent, our identity, and then inwards through the first layer of fat, and into the muscles that lie below.
Those muscles, which following practice are engorged with prana, and vibrational resonances, and then on into the bone structure, the skeleton that dwells within. Recall and identify as many as you wish, from memory of those illustrations we all know so well, and mapping internally too.
Yes, know your skeleton well.
And, then conatined within the structure are the vital organs, from the brain and eyes in the skull, and the heart, lungs, digestive systems and more within the torso, and, this all fed with a network of veins and arteries, carrying the life giving blood throughout the body.
Yes, know your system well, and feel it by knowing it.
And, then deeper within, are the nervous systems that carry information and data about the entire body, at lightning speeds, and follwing practice allow the mind to become more familiar with the mapping, that is loosely aligned with the physicality of the body.
These pulsating and resonating systems are highlighted immediately after practice, and this is an opportunity to know, to feel, that which we normally ignore, and then, deeper still, the subtle body...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Saturday, 27 March 2010
AN ASHTANGA DIARY 8
And maybe the most important, and most neglected of the asanas? Savasana - corpse pose.
It is, for me, the posture that requires the utmost engagement, but with the least physicality and effort, but with the most subtly applied alertness, it is the one that fully integrates the entire practice.
And I've tried avoiding it, by simply lying on the floor for 30 seconds, impatiently, and after a week or so of this, my body seems tighter than had I not done any yoga at all, as, the effects have not been assimilated into my entire body/mind complex.
It is a highly meditative posture, allowing the subtle to fully integrate with the gross.
This is our chance, our opportunity to draw awareness fully within the body, and experience that which is revealed. It may be that a residual tension is felt, say in the hips, and this chance to fully enter that part of the body, is an aspect of the healing capacity of the prana we have flooded our body with over the past hour or so.
We are highly charged, and armed with this power, every opportunity to fully enter into the points of pain or discomfort are awakened, and with the combination of mind, increased prana, and body awareness, we can get right into the inner densities, and allow the healing to radiate and magnify into the subtle physical elements.
A chance to get right in there....
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
It is, for me, the posture that requires the utmost engagement, but with the least physicality and effort, but with the most subtly applied alertness, it is the one that fully integrates the entire practice.
And I've tried avoiding it, by simply lying on the floor for 30 seconds, impatiently, and after a week or so of this, my body seems tighter than had I not done any yoga at all, as, the effects have not been assimilated into my entire body/mind complex.
It is a highly meditative posture, allowing the subtle to fully integrate with the gross.
This is our chance, our opportunity to draw awareness fully within the body, and experience that which is revealed. It may be that a residual tension is felt, say in the hips, and this chance to fully enter that part of the body, is an aspect of the healing capacity of the prana we have flooded our body with over the past hour or so.
We are highly charged, and armed with this power, every opportunity to fully enter into the points of pain or discomfort are awakened, and with the combination of mind, increased prana, and body awareness, we can get right into the inner densities, and allow the healing to radiate and magnify into the subtle physical elements.
A chance to get right in there....
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Monday, 22 March 2010
AN ASHTANGA DIARY 7
And of the sequence, of the Primary Series, each of us has one asana which we dread. One posture that we hold in our minds from the moment we step onto our mats, and this one asana can actually hold us back from practice.
The fear and the anticipated pain or discomfort of that one posture is the essence of our entire practice. For, that muscular retraction, that involuntary lock we place around that area we wish to protect, is the purpose of our practice. It is for that single attribute we need to practice.
And, I suggest that today, or tomorrow, when you next practice, take your mind into that place of fear and tension, and release that one part, make that the primary reason for your sequence, and release that tightness, that tension, with love.
Forgive that aspect or characteristic, release any anger at your body, and allow it to flow away, use the breath to focus your mind into the spatial arena of tightness, and work into the area...
For that kink or blockage, that inner obstruction, is (in part) of an emotional character, and that acknowledgement, will facilitate a partial deconstruction of the system, rendering it incomplete, and thus unstable, and whilst the system is unstable, the chance to transform, change or even eliminate it arises.
A golden opportunity.... Love it away...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
The fear and the anticipated pain or discomfort of that one posture is the essence of our entire practice. For, that muscular retraction, that involuntary lock we place around that area we wish to protect, is the purpose of our practice. It is for that single attribute we need to practice.
And, I suggest that today, or tomorrow, when you next practice, take your mind into that place of fear and tension, and release that one part, make that the primary reason for your sequence, and release that tightness, that tension, with love.
Forgive that aspect or characteristic, release any anger at your body, and allow it to flow away, use the breath to focus your mind into the spatial arena of tightness, and work into the area...
For that kink or blockage, that inner obstruction, is (in part) of an emotional character, and that acknowledgement, will facilitate a partial deconstruction of the system, rendering it incomplete, and thus unstable, and whilst the system is unstable, the chance to transform, change or even eliminate it arises.
A golden opportunity.... Love it away...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Friday, 19 March 2010
AN ASHTANGA DIARY 6
And, yes sir. Keeping up the practice, and as the year levers over past the Vernal Equinox a certain sense of inner change shall begin to manifest, in harmony with the season's turn.
And how might this be so? Why might yoga practice change throughout the year?
The dry cynics will fail to be swayed by any discussion, but any ashtangi will know that as the year turns, practice changes. The light and warmer mornings lift flexibility and strength, and increases the wish to engage with the practice, whereas the cold, dark winter months can be a struggle through which practice might be abandoned.
And, as spring arrives, and the Earth begins to manifest that which has lain dormant for the past few months, so too the consistent practitioner will begin to notice changes from deep within her/his system.
This might be an adaptation of breathing patterns and depths, causing deep seated changes to manifest, releasing old issues, and traumas, and similarly the time of physical release might begin to precipitate, as the warmer days bring an increased relaxation to the body in general, through muscular release, and also a sense of emotional well-being can also aid the development of a relaxed body.
The seasons do affect us, both inner and outer... We relax in the sun, and as seasons change our bodies notice, even if we do not.
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
And how might this be so? Why might yoga practice change throughout the year?
The dry cynics will fail to be swayed by any discussion, but any ashtangi will know that as the year turns, practice changes. The light and warmer mornings lift flexibility and strength, and increases the wish to engage with the practice, whereas the cold, dark winter months can be a struggle through which practice might be abandoned.
And, as spring arrives, and the Earth begins to manifest that which has lain dormant for the past few months, so too the consistent practitioner will begin to notice changes from deep within her/his system.
This might be an adaptation of breathing patterns and depths, causing deep seated changes to manifest, releasing old issues, and traumas, and similarly the time of physical release might begin to precipitate, as the warmer days bring an increased relaxation to the body in general, through muscular release, and also a sense of emotional well-being can also aid the development of a relaxed body.
The seasons do affect us, both inner and outer... We relax in the sun, and as seasons change our bodies notice, even if we do not.
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Saturday, 20 February 2010
AN ASHTANGA DIARY 5
Up to 5 times this week, 5 primary series, and for now, this is the peak, maybe I'll do 6 days but I am so glad to have 2 days off a week.
Something happens with a 5 day practice that simply would never occur. You see most of us think that by doing yoga once or twice a week things will get a little better, and this is the truth, but the actual path of yoga is a journey that continues to unravel, and the message lies in the journey, not the destinations, and following this travel analogy, it may be that we enjoy the view from one part of our journey, but to find and reach our destination we must continue, sometimes uphill, and sometimes downhill, but continue we must, for abandonment means no fulfilment, no dream realised.
And this path of yoga involves pain and discomfort, a form of body modification, much as tattoo or piecing, though the path of yoga is more concerned with internal modifications rather than external visual signs, so for the yogi, change is subtle, personal and internal, but can any practitioner not speak highly of this path?
Yoga is sometimes presented as a spiritual path, but I would disagree with this, on the premise that it does not truly define the use of the word 'spiritual'. For me Ashtanga is a combination that permits increased engagement and awareness within my physical body, allowing an increased energetic flow, creating less physical shutdown, thus improving health and well-being, as if we retract from this, our closest object, our body, how can we engage with anything or anyone?
So, now I can hug, with an open heart and open body... want some?
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Something happens with a 5 day practice that simply would never occur. You see most of us think that by doing yoga once or twice a week things will get a little better, and this is the truth, but the actual path of yoga is a journey that continues to unravel, and the message lies in the journey, not the destinations, and following this travel analogy, it may be that we enjoy the view from one part of our journey, but to find and reach our destination we must continue, sometimes uphill, and sometimes downhill, but continue we must, for abandonment means no fulfilment, no dream realised.
And this path of yoga involves pain and discomfort, a form of body modification, much as tattoo or piecing, though the path of yoga is more concerned with internal modifications rather than external visual signs, so for the yogi, change is subtle, personal and internal, but can any practitioner not speak highly of this path?
Yoga is sometimes presented as a spiritual path, but I would disagree with this, on the premise that it does not truly define the use of the word 'spiritual'. For me Ashtanga is a combination that permits increased engagement and awareness within my physical body, allowing an increased energetic flow, creating less physical shutdown, thus improving health and well-being, as if we retract from this, our closest object, our body, how can we engage with anything or anyone?
So, now I can hug, with an open heart and open body... want some?
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Tuesday, 9 February 2010
AN ASHTANGA DIARY 4
Tell me about your practice? What is the worst bit? I'll confess.. For me it is taking the decision to start, to actually clear the floor and unroll my mat.
For there is always something else I need to do, like write a blog, or make a cup of coffee, or look out of the window... You know this feeling?
But this year, thus far in 2010, I have been good and I am practicing, usually 4 times a week. It is a lonely and thankless task to drive myself to the mat each morning, and the rewards, though there are obscured from me. For after a long period of practice, maybe 5 years, progress is subtle and slow, and the rewards of practice are almost obscured by the relative familiarity of my body to me.
For as I practice yoga, the depth of experience, married with a relative flexibility, becomes the norm, and thus it becomes taken for granted, for to engage with the wish to go further, stretch deeper, practice at a higher level, is not contained within my understanding of yoga practice.
But this I do question - what might I feel like, what might my body be had I never taken up the practice of asana? Would I feel entrapped, might I be stiffened and locked? Well, I will never be able to answer that specific question, as all I know is what I am now. But I do think that I have the benefits of a healthy body and system, that is in part due to my daily practices, keeping my inner organs stimulated, and my muscular system activated... It feels good most of the time.
But honestly? What I really dread? A's and B's...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
For there is always something else I need to do, like write a blog, or make a cup of coffee, or look out of the window... You know this feeling?
But this year, thus far in 2010, I have been good and I am practicing, usually 4 times a week. It is a lonely and thankless task to drive myself to the mat each morning, and the rewards, though there are obscured from me. For after a long period of practice, maybe 5 years, progress is subtle and slow, and the rewards of practice are almost obscured by the relative familiarity of my body to me.
For as I practice yoga, the depth of experience, married with a relative flexibility, becomes the norm, and thus it becomes taken for granted, for to engage with the wish to go further, stretch deeper, practice at a higher level, is not contained within my understanding of yoga practice.
But this I do question - what might I feel like, what might my body be had I never taken up the practice of asana? Would I feel entrapped, might I be stiffened and locked? Well, I will never be able to answer that specific question, as all I know is what I am now. But I do think that I have the benefits of a healthy body and system, that is in part due to my daily practices, keeping my inner organs stimulated, and my muscular system activated... It feels good most of the time.
But honestly? What I really dread? A's and B's...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Monday, 25 January 2010
AN ASHTANGA DIARY 3
I had not taken an ashtanga class, ooh, for around 18 months, as where I live there are no teachers, so I practice solo..
But, last week I stayed over in Brighton, with my daughter, and she had a free pass to her gym, and by co-incidence there was a class that morning, so... we went together.
I had forgotten how long 5 deep breaths are, I must have developed a habit of taking 2 shallow breaths, it seemed so looong, and why oh why do the teachers always hang out that last count, and go adjust someone whilst you are mentally gagging to get our of downward dog? Is it just me? Nope, it is the teacher's prerogative to torture the students, and for all you teachers of yoga out there, and those who are yet to be, revel in your power, for your time will come when you giggle silently to yourself.
The class itself actually had too many demonstrations, and it was not a counted class as such, more of a tutorial, but as a lazy man, it kinda suited me. But what did surprise me was the second series asanas that we encouraged, rather strangely, hardly anyone in the class (of about 20 students) could get even half way to doing them, and there were even a couple of students that had never done a yoga class... They must have been terrified.
One posture I have not been familiar with was the pigeon posture, and we did this 3 times each side, and I must say I loved it, a lovely warm easing into my hips, that I just wished to stay with, and one of the few asanas that I could truly relax into, but after the class... Eeek, my hips felt as if they had been nuked, and I was dreading the following day, but, funnily enough, nothing, the next day I did not even think about them... A special posture for me.
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
But, last week I stayed over in Brighton, with my daughter, and she had a free pass to her gym, and by co-incidence there was a class that morning, so... we went together.
I had forgotten how long 5 deep breaths are, I must have developed a habit of taking 2 shallow breaths, it seemed so looong, and why oh why do the teachers always hang out that last count, and go adjust someone whilst you are mentally gagging to get our of downward dog? Is it just me? Nope, it is the teacher's prerogative to torture the students, and for all you teachers of yoga out there, and those who are yet to be, revel in your power, for your time will come when you giggle silently to yourself.
The class itself actually had too many demonstrations, and it was not a counted class as such, more of a tutorial, but as a lazy man, it kinda suited me. But what did surprise me was the second series asanas that we encouraged, rather strangely, hardly anyone in the class (of about 20 students) could get even half way to doing them, and there were even a couple of students that had never done a yoga class... They must have been terrified.
One posture I have not been familiar with was the pigeon posture, and we did this 3 times each side, and I must say I loved it, a lovely warm easing into my hips, that I just wished to stay with, and one of the few asanas that I could truly relax into, but after the class... Eeek, my hips felt as if they had been nuked, and I was dreading the following day, but, funnily enough, nothing, the next day I did not even think about them... A special posture for me.
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Friday, 15 January 2010
AN ASHTANGA DIARY 2
Into the second week of practice for the year, on Friday, and the weekend approaches... But today is a moon day... A moon day is a day of the full moon or new moon, and it is traditional that no yoga practice takes place on these two days of the month.
Today is a New Moon day, so I will not practice, and a part of me is pleased that I do not have to stretch, twist and flex, but another part of me wishes that I could practice, as though I dread the commencement of my practice, once I start I love it, and when I have finished, I adore it!
So, mixed feelings today... Why do I dread it? Well, it hurts, and it is uncomfortable, painful and exhausting, so why do I do it? Well, once completed, the energy surge is astonishing, all my faculties are clear and bright, my mind is clear and focused, and I feel strong. It does take a certain type of masochism to engage in a serious yoga practice, as as one progresses, simply by engagement, one reaches variations of discomfort that one simply experiences, and endures... Choosing to encounter physical discomfort and pain, and not withdrawing, and the reason for this? To free the tensions and blockages created through over tensing and knotting our muscles, and also our internal organs over a long period of time.
As, those tensions we create within our muscular structure, will, over time distort our inner organs, and create malfunctioning systems, and the practice of yoga will relieve the pressures upon our digestive, alimentary, pulmonary and breathing systems, enabling free flow and movement.
So, why not at the moon day? I'll tell you another day...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Today is a New Moon day, so I will not practice, and a part of me is pleased that I do not have to stretch, twist and flex, but another part of me wishes that I could practice, as though I dread the commencement of my practice, once I start I love it, and when I have finished, I adore it!
So, mixed feelings today... Why do I dread it? Well, it hurts, and it is uncomfortable, painful and exhausting, so why do I do it? Well, once completed, the energy surge is astonishing, all my faculties are clear and bright, my mind is clear and focused, and I feel strong. It does take a certain type of masochism to engage in a serious yoga practice, as as one progresses, simply by engagement, one reaches variations of discomfort that one simply experiences, and endures... Choosing to encounter physical discomfort and pain, and not withdrawing, and the reason for this? To free the tensions and blockages created through over tensing and knotting our muscles, and also our internal organs over a long period of time.
As, those tensions we create within our muscular structure, will, over time distort our inner organs, and create malfunctioning systems, and the practice of yoga will relieve the pressures upon our digestive, alimentary, pulmonary and breathing systems, enabling free flow and movement.
So, why not at the moon day? I'll tell you another day...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Friday, 8 January 2010
AN ASHTANGA DIARY 1
Oh, missing Mysore, or not?
New Year, new resolve.. I have been practicing yoga for around 10 years. I started fairly late in life, in my early 40's, with a weekly class of Iyengar yoga, and within a month or so, I had a photocopied page of asanas that I began to practice most evenings.
At the start of this journey I am going to tell you why I took up yoga.. I had a hankering for what I thought might be a long term physical exercise, something that was not too 'pushy' as I had encountered in the gym world. So, having chatted to some slender women, I took the leap and found my first local class.
The teacher? Ann Chinn, a lovely gentle woman who taught at the Brighton Natural Health Centre, and she taught the Iyengar method. My first class? Well, I think I could just about reach my knees in a forward bend, having spent years lifting furniture and pushing weights in the gym... I was, well, inflexible...
In the class were about 20 women, and 2 men, one of whom had done yoga previously, and one who had not... Me. I found the class sedate and slow, and not really challenging, except for one or two upside down positions... yes inversions...
The Iynegar method seemed to based upon the adaption of the minutiae of the positioning of the hands and feet, almost to an obsessional point. Getting the fingers in line and level, getting the heel and instep aligned on the mat, and having my head looking in the right direction.
Simple, this was not exercise.. Is it?
Well, that is how it seemed, a stroll though the park. But, after the class I felt gratified that I had bothered to try and shrugged it off as a waste of my time... Until the next day...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
New Year, new resolve.. I have been practicing yoga for around 10 years. I started fairly late in life, in my early 40's, with a weekly class of Iyengar yoga, and within a month or so, I had a photocopied page of asanas that I began to practice most evenings.
At the start of this journey I am going to tell you why I took up yoga.. I had a hankering for what I thought might be a long term physical exercise, something that was not too 'pushy' as I had encountered in the gym world. So, having chatted to some slender women, I took the leap and found my first local class.
The teacher? Ann Chinn, a lovely gentle woman who taught at the Brighton Natural Health Centre, and she taught the Iyengar method. My first class? Well, I think I could just about reach my knees in a forward bend, having spent years lifting furniture and pushing weights in the gym... I was, well, inflexible...
In the class were about 20 women, and 2 men, one of whom had done yoga previously, and one who had not... Me. I found the class sedate and slow, and not really challenging, except for one or two upside down positions... yes inversions...
The Iynegar method seemed to based upon the adaption of the minutiae of the positioning of the hands and feet, almost to an obsessional point. Getting the fingers in line and level, getting the heel and instep aligned on the mat, and having my head looking in the right direction.
Simple, this was not exercise.. Is it?
Well, that is how it seemed, a stroll though the park. But, after the class I felt gratified that I had bothered to try and shrugged it off as a waste of my time... Until the next day...
Written and published by Mark Golding - THE ORGANIC HOME
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
Saturday, 2 January 2010
A YOGA NEW YEAR!
Not everyone woke up with a hangover on morning of Jan 1. Taking a less beaten track were several youngsters among others who were sitting in meditation at Nityananda Dhayanampita ushering the New Year at its Shamshabad ashram on the New Year's eve from 11.30 pm to past midnight.
'Through meditation, we pay gratitude to everybody who came in our lives because we believe that gratitude is the best attitude. The doors were open to all,' said Maa Sachitananda of Nityananda Dhayanampita. Apart from the programme on the New Year's eve, the society also organised a similar session on the first day of the year from 4 pm.
And it wasn't just sunburn music fest that beckoned Hyderabadis. Around 40 Hyderabadis even packed their bags and left for a special meditation session held on Dec 31 at the Isha Yoga Centre at Coimbatore, said Chidambar Rao, meditator with Isha Yoga.
Many other yoga and meditation centres in the city organised programmes on January 1 on similar lines. One such event was held at Shwaas, Jubilee Hills. 'We are doing a screening followed by a session on 'forgiveness meditation.' The idea behind this is that it empowers one to overcome baggages of guilt and consciousness. It is more like a cleansing process at the beginning of the year,' says Salil Ganeriwal of Shwaas. He adds that since not everybody is the kind who likes to party, through such sessions, people get a chance to celebrate the New Year in a spiritual way.
'We have been aping the west but a point comes where we have to turn to something. This is the time when people look for spirituality and answers within as routine life becomes boring. Hence, people enrolling for yoga and meditation are on an all time high. With these programmes, you might start looking at situations in life which may give inner peace,' adds Salil. Rajayoga Meditation Centre will hold a meditation session on Saturday, January 2 at West Marredpally. 'The theme of the session is a new beginning for the New Year,' said a member.
By Times of India
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
'Through meditation, we pay gratitude to everybody who came in our lives because we believe that gratitude is the best attitude. The doors were open to all,' said Maa Sachitananda of Nityananda Dhayanampita. Apart from the programme on the New Year's eve, the society also organised a similar session on the first day of the year from 4 pm.
And it wasn't just sunburn music fest that beckoned Hyderabadis. Around 40 Hyderabadis even packed their bags and left for a special meditation session held on Dec 31 at the Isha Yoga Centre at Coimbatore, said Chidambar Rao, meditator with Isha Yoga.
Many other yoga and meditation centres in the city organised programmes on January 1 on similar lines. One such event was held at Shwaas, Jubilee Hills. 'We are doing a screening followed by a session on 'forgiveness meditation.' The idea behind this is that it empowers one to overcome baggages of guilt and consciousness. It is more like a cleansing process at the beginning of the year,' says Salil Ganeriwal of Shwaas. He adds that since not everybody is the kind who likes to party, through such sessions, people get a chance to celebrate the New Year in a spiritual way.
'We have been aping the west but a point comes where we have to turn to something. This is the time when people look for spirituality and answers within as routine life becomes boring. Hence, people enrolling for yoga and meditation are on an all time high. With these programmes, you might start looking at situations in life which may give inner peace,' adds Salil. Rajayoga Meditation Centre will hold a meditation session on Saturday, January 2 at West Marredpally. 'The theme of the session is a new beginning for the New Year,' said a member.
By Times of India
THE LATEST YOGA NEWS, FROM IT IS YOGA
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