Savasana or Final Relaxation Posture

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The word Sava means a corpse.  In Savasana you are meant to imitate a corpse, to play dead.  This is often the hardest pose.  I know some students who cannot stay for Savasana because they see it as a waste of time; they cannot stay still.  By remaining motionless for some time and keeping the mind and body still while you are fully conscious, you learn to relax.  In the beginning, you may fall asleep.  This is ok.  It just means that you are really tired and probably are not getting enough sleep.  However, after a while, you should not fall asleep.  Conscious relaxation invigorates and refreshes both the body and the mind.  With practice, the mind learns to follow the breath, stay focused and fall into light meditation.  The posture is then extremely restorative and refreshing.

During the month of December, we will focus on Savasana.  It’s not that we will spend more time doing Savasana, we just might focus on different versions of it:  supported, side-lying, or prone.  The busy days preceding the holidays are often a great opportunity to practice conscious relaxation.  It is especially important to maintain your yoga practice and to find some time every day to sit quietly and meditate.

Cultivating an Attitude of Gratitude

Several years ago I developed a daily gratitude practice.  I wanted to shift things in my life.  Somehow I knew I had a good life, or even a great life, but I found myself complaining a lot about things. I felt dissatisfied somehow.  I began to see that I was focusing on those things that were going wrong in my life, rather than what was going right.

Back in November 2013, I was waiting in line at the grocery store and I picked up O magazine.   I have always loved Oprah's article called "What I Know for Sure" which is on the last page of the magazine.   In this particular article she wrote about how much her gratitude practice helped her.  I remember thinking that Oprah, who seemed to have everything, had to practice being grateful???  But she did.  And, so, I thought that if it was good enough for her, then maybe I should give it a try.

I keep a journal by my bedside and write in it every night 5 things I am grateful for.  That was the beginning in a big shift in my attitude.  Sometimes I am grateful for the same things every night: my husband, my son, my house.  Sometimes I am grateful for the simplest things:  my car starts every morning when I turn the key, I have hot water, I don't have a tooth ache.  The act of being grateful points the way to other things that I am grateful for and so my life changes from feeling somewhat vaguely discontented to realizing how wonderful my life truly is!

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One of the things I am enormously grateful for is my job.  I love teaching yoga and I love my students.  In one of my teacher training sessions, one of my students, who also shared a love of Oprah, shared a book with me:  29 Gifts by Cami Walker.

Here is the description of the book from Amazon:

"At age thirty-five, Cami Walker was burdened by an intensified struggle with multiple sclerosis, a chronic neurological disease that left her debilitated and depressed. Then she received an uncommon “prescription” from South African healer Mbali Creazzo: Give away 29 gifts in 29 days.

29 Gifts is the insightful story of the author's life change as she embraces and reflects on the naturally reciprocal process of giving. Many of Walker's gifts were simple—a phone call, spare change, a Kleenex. Yet the acts were transformative. By Day 29, not only had Walker's health and happiness improved, but she had created a worldwide giving movement. 29 Gifts shows how a simple, daily practice of altruism can dramatically alter your outlook on the world."

Check out the 29 gifts website here.

The book details the "prescription" given to Cami by Mbali Creazzo which I wrote about here.

I know that Thanksgiving is the time of the year that we are already supposed to be be thankful.  So, I thought it would be a good idea to take this time to cultivate an "Attitude of Gratitude" that lasted for more than one day.  You might feel that with the beginning of the holiday season that you are already worried about what you are "getting" other people.  But I encourage you to think about these gifts differently.  A gift could be: a compliment, a hug, giving somebody something you already have (but maybe don't use) that you know they would want.

 

Mbali writes about how the prescription of giving for 29 days changed her life.  She says:  "When I am in service to another person, I am moving from a place of self-centeredness to selflessness.  The act of giving inherently carries gratitude in it.  For me, it is impossible to give without feeling grateful."

Maybe the timing is not quite right for you to begin giving 29 gifts right now.  If it isn't,  wait until you have read the book.  Maybe you start in the new year, as I did on January 4th of last year.  If you do this practice, I guarantee it will cause a shift in your perspective and may very well change your life.

I leave you with my favorite quote about gratitude.  I read this every Thanksgiving to my classes and at my own Thanksgiving dinner table:

Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns what we have into enough, and more. It turns denial into acceptance, chaos to order, confusion to clarity. It can turn a meal into a feast, a house into a home, a stranger into a friend. Gratitude makes sense of our past, brings peace for today, and creates a vision for tomorrow.” - Melody Beattie

If you embark on this mission, please share your experiences below.  May you have a wonderful holiday filled with gratitude for all the blessings in your life!

Namaste,

Karin

 

 

Elevate Your Practice.  Master Your Skills As A Yoga Teacher.

ADVANCED YOGA TEACHER TRAINING PROGRAM

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We are so very fortunate in our area that there is a lot of good yoga.  This is great for yoga students as they can pick and choose the classes and teachers with whom they want to study.  As a teacher it means that you have to work not only on your yoga practice, but your yoga teaching skills as well.  There is a lot more to teaching a great yoga class than simply loving yoga and playing "Simon Says" on your mat.

My goal is to help yoga teachers develop themselves professionally to become better teachers by offering programs on: refining their ability to see alignment, offer fabulous assists, understand relevant anatomy and physiology, create curriculum to help students make progress, find their special niche for teaching from their passion, expand their offerings to supplement their income streams, offer the benefits of yoga to people who may not be able to attend public classes, and more.

This program is modular.  You may take any section individually, or you may take the whole thing together in order to register with Yoga Alliance for your E-RYT 500. The first modules are coming up!

The first weekday module is:

The Language and Tools of Alignment - It starts with Tadasana.

Gain a deep understanding of the principles of alignment. In this module you will develop your eyes to see Tadasana in every pose. From the moment your students take a seat on their mats, your eyes will be trained to see and understand what their particular challenges are and you will be given the tools and knowledge to learn how to help them.

Class begins Wednesday, January 4 and meets every Wednesday for 6 weeks until February 8, from 12:30 to 6:00 pm

To register for this module call Erin, Treehouse Director, at:  215.862.2200

The first weekend module is:

Sanskrit - The Language of Yoga

Discover the ancient language of yoga! Work with pronunciations and definitions of the Sanskrit alphabet, commonly used Sanskrit terms and the Sanskrit terminology for asanas. Discover mantra, the practice of traversing the mind with Sanskrit. Learn how to practice yourself as well as how to make recommendations for your students

Top 10 Reasons to Immerse Yourself in an Advanced Teacher Training with Me!

My goal is to help yoga teachers develop themselves professionally to become better teachers by offering programs on: refining their ability to see alignment, offer fabulous assists, understand relevant anatomy and physiology, create curriculum to help students make progress, find their special niche for teaching from their passion, expand their offerings to supplement their income streams, offer the benefits of yoga to people who may not be able to attend public classes, and more.

Why should you take an advanced yoga teacher training program?  I have listed my top 10 reasons below:

  1. Improve your skills and become a better teacher.

  2. Attract more students to your classes.

  3. Become a leader - on and off the mat.

  4. Expand your knowledge of anatomy to become a better teacher.

  5. Gain confidence in giving skillful assists.

  6. Learn how to earn more money teaching yoga.

  7. Find your niche as a yoga teacher.

  8. Help your students advance their own practices, physically, emotionally,  and spiritually.

  9. Learn the specific tools and insights to run successful private lessons, workshops and retreats.

  10. Improve your own life and the lives of others through the practice of yoga.

What is up with "Venting"?

The Five Layers of the Body

The Five Layers of the Body

My intention as a yoga teacher is to teach "alignment based yoga".  Maybe that sounds obvious, after all who would teach yoga in a non-aligned way?  That would just be unsafe.  Proper physical alignment in postures is important to stretching and strengthening safely.  But physically aligned poses just touch one layer of our being.

Annamaya Kosha:  The physical, or food layer.  This layer contains our muscles, bones and organs.  This is the physical level of doing postures "correctly".
Pranamaya Kosha:  The energetic level.  This is the level of our breath, our energy, our spirit.  We do Pranayama, or breath work, to access this layer.
Manomaya Kosha: The mental layer.  This is the level of our senses, awareness and perception of things.  This is where we experience the postures and the effects they have on us.
Vijnamaya Kosha:  The intellectual layer.  This layer contains our ability to discern, to discriminate. This is where we are concerned with what is behind the postures.
Anandamaya Kosha: The bliss layer.  This is where we recognize our connection to something greater than ourselves.

There is more to yoga than just doing postures correctly; it has to do with how we perceive and act in our world, it also has to do with the quality of our health and energy and our interactions with others.  Our yoga practice really begins the moment we step off our mat.

In my Yoga Teacher Training Program we talk about the Yamas and the Niyamas; the ethical precepts of yoga.  The first one is ahimsa, or non-violence and the second one is satya, or truthfulness.  Recently a student had this question:  “I was thinking about the yamas and niyamas, about ahimsa and satya- and I'm wondering does complaining or 'venting' fall into either of these categories? I often vent to my boyfriend about people in my life (like my friends or my mom) if I get frustrated with them or annoyed at something they did or said. I don't think this is gossiping, because I am just venting my frustrations, but I feel like it is something! I'm just not sure which yama it would fall under.”

Venting is something we all do and while it sometimes feels good to get things off your chest, it also doesn’t feel good.  As the student comments, “…it is something!”

There are several reasons why it is “something”.

The First Two Yamas: Ahimsa and Satya

The yamas are considered restraints.  As I mentioned above, we have only talked about ahimsa and satya so far.  So I will only look at these two; although the yamas and niyamas are meant to be looked at in relationship to each other because they are truly intertwined.  Is venting your frustrations harmful to another?  Maybe not if the person about whom you are talking doesn’t hear it.  But what if they did?  They might not like what you said about them.  Would what you said be harmful?  If the answer is “yes”, then you know that you are not in alignment with ahimsa.  In terms of satya, or truthfulness is what you said true?  Or, is it just your opinion?  While you may not like what your friend or mother did, that is your opinion.  You don’t know why they acted the way they did.  People do things for their own reasons.  More about his under The Four Agreements later.

The Laws of Karma

The real question to ask is how does venting harm you?   This is where the laws of karma come in.  Karma is defined as anything you think, do or say.  Thoughts and words plant seeds as much as actions do. One of the reasons it feels like “something” when you vent about others is that it is planting negative seeds.  Planting seeds of gossiping or complaining causes those things to happen to you.  Just like planting a tomato seed will only produce tomatoes and not pumpkins. Have you ever been hurt by what others have said about you?  The best cure for that is to not say things about others.  This is a challenging but extremely rewarding practice.  I think it is human nature to vent our frustrations, but nothing good ever comes out of it.  While I initially think I will feel better when I get it off of my chest, I almost always feel a little cheap or dirty, a little something, afterwards.  In other words, I don’t feel good about it.

The Four Agreements

While these agreements come from a different discipline, I think they are applicable here.

  1. Be Impeccable with your Word:Speak with integrity. Say only what you mean. Avoid using the Word to speak against yourself or to gossip about others. Use the power of your Word in the direction of truth and love.

  2. Don’t Take Anything Personally
    Nothing others do is because of you. What others say and do is a projection of their own reality, their own dream. When you are immune to the opinions and actions of others, you won’t be the victim of needless suffering.

  3. Don’t Make Assumptions
    Find the courage to ask questions and to express what you really want. Communicate with others as clearly as you can to avoid misunderstandings, sadness and drama. With just this one agreement, you can completely transform your life.

  4. Always Do Your Best
    Your best is going to change from moment to moment; it will be different when you are healthy as opposed to sick. Under any circumstance, simply do your best, and you will avoid self-judgment, self-abuse, and regret. 

Again, I will refer to the first two only.  (What a coincidence!)  Venting falls under the category of Being Impeccable with your Word which relates to satya.  This one is simple; venting is not using your word in the direction of truth and love.  In my study of yoga philosophy I have learned that the ancient seers believed that the universe was created by sound.  Even in the Bible, Genesis starts with: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God and the Word was God.” In yoga there is this idea that the sound “AUM” is the sound of creation.  Scientists have discovered that there is a sound, a vibration in the universe that corresponds to the sound of AUM.  We have all heard that we have the power to create our world with our words, or to destroy someone else’s. In order to manifest things in our lives we often have to speak them out loud.  What do we want to create? What are we creating with our words either consciously or unconsciously?  Again, since karma is everything you think, do or say we need to pay more attention to our thoughts, actions and speech.  There is an interesting story I heard about our thought patterns:

A man was looking to relocate his family in a new town.  He decided to take a drive one day to check out the town he wanted to move into.  He stopped at a gas station to fill his tank and he asked the attendant what the people were like who lived in this town.  The gas station attendant was very wise and asked the motorist what the people who lived in his town were like.  The man said that the people in his town were very nice, hard-working, trustworthy and always ready to lend a hand to someone in need.  The gas station attendant said, “Well, I guess you will find people to be the same around here.”  The man thanked him and drove off.   On another day another man was looking to relocate to this same town.  He pulled into the gas station and asked the attendant what the people were like who lived in this town.  The attendant asked what the people who lived in his town were like.  The man said he hated the people in his town and that was why he was looking to move away.  He said the people were mean and he didn’t trust his neighbors.  The gas station attendant said, “Well, I guess you will find people to be the same around here.”

The Divine Truth of the Seventh Chakra

According to medical intuitive, Caroline Myss, the “Divine Truth” of the seventh chakra is to “Live in the present moment”.  The last reason I can think of as to why venting is “something” is the idea that we are usually venting about something that has already happened.  Another story: 

Monks take a vow of celibacy and are not supposed to have contact with women.  Once, long, long ago, two monks were walking along a path.  They came upon a finely dressed women who asked the monks if they could carry her across the stream as there was no bridge or other way to get across without ruining her dress. The younger monk felt very uncomfortable about touching the woman and declined.  The older monk picked up the woman, carried her across the stream and set her down safely on the other side.

The two monks walked along for a little while in silence.  Finally the younger monk asked the older monk how he felt about breaking his vow and touching a woman.  The older monk looked at the younger monk and said, “Brother, I put that woman down a half an hour ago.  Why are you still carrying her around?”

We cannot control our friends or our parents.  And we know that people do things for their own reasons.  How much of our energy are we tying up by living in the past and complaining about what someone did previously?  Can we learn to unplug, to let go and to bring all of our energy into the present moment?  Better yet, can we learn to bless our friends, neighbors, parents or kids as they move along on their journey while we attend to ours?  Think of how much more energy we will have for ourselves and our own affairs if we let go of the affairs of others.

Simple but not easy!

Metta Meditation – May all beings be happy and free. 

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Metta meditation, or loving kindness meditation, is the practice concerned with the cultivation of benevolence or kindness.  The practice consists of silent repetitions of phrases like “may you be happy” or “may you be free from suffering”.  These feelings are directed initially towards oneself, then a loved one, a neutral person and finally a difficult person.

This particular meditation is directed towards freeing the person doing the meditating from the negative thoughts associated with holding grudges or ill-will against another being.  Holding a grudge against someone, or being angry with someone is a lot like “drinking poison and hoping the other person dies”.  The only person being harmed is the person holding the negative emotion.  The other person may be totally oblivious to your feelings about them.

To start, come to a comfortable sitting position with the spine erect.  Take a nice deep inhale followed by a couple of long slow exhale.  Do this a few times until you no longer feel any power behind the letting go of the breath.  Imagine the love and light of Divine Consciousness (your idea of God or the wisdom of your own heart) pouring over you and washing through you, revealing the purity of your own heart.  Feel yourself totally safe, loved and enclosed in this radiant light.  Repeat these lovingkindness blessings to yourself:

May I be at peace, May my heart remain open
May I awaken to the light of my own true nature,
May I be healed, May I be a source of healing for all beings.

The second step of Metta extends blessing to our loved ones.  Bring a loved one to mind.  See them in as much detail as possible.  Imagine the light of Divine Consciousness pouring over them and revealing the purity of their own heart.  Imagine them totally safe, loved and enclosed in this radiant light.  Then bless them:

 May you be at peace, May your heart remain open
May you awaken to the light of your own true nature,
May you be healed, May you be a source of healing for all beings.

The third step of Metta extends blessings to a neutral person.  Someone you may come into contact with in your day, but you don’t really know; like the cashier at the grocery store.  Bring this person to mind.  See them in as much detail as possible.  Imagine the light of Divine Consciousness pouring over them and revealing the purity of their own heart.  Imagine them totally safe, loved and enclosed in this radiant light.  Then bless them: 

May you be at peace, May your heart remain open
May you awaken to the light of your own true nature,
May you be healed, May you be a source of healing for all beings.

A fourth step of Metta extends blessings to someone who may be a little bit or a lot hard to love.  Start with someone who is just a little hard to love.  It is quite an advanced practice to send Lovingkindness to someone with whom you have great difficulty.  But remember, this practice is as much for yourself as it is for someone else!  Bring this person to mind.  See them in as much detail as possible.  Imagine the light of Divine Consciousness pouring over them and revealing the purity of their own heart.  Try to remember that they are just trying to do the best they can with where they are on the path.   Imagine them totally safe, loved and enclosed in this radiant light.  Imagine this light washing away all of their negativity and illusion.  Then bless them:

May you be at peace, May your heart remain open
May you awaken to the light of your own true nature,
May you be healed, May you be a source of healing for all beings.

Notice how these practices affect your own heart.  Do you feel more open?  Do you feel more of a sense of lovingkindness?  If judgmental thoughts about others occur during the day, take a moment to send lovingkindness blessings first to yourself and then to them.

The chant that I have been doing in class is a lovingkindness chant.  Use it to help ground you in a sense of compassion and lovingkindness:

Lokah Samastha Sukhino Bhavantu

Listen to Russil Paul's version of this chant here.

Which is poetically translated as:

May all beings have happiness and the causes of happiness.
May all beings be free from suffering and the causes of suffering.
May all beings never be parted from freedom’s true joy.
May all beings rest in equanimity free from attachment and aversion.

Metta meditation - May all beings be happy and free.  Not just me and the people I love, but all beings, even the ones I may have difficulty with!  (gulp!)

Yoga Lifestyle: Self Care Rituals – Abhyanga or oil-massage

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As the weather begins to get cooler, I begin my daily practice of Abhyanga.  My skin gets very dry in the winter when the humidity drops and we turn the heat on. I used to get painful cracks in my fingers until I learned this Ayurvedic technique:  Abhyanga is a Sanskrit word that means "oil massage".  It is a form of Ayurvedic medicine that involves massage of the body with warm oil. The oil can be pre-medicated with herbs for specific conditions.

I do this every morning before I take a shower.

  • First I take my bottle of oil* and I put it in a sink of hot water to warm it.  While the oil is warming I begin a dry rubbing of my body to increase circulation and remove dead skin cells which helps the oil to soak in.

  • Using exfoliating gloves, I rub down my whole body.  I use rather vigorous long back and forth strokes on the arms and legs and gentler circular movements on the face, chest, knees, shoulders, neck and belly.  While I am doing this I pay attention to my body and send it lots of love.  I appreciate all that my body does for me on a daily basis that I usually take for granted.**  Don’t forget your feet!

  • Then I pour out a bit of oil on my hands and rub it into my body. If I am washing my hair, I will massage my scalp first, but I often skip this step on days that I don’t wash my hair.  I put oil on all parts of my body using the same strokes that I used for the dry rubbing; long straight strokes on the limbs and circular motions on the other body parts.  I do my face first and work my way down, doing my hands and feet last. (I am careful not to get oil on the bottoms of my feet.  That would make it very slippery and dangerous as I step into the shower.) As I massage each part, I mentally thank each body part for doing its job and for moving me through my world.  If I have any part of my body that is injured or just feels like it needs a little TLC, I send a little extra love to that particular spot.**

  • If I have time, I will sit for a few minutes and allow the oil to soak in. This is a good time to nourish my physical self with thoughts of gratitude for all the things mybody does for me.  **  On most work days I practice feeling gratitude for my body while I am dry-rubbing and massaging the oil in.  I usually let the oil soak in while I brush my teeth.

  • Then I turn on the shower and get in.  I allow the water to run over my body, but I only use soap on the essential parts.

  • When finished I pat myself dry and get dressed.  My body feels warm, well loved and lightly moisturized.

According to the Charaka Samhita Vol. 1, V:88-89 (One of the great texts of Ayurveda):

“The body of one who uses oil massage regularly does not become affected much even if subjected to accidental injuries, or strenuous work. By using oil massage daily, a person is endowed with pleasant touch, trimmed body parts and becomes strong, charming and least affected by old age”

*About the oil

In my early studies of anatomy I remember learning that the skin is the largest organ in the body.  I was taught that it will absorb whatever you put on it.  My teacher told us that if you rub a clove of garlic on your foot it will give you garlic breath!  She suggested that you never put anything on your skin that you would not put into your mouth.  The only moisturizer I use on my skin is oil from my pantry.  I have used extra virgin olive oil, sesame oil and coconut oil.  I like to use coconut oil in the summer time as it feels lighter on my skin.  I often scent my body oil with a  few drops of lavender essential oil.

There are different oils you should use depending on your dosha or constitution: If you are vata use sesame, almond or olive oil;  for pitta coconut, almond or sunflower; for kapha use sesame, safflower or corn.  (To find out your dosha you can take this quiz.)

Besides preventing dry, cracked skin in the winter, there are other benefits of abhyanga:

  1. Nourishes the entire body—decreases the effects of aging

  2. Imparts muscle tone and vigor to the dhatus (tissues) of the body

  3. Imparts a firmness to the limbs

  4. Lubricates the joints

  5. Increases circulation

  6. Stimulates the internal organs of the body

  7. Assists in elimination of impurities from the body

  8. Moves the lymph, aiding in detoxification

  9. Increases stamina

  10. Calms the nerves

  11. Benefits sleep—better, deeper sleep, especially if you do abhyanga at night right before bed

  12. Enhances vision

  13. Makes hair (scalp) grow luxuriantly, thick, soft and glossy

  14. Softens and smoothens skin; wrinkles are reduced and disappear

  15. Pacifies Vata and Pitta and stimulates Kapha.

 

**The part about appreciating your body is an important step in your daily self-care.  All too often we take our body for granted.  If we get injured, rather than listening to our bodies, we often get impatient and aggravated.  Our bodies have a miraculous ability to heal.  Sometimes, all we need to do for this to happen is to allow it to happen and appreciate it.

Our bodies are always sending us messages.  In her book Healing Consciousness, OB-Gyn and Breast Oncologist Dr. Beth Dupree talks about how our bodies are often communicating with us.  We will often get subtle impressions and inklings or sudden urges or instincts to act on something, or not to act.  If we listen to these urges, they tend to guide us. If we ignore these messages, they will become stronger and more insistent until one day they “hit us upside the head with a 2 x 4”.  These events are usually major health crises.  I recommend that you use abhyanga as a means to love your body and to get in touch with the subtle messages it is sending you.

The Eight Steps to a Yogic Lifestyle - Step # 1 - Ahimsa or Non-Violence

Sometimes the stages or steps of yoga are described as a ladder; you progress in an orderly fashion from one stage to the next. At other times the stages of yoga are described as spokes of a wheel that radiate in toward a center. In either case, the point is to be working toward a more highly evolved state, or Samadhi. In reality, the stages tend to overlap each other and lack of progress in one stage may send you back to one of the other stages looking for answers.
For instance, say you want to work on meditation, but you have a hard time sitting still; you can’t get comfortable, you have difficulty concentrating and you find your mind filled with thoughts of anger. If you have trouble sitting, maybe you need to look at the third step on the path: asana. Perhaps doing more asana would help you open your hips to sit more comfortably, or learning how to prop yourself into a more comfortable positions would be a good idea. If you have difficulty concentrating (Dharana) it might be because you feel strongly pulled by your senses (Pratyhara) and have trouble closing your eyes and turning your attention inward. You might need to go back one step and look at where your attention is being pulled to. Or, especially if you are struggling with negative emotions like anger, you would have to go all of the way back to the Yamas and the Niyamas and see where you are being tripped up by not observing moral restraints (Yama) or your personal observances (Niyama).

In one of her contemplation articles, Swami Nirmalanda talks about this:
"You are the light of consciousness, manifested in a unique and individualized form. That light shines through your eyes, fills your heart and sparks your greatest ideas. The light of your own being arises from its source, spills into your life and fills your relationships with light and love and joy.

This happens consistently and reliably only when you have cleared the pathway. The pathway for the light of consciousness is your mind. This means you must do some yogic work on your mind, not just yoga for your body and breath. I would like to make two related points here: 1) working on your body is not enough; 2) when you work on your body, more begins to open up.

Working on Your Body Is Not Enough
Perhaps you expect your yoga practice to perfect your body. If so, is this a reasonable prediction of your future? I know many yogis who have been practicing for decades. This means they are now decades older than when they began. While their aging process is profoundly different than any non-yogi, none of them expect their body to return to the condition it was in when they were 15 or 25 years old (assuming it was perfect back then).

Still, if your goal is to perfect your body, does that mean you will shine with the light of consciousness when your body is perfect? If so, the fashion models, TV & movie stars, professional athletes and singer-dancers would be enlightened. This is clearly not the case!

Thus working on your body is not enough. You must begin aligning your life with the principles of light by following yoga’s precepts for living, so your own inner radiance can shine through your life. Yoga’s precepts for living are titled the Yamas and Niyamas. There are five of each, which we’ll explore in next few months."

The Eight Stages of Yoga are:
Yama – moral restraints. There are five of these: Ahimsa (non-violence), Satya (truthfulness), Asteya (non-stealing), Brahmacarya (restraint), Aparigraha (non-hoarding)
Niyama – observances. There are five of these: Saucha (cleanliness), Santosha (contentment), Tapas (effort), Svadhyaya (study), Ishvara Pranidhana (surrender to something greater than yourself).
Asana – physical postures
Pranayama – breath work
Pratyhara – withdrawal of the senses
Dharana - concentration
Dhyana - meditation
Samadhi – enlightenment

In my teacher training, I talk about the stages of yoga in a ladder form. We always start with the first Yama, which is Ahimsa. The Sanskrit word Himsa means violence. Whenever you put an “a” in front of a word, it means “not that”. So, Ahimsa means non-violence. I think most of us would describe ourselves as non-violent. And I hope that is true. We don’t go around killing each other, or even hitting each other. I remember when I adopted my son I had to sign an agreement with the adoption agency that I would not use corporal punishment as a means of disciplining my child. Maybe because my parents used to hit me, I had no intention of ever hitting my child, but still, signing the form was interesting and reinforced my practice of ahimsa.
But is outward violence the only form of violence? I like to think of these practices as having layers or a series of concentric circles; you can get closer to the core, or you can be working out on the periphery. You may not act out in a violent way, but do you have murderous thoughts? Have you ever said to your kid (not meaning it literally) “If you get mud on my clean floor again, I’m going to kill you”? Of course you aren’t going to kill your kid, but what does the choice of language do to our psyche? How angry are we? Sometimes students will ask what the difference is if I think these thoughts but I never act on them; nobody will know but me. And I would say to them, but, you will know. Why are you so unimportant that you are willing to harbor those thoughts? This is your mind, your conscience, your soul that you are talking about. Inside of your head, you are the only one who matters. This is a deep level of integrity to practice non-violence at this level. It is also you alone who sits on your meditation cushion and practices turning inward. If you have even these seemingly innocuous thoughts of violence in there, is the inside of your head a comfortable place to be?

Peace and Ahimsa
In her book Practicing Peace in times of War, Pema Chodron, an American Buddhist nun, talks about how to cultivate peace. She says:

War and Peace start in the hearts of individuals. Strangely enough, even though all beings would like to live in peace, our method for obtaining peace over the generations seems not to be very effective: we seek peace and happiness by going to war. This can occur at the level of our domestic situation, in our relationships with those close to us. Maybe we come home from work and we’re tired and we just want some peace; but at home all hell is breaking loose for one reason or another, and so we start yelling at people. What is our motivation? We want some happiness and ease and peace, but what we do is get even more worked up and we get everyone else worked up, too. This is a familiar scenario in our homes, our workplaces, in our communities, even when we are just driving our cars. We’re just driving along and someone cuts in front of us and then what? Well, we don’t like it, so we roll down the window and scream at them.”

“War begins when we harden our hearts, and we harden them easily – in minor ways and then in quite serious, major ways, such as hatred and prejudice – whenever we feel uncomfortable. It’s so sad, really, because our motivation in hardening our hearts is to find some kind of ease, some freedom from the distress that we’re feeling.”
“Someone once gave me a poem with a line in it that offers a good definition of peace: “Softening what is rigid in our hearts.” We can talk about ending war, we can do everything in our power, but war is never going to end as long as our hearts are hardened against each other.

In the Yoga Sutras, Patanjali gives us a way to measure our practice of Ahimsa:

Ahimsaa-pratishthaayaam tat-samnidhau vaira-tyaagah. Patanjali Y.S. 2.35
All others will cease to feel hostility in the presence of one who is firmly established in ahimsa.

If you are firmly established in the practice of non-violence, others will cease to be violent in your presence. This means that you don’t feel hostility towards anyone. It even means that you don’t think harmful thoughts towards anyone. Not only do you refrain from hitting someone, you even refrain from yelling at them or from making snide or sarcastic remarks. (Yes, to that deep a level!) But, as human beings we have violent impulses. What do we do when they arise? First, we acknowledge these feelings or impulses. Second, we wait with them. Remember the old count to ten technique? Do it! Breathe. Wait it out. If you truly practice this, the violent urge or impulse will fade and eventually disappear.

Again, Swami Nirmalanda says:
"This is not suppression, denial or avoidance. You’ve already tried these strategies and know that they don’t work. Now you’re taking the intelligent path: simply don’t hurt others. You’re only tempted to hurt them because you’re not getting your own way. But don’t take it out on them. Even if they could improve the situation, hurting them is not the most effective way to make progress. Thus intelligence demands that you don’t act on your harm-causing impulses, even though they will continue to arise inside for some time. It takes time to eradicate your own violent tendencies.

You have violent impulses because you are a human being. It is a human characteristic. Everyone feels this way sometimes, until they’ve used yoga to become free. You will feel like hurting someone but, since you’re a yogi, you are simply not going to do it. What do you do instead? Simply feel it. Feel the violent impulse. Don’t deny that you feel like killing that person, but don’t kill them. The yogic key is this: you must be aware that you feel like killing them. Let the feeling arise; don’t even put words to it. Just feel it, and while you are feeling it, don’t act on it.

If you let it arise, and you don’t lie to yourself about the feeling, it will only last a short time. It might last 45 seconds, or it might last 3 minutes. But it won’t last long. If it lasts longer, you weren’t actually allowing yourself to feel it; you were trying to justify it, or trying to figure out what to do about it. Just feel it. It dissolves, like fog in sunlight.

That is exactly what it is, brain-fog. It is the clouds of confusion, the mists of delusion, and the fog of dependency mucking up your innards. When you go outside and stand in the fog, which I love to do especially at sunrise, the sun comes up and shines through the fog. Slowly the fog dissipates. It melts away.

You must do the same thing with your brain-fog. Stand in the fog, being aware of the fog. Your awareness is the sunlight. It is the light of consciousness, and it dissolves the fog. It dissolves your anger and fear; it dissolves your desire, need and greed; it dissolves your regret and worry; it dissolves your blame and guilt. It dissolves all the reasons you want to hurt someone or something."

Discussing Ahimsa is very interesting. As you can see, it is not just outward violence that we are talking about, it is subtle violence. It can be found in thoughts inside our heads or in snide or sarcastic remarks. Have you ever made a snarky remark to someone where you thought you were being funny and that other person just didn’t take it that way? (Has that only happened to me???)

The beautiful thing about the Yoga Sutras is that all it says is “non-violence”. It is up to us to think about it, tease it apart and understand it on any and all levels. It is up to us to examine and question ourselves. I like to ask my yoga teacher trainees this question.  They are always surprised when I ask it.  o, let me leave you with this question to think about: “Is texting and act of violence?”

What do you think? Leave an answer in the comments below.

Pose of the Month for October - Tittibhasana or Firefly

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The word Tittibha means an insect like a firefly.  This is an arm balancing pose where the torso and legs are in a Wide-legged Seated Forward Fold and the arms are doing the same work as in Crow.

That should give you an idea of some of the warm ups and modifications for this pose:  either seated or standing Wide-legged Forward Folds  and Crow.

Since this pose requires a deep forward folding ability we will be working on stretching the hamstrings and glutes in postures like Triangle, Pyramid and Gate Pose.

In addition, we will keep working on opening the hips with poses like Warrior II, Cobbler's Pose and Lizard Lunge.

We’ll stretch the upper back with our arms in Eagle pose.

Since this pose starts from a squatting position, you should expect to work on stretching the quads and calves in order to come into a deep squat.   Oh, and let’s not forget some abdominal work in Boat Pose. Does that have your mouth watering for the month of October?  I hope, so.  I am excited.  And don’t worry; “While it is nice to have an end to journey towards, it is the journey that matters in the end.”  (Ursula LeGuin)   I’ll talk you through it.  It will be fun!

I’ll see you in class!     Karin

The Struggle Between Accepting Where I Am and Trying/Wanting To Do More.

In a recent survey I sent out, I asked students how I can help them with their yoga practice. I have been thinking about one particular response I received. I am so grateful for the person who submitted this response because I think it is something we all struggle with. It has to do with the very nature of practice itself.

The comment is: “I struggle between accepting where I am and trying/wanting to do more.”

Are you practicing because you want to be able to achieve a certain pose; or a particular measurement of flexibility? While it is good to have a goal to work towards, it is the journey that matters most.

My family got into watching the show America’s Got Talent. I don’t often watch a lot of TV, but somehow I was drawn to watching this show. Contestants vie to win first the judge’s votes and then the TV audience’s vote to be the one winner who will receive $1,000,000.00 and a headline show in Las Vegas.

In the first round of auditions, a lot of the contestants do very well. It’s as if they feel they have nothing to lose and they give it their all. In the second round, you can feel the fear and anxiety in some of the contestants. The focus seems to shift to everything they could gain and a lot of them choke. The contestants who win seem to be those who are doing what they love to do and they would do it no matter what. They might be nervous, but once they start performing, they seem to get into that zone or state of flow that makes everything work smoothly.

What does this have to do with struggling to be where you are and wanting to do more? If you are doing your yoga practice to achieve a split, for example, you may try and work very hard to get there. But in the process, if you are focused on the end result only, like the show in Las Vegas, you could miss all of the juice in between. One of the main teachings from the Bhagavad Gita is:

You have a right to your actions,

But never to your action’s fruits.

Act for the action’s sake.

And do not be attached to inaction.

-B.G. ch.2, v. 47

Your yoga practice has to be done for the sake of practicing itself, not just to get certain poses. It is fine to work towards certain postures, but you are not guaranteed to be able to perform that pose. Not everyone’s body is suited to do every pose. Patthabi Jois, the father of Ashtanga Yoga, famously said, “Practice, practice, all is coming.” I’ve talked about this quote before. What does it mean? Does it mean if I practice diligently that I will be able to achieve the pose? Or, does it mean in the process of practicing will I learn what is important and what is not important in the pose or in life? 

In the last line I quoted from the Bhagavad Gita, it talks about not being attached to inaction. The yogi must take action. The progress one makes depends on the intensity of the practice. In the Yoga Sutras it says this:

To the keen and intent practitioner the result comes very quickly. Y.S - 1.21

The time necessary for success further depends on whether the practice is mild medium or intense. Y.S. – 1.22 

Are you a “keen and intent practitioner”?  Is your practice mild, moderate or intense?  Intense doesn’t necessarily mean hard.  It is far better to practice a little every day than it is to go all out once a week. While Patanjali is talking about the attainment of Samadhi (or liberation) in this Sutra, the same principles can apply to our physical practice.

I know that I have worked really hard to try and achieve certain postures.  But if I only focus on the goal, I often miss something along the way.  If I am doing something incorrectly, and I am not aware of that fact, it may be the one thing that is keeping me from getting that posture.  Often, if you have been making progress on a particular pose and then you can’t seem to get past a certain point, it could be a sign that you are doing something wrong.  Something is out of alignment and you have to figure out what that is before you can make further progress.  Just pushing harder won’t make it happen and could possibly lead to injury.

I once asked my teacher why I couldn’t balance in Handstand without the wall.  She watched me do the pose and then she told me that I had too much movement in my shoulders.  I would move into alignment and then past it and then I would have to bring myself back to center again.  All of this swaying back and forth makes balancing very hard.  The way to fix that was to get stronger so that when I lifted up into Handstand, I lifted up right into alignment.

In order to make progress, I have to ask myself a couple of questions.  Do I really want to do this pose?  If so, am I willing to put in the amount of effort required to master it?  Am I willing to look at myself and my alignment and see where I am not seeing myself clearly (Avidya – not seeing reality as it is.  The first klesha, or obstacle).  Am I willing to back up in order to go forward?  Am I willing to do the practices because I enjoy doing so, not because I only want to get the posture?  These are the question a keen and intent practitioner must ask in order to make progress.  It is not enough to want to do something, it is important to take action and apply oneself to the task. In addition, the task must be joyful, or you won't really want to do it.