yoga being and becoming

yoga being and becoming

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

yoga being and becoming are addressed in this lovely quote

“change is the essence of life…be willing to surrender what you are for what you could become”… yoga practice is a strong reminder of change. Someone can to class yesterday with a sore/stiff shoulder. The practices we did proved very therapeutic to her, and when we left she remarked about it. The photo above draws us into movement – from storm to calm. To some degree you have to know where you are and have a idea of where you want to be, even though there is nothing wrong, in the wholeness of the moment, where you are.

BKS Iyengar wrote: ” life inevitably oscillates, moves, and changes between the known and the unknown. So often we are not ready to accept the flow of life. We seek freedom but cling to “bondage”.  We do not allow life to “happen” and take on its own shape. Conflicts, opposition, clash of interests and ideas, collision of ego (personal and collective), and limited understanding are all inevitable parts of life. The yogic solution to all these vicissitudes is to study how to adapt and build ourselves up. The key is to control the emotional disturbances and the mental fluctuations”

There are a few practices on my cd, YOGA MIND which will perhaps help you with this process. Starting where you are, just kind of settle into practice and the journey of it. Also check out my workshops for some key peaceful practices

Yoga For Energy

Yoga For Energy: Reflecting today on how we want increased energy but we forget that energy is part of the subtle body.  Healing takes place in our consciousness and then finds its way into our physical body.

yoga  energyYoga Energy: I hear people say “ I’m tired” a lot. I sometimes say it too! We turn to Yoga to increase our energy, but it isn’t a straightforward answer as to how to go about this. There are so many ways, and different practices, how does one evaluate which remedy to choose. Here are at least 10 ways to use yoga to improve your energy

Make your practice purposeful.

Start where you are: A good place to begin the query is to ask yourself: What kind of tired am I? Energy is subtle, and each of us needs to tune into what our spectrum is. Think gas tank, full, empty, somewhere in between.

If you are tired, but have strength and feel up to it, an energizing sequence of poses can do the trick. Step onto your mat, sit with yourself, and then map out a practice that meets your needs.

If you have really low energy due to extreme fatigue, think less is more. Minimize your asana practice. You can keep working on strength, but avoid the very strenuous poses and really long holds. Add some rest time between poses. Move when you are ready. Think low and slow like (vegan ?) BBQ ribs!

Shouldn’t I take deeper breaths?

Inhalations are energizing and exhalations are calming as a rule.Never be pushy with your breath.If you feel lethargic yes, you can get a bit peppier. Inhaling through the nose and sighing it out with an AAHH can be refreshing too. Sometimes just staying with classic yogic 3 part breath (belly/ribs/chest) is the ticket. Keep it simple. When in doubt, consult.

Change it up.

A nice walk followed by legs up the wall is refreshing, and boosts endorphins. Or, practice restoratives instead. Many of the active poses, including back bends) can be ‘energizing’ in an uplifting way without recruiting as much muscular effort. Think rest and digest. Think bridge pose over a block, child’s pose over a bolster.

Savasana works.

Yes, make silence and stillness are your new BFFs and conserve energy. It’s like money and banking. If you keep spending without earning, you deplete your capital. Relaxation promotes renewal.

Doctor up your posture.

We lose a lot of energy just by dropping our heads forward. Use asana as a therapeutic remedy for tilts and twists and drops in your posture.

Communicate

Say no. Sometimes when we don’t want to do something but go ahead and do it anyway, we feel resentful or frustrated. The negativity robs us of joy and inner peace. Protect and serve your self when possible. Think airline stewardess advising you to take oxygen from your mask first, before passing it to someone else.

Feeding the System

Check your diet. Is it rich in sugar and caffeine? If at 4pm, your energy dips, exchange the false highs for something with more nutrients. Drink water.

Sleep

Burning the candle at both ends is just that. Typically, for insomniacs, the recipe involves less stimulus during the day. Cut back. Get home and in bed in time to nurture yourself. Naps are good.

Focus

Get focused. Worry is draining. Get your AUM on – seriously! Mantra practice, mindfulness, get present, get prana.

Just Be

Instead of trying so hard to ‘improve’ energy, remember that your innermost core is the energy body, the body of pure light. You are prana embodied, but what you do with this gift is an ongoing learning experience.

 

Yoga Workshop to Support the Immune System In Jersey City

Yoga Workshop to Support the Immune System In Jersey City

Yapana Restorative Yoga Therapy: This is a practice that uses a specific sequence of prop-supported yoga poses, called Being poses with purpose, intention and direction. Strategic support helps meet your body/mind where you are, supporting an enhanced immune system. Constant stress throws the body off, frazzles the nerves and makes us impatient, irritable and susceptible to compromised health. Let’s stimulate the rest and digest with a soothing practice that allows our adrenal glands to repair and our nervous system to reboot. All are welcome and will reap the benefits of the practice, whether you are a dedicated student, a yoga instructor interested in learning how to integrate restorative yoga therapy into classes or as a complete practice.

immune system reboot

Child’s pose

December is such a busy time of year, with holidays, travel, extra financial and social pressures. All can be exciting but as well, depleting to our immune system. Once you are at the level of “burnt out”, it is harder to get your health on track. The best thing you can give yourself, is the gift of renewed energy and a rebalanced mind set. To teach this, it is helpful to have experienced it first hand, therefore, this workshop will appeal to all, both teachers and students.

To register, click here (Yoga In The Heights) P.S. Sunday, the parking is free on streets

To view flyer, click:

Restorative Yoga Workshop

free yoga in jersey city heights

free yoga

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

free yoga in jersey city heights

this weekend, on Saturday October 25th come meet me for a free yoga class in jersey city heights…bring a friend! I have 3 classes on the schedule right now with several workshops in the making

Q.How can I FEEL BETTER through YOGA?

A. Regular practice of YOGA will help you FEEL BETTER by
*Increasing strength, flexibility and cardiovascular endurance
*Lubricating joints, tendons, ligaments
*Improving overall mood and energy level
*Working out tensions in the body
*Preventing disease
*Detoxifying the body and delaying the ageing process
*Helps control overactive emotions
*Decongesting the toxins from the organs glands and deep tissues

Q. How can I THINK BETTER through YOGA?

A. Regular practice of YOGA will help you THINK BETTER by
*Harnessing the power of your mind
*Improving memory
*Improving communications skills and creativity
*Decreasing the effects of stress through its meditative aspect
*Helps create focus and inner balance
*Quiets mind so one becomes freer to make better decisions
*Peace of mind creates efficiency and productivity

Q.How can I LEAD A BETTER LIFE through YOGA?

A. Regular practice of YOGA will help you LEAD a BETTER Life by
*Teaching self-mastery
*Access inner resources of confidence and inspiration
*Improves performance
*Long -lasting sense of inner happiness an positive outlook
*Access intuition
* Free-spirited ness that translates into being centered during stressful situations

 

yoga and patience quotes

yoga and patience quotes

“you will get there when you are meant to get there. So relax, breathe, and be patient”.

I love this quote. We rarely use that word anymore, but it is a good one to pull out and examine when you can. We seem to practice impatience a lot because that is what we are used to. You may even have done it today at the grocery store when you were waiting in line and the person ahead of you was taking FOREVER to pay. You rolled your eyes, stamped your foot. Everything has to be done yesterday or it isn’t good. Well, I don’t think speed is the same as intelligence.

Hey we all have our own pace. Interesting to watch my students today doing a simple vinyasa with forward folding. Each was at their own tempo and it was great because I could tell they were watching their alignment and waiting for their breath, pretty much all I could ask for. Science lately is revealing that chasing a stretch with vehemence does not change your body’s set postural point and may in fact, put you at risk for injury. I prefer to set up a pose with a great prop and settle in for a bit. Wait, and let the pose be revealed a bit. Wait some more and it may get interesting.

yoga and patience quotes

yoga and patience quotes

yoga and pain management

yoga and pain management: “A lot of the pain that we are dealing with are really only thoughts” hmmm….

There is a growing body of evidence that yoga can help with chronic pain. Now, if you are actually in pain then hearing that your thoughts are causing it will probably frustrate you. However, you will be among an estimated 50 to 75 million Americans who are living with chronic pain, and to know that your mind is involved, may actually help move you to a better place. This does not mean that your experience of pain is not real, but, what it does involve is that the source of pain is not limited to where you think it starts from or where you are feeling it.

Chronic pain is a complex issue. Fortunately, when you think of it as a mind,body,spirit ‘issue’, then you can treat it from the toolbox of the yoga system, which will include restorative yoga, breathing practices, relaxation, and meditation.

The body basically detects pain through a sensing of incoming threat- which then stimulates and stresses certain nerves in the spinal column and then travels to the brain and becomes a message of suffering/anger/fear/ and other reactions. When pain becomes chronic, our nervous system has been taught already what will trigger pain, and it may be so sensitized and protective that it is like dialing 911 all the time. It can be exhausting on all levels.

There is more to it, but certainly, since our brains can learn, yoga does steer us to train the brain to turn on healing responses – for example, slowing down the exhale, watching thoughts, being poses that offer a chance for the nervous system to recuperate..

pain-thoughts

Depression and yoga

Depression and yoga, some thoughts today on how to move into a state of possibility…

yoga and depression: an alternative

Possibility

I am not going to tackle this head on because it is a big subject, rather let you read the following description and see if it is you, or someone you know. Despair or the feeling that there is no hope or possibility is rampant in our culture, and hits people along all socio-economic lines. Doctors consider it biochemical; and there are people who can and do need medication whether long or short term. I have worked with people who want to be strong enough to go off meds, and look to yoga as alternative medicine because it gives you tools to alleviate stress, make different choices, alters brain chemistry in a positive way…and so much more including changing postural habits (like sunken chest), replacing depressive thought patterns with more optimistic ones, accessing your inner peace and strength. This affirmation is a good antidote so word of the day is “possibility”….

For clinical depression, you must have five or more of the following symptoms over a two-week period, most of the day, nearly every day. At least one of the symptoms must be either a depressed mood or a loss of interest or pleasure. Signs and symptoms may include:

  • Depressed mood, such as feeling sad, empty or tearful (in children and teens, depressed mood can appear as constant irritability)
  • Significantly reduced interest or feeling no pleasure in all or most activities
  • Significant weight loss when not dieting, weight gain, or decrease or increase in appetite (in children, failure to gain weight as expected)
  • Insomnia or increased desire to sleep
  • Either restlessness or slowed behavior that can be observed by others
  • Fatigue or loss of energy
  • Feelings of worthlessness, or excessive or inappropriate guilt
  • Trouble making decisions, or trouble thinking or concentrating
  • Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide, or a suicide attempt

 

Why private yoga lessons Jersey City

private yoga lessons

hands on adjustments feel awesome!

Why private yoga lessons Jersey City

You may be wondering why you would ever want to to try private yoga lessons, you may love the energy of the group, and although you may struggle in that setting, sort of push the question of why try private yoga lessons aside. So perhaps this post will clarify some things. Whatever your training goals are – to increase flexibility, develop strength, enhance your athletic performance, prevent injury or simply improve upon the daily movement requirements of  life, you have a certain starting point in terms of a set point posture. As Aristotle said, “We are what we repeatedly do”. Imbalances show up when we do yoga they just do. Learning how to specifically modify or in some cases, omit or replace, one posture for another can be helpful to learn as it will bring us closer to our goals. A private yoga lesson will give you some idea who you are and help you correct these imbalances (and you get a lot of attention, assistance, and to ask questions)…like “how can I do that so—?”

Develop, Deepen and Refine Your Practice:

By finding the right alignment for you (which can be organic) it will :

1. Help you learn the skill involved in sustaining alignment.
2. Take unnecessary struggle out so you cultivate more of a relaxed mind.
3. Make a pose more accessible.
4. Prevent injuries and help old injuries to heal.
5. Create space in the spine and joint stability.
6. Achieve a deeper release of tension as you learn to be in a pose for longer with greater comfort.
7. Promote balance by encouraging weak parts to strengthen and less flexible areas to lengthen.

Current science is showing that gains in flexibility happen when your nervous system is relaxed, not when you yank or pull on your muscles. I encourage you to book an assessment with me to determine what your particular structure and weaker links are so that your yoga meets you where you are. This knowledge will transform your practice to one that is specific to your needs and instead of getting hurt, you will stay safe, healthy or even begin to heal those pesky postural problems. Attending the group classes after you learn from your yoga assessment session how to adjust the postures to meet your goals will turn your YOGA up a notch and into YOGAtherapy

mindfulness quotes

mindfulness quotes

This is a fantastic quote. “Meditation practice isn’t about trying to throw ourselves away and become something better. It’s about befriending who we are already.” ~ Pema Chodron

I think people tend to come to their yoga practice with expectation, maybe you don’t feel so great in your posture, you have low energy, you feel so stiff that you can’t do simple things around the house, your nerves are frayed, whatever the case. Then you show up for practice and want all that to change. My teacher always said, “you are perfect as you are”. It’s a pretty powerful concept, but I think when you befriend yourself, aches and pains included, it softens your perspective and your grasping for change. No chase is needed. Practice will transform you over the course of your practice.

I believe when the mind is relaxed, all necessary transformation can take shape. Starting from compassion and loving kindness (maitreya) is a good beginning for anyone’s yoga practice; the word “Maitreya” means : ” (Metteyya in Pāli) is derived from the Sanskrit word maitrī (Pāli: mettā) meaning “loving-kindness”, which is in turn derived from the noun mitra (Pāli: mitta) in the sense of “friend”

mindfulness quotes

who are you?

stillness and the calming of the mind

stillness and the calming of the mind

stillness and the calming of the mind

stillness and the calming of the mind

Look at a tree, a flower, a plant. Let your awareness rest upon it. How stil they are, how deeply rooted in Being. Allow nature to teach you stillness. ~ Eckhart tolle

Seasons are changing, as we feel the colder temperatures, part of us wants to keep moving to stay warm, the other part feels more tired, and wants to rest.

There is definitely a shift, and this should as well, be reflected in your practice, and in your diet. According to yoga’s sister science, Ayurveda, each of us, and as well, each season, is dominated by one of the three doshas (vata, pitta, kapha).

In Fall, vata is more dominant (notice the wind blowing the leaves off the trees?). Vata also governs movement in the body, such as activating the nervous system and the processes of elimination. Its qualities of vata are, not surprisingly, cold, dry, rough, light, changeable, irregular and moving. Vata is composed of the elements of air and space, and since it is associated with the nervous system, it can be reflected in our mental state. As you can imagine, if this element becomes so dominant in our psyche, we can become overwhelmed and out of balance. Are you may feeling unsettled, ungrounded ? We cannot ask Fall to settle down but we can make adjustments to maintain internal balance.

From salad, sometimes moving to root veggies. Remember to warm up for your poses, and choose a balance between boosting your energy, and restoring your energy. Relaxation is ever important, and an attitude that embraces the season – including some of its more hibernation based accents will get you far 🙂