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Beautiful People Healthy Activities Healthy Living Yoga

Yoga for Pain Management

davinvi
I spend the entire Saturday at Niroga’s TT on pain management module. The visiting faculty was Neil Pearson, MSc, BScPT, BA-BPHE, CYT, RYT 500. Neil is a wealth of knowledge and comes with some shocking first hand experience having been on the front line as a clinician and a scientist, never short of insightful stories to share with great sense of humor. Here’s Neil’s bio from Niroga’s workshop:

Neil Pearson is a Clinical Assistant Professor at University of British Columbia, a physiotherapist and yoga therapist. He works exclusively with people with complex pain problems, and provides therapeutic yoga for people in pain. Neil is a faculty member in yoga therapy training programs throughout North America, integrating knowledge of anatomy, physiology, pain and pathophysiology with yoga therapy. He teaches health care professionals and the public about pain management and about yoga as therapy. Neil has created many resources including an extensive educational website, audio CDs and a yoga DVD for people with chronic pain. See more at www.lifeisnow.ca.

It’s a sequence in itself, this training program – very methodically, we take a journey within this precious body, its functional and mysterious makeup. What I love so much is I always wanted to know the WHYS. Now I get the real answers – Why is it that “hip opener” is good and what exactly does that mean? Why is this pranayama good specifically for anxieties and not for depression, etc. Why? And last month, why do we think fasting is good for you; why? What scientific basis is there? Why ? Why? Why? Last month’s module being Yoga for Digestion taught by Baxter Bell, MD who is well versed and a practitioner of both Western and Eastern medicine. And now this…which was in invitation to join the Year Two training weekend for us Year One students. (normally you’d have to wait another year for this module but got to join:) So much to “digest” going into Thanksgiving week.
In Gratitude for this body and mind that allows this embodied experience of what’s eternal inside, this spirit.
michael

Something to think about as Neil cited Prince and the typical treatment used in Western medicine, usually a quick fix with drugs like Opioid, which is effective for “acute” pain relief. Yet long term use for treating “chronic” pain is oftentimes accompanied by unwanted side effects and risks …So many of us, then tend wonder, is intake of such drugs the only answer? Before going into alternatives, he then shared some startling “pain” plain truths. Per Neil Pearson,

Persistent pain is more common than we think – 20% of adults live with moderate to severe chronic pain.

Only 42% of people in pain believe their doctor understands how they feel.

The cost of pain is more than the cost of cardiac disease and diabetes combined.

The rate of suicides in people with chronic pain is 8 times that of depression (although I suspect both are intertwined).

This is dark yes, but here’s the light. According to Neil,

A person in pain has the power to

– decrease pain.
– to increase movement.
– and to improve quality of life.

It’s a process that we as trained yoga therapists can teach. Interesting to learn that Neil likened it to a method similar to training Navy Seals !!! It’s such a discipline but hey, he says, do you prefer living with chronic pain or would you rather transcend it and get your life back? Most would pay anything to restore that quality of life… There’s hope if you have faith and will to change. Having just suffered a migraine headache, and such minor? aches to completely change my personality from joyful to miserable, I feel lucky to have found some answers. One of which is: (well designed & customized) Yoga works.

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Beautiful People Beautiful Places Beautiful Rituals Healthy Activities

Amazing Workshop @Mt. Shasta coming up !

My lovely friend, founder of Shastina Herbal of Mt. Shasta, Y-san thought it would be so nice to spread the word on this rare visit by Andreas Lehmann and Miyuki Ninomiya, from Germany and Kyoto, Japan, respectively. They will be traveling to bring together a group of Lyre making students who will be spending the needed time to construct this musical instrument at the base of Mt. Shasta. Upon completion of this instrument, the couple will hold a weekend long workshop where guests and participants are treated to a symphony of Lyra and other sounds reputed to have healing qualities. It’s all about the energy of vibrations that reaches you at the cellular level. If this resonates with you –

if it SOUNDS like something that strikes a “chord” with you

🙂

and if you are looking for something special to treat yourself to Thanksgiving weekend … perhaps it’s not too late to contact her for a spot.

I WISH I could go – the fact that the instruments are to be constructed at Mt. Shasta is so enticing … If nothing holds you back, just go:)

lyre_flyer2

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Healthy Activities Healthy Living

Your body is a TEMPLE?

not a ruin, lol. If not so bad, an analogy may call for a renovation?

Thank goodness for the Mindful Biology video created by Will Meechum, MD as part of our curriculum so rich, it’s like med-school for the dummies? Am I calling yogis dummies – NOOOO – of course not. No, just insanely curious yogis … we really have to know how the body works. While watching hours of these can really give you the stiffness we try so hard to banish through the practice of yoga and exercise, it’s utterly fascinating to know how we work and how we break down, then recover and heal. The access to the particular videos are currently restricted and available only to the students of Yoga Therapy Teacher Training with Niroga, maybe Will will make it available to the public one of these days – public as in anyone interested in the workings of our body beyond the basics but without the grotesque exposures to actual cadavers (my worst nightmare, lol). Great illustrations that deals more with “function”. One can see how much labor has gone into creating these videos for us so we feel grateful for all Will has done – while he keeps saying, you don’t have to know it to such detail, it is kind that he does not dumb down the information – and leaves it up to us to decide what we can retain and what we have to discard, just keeping the bare minimum to make us competent. His work is, at times, even more detailed than we need to know probably for regular yoga therapist or instructor sessions but … SO fascinating. Amazed how little I knew about my own body, mind and how that affects our spiritual well being.

This resonates more with me … by Beau Taplin:

“Listen to me, your body is not a temple. Temples can be destroyed and desecrated. Your body is a forest—thick canopies of maple trees and sweet scented wildflowers sprouting in the underwood. You will grow back, over and over, no matter how badly you are devastated.”

Yes, it’s more a forest … it’s an interplay of life, death and rebirth within our senses, an organic amalgam. Breathe it all in and revitalize at the cellular level. Invite in the freshness; sayonara to staleness, the toxins.

IMG_0340_smallIMG_0343_smallIMG_8196_smallIMG_2546_01_small
sm_IMG_6510Feels good for your back … the tree trunk the best prop.sm_IMG_6584 What is this pose called? Standing silly on a mossy slippery wet stone in midst of rushing water just to prove I have balance & focus – pose. A tree.sm_IMG_6551
We worship this life force and give our thanks for the light that shines upon us. Namaste.
IMG_8195_smallLastly, but not least, thank you Shinobeau-san for organizing this tour to a tucked away monastery in the forest. Right here in California.