Categories
Healthy Living

Autumn is Here …

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Rainy days and foul weather tend to bring more people to gyms and yoga studios. Or some to stay home and reconnect with family and friends in front of the hearth (aka kitchen?). Heading into darker mornings, shorter days, colder temperatures with nips and frost in the air. Bring out the coats and jackets, the turtlenecks. My girlfriend up in Portland, however said she loves this weather where there’s rain outside and you hear the pitter-patter on the rooftops, snuggled up in a warm and cozy home, a sanctuary. It’s when she does a lot of reading, baking and cooking. According to her, best time to be reflective and creative – making jams and preserves … ahhh, the scent that fills the kitchen and spills into rest of the living space. Then curling up with a good book. Then … practice some yoga 🙂 If you are harried and have no such luxury caring for others and that job, that job … carve out a time to not only exercise (walks with umbrella in hand and boots – refreshing!) but to … decompress and reconnect. Feel better. Stay well.

strawberryjam

Categories
Healthy Activities Yoga

From cervical spine care to sluggish thyroid explored …with Queen of Poses

i.e., Salamba Sarvangasana
cervical-lordosis-diagramWe get to protect these curves with yoga!

Recently a student approached me to say that she would like me to re-introduce inversions, specifically a shoulder-stand in the class. I tend to always opt for reducing the risks of any injury by playing it safe since I don’t recall any liability release signed by the student at these classes offered at gyms and clubs … at least at yoga studios, each student signs a release so there’s comfort in knowing that when some riskier asana may be weaved into a sequence.

I would normally instruct the harmless but effective bridge pose and then tell students that if they regularly practice shoulder-stands, they are welcome to sequence into that. In a public class with a wide range of ages and abilities, I allow the student to make the call based on their home practice or regularity to which they practice yoga. While I am certainly willing to instruct play by play on the how-to’s, with utmost attention to safety, I tend to be conservative and avoid some poses. But here’s a request and I am happy to oblige of course. This lovely student is always curious and eager to challenge herself. She does look so much better than when she first made her appearance to my class nervous with darting eyes … now her eyes are shiny and reflective like surface of deep clear lake and her energy level calm but revitalized – yes : ) Yoga’s working! This is an old article but relevant as ever since our body remains the same – just a little older – lol – The writer is an instructor who teaches in E. Bay …right after Richard Rosen’s class which I sometimes attend when I want to hear someone who non-stop talks and seemingly incessantly instructs. He doesn’t lecture about monkey mind, yak, yak, pop spirituality – he basically does not “lecture”. Rather he really instructs one tissue, one joint, one cartilage at a time. That works better for my focus than being lectured about monkey mind because it’s all about the dynamic “process” not this static state, unattainable as we are told to cleared it of thoughts, here likened to a monkey jumping from a tree to trea. A thought arises – how irritating it is to be talked down to cultivate it. Then judgement and critiquing enters this mind, & it’s over – that peace is lost, more thoughts take over. SOS.

Good article to be aware of the strain on the neck if it feels funny or beyond funny – in pain! Check out this article written quite a while ago but still holds true as our anatomy hasn’t changed – in fact there are probably more people suffering from straight neck (loss of that c-curve) than ever before as more of us are always checking our cell phones and constantly looking down to tablets and all other forms of electronic gadgets.

So rather than hand-stands and head-stands, shoulder-stands seem much more accessible with the benefit lacking in the former mentioned inversions. There are many benefits but which benefit am I referring to exactly?

So

The reason this student wanted to practice the shoulder-stand had nothing to do with straight neck vs. C-curve neck. It’s what all of us can related to as we make our way into impending holiday season – first comes the candies, the treats of Halloween; then Thanksgiving and … the holiday season and what does all these have in common? Yes, all the eating that goes along with celebrations. Love it : ) Apparently, Americans on average gain 5lbs during the holiday season and if you don’t lose that 5 lbs after the holiday season, in 2 years, that accumulates to 10 lbs, then next year, 15 lbs and so on – scary, indeed very scary, lol.

While I don’t think there’s a direct link to weight loss as this student appears to have read somewhere by doing shoulder stands, it is said that the pose helps with thyroid balance and that thyroid balance does contribute to better metabolism. It is believed that under-active thyroid means low basal metabolic rate which causes weight gain and difficulty losing that extra weight. Same tends to hold true for an overactive thyroid with messed up metabolism which causes a weight gain and difficulty with weight loss.

Safe methods are best taught by near-PT-level trained yoga teacher/therapist or Iyengar influenced or educated teachers when it comes to inversions – yes, we don’t just throw ourselves up unless you were a gymnast in past training. It’s also lovely if you can partner with someone so there’s an assist to set up the form – spotting the lift – so in this respect, I love Judith’s inversions – in which risks are reduced but as effective. You can stay in it for as long as you’d like – With proper guidance, we can do it with ease and comfort; not with strain and force.

Categories
Healthy Living Yoga

Protocol Presentation

Tree pose because … the forest is right there … beyond the Moon Gate.
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Last summer’s photos from Vancouver, BC, Canada where we hope to relocate should you know who gets elected to be the leader of the free world.lol Just kidding. Not?
IMG_9896_smallSo had kind of a challenging weekend. Challenge in a very good sense. Three of us were in a lineup to teach a lesson plan we each designed with specific intentions/purpose in front of (no more pre-scripted blue print sequence … we have to think it up with logical justifications as to why this over that posture for instance …) maybe – didn’t count – 30 yoga teachers (everyone like me are 200 hrs. certified) and teacher training director this Sunday. I was one of the three to share the “project”. Then be … critiqued with constructive feedback by Self first – in front of the entire group. Judgement Day? & here we are all about non-judgement in yoga BUT as one to teach, we must have humility. It is so very difficult to let the ego go and treat the challenge to get evaluated… as just another part of a learning and growing opportunity – I mean, after all, no matter what anyone tells you, we are conditioned to think it’s a … TEST, isn’t it? Evaluation is … a test. We get graded on tests and I have been conditioned to stress over them because of course I want to do well.
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I overcame the performance anxieties by thinking about a dear student who used to come to my Sunday evening classes at a lovely studio in the Peninsula. I thought of her and her fighting spirit and how she used to bestow me with such positive encouraging feedback. She had really inspired me to study this art of healing more seriously. Thinking of the battles she’s waging, the challenges she is overcoming, my little test really is nothing – relatively speaking – it’s just about cultivating humility for betterment. Seeking high quality and betterment … while remaining humble is …to me, spiritual. And this is just another continuum of that pursuit.

So this challenge, this “test” is so little relatively speaking in scheme of the BIG challenges we face in our daily lives. I can even share a part of my evaluation where the program director commented as follows:

+ Thoughtfulness and care evident in instruction, voice and selection of the postures.
+ Very nurturing presence and instruction, conducive for healing.
+ Very fluid progression in sequence to help sustain mindfulness.

Phew – what a relief!!! because honesty, I found myself deviating from the pre-set lesson, practically an ad-lib even though I had a whole plan outlined, that had been peer-reviewed by a well respected cohort … At times like this, stress and tension is actually a good thing when harnessed and channeled for improvements.

Then comes the “constructive” criticism portion … thankfully not too much – This feedback being the most important:

– Simplifying postures and refining precision to highlight focus.

So in other words, hone it into a very distilled focused practice. Whereas, I made it a bit more complicated than necessary …by cramming in lots of postures, with the immature notion of more the better … Sometimes we are scared to keep things simple, but that was the overriding lesson: Keep it simple. Less is more.
As I had 100’s of possibilities running through my mind, it is indeed all about making choices, distilling the teachings into a clear, concise lesson plan that resonates.

So fortunate to immerse in the fine art and science of yoga methods for therapeutic applications. More and more amazing and helpful information to share if I am allowed to share the knowledge from the experts and experienced peers (the MDs, therapists and seasoned experienced teachers) as I integrate the teachings into lesson plans.

This month’s module … “Immune System and Yoga” taught both theoretically and through actual practice, was very eye-opening. Felt its medicinal effects immediately and felt that in some ways, regular practice of this is better than say, getting a flu shot – REALLY. Don’t we need to strengthen our immune system as we head into holiday season?

With optimal health, we can enjoy all that the coming season has to offer, healthy and fully engaged. Life is short; life is fragile and … we keep it going with loving self-care. When you are cared for, you can be that love furnace kindled with energy and light – we have to have the energy, the light ourselves so we can share that warm glow of santosha. We can’t care for others unless we ourselves are well cared for – to me, that’s what a spiritual practice is all about. To expect the best in all of us as we learn and grow on this blessed journey called life. Love & Light … Namaste
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