Blog posts from the ‘News Stories’ Category

Does yoga for dogs work?

Yoga for dogs is becoming more and more popular. It seems to be a growing trend or is it just barking mad, excuse the pun. I read alot of articles about the benefits of a yoga practice with your furry four-legged companions. I’ve read the stories, but I’ve never quite come to terms with how exactly a dog yoga class (AKA Doga) might work.

Take a sneaky peek at this video, the little sausage dog looks quite yogic.

What do you think? Would you take your furry friend along to a yoga class?

Escape to Argentina

Just wait till you get to Argentina. Arriving in Buenos Aires is like jumping aboard a moving train. Outside the taxi window, a blurred mosaic of apartment blocks and haphazard architecture whizzes by as you shoot along the freeway toward the centre of town. Then the real city appears, the cafés, the purple jacaranda flowers draped over the sidewalks, stylish porteños (residents of BA) walking purposefully past the newspaper stands.

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Wall mural in Buenos Aires

Get people free-associating on the word ‘Argentina,’ and it’s quickly apparent why the country has long held travelers in awe: tango, Patagonia, beef, soccer, Tierra del Fuego, passion, Mendoza wine country.

The crackling advance of the Perito Moreno Glacier in the south, Argentina’s natural attractions was a place that you will never forget. It’s the most amazing experience when you hear the first crash of a part of the ice falling into the water.

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The view from our boat

The country beholds some of the Andes’ highest peaks. It’s home to massive ice fields in Patagonia, a vast, sweltering, thorn-riddled wilderness known as the Impenetrable, glacial lakes, deserts, Andean salt flats, a spectacular Lake District and more.

Travellers will also experience a country at a crossroads – an Argentina emerging from its worst economic crisis ever with a renewed, forward-looking sense of self. Cristina Kirchner, the country’s first elected female president, took office in 2007, following in the footsteps of her husband, Nestor Kirchner, who enjoyed higher approval ratings than any other president in recent years. There’s a palpable optimism in the air.

Travelers who dig beneath the tourist-office version of Argentina will find a beauty like no other. Argentina is in being reinvented. More than ever, Argentines have a lot to argue about. Spend any amount of time here, and you’ll find yourself wrapped up in the discussion too, hopefully with a couple of locals. It’s important to remember when travelling always take some time to out to sit, chat to the locals and have a hot cup of tea (mate in Argentina.)

Until next week,

 

Namastex

Yoga In The Workplace

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Yoga, meditation, training in communication skills, and other proven stress management techniques can play an important part in any Occupational Health and Safety Programme, especially for companies setting themselves up as government-approved healthy workplaces.

The benefits of a healthy, stress-managing workforce are proven. Taken alongside employee demands for a more balanced lifestyle, training in stress management and Yoga could help you meet your company’s real health promoting workplace needs.

Employees and employers alike are realizing the ease of yoga and its benefits. No leg behind the head poses here, just energy enhancing and stress relieving ones, combined with simple breathing techniques.

Why Yoga?

Because a healthier workforce means a happier, brighter workforce.

Training is available in various forms of Yoga from gentle stretching to strong Vinyasa flow as well as in calming breathing, effective communication, meditation and relaxation techniques.

Even more reasons for you to get your workforce into yoga

· Helps with team building
· Employees learn stress management
· Increased productivity
· Improved enjoyment
· Employees improve awareness, focus and control
· Mental clarity improves

YogaWellbeing has taught in a number of different corporate environments and is able to provide a variety of teaching arrangements

At work sessions

Designed to meet the needs of the company and employees and usually offered before work, during lunch or straight after work. Classes can be fully paid for by the company, subsidised by the company or the company can choose to just provide the space free of charge and then ask employees to pay on an individual basis (subject to a minimum hourly rate being achieved).

One off or time limited sessions

A single session or a number of sessions for company conferences, ergonomic and desk exercise training, away days or team building events can be arranged. With a background in organisational Psychology, Kim specialises in designing workshops to meet all needs from those that follow the more traditional yoga class format to those which focus on relieving workplace tension, improve concentration and relaxation and that help to avoid common workplace ailments such as backache, shoulder ache and RSI.

YogaWellbeing can design and deliver sessions to meet the individual needs of your company and can range from 15 minutes – 3 hours.

 

For a list of company references and recommendations please contact Laura at YogaWellbeing.

Yoga an Olympic Sport?

 

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So ubiquitous is yoga, and in so many forms, that we now have the British Yoga Championships, devotees of which are attempting to get yoga "recognised" as an Olympic sport. And one of the reigning British yoga champions has been doing yoga for only two years.

Pushing the Olympic dream forward is the Bikram school of yoga, founded by Bikram Choudry, who was always more of an athlete than an aesthete. His system of the same 26 poses performed in a room heated to 41C was devised originally to restore his own health after a gymnastics accident at 20. Now, thanks to a nine-week teacher-training course and 840 studios world-wide, Bikram is claimed to be the fastest-growing yoga system in the world.

I feel even more shocked to hear that the egregious spread of any number of types of yoga has extended back to India itself, the home of yoga, where fashionable girls in Mumbai are taking it up for the first time because "Madonna does it".

Power yoga classes, the Californian way, seem to have become a platform for both teachers and pupils to show off toned torsos as well as to perform and impress with their fabulous ability to bend and contort the body into ever more demanding positions. What happened to inquiry and the acquisition of wisdom? What happened to the teaching of BKS Iyengar, who suggested that all you need for yoga practice is a mat and some space in the shade?

No longer does the aspiring yogi have to choose from acknowledged schools such as Hatha, Iyengar, Sivenanda, Ashtanga or Kundalini – the Bhagavad Gita (regarded as a sacred text by the majority of Hindu traditions) actually names 18 different kinds, each with its own emphasis. Today, due to the proliferation of yoga across the western world, teachers with only a few weeks or years of knowledge are offering a plethora of new permutations, some of which have strayed a very long way from the original systems.

Today you can choose from any number of "yoga fusions", among them power chi yoga (a combination of tai chi and Ashtanga yoga), Sport yoga (aerobics and yoga), Fitcamp Fusion (yoga and pilates), weight loss yoga, disco yoga and laughter yoga (the latest hot trend from Los Angeles) – and that’s not a joke. I could go on.

"In the 60s, we didn’t know anything about yoga and we accepted all things oriental with blind faith," says Peter Blackaby, a distinguished teacher with a practice in Brighton. "But after 40 years yoga has flowered and, yes, diversified and some of it is mad. Absolutely mad."

Indeed, some teachers think that if they throw in some pseudo-science, a bit of Sanskrit, some chanting but little instruction, then that is all right. In one class in LA they even played bagpipe music and I wondered if they thought that it was Indian. And remember the woman who came back from India some years ago practising a yoga that involved not eating, just breathing?

"There is such a thing as intelligent yoga," says Blackaby. "It’s about letting go, unravelling muscles only where you need to. There is nothing mindless or sleepy about it. "

For this article, I went recently to a so-called Ashtanga class in central London with a friend who is happily caught up in a passion for yoga. I have been to classes all over the world, in chilly church halls, mouldy basements, Zen gymnasiums, hotel spas as well as on distant beaches and in shaded gardens.

I have woken at dawn and driven from London to Oxford for regular classes and workshops. I have tried classes in Thailand, New York, Los Angeles, Paris and Shanghai. I have done days of yoga, three- and five-hour sessions and 40-minute bursts; classes where "gurus to the famous" presided and joss sticks were burned; where there was Sanskrit chanting, mystic breathing, and yogic jumping. I have done classes on my own and classes with up to 100 people.

In the Ashtanga class I tried, the pupils were packed in so tightly that the teacher couldn’t possibly see whether we were unravelling or not and she had no assistant. (It appeared to be more about making money than sharing knowledge.) She had what I call an Ashtanga body – taut and defined – and she started the class with an extremely advanced set of breathing exercises that are potentially dangerous. We then progressed to the familiar, tiresome routine of endless down-dogs, up-dogs and chatarangas that seem typical of many of today’s classes; repetitious poses that merely add up to callisthenics with absolutely no attention paid to the very stiff who were trying to go much further than their capabilities allowed.

Rarely do I go to a class (except those with my own teacher, Chloe Fremantle) in which upside-down poses (headstand, shoulder stand and variations), let alone a series of thoughtful floor poses (twists and balances), are taught or the individual is considered. It is all about pumping people up, rather than bringing them down into a calm, mindful place – despite ending the session with a bit of chanting (Sanskrit? Hindu? Tibetan?), to add a touch of random spirituality.

"In 1976, studying with Iyengar in India, we were told that we were very lucky to be learning yoga because it was something that was only for high-class, spiritual Indians," says teacher and yoga book author Mary Stewart. "Nowadays yoga has been dumbed down. Publishers demand a ‘celebrity’ on the book or magazine cover even if they don’t know how to do the poses," she says. "And I was asked to include a 10-minute programme presumably because no one these days is thought to have the attention span to do it for longer. In 1983, I was told that the word yoga could not be used, if the book I was co-writing was to sell in middle America."

And this is the same yoga that Carl Jung described as "the spiritual achievement of the East, one of the greatest things the human mind has ever created". What would he say about Geri Halliwell’s video? Would he be disenchanted to know that the desire for money and fame has corrupted Indians as well as westerners, many of whom have played along with what they think westerners want, both in India and, particularly, in guru-friendly California, branding their schools and systems for the rewards of money, status, cars and jewellery.

"Beneath the bogus spirituality and superficiality of some of the yoga around," says Stewart, "there is a yearning among generations all over the world for something deeper and more meaningful." I agree.

Yoga that is about strength and competition misses the point and inevitably ends up with injury and disillusion. Poses should be beneficial, not detrimental, as we strive for balance and the ability to sit and meditate with ease. The practice is about grounding and releasing; it involves effort but not push and struggle.

With or without Olympic yoga, there are people who will take yoga onwards and who realise the deep significance and power of its roots. "How can I say what is good and bad?" said the great Iyengar, recently interviewed about the way yoga is going. "People will find what they are looking for."

That seems to say it all.

Om peace

Kathy Philips

Brooklyn’s Tide of Chains, Decidedly Local

Little empires of homegrown restaurants, bars, clothing stores and other establishments have multiplied in one patch of brownstone Brooklyn.

Yoga as a Complementary Therapy

What started out as being seen as an esoteric practice that was relegated to the hippie generation (and later defined as the sport of the affluent), yoga is now a force in the world of complementary therapy. Where the Chiropractic discipline once tread is now the stomping ground of yoga and yoga therapy (as well as meditation). Despite the fact that more and more people afflicted with stress-related illnesses are flocking to yoga to help with managing the symptoms of these illnesses, there are still questions swirling about the realm of yoga therapy. How is it defined? What does it mean? What should a yoga therapy training program look like?

The International Association of Yoga Therapists (IAYT) has been struggling to define yoga therapy for some time now. Just recently they released an overview of their efforts to support the development of standards of training for yoga therapists. This is reminiscent of the development of standards for massage therapy training. The question is — will yoga follow the way of massage therapy?

Regardless of the future of yoga therapy definitions and training guidelines, I’m heartened to see more people turning to yoga to as a complement to their medical treatments. If you’re a yoga teacher who is being approached by your students to assist them with healing or if you’re a yoga student who wants to transition your practice to a more healing one or if you’re someone suffering from an illness and are interested in yoga as complementary therapy, here are a few interesting resources:




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I think the next 10 years are going to be interesting ones in terms of public acceptance and use of yoga and meditation as a complementary therapy. It’ll be interesting to see how it evolves. Until things are more set in stone, I’m rounding out my training as best I can so that I feel competent to work with folks in a therapeutic way. It’s exciting to be involved in a movement that’s bringing therapeutic yoga to the masses.

Namaste!

September: New Beginnings and Yoga Celebrations

I love September — the weather, the feeling of a fresh start, the cusp of a new season. Even though I haven’t been in school for quite some time (college is a distant memory), I still view September as the start of a new year, a beginning. In fact, I love to sign up for workshops/courses in September (hmmmm…perhaps I’m trying to bring the distant college memory closer), as I still view it as the perfect time to learn something new (this year I’m embarking on another education adventure with this course).

This September I’m embarking on a few new ventures, including establishing a more regular meditation practice, eating more raw foods, adding short yoga breaks into my day, establishing a regular journaling discipline, and participating in some interesting courses/workshops in the coming months. Even if you’re not still following the academic calendar as I seem to be, you can start fresh in September. Think back to your school days — remember the excitement you felt when you bought all your new school supplies and looked forward to meeting new people and taking new courses? You don’t have to be a child to feel this way. Here are a few suggestions to revive that “start fresh” feeling in you.

Yoga Events and Celebrations

In my last post, I mentioned Yoga Month and the 30 Day Yoga Challenge. Both are great ways to reinvigorate your yoga practice. If you’re already a regular practitioner, why not add a fun yoga event to your calendar this month? There are a number of events associated with Yoga Month, including Global Mala and Yoga Aid. Click here for a complete listing of yoga-related events and celebrations.

Opportunities to Give Back
There’s nothing like helping others to renew your passion for life. Reinvigorate yourself this Fall by getting involved in events such as Yoga Aid (mentioned above) and organizations that help through yoga. Here are some suggestions:

  • Off the Mat and Into the World, the brainchild of yogini Seane Corn, promotes activism by encouraging yoga practitioners to find a purpose through yoga and offers the tools to help them create local service progams. Click here to watch a video about this inspiring non-profit organization. If getting involved seems a bit too daunting, Lucy active wear has a special offer running through the month of September. Five percent of the sales of the Lucy Hatha Power Pant (which boasts a number of performance features, including moisture wicking, anti-chafe, and compression technology) will go to Off the Mat and Into the World. Click here to learn more and to go shopping. 
  • Yoga Bear offers cancer survivors access to yoga to help heal and increase quality of life. They offer a variety of ways to get involved — from donating old yoga mats to pro bono teaching.
  • Green Yoga Association enourages ecological consciousness, reverence, and action in the yoga communityl. Click here to see a listing of upcoming events. 

Resources to Help You Get Healthy
The start of a new season is a perfect time to do a cleanse and/or change your eating habits. Here are a few resources to help:

  • If you’re thinking about going raw, check out Dan McDonald’s YouTube channel. I love this guy! He offers dozens of free videos that will inspire and inform. 
  • Raw foodist David Wolfe has distilled years of research down into an easy-to-implement program to help you get and stay healthy. The Longevity Now Program sold out in its first printing and is back on sale after a break for reprinting. Click here to learn more about the program.
  • If overhauling your diet seems a bit intense, you could start with a brief cleans. Two of my favorites are Ultimate Energy Cleanse and The Cleanse of Santa Fe. Both offer gentle cleanses that are sure to boost your energy and get you on the road to optimal health.
  • If you’ve always wanted to go vegetarian, but aren’t sure where to start, check out this excellent resource.
  • Heal your relationship with food by holding the intention to be less hard on yourself regarding what you do and do not eat. Click here for an excellent article on this very topic.
  • If you’re wanting to lose weight and/or detox, click here for an easy recipe for a raw detox salad

Namaste!

Jumping Back on the Yoga Bandwagon: Recommitting To Your Practice

Is your yoga practice floundering? Has your practice gotten stale? Are you finding that you aren’t getting on your mat as often as you used to or as often as you like? If your yoga practice has taken a an extended vacation, you can get things back on track with a fresh start.

September is National Yoga Month, which means that you get one free week of yoga at a local studio. All you need to do is select a participating studio in your area, print out a Yoga Month Card, and then redeem it (although you must be a first-time student). Click here to learn more about the Yoga Month Card and to get yours.

September promises to be a month-long celebration of yoga with studios from all over the country participating in Yoga Month. Throughout the month, millions will come together to celebrate the mind and body benefits of yoga practice. There’s nothing like a nationwide movement to reinvigorate your yoga practice!

Get One Week Free Yoga during National Yoga Month 09.2009 www.yogamonth.org

If you’re someone who is encouraged by having a challenge proposed to you, how about this — a global 30 day yoga challenge. When you register, you’ll be supplied with a daily dose of yoga videos, helpful information about yoga, nutrition, and meditation, and a support forum. Click here for more information and to sign up for the free 30 day yoga challenge. If you want to dive deeper into the challenge and rework your diet and your thinking, you have the option to sign up for a paid level of the challenge, which you can learn more about by clicking here. My practice is going strong, but I still signed up. I can’t think of a better way to celebrate the start of fall than with a celebration of Yoga Month with a challenge.

If you’d rather get your yoga glow on online, check out the newly-launched Yogaglo — the new online yoga experience in HD. You can subscribe by the month and get access to classes, workshops, lectures, and meditations. Five percent of Yogaglo’s profits are donated to charity, so you can jumpstart you yoga practice while doing good. Because all of the Yogaglo’s classes are recorded live, you get the feel of being in a live yoga class minus the travel and the crowded studio. Click here to learn more about Yogaglo.

If none of the above appeal, you can also try these ideas for getting back to a regular yoga practice:

  • Create accountability by enlisting the help of a partner — whether you choose to practice yoga with a friend or simply report on your progress to a friend with daily progress reports via phone or email, let someone call you on your goal of practicing yoga every  day for a month (or however long it takes you to integrate a regular practice back into your life).
  • Try a new style of yoga. Sometimes you need to switch up your yoga practice depending on the time of your life, your physical condition, or to satisfy your need for variety. Don’t be afraid to try something new — you just might breathe new life into your yoga practice as a result.
  • Try a new teacher and/or yoga studio. Sometimes it’s easy to get stuck in a rut when you practice with the same teacher or at the same studio. Try mixing it up by sampling another teacher’s style or the vibe at a different studio. You can always go back if you don’t like it.
  • Use an old-fashioned reward system — mark off the days on the calendar you practice yoga. When you hit 30, treat yourself to something wonderful — a massage, a new yoga outfit, a $100 shopping spree at the bookstore, a night out at your favorite restaurant or anything else that you desire.

Put forth the intention to practice yoga regularly and then take the steps necessary to ensure action (could be sleeping in your yoga clothes so you pop out of bed in the morning ready to practice, or creating a space in your home to practice, or purchasing an unlimited yoga pass at your local studio, or buying a library of yoga DVDs or downloads to keep your practice fresh) and you’ll get your yoga practice back on track in no time. September is the perfect time to recommit.

Happy upcoming Yoga Month everyone!

Namaste!

Yoga for runners

In the run-up for the Trees for Cities’ 5km London Tree-Athon event,
Inna Costantini looks at the multi-fold benefits of practising yoga for
runners.

 

 

read more

The Relationship Between Vacation, Gardening, Yoga, Yoda, and Desikachar

LUKE: What’s in there?
YODA: Only what you take with you.

Now if the title of this post doesn’t make your head spin and think “say what?!?!?!” I don’t know what will. I’ve got a lot of things to tie together here, so let me get started. Hang in there — I’d like to think it’ll be worth the wait.

My brother was the Trekkie in the family while I was the Star Wars fan. Yep, I was a total Star Wars geek — I saw the movies, bought the action figures (and quite a few light sabers), even ate the cookies (you die hard fans will remember the cookies that came out around the time of Return of the Jedi). My mom delights in telling the story about how the cashier at Toys R Us, after ringing up quite a few Star Wars toys during the Christmas rush, said “Wow, your little boy is quite lucky.” Being that my mom waited 12 years and two boys to finally be blessed with a girl, she shamefully replied that she was actually buying gifts for her daughter.

But I digress. The reason I had such a love for Star Wars was that the good guys always seemed to prevail and the timeless lessons included in the movies from ancient texts/religions. One of my favorite characters, of course, was Yoda. Yes, he was so ugly, he was cute, but DAMN that little green guy could blow you away with his wise little one-liners. The quote above comes from the scene on Degobah, when Luke is wary about entering an ominous-looking cave. Who knew that Yoda was a smaller, uglier version of a Buddhist teacher?

Why think of this now — years later when my light sabers (yes, I do still have a few) are collecting dust in a closet somewhere and I’ve traded in my light saber fighting for practicing yoga? Because the lesson still applies. And now we tie it into vacation…

While on vacation, I was surrounded with a fraction of the static that I am when I’m home. The books, the clothes, the computer time, the to do list — all drastically cut back. And yet, I didn’t miss any of it. I enjoyed my simple existence. Which now takes me to gardening…

Somehow when I was away, the weeds in my yard got together and threw some sort of orgy and multiplied out of control in my absence. Garden gloves on my hand and bucket hat on my head, I’m spending some quality time in my yard tackling the super human chore of eliminating the weeds. I’m ripping out the weeds yesterday when I realize that I need to do some weeding in my life as well. If I didn’t need all of the static on vacation, then why do I need it now?

So, in case you couldn’t follow my circuitous path, here you go — I realized that Yoda was right — I’m taking more than I need with me. Being away put it into perspective for me — I need to simplify. And all of that weed pulling reminded me that I need to start weeding things from my life. As Patanjali says in the Sutras — and I’m paraphrasing here — you have to deal with the weeds (or Kleshas, in yoga-speak) when they’re small.

And as I’m thinking this, I come across an excellent video excerpt of a Paul Grilley workshop in which he talks about how the junk in our minds takes a toll on our yoga practice. He uses the phrase “contra mantras” and his point is well taken. Perhaps before you step onto your mat, you might ponder Yoda’s words about what you’ll find — “only what you take with you.” Lucky for me Paul also offers up an easy solution for anyone suffering from backpain. Being that I’ve been doing all of this yard work, I could use a little lower back care. Click here to view the video of Paul — you’ll get a chuckle and perhaps have an “ah-ha” moment.

Now you may be wondering, how on earth can I possibly add an international yoga luminary into this odd mix? Here goes…

As all of this is running around in my head (which is pretty crowded what with Yoda being in there and all), I find myself weeding out my magazine pile, which has been neglected for a month of so. As I’m reading through the old magazines, I come across an interview with T.K.V. Desikachar in the August issue of Yoga Journal. His wonderful answer to one of the questions reminds me that I can also let go of some of the aspects of my asana practice. I can let go (or weed out, since I’ve got gardening on my mind) of perfection in asana, the amount of asana that I practice, and the feelings I have about missing a practice here and there. While I’m still a Yoda fan, I think that Desikachar’s wisdom blows The Green One out of the water:

“My wish is that more students experience the vastness of yoga, not simply asana. Increased attention to the concept of body consciousness has become very popular. Yoga was primarily evolved for inner limbs such as mind, senses, emotions. Unfortunately, many yoga teachers themselves are not aware of these techniques to be able to guide students in these domains. It is my sincere wish that both teachers and students of yoga move beyond their obsession with the body level, to actually experience these subtle and more powerful dimensions of this ancient wisdom. This requires patience and commitment and a serious search to look at oneself.”

So, to recap, we’ve got vacation realization of simplifying one’s life, which is reflected in the weed-pulling, which reminds me of Yoda’s words to Luke, which ties into my yoga practice and is a sentiment somewhat echoed in the words of Desikachar. Whew — that was one wild ride, eh?

Enough about me and my crazy ramblings (it is entirely possible that all of this yard work means that I’ve been out in the sun way too long and the rays have fried my brain), how about you and your life? Here are some pondering points:

  • What are you taking onto your mat? Are you attached to asana and ignoring meditation, pranayama, and other yogic tools? Do you honor your body or do you berate it when it doesn’t fit into the yoga mold that you think it should (do Paul Grilley’s words hit a nerve)?
  • What can you weed out in your life? Can you delete more emails (or get away with giving up email altogether)? Can you give away some of your possessions? Can you let go some of your obligations?
  • Can you move beyond the body? Can you cut back on your asana in order to incorporate more meditation?
  • What are some small things that you can take care of now — before they get too big and overhwelming to tackle later?

Just say “no” to the contra mantra!

Namaste!



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