Seattle Yoga News – Yoga Performances at Taj Yoga

Attention Seattleites, this is yoga like you’ve never seen it before! Come to the Crown Hill Arts Festival, eat, drink, be merry, and watch some awesome yoga dance compositions, for FREE!

This Saturday November 7th, Taj Yoga in Seattle will transform into a performing arts venue. Four original yoga dance compositions choreographed by Theresa Elliott will be performed by Taj teachers and students:

  • “Standing Pose Vinyasa,” 1991: Based on lateral and sagittal standing postures as defined by yoga master B.K.S. Iyengar, this work is performed by April Kieburtz. Music: Pink Floyd’s Us and Them.
  • “Eventide,” 1997: Flamenco dance and mudras (hand gestures) inspired this work performed by Laura DeFreitas. Music: Tchaikovsky’s Coffee: Arabian Dance from the Nutcracker.
  • “Pommel Horse: Variations on Hanumanasana,” 2008: Performed by Dylan Noebels and accompanied by the fabulous Bill Mathews on drum, this work is based on the movements of a gymnast on the pommel. Six variations of Hanumanasana (splits) are presented in this highly kinetic piece.
  • “Mowgli Walking: The Lure of The Quadruped,” 2009: In this latest work performed by Theresa Elliott, the human activities we do on two feet are transferred to animals on all fours. Music: Henry Mancini’s Baby Elephant Walk

Pommel Horse – performed by Theresa Elliott

Eventide – performed by Theresa Elliott

Are You Practicing Real Yoga?

I admit, “Are you practicing real yoga?” is a rather obnoxious question. It’s probably like walking up to a woman, especially someone you don’t know at all, and say, “Are those real?” I’m gonna bet she’d get pretty offended and slap you in the face. (I will never have this problem, so I can only speculate).

My intention is not to incite or invite any such hostility, though I’m aware that it’s bound to come up. My intent here, and elsewhere in this blog, is to give a sort of “report from the field” from my personal exploration of what yoga really means to me. The more entrenched I am in the study and teaching of yoga, the more I see the complexity of intertwining this ancient personal practice with business and profits in our modern world, one in which brand names, image, and marketing matter just as much, if not sometimes more, than the actual substance and content of the practice itself.

I’ll always remember the day when a coworker looked me in the eye and told me, “that’s not real yoga” when I told him that I do Bikram. I was offended. “Yes it is!” I wrinkled my nose and growled back. “It’s not real yoga. It’s not Authentic Indian Yoga.” Well,  ok… I had nothing to say to that, not to a native from where yoga came.

Determined to be right, I found a quote by Mr. B.K.S Iyengar in Light on Life to make my case:

The stress that saturates the brain is decreased through asana and pranayama, so the brain is rested, and there is a release from strain. Similarly, while doing the various types of pranayama the whole body is irrigated with energy. To practice pranayama people must have strength in their muscles and nerves, concentration and persistence, determination and endurance. These are all learned through the practice of asana. The nerves are soothed, the brain is calmed, and the hardness and rigidity of the lungs are loosened. The nerves are helped to remain healthy. you are at once one with yourself, and that is meditation.

See? Since I am working on my English bulldog determination and endurance in a heated room for 90 minutes, I so am, totally, 100 percently, truly doing real yoga! Eat your heart out, coworker. (Humph!)

If I could, I would give a huge hug to that younger version of me, that 25-year-old so devoted to yoga, who would religiously take a bus or drive 45 minutes to a yoga studio, to practice, practice, practice, but didn’t have any yardstick to measure her progress against, and didn’t have anything substantial to say about what makes a yoga practice “real”.

Yoga Will Ruin Your Life

In one workshop, my teacher Judith Lasater said, “Yoga will ruin your life, and thank God.” She then further explained that doing yoga can make us re-evaluate everything about our lives. It can change the way we eat, the way we act, who we hang out with, what we read, what we do on the weekends, etc. In other words, yoga changes everything (I keep hearing that children do this too, but I wouldn’t know).

It’s pretty common to hear someone gush that yoga changed their life, and for good reasons. You can lose weight and feel better and experience all sorts of wonderful benefits that a regular yoga asana practice can offer. I will argue, however, that any regular physical exercise program can bring forth those benefits and changes. Running, swimming, lifting weight, cycling, climbing, etc. they can all change our lives to a certain extent.

Vrtti, Vrtti Everywhere

There is no denying that hatha yoga is enormously beneficial, and I love it just as much as the next yogaite. The changes that yoga brings that I’m talking about here, though, is much, much subtler than the physical changes and the general good feeling that follows a hatha practice. The kind of changes I’m talking about is behavioral, and the yardstick is to ask, “Is my yoga practice making any inroad in how I function in life?”

Vrtti, or vritti, is a Sanskrit word that roughly means the activities in our minds, the stories we tell ourselves to make sense of an experience. What kind of conversation am I having with myself? How much shame, blame, and guilt is going on if I see a friend getting what I want? How much do I lose it when someone cuts me off in traffic? When my dad nags me about where to park the car, how much am I tensing up in my neck and shoulders and rolling my eyes and telling him to stop telling me what to do? How tuned in to my body to know that I’m eating when I’m not hungry?

My teacher Theresa Elliott said once, “I do yoga to take a vacation from myself.” She’s talking about the incessant chit chat in our minds, and how well we can effectively turn it off, which brings me to another question, “How much thinking am I doing in Savasana?”

Stuck in a Moment

I played in a soccer game this past weekend, and my boyfriend and I planned our whole day around the time of the game. We drove across town to find out that the team captain had mixed up the time, and our team had missed our game. It was a huge bummer, but what’s done is done, so we rolled with the ball (yes, please groan) and stayed to do some practice drills.

Luckily, the other teams needed subs, so I also got to play. Soccer relies on tight teamwork and strategy, and playing on a new team threw me off. I was playing defense when an opponent scored. The game carried on, but for a little while, I lived in the past. “If only this, if only that…”, I kept playing the What If game in my head.  As a defender, there’s this huge sense of guilt when the other team scores, and if you’re not blaming yourself, you’re blaming others.

In a moment of clarity, I realized what I was doing. In the lyrics of U2: “You’ve got to get yourself together / You’ve got stuck in a moment / And you can’t get out of it”. So the question is, “Is my yoga practice helping me be here now? Like, *right now*. Is it helping me realize when I’m stuck in memory?”

Will the Real Yoga Please Stand Up?

In the October newsletter of the American Sanskrit Institute, Vyaas Houston wrote something that blows my mind (in a good way):

There’s nothing inherent in a Sanskrit mantra or a yoga posture that’s liberating. It’s only yoga when the real definition of yoga is having an impact on the experience of the mantra or posture and each of these becomes a new type of experience, a progressively purer experience, freer from the intrusions of identity hoping for a good result, or fearing that it will not be reached.

There’s nothing inherently yogic about Tadasana or Mountain Pose or Standing in Line at the Grocery Store or whatever name in whatever language you want to call it. There is, however, a choice of what we do and think. We could get aggravated because the line is too slow, and give someone a stinkeye because they have sixteen items in a 15-or-less line. Or, we could catch ourselves getting completely livid, surrender to the situation, let the shoulders settle, sneak in a couple Kegels, enjoy the fact that we can breathe in and out, and wait for our turn to check out.

The other day while thinking about Graduate school, I noticed that I was holding my breath in my chest, I was getting so anxious thinking about the possibility of getting rejected. After learning to watch the breath and observe what’s happening in the body in yoga class, I realized that I was doing it off the mat. My “yoga habit” has bled into other parts of my life. Judith L. said, “Just because we do yoga doesn’t mean that we don’t get angry. We are just very clear on when we are angry.” Yoga gradually makes us notice certain things that may not have been obvious before. So, another question I’d ask is, “Is my yoga practice helping me become an observer of myself?”

It doesn’t matter what style of yoga it is, to me, a “real” yoga practice should cultivate an acute sense of awareness in our body and mind. It should be something that, with time and practice, progressively keeps us more and more honest with ourselves. In a sense, it could ruin our lives as we know it.

Be here now

Be here now

Seattle Yoga News – 200-hour Teacher Training at Pacific Yoga

If you are interested in a 200-hour Yoga Teacher Training program, I highly recommend checking out Pacific Yoga in Seattle. The next training is slated for February to October 2010, as I wrote about in a previous post.

Don’t live within a reasonable commute time from Seattle? The schedule has been modified to make it easier for out of town students to take time off on just Friday instead of Thursday and Friday like in the previous training.

The application deadline is January 15, but I’ve been told that applications are already in! So, if you are interested and would like to meet the teachers and find out more, there is an Open House scheduled for Friday October 23rd, that’s next Friday!

  • 5:30 – 6:00 PM – Meet and greet
  • 6:00 – 7:00 PM – Presentation

Business of Teaching – Yoga Teacher Bios

I’m reminiscing now, one late winter afternoon in my 200-hour teacher training, we sat around in a circle awaiting the handouts. The topic du jour was the Art and Business of Teaching, specifically, how to write your yoga teacher bio.

Our teachers, Theresa Elliott and Kathryn Payne, have been teaching for at least 20 years each, so they have seen their fair share of yoga teacher bios, and they handed out samples for us to read and peruse (“Names have been changed to protect the innocent” :) )

“Write about who you are and what you have to offer”, was their first advice. And please, don’t go overboard with the name dropping. If you didn’t hear it the first time, go easy with the name dropping. By the way, did we mention no name dropping?

Okay, so the exact details of how it went down may be a little different, but the one thing I remember most vividly is to be careful about who you say you “studied” with.

In my current 500-hour teacher training, we are required to apprentice with a Senior teacher, and at first, I wanted to go round and round and take a sampling of all the teachers in town. My advisor Kathryn gently put me in my place, “let’s be clear on whether you want to apprentice or just to check out someone’s style of teaching”.

I have now realized the difference between “being influenced by” and “studying with” a teacher. Kathryn apprenticed with Dona Holleman for three years and practiced with her for 10 years. (Okay Kathryn, I guess you could say that you studied with Dona Holleman :) ). If I just took a weekend workshop with someone once, and if they don’t even know my name or my practice, then no, I can’t really say I’ve studied with them.

Late last night, the magic that is hyperlinking on the Internets lead me to this funny and poignant post from Yoga Spy: Naming Names.

_____ began practicing yoga in 1989 while living in New York City. _____ spent several years exploring many different yoga traditions leading to years of study in the Iyengar yoga tradition with many of its master teachers such as Faiq Biria, Manuso Manus [sic], Ramanand Patel, Aadil Palkivala [sic], Joan White, Kevin Gardner [sic], Lisa Walford, Paul Cabanis, Marla Apt and Kofi Busia. _____ has also studied with renounwed [sic] teachers such as Judith Lasater, Donna Farhi, Dona Holleman and Rodney Yee. _____ was introduced to the Anusara tradition through workshops with John Friend and Viniyoga with Gary Kraftsow. In recent years _____ has been practicing Ashtanga yoga as taught by Sri K. Pattabhi Jois, under the guidance of Chuck Miller and Maty Ezraty. In the Ashtanga tradition _____ has also studied with Richard Freeman and the guru of Ashtanga, Pattabhi Jois.

Someone forgot to nudge this teacher and say, “Hey, you’re nobody without Jivamukti.”

Recognizing one’s teachers is a nice way to pay homage and to give prospective students an idea of one’s teaching methods. But it’s a slippery slope to blatant marketing and name dropping.

If I see someone list a dozen significant teachers (covering the panoply of yoga lineages), it verges on ADHD to me.

We are all influenced by numerous teachers, by reading their books, taking their workshops, and studying regularly with those in our own town. Indeed, I have taken many workshops with different teachers, some famous, but would I call them My Teachers?

P.S I would tell you who Yoga Spy is, but I’d have to kill you. (Not really :) , I myself don’t know who Yoga Spy is either, but then again, I don’t even know who “I” is sometimes…). Just rest assured that the Yoga Spy blog is much recommended both in terms of content and style.

P.P.S That last bit of Engrish is intentional.

Seattle Yoga News – Monthly Led Practice Class with Theresa Elliott

Theresa Elliott is one of those incredible Senior Yoga Teachers on the same par (if not above) some of the teachers you see at all those Yoga Conferences, and I count myself as a lucky duck for having her in Seattle to call my teacher.

[Warning: bragging about my teacher begins] She is the model for 30 Essential Yoga Poses: For Beginning Students and Their Teachers by Judith Lasater, which received tons of praises, and one reviewer even went as far as saying that Judith ”has written the book she will be remembered for if and when she ever retires from her accomplished teaching career.” And if you have a really keen eye, you might recognize her on the cover of Judith Lasater’s acclaimed book Yoga Body: Anatomy, Kinesiology, and Asana.

Theresa has chosen to lay low and stay local (eat local, teach local). She once told me that this allows her to have established and long term relationships with her students, and it is a joy for her to see how people grow.

She is trained in the Iyengar tradition, but also works very closely with Physical Therapists over the years to adjust the poses to the individual, rather than follow a strict prescription.

You too, can now study with this awesome teacher! Theresa is starting a Monthly Led Practice Class, where you can “follow Theresa in her asana practice as she creates sequences from her 20 years of practice in asana and the movement arts”.  [Okay, I'm done bragging now, for now :) ]

From the Taj Yoga web site:

Monthly Led Practice Class
Selected Friday Mornings: Sept. 18, Oct. 16, Nov. 13, Dec. 11
10:05 am -11:30 am’ish
$15 Drop-in, class card available
Prerequisite: 3 years study with Theresa or by consent. Must be proficient in Sirsasana and Sarvangasana (or alternatives) and have a sense of humor.

This intermediate+ class is in the “follow the leader” format (no adjustments or visual assessments from Theresa) and may include, but not limited to:

  • Standard asana work
  • Pranayama/meditation
  • Research and development
  • Demanding/highly focused repetition or pattern work
  • Music
  • Unusual “postures” and vinyasa
  • Jokes

Alternatives will be offered when needed.

I’ll be there, and hope I’ll see you too!

Seattle Yoga News – 200-Hour Yoga Teacher Training at Pacific Yoga

If you are looking for a quality Yoga Teacher Training Program, look no further than Pacific Yoga Teacher Training & Advanced Studies.

The next 200-hour training (PDF) is set to start on February 19, 2010, and ending on October 24, 2010. The program includes the studies of Yoga Asanas, Pranayama, Anatomy (gross and subtle body), Sanskrit, the Yoga Sutras, and the Art & Business of teaching yoga.

There’s an open house scheduled for Friday October 23

  • 5:30 – 6:00 PM – Meet and greet
  • 6:00 – 7:00 PM – Presentation

Teachers Theresa Elliott, Kathryn Payne, and Paul Bubak will be there to answer questions. If you have any questions for someone who went through the training, let me know (I might be a bit biased :) ). You might also want to check out my article on choosing a yoga teacher training program.

Lessons Through an Accident

A Bike Accident

Yesterday, on my bike ride home, I flew off my handlebars going downhill.

I blacked out for a second, and before I knew it, someone was standing there asking if I was ok. “Your legs were over your head,” he said, (I know, impressive right?) and offered if he could take me somewhere.  I was totally disoriented, and the time-space contiuum seemed to all blend together. I felt fine enough to get on my bike, but I was so out of it that I didn’t have time to ask for the guy’s name to thank him.

The more that I think of it, the more that I am truly truly grateful for my accident. I’m thankful for the kindness of  a stranger. I’m thankful that my body, though sore as it is right now, didn’t suffer any broken bones. I still have all my teeth, and I can still walk around on my own two feet.

Normal is nice, and we take it for granted all the time.

Listening to the Animal

I rode my bike the rest of the way home, checked that I was mostly ok, and got on my mat. I curled up in Child’s pose, and just felt the weight of my body. A bit shaken up, I repeated “I’m okay” out loud a couple times, as to reassure my reptilian brain.

My teacher Theresa Elliott often refers to our “animal” within as the creature that we need to sooth and coax into focusing and relaxing. As much as possible, I slowed down my breath and smoothed it out, coaxing my animal to calm down.

I used the scanning technique in yoga, to go through my whole body to see how it felt, to hear what was talking to me. I have to admit, this will sound extremely cheesy, but there was this moment of tenderness, of me really giving my full attention to my body, and really listening to it.

The Gaitri Mantra

I sat up and tried to press my hands together, something I can do very easily normally, but was practically impossible at the time, because my wrists, especially my right wrist, were bruised upon the hard impact of the fall. I let my palms, and hands, be where they wanted to be, and started chanting the Gaitri Mantra.

I learned of the Gaitri Mantra when I took a Sanskrit workshop with my teacher Kathryn Payne, and there was a woman in class who was a devoted Bhakti Yoga practitioner. She had suffered from chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia for 7 years, and wasn’t getting much better through both western and eastern medicine. She learned to chant the Gaitri Mantra, and did it for 108 times a day, every day for a couple weeks, and the  symptoms subsided. She swore that she had been pain-free ever since.

I had always been somewhat skeptical of such stories, as my Western science mind has been trained to be, but at that moment, any doubt I had seemed to be insignificant to my body’s desire to chant. So I kneeled down by my bed with my shaken body and voice, and started to chant, Ohm Bhurbhuvah svah… The unfamiliar Sanskrit words filled the room, and I began to get so involved with the pronunciation and the pure sound of it, that I forgot how painful my wrists felt.

Stop Fanning the Fire, and Stay with the Breath

Last night, as I tried to sleep, my head felt heavy and dizzy, and I thought of Natasha Richardson’s recent death from a head injury. “Oh God, what if this is my last night?”, I thought. I know, it sounds silly and overdramatic in broad daylight when everything is fine. But in the dead of the night, when the mind is fearful, overactive and imaginative, it can go anywhere and is capable of thinking of anything.

So I thought of Pema Chodron’s teaching, and in particular the advice of “do not fan the bad thought”. Essentially, every time I think of something, usually something unpleasant, I am fanning it, making the fire bigger.

Then I remembered the lesson of being present, and went back to the good ol’ breath. I thought of my pranayama lessons, especially observing the breath. What is it doing? Where is it going? I laid there, just watching my breath, and fell asleep at some point.

Yoga for Every Occasion

This morning, I woke up and temporarily thought of going to yoga, but when I stirred and tried to turn my body, I immediately realized I could not do even a simple Downward dog at the moment. “What now?”, I thought. It was like when I was doing a lot of competitive running, and when a shin splints sent me sideline, I felt this loss of identity. “But I am a runner, what was I then, if I did not run?”

Luckily, there is a yoga for everyone and for every season. I had dabbled into Yin Yoga for a bit, but quite frankly, my go-go-go-ooh-shiny-shiny personality hadn’t really jived with it. But this morning, it was the perfect and most appropriate thing for me to do, so I dusted off my Biff Mithoefer’s Yin Yoga Kit, and put on the guided practice CD. Then, I arranged blocks, bolsters, and blankets together, and fell in a Restorative Yoga pose that I had learned from Judith Lasater.

Having had this accident has slowed my pace down, but it has filled up my heart with even more gratitude. Gratitude for all the teachings I have received, and that there is this thing, this tool, this yoga, in my life. My friend Brendan once asked me why I do yoga, and after thinking about it for a minute, I said, “I do yoga so that I can deal with the shenanigan of Life more gracefully.” It was true then, and it’s true now.

The benefits of doing yoga, as I have seen, go above and beyond being able to touch my toes. So breathe, breathe, breathe, and wear your helmet!

30 Essential Yoga Poses

30 Essential Yoga Poses: For Beginning Students and Their Teachers

30yogaposes

This is a great reference for me when doing my own home practice and sequencing poses for a class. My favorite part of the book is the Theme Practice sections where Judith has suggested sequences for what ails you: lower and upper back, hips and hamstrings, balance, strength, energy, fatigue, and relaxation.

What’s also really neat for me is my teacher, Theresa Elliott, is the model for the poses.