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Posts Tagged ‘yoga class’

Necessity And 60% Yoga

June 30th, 2008 No comments
Donna and I began attending yoga class about eight years ago, largely due to health concerns. Doctors wanted her to have surgery on her spine to correct a troubling stress injury. The prospect of surgery scared us enough that we were soon looking for every alternative we could find.We became regulars at a chiropractor’s office, one who specialized in the treatment of athletic injuries, though Donna’s injury was more work related. He recommended regular massage, so we found a gifted massage therapist. We often drove to an acupuncture school where we learned the basics of Chinese medicine, and she found a little relief there. All these treatments served to strengthen her muscles and joints, and relieve stress.

We heard about a weekly restorative yoga class at a nearby church. My doctor encouraged me also to take better care of myself, to get regular exercise, and because I was driving anyway, I joined Donna for the class, discovering quickly that my body liked this restorative pampering and relaxation. The yoga style we first learned was called Svaroopa, and I remember using lots of props: cushions, blocks and straps (bondage?) to hold certain poses, allowing us to surrender more deeply into them.

A few months later, we decided to relocate to shorten our commute, giving us more time to get our domestic things in order, and just plain have a life outside the rush hour traffic congestion. After our move, we re-thought our health care, finding a new chiropractor just a couple blocks away, complete with an acupuncturist and massage therapists regularly using his extra office space.

Turns out our new chiropractor has treated many yoga instructors and students for years. He recommended an instructor who herself began practicing yoga years before, because of a horse riding injury.

We began enjoying her classes at a new studio for us, learning more about yoga as a healing practice for our bodies and minds – and also – very important – how to take care of yourself in class.

If a teacher doesn’t offer alternative postures, or suggest backing out of uncomfortable positions, or encourage you to honor your body’s abilities, then you’re on your own, you need to do these things for yourself.

It’s very easy to want to please a yoga teacher in a yoga class, in part because they create a safe place to learn outside your comfort zone, to stretch your limits, doing so in a compassionate and forgiving way. And the safe place is central to learning the practice, a learning that takes years. We have so few truly non-judgmental spaces in our cities and towns, that this freedom at the yoga studio – to just be – is refreshing, an oasis and balm to the endless hustle and stress outside.

We soon found our two weekly basic Iyengar classes with Lori were making a significant, if gradual, improvement in Donna’s strength and range of motion, and in my own flexibility and sense of well being as well. The Iyengar approach, as taught by Lori, was the perfect transition from the purely restorative to a more active style for us, with the easy flow between postures serving to get us moving more comfortably and breathing more deeply in the classes.

I got some razzing from my brothers about turning myself into pretzels and getting all new age-y around them, as was to be expected. But when I noticed them complaining about the inevitable aches and pains of aging, I was able to offer a couple exercises like the cat-cow and variations on long deep breathing. They felt some immediate effect, and soon backed off from their initial skepticism.

It was during this time that I came up with the idea of 60% Yoga. In this approach, it didn’t matter what style of yoga was being taught, only that the teacher encouraged each student to think of the experience as their own personalized class. Each student is always responsible for taking care of themselves, backing out of uncomfortable poses, checking in with the teacher whenever they need any kind of help.

The 60% figure is the result of two self scores. You get 50% just for showing up, starting with a credit rather than a deficit. And you’re required to attempt only 10% of what the teacher is suggesting, thus 60% total. The showing up is key, and 10% is never too much to ask, the threshold always providing an easy permission to begin as modestly and gently as you wish.

It’s important to understand that a yoga practice is about showing up, becoming more present in your body, in your interactions with others, in your better estimations of yourself. If you begin with 10% and hold that as a baseline, then the time will come when you’ll naturally adjust what that 10% means for you. Each class truly becomes YOUR class.

I am an often lazy yogi. We’ve been at this still new practice for over eight years now. Donna has almost 100% range of motion back, and much less pain. We’ve taken up dance classes for a couple seasons (something that never could have happened without the yoga) and have several new projects we’re looking to immerse ourselves in,even entering a new graduate school course of study.

When we found ourselves in yoga teacher training a year ago, along with an enviably younger and truly enthusiastic group, my 60% yoga idea required some explanation, so I refined it, just as I was exploring a new style for me, kundalini yoga.

Kundalini is not quite as approachable with the 10% criterion to begin, as it’s designed to engage your whole self, keeping you so busy, inwardly and outwardly, that there’s little room to think. But I do allow myself as a new student again to take time in the breathing and movements, some days giving it more like 95%, but always respecting the journey I’ve taken, keeping the 60% Yoga as a kind of beginner’s touchstone, one that carries great value for the skeptical and still reluctant parts of me.

I’m grateful for how far I’ve come with these varieties of yoga, especially since this physical yoga experience was nowhere on my radar of possibility until Donna’s injury.

We’re both much healthier now, with reasonable strength, endurance, even a few decent dance moves, and great yoga friends, some of whom started as we did, with very little interest beyond feeling better or tagging along with a spouse, without much more than a 10% capacity to begin. Some exercises and poses are still uncomfortable, but I have my own inner permission to back off and take a pass when that suits me. I do find it interesting how some poses that were beyond me at the beginning are now a piece of cake – tree pose for instance. I could not for the life of me maintain any consistent balance on one leg, and now I hold myself still as long as I wish. My 10% became 11%, then more, until it all became easier as I kept showing up – at class, in the poses, in the breathing, in my life. And the idea of surgery for Donna was laid aside a long time ago. There are far better choices, and yoga offers some surprising new ways of thinking and being, in addition to the health benefits over time. A great yoga instructor is worth going out of your way for. Find someone you can trust, and your life will change – for the better.

About the Author

Jess Freer attends regular yoga classes with his wife Donna, and recommends his ’60%’ approach to anyone, especially reluctant men interested in seriously improving their health, but is unsure how to begin. http://mypieceofthe-e-pie.com

Facial Yoga, Is This The New Face Lift?

May 21st, 2008 No comments
While it is undeniable that the benefits of yoga are endless and far reaching many are still skeptical of a new trend being called yoga facial toning. The yoga element will definitely produced positive results but does it actually give you a face lift without the surgery? This may indeed be one of those things you may just have to tryout to find the answer for yourself.Yoga facial toning is considered to be a specific exercise program which stimulates, firms, and lifts every muscle of the face and neck. The claim is that by exercising these muscle there will be a reduction of sagging skin and the disappearance of fine lines and wrinkles. Many also believe the stimulation of the facial muscles will also lead to a clear complexion.

During a yoga facial toning class the face is ultimately the focus but be aware of the fact you will not just be sitting in a chair making faces at your instructor, it is generally believed that proper form involves your heart being higher that your head. The facial poses are often combined with yoga body poses and breathing techniques to allow for an increased flow of oxygen and nutrient rich blood to all parts and aspects of the head including the face, neck, scalp and brain.

The facial poses are very precise as technique and form are considered key. In general terms some of the facial expressions utilized are looking surprised, puffing out your cheeks, looking like you are kissing someone, and wagging your tongue. The premise is that exercising the muscles of the face and neck will result in drastic improvements of an aged face and also prevention of further damage. All muscles in your body regardless of where they are located will experience atrophy when not used and stimulated.

There are additional side effects of facial yoga that may indeed lead to a younger appearance. Yoga is centered around the body, mind and spirit connection and the balance of ones vital force. When you leave a yoga class you will definitely experience an unexplainable combination of feels including increased energy, at peace, free of stress, and a sense of clarity which leads to a shift in awareness. If you feel more vibrant you will most certainly look more vibrant. In addition, we most certainly wear stress on our faces, therefore it stands to reason we should also see in the face when this stress is alleviated.

Whatever the reason, many people swear by facial yoga toning so it may require some experimentation on your part to determine for yourself if this is a trend you want to be a part of. If yoga facial toning does indeed return the toted results it is definitely a great alternative to the cost and risk that surgery offers. At the very least it would offer the proven benefits of total body yoga not to mention laughs and good hearted fun, where else can you stick out your tongue and not get a disapproving look.

About the Author

Looking for Anti Aging tips, facts and products to help you age gracefully and ensure you life your best life? Visit: http://www.antiagingproductsreviewed.com

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