Relax

Yoga Nidra Tonight!

Posted by on May 14, 2011 | 0 comments

Have you attended Yoga Nidra? If you have, then you know why we offer it frequently; if you haven’t attended, then we invite you to set your intention now to attend this evening. Give yourself the gift of an hour and allow yourself that time to discover relaxation.

Yoga Nidra is appropriate for anyone regardless of ability and no previous yoga experience is necessary. You are guided through a relaxing meditation while lying on your back (or sitting if needed) leaving you feeling refreshed and relaxed.  Don’t take my word for it, come and discover this for yourself.

Join us tonight at the studio for an hour-long session of Yoga Nidra. Here is the link to the studio address.  Please contact us at info@shantayoga.com should you have any questions or concerns. We’re here to help!

As with all of our in-studio classes, Yoga Nidra is offered by donation.  We appreciate your generosity!

Jai Bhagwan

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Life As A Yoga Mat

Posted by on May 4, 2011 | 0 comments

#3 in a series of posts that addresses the topics listed in this article.

“I love teaching yoga, but teaching is torture if I haven’t been able to do my own practice in awhile.”

Both Ramdas and I do indeed love teaching yoga; that portion of today’s topic is joyfully expressed, however, the remaining portion of this topic is what I would like to attend to, neither of us ever finding torture in teaching.

To better explain, I would like to write about what I believe a practice is.  I will assume the author of this article I am addressing is referring to an asana practice, or postures performed on a mat.  Yoga is about breaking our reactive patterns to any given situation, on or off the mat.  Postures performed on a mat are simply a place we can learn what causes us to react and where our edges lie, but they are not the only place; asanas are simply one vehicle for practicing yoga, and a good entry point.

Postures are, by design, places to deliberately enter into uncomfortable situations.  Yes, I wrote uncomfortable.  If you stop to think about – I mean really think – then you’ll eventually arrive at the understanding that holding your arms up over your head for minutes on end actually serves a purpose beyond strengthening a few muscles.  It teaches us that although we might be uncomfortable, we have the remarkable ability to expand our capacity for accepting things just as they are, as they show up, every moment of every day, allowing us to live with greater ease and happiness.

Life is full of what we believe to be uncomfortable situations, moments when we believe that anything else than what is happening is preferred.  If you find yourself in a torturous situation, as the author of this article did, then that is your opportunity to call forth what yoga has taught you, to breathe into that space you’ve created by practicing asana, relaxing with whatever is happening, and in doing so you will find that you are no longer just practicing yoga on a mat, but everywhere you are.  Life will become your yoga mat.

Jai Bhagwan

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Breathe

Posted by on Jan 28, 2011 | 1 comment

Have you ever heard me or another teacher say that in a class?  I’m sure you probably have.  Why do we, yoga teachers, bring up breath so much?  Breathing is such a simple action and one that we each do unconsciously hundreds, even thousands of times a day.  Without breath, the Breathe With Ease.  Breathe.  Be Happy.  Live with Easebody dies just as without a heart beat the body dies.  Unlike a heartbeat, however, it is very simple to control breath, just think the words “long slow inhale, long gentle exhale” and the breath immediately lengthens and slows.  As the breath slows, the body relaxes and the mind becomes calm and focused.

Breath is the bridge, the link, between the body and the mind.  If the body shortens the breath, the mind becomes agitated.  If the mind shortens the breath, the body becomes agitated.  Both are fight or flight responses with the body and mind preparing for action.  Now, don’t make any changes and just notice your own breath.  What is it like?  If you’re like the majority of people, the breath is shallow—filling the top third or so of the lungs—and the breath is fairly rapid.  Shallow, rapid breath is the body’s signal to the brain to prepare for fight or flight.  Most of us live on the cusp of our flight or fight response, why?  We live under constant, low-level tensions.

When the body is well fed, it has a capacity for activity and when it needs more food, the body experiences hunger pangs.  Everyone knows how to relieve hunger pangs:  Eat something!  Similarly, the mind has a capacity to deal with tension but once the tension exceeds the mind’s capacity, tension becomes stress.  When stress goes unresolved, it lowers the capacity of the mind to deal with tension which means more of the tension becomes stress and, very quickly, a vicious cycle forms.  You may have experienced this yourself, one thing after another piles up in your life and the stress builds and builds until finally, one little thing “goes wrong” and BOOM!  Emotions explode.  How those emotions explode is different for everyone, for some it might be raging anger or torrents of tears and for others it might be mind numbing depression.  Regardless of the shape of the explosion, the root cause is the same:  Stress but why, why are so many of us so very stressed?

Unlike hunger pangs, most of us are unsure how to relieve stress.  We may have means for temporarily treating stress such as taking a luxurious bubble bath or running a few miles or working out at the gym.  Usually, however, these are only temporary fixes and stress levels quickly race back to unhealthy levels.  So, how to relieve stress?  Breathe.  Too simple, right?  Remember breath is the signal to both body and mind to prepare for fight or flight.  It is also the signal to mind and body to relax and be at ease, the key is long, deep inhales and gentle, slow exhales.  Have you ever heard someone say, “Take a deep breath and relax”?  Take five, ten or even fifteen minutes right now and breathe.  Long, deep inhales and gentle, slow exhales.  Notice how simply changing breath changes the level of relaxation in the body and the level of ease and peace in the mind.

Now, there are other tools to help release stress, if there weren’t then I wouldn’t say, “Breathe.  Relax.  Let go. ” but I’ll write about those other tools in upcoming entries.  Until then, remember to breathe.

Jai Bhagwan

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Breathe. Relax. Let Go.

Posted by on Jan 14, 2011 | 1 comment

I have been trying for four days to write an entry here.  I had a topic in mind and I’ve written quite a bit but it just didn’t feel right, didn’t really fit.  It was actually to the point that I could not force myself to continue writing on the topic.  What was the horrid topic?  Life is full of ease when one is happy.  It’s true and I can teach anyone how to live with ease and how to be happy no matter what shows up in life.  Yoga is about ease, freedom, liberation.  It is about living happy, content and with a sense of ease.  That, however, is not what was coming out of my fingers as I typed; so, I let it go.

There is a very clever aspect of yoga called svaadhyaya or self-study.  This basically means that I observe my own actions and reactions and learn from them.  As soon as I let go of the need to write about ease and happiness, I noticed that I felt happy and at ease.  Why?  Was it because I gave up on something hard?  Was I just taking the easy way out?

“The path of least resistance is the path of the loser.”

~ H. G. Wells

“The path of least resistance makes all rivers, and some men, crooked.”

~ Napoleon Hill

By not writing on a topic that was hard, am I now a loser or in danger of becoming crooked?  I often say, “Breathe.  Relax.  Let go.”  Am I encouraging students, friends, family and myself to simply take the easy way out?  No, if you have been in my class and heard me say, “Breathe.  Relax.  Let go.” then you know that I usually say that while everyone is holding a pose.  Knees frequently are shaking or arms are trembling and there I am saying, “Breathe.  Relax.  Let go.”  The easy way out would be to hold the breath, struggle and force yourself through the pose.  In the beginning it actually takes more discipline to simply breathe, relax and let go because that is exactly the opposite of what most of us naturally do.

Sometimes struggle, hard work and great effort is exactly what is needed and sometimes, quite often actually, it is simply ego trying to control the situation.  The question then is how can one tell the difference between needed effort and optional, unhelpful effort?  Ease.  Sound crazy?  Maybe it is, maybe it is but before making that decision, consider this:  Have you ever done something hard but completely enjoyed, even felt refreshed by doing it?  This almost always happens for me when I’m mowing my lawn.  I have almost 1/3 of an acre of grass to mow so I know I’ll be at it for a while.  I also know that if I’m distracted by all the other things I would rather do that mowing the lawn will be a terrible drag.  Knowing that I don’t want to be miserable, I let go of whatever else I could be doing and just focus on mowing.  When I do this, all the work of mowing comes with a sense of ease.

The same basic thing happened with this blog post.  The first topic filled me with struggle and effort and there was absolutely no ease in it.  This entry, on the other hand, has almost written itself.  Both required the effort of typing and thinking and feeling and editing but one was a moment to moment struggle and the other was a breath of fresh air.

Remember, when the going gets tough, the tough breathe, relax and let go.

Jai Bhagwan

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