|


|
 
|
The Living Practice Online
Yoga Articles, Yoga Essays, Yoga
Stories, Yoga Wisdom

Check
back often as we refresh and renew our online treasure-trove of
inspirational articles in our Living Practice Online. Our writers
are a devoted group of yoga practitioners from all lineages with the
intention to illustrate ways to incorporate yoga in to everyone's
daily practice ... everywhere!
Pinca
Mayurasana Peacock Tailfeather
When you’ve
perfected
this posture
throw it away –
a peacock cannot
see
the beautiful
feathers
behind it.
Reprinted from Yoga Poems: Lines to Unfold
By, Stone Bridge Press.
Leza is a published author, yoga
instructor and co-owner of Sun and Moon Yoga Studio located in Meguro,
Japan.

Workshop Report
Body Landscapes
Dancing the
Feminine
By Charlotte
Holtzermann
With instructors
Georgianne Cowan and Stephanie Franz on June 12, 2006.
"Summer is upon us
and there is a blossoming into shape and space." Stephanie Franz
welcomed a circle of seven women in a large, carpeted studio.
On the threshold of
summer, I visit this class to renew my soul in movement, to feel space
with closed eyes, to let impulse unfold. It is a feminine way to move
intuitively through uncharted ground. I feel liquid, serpent-like and
free in this context of exploring movement and ritual play.
The space is
dressed with fabric and symbols; an altar on the floor hosts a bowl of
water, small buddha figures, candles and broad green leaves. Panels
of violet, sage, saffron and red chiffon hang from high beams. Piles
of small, smooth stones suggest to my feet that it's time for summer
walks at low tide.
We begin a warm up
holding hands with our left palm up and right hand down. A current of
air envelopes us. We emit an audible "ah" on our exhale, letting our
inhale grow into a full, suspended breath. Georgianne suggests that
we use our left hand to stroke the back of our neck and our right hand
to circle the abdomen.
We shift on to our
hands and knees and let our pelvis move in a figure eight; letting
this movement be the source of opening the torso and legs. After
years of beginning class at the barre in ballet or standing on the mat
in yoga, I feel animal like - grounded, as we begin to warm up from
all fours. Georgianne encourages us to sense the ember, the heat in
our tail bone.
We continue to
stretch into our feet, to make gestures touching our heart. We move
for the first hour to haunting chants and drums. Each woman passing
through her inner worlds. I revel in exploring trance, dance and
ritual.
After a short
break, Stephanie introduces the second round by talking about recent
evidence in science which shows the function of mirror neurons in our
brain; how much we understand through empathic intake and imitation.
She mentioned a recent study of a monkey's brain wired to a monitor in
a lab showing the monkey's neurons mirroring a lab technician licking
an ice cream cone.
This idea is key to
our next round: To be in a state of mirroring and offering to each
other. "This is about meeting, blessing and exposing yourself," said
Stephanie. Each of us took turns moving before and interacting with
the group. I was moved watching some women reveal raw angst and
rapture. This rite of exposing internal terrain in movement brought
us into more intimate space.
In the third round,
each of us took time to dwell at various altars in the room, exploring
self in stillness and with stones, bells, veils, corridors, cushions
and the floor. After years of training in various dance and movement
disciplines, I am drawn into this domain of exploring space and
gesture. It feels like feminine yoga - joining psyche and soma.
Georgianne Cowan
and Stephanie Franz embody and articulate womanly, earthy and ethereal
dance. They met while studying Continuum movement with Emile Conrad
and Susan Harper. Their idiom is guided and mimetic movement
incorporating myth, dream and prayer. They inspire women to tap into a
feminine landscape of exploration and healing.
With Michael
Tobias, Georgianne edited a book of collected essays on The Soul of
Nature. She is a photographer and performance artist in a video she
produced entitled Earth Dreaming. Stephanie Franz, M.A., is a
movement therapist and professional Birth Assistant. They blend and
complement each other in a shared evening of guiding the group.
Georgianne and
Stephanie will resume classes in Body Landscapes on Monday
evenings beginning
September 11th. For more information, contact GCowan2000@aol.com
Charlotte Holtzermann teaches
Beginning Hatha Yoga at LMU Extension and for children in STAR
Education. She works with individuals in Alexander Technique, Aquatic
Exercise and Watsu.
mailto:Charlotteholtz@yahoo.com

Milk In The Age
of Convenience
By Arun Deva
As with all great
treasures, milk comes with certain caveats. As our society further
distances itself from nature and turns gradually more synthetic, these
caveats turn into dire warning signals. A look at milk’s qualities as
expressed in the magnificent Ayurvedic text, the Caraka Samhita,
shows the potentiality of both misuse and overuse. Caraka
lists milk’s qualities as sweet, cold, soft, lubricant, unctuous,
smooth, slippery, heavy, slow and pleasant. In Ayurveda, milk is
almost never drunk cold, as it is harder to digest and thus turns the
milk from sattvic to tamasic in nature. Sattva is a state of
lightness, equanimity, clarity, and, in this case, fortification,
strength and vitality. Tamas, on the other hand, reflects dullness,
confusion, sloth, and in this case, the process of compromising its
quality, leading to ill health and the potentiality of allergies. But
what exactly is “compromised” milk?
To answer this is
to look first and foremost at its source: the Mother. When a nursing
mother makes choices regarding her diet, she does so with the welfare
of her infant in mind. She instinctively knows that what she eats will
be passed on to her child through her milk, thus confirming milk as
the essence of her diet, her emotional state and her health. It is not
a far-fetched theory that makes a mother stay away from alcohol and
cigarettes when she is nursing. It is, however, an act of “putting on
the blinders” when she stops at that and does not extend the logic to
her diet, her health and her emotional state. This begins the process
of compromisation of the quality of her milk and the obvious
implication is the shifting of her milk away from the desired sattvic
state. As in life, there is not just black and white; there are
various shades of grey in between.
The Caraka
Samhita, at least 2000 years old, lists eight recommended sources
of milk, including cow, sheep, mare, elephant and human. It lists the
varying qualities of each. Of all, cow’s milk is considered the best
for its ability to increase ojas, the essence of our immunity and
vitality. Yet today, milk is a subject of great controversy regarding
its benefits, especially as compared to its potential risks. These
risks include high and unhealthful cholesterol levels, heart disease,
cancer, osteoporosis, high blood pressure, constipation, lactose
intolerance and allergies, among others.
So, how did our
perception of milk shift from “best among rasayanas (rejuvenative)”
to a highly suspect source of many illnesses? The answer must lie in
the changing quality of milk as precipitated by the manner in which we
treat its source: the mother. Whether cow, human or other, it is still
only a mother that naturally provides milk. When I advice my clients
or students about milk, I often tell them to get a healthy cow, put it
in a large pasture with lots of green grass, let its calf play with it
as a child does, then let the calf drink its full from it and then
when you look into its large, liquid, loving eyes and you put a pail
under it, you may not even need to milk it, the milk will be given to
you that readily! This milk drunk fresh, warm and raw will nourish you
like no other food in this world! Realistically, this scenario is
almost impossible for most but its essential message can and should
exist symbolically for all of us.
As is the case of
the human mother, it helps to put things in perspective by remembering
that the cow is, first and foremost, also a mother. The cow was always
revered in
India,
her special status enshrined by the law. But now, as you walk the
streets of India, in many alleys you will find a cow rummaging through
the garbage for food. As a result one reads every few days about a
dead cow, her stomach stuffed with discarded plastic bags.
In farm factories
around the world, cows are forced into yearly pregnancies for their
milk. After giving birth they are milked for 10 months, often they are
artificially inseminated during the third month so that they can be
milked even when pregnant. This stressful demand for production of
milk is more than her body can take, so she starts breaking down body
tissue to produce milk. The result is an illness called ketosis. Most
of the day the cow is tied up in a narrow stall usually wallowing in
her own excrement till she goes lame. She may get mastitis because the
hands that milk her so often are rough and usually unclean, so imagine
her fate when milked by machines. She gets rumen acidosis from
unnatural feed. She is also subject to the use of an array of drugs,
including bovine growth hormone (BGH); prostaglandin, which is used to
bring a cow into heat whenever the farmer wants to have her
inseminated; antibiotics; and even tranquilizers, in order to
influence her productivity and behavior. In
India, when Mahatma Gandhi heard about the inhumane
manner in which cows were being treated, he gave up drinking milk,
something he had cherished all his life.
Cows on today's
dairy factory farms live only about four to five years (often
slaughtered because of mastitis), as opposed to the life expectancy of
20-25 years enjoyed by cows who are treated humanely and are free to
roam and free of violent drugs. No cow lives out her normal life
cycle. She is milked, made sick and then killed. Perhaps the greatest
pain suffered by cows in the dairy industry is the repeated loss of
their young. Female calves may join the ranks of the milk producers,
but the males are generally taken from their mothers within 24 hours
of birth and sold at auction either to the veal industry or to beef
producers.
And what of the
milk itself? Each cow has its own qualities of health and emotion, yet
the milk we drink is freely mixed from all the cows on the farm.
Ayurvedically, this milk is already tamasic and indigestible, causing
confusion, lethargy, fear and anger. Surely a cow that lives in
constant dread, fear of its life and deprivation from its calf, will
carry emotions such as anger, outrage, fear and hate. These then are
the emotions we digest when we drink its milk. The milk is further
pasteurized (in this age of sterile metal containers, an oxymoron) and
the good bacteria as well as the bad are destroyed. Since we need the
good bacteria to help in the formation of lactase within us, we turn
lactose intolerant. Ultra pasteurization, where the milk is violently
heated from cold refrigerated to boiling in a couple of minutes
changes the chemical composition into a mutated form the horrors of
which we can only imagine.
It is this milk
that we are expected to equate with the sattvic milk of the Vedas, of
the yogis and of Ayurveda. By all standards it will fail. It is in
fact no longer the panacea promised by Surabhi, the celestial
cow of the Vedas. In the epic myth of the churning of the ocean (manthanam),
among the fourteen great treasures that arose was this “cow of
plenty”. The ancient texts say that in Satyuga (age of
perfection), dharma stands as a cow on four legs, in the Tretayuga
(age of less than perfection), she stands on three, in Dwaparayuga
(dwindling and disappearing perfection), just two and today, in what
is widely believed to be Kaliyuga (age of decadence and
destruction), she stands on but one leg.
If milk is the
essence of a cow’s diet, then what is this milk that arises from a
steady diet of soy meal, cottonseed meal or other commercial feeds,
even bakery waste, chicken manure or citrus peel cake, all laced with
pesticides. Vitamins A and D are greatly diminished when milk cows are
fed commercial feed, needing to be added in artificially. Soy meal has
the wrong protein profile for the dairy cow, resulting in a short
burst of high milk production followed by premature death. Real feed
for cows is rapidly growing green grass, green feed, silage, hay and
root vegetables. From a yogin’s perspective, a cow is revered for the
fortifying and complete meal offered by her milk. In the Mahabharata (Anusasana
Parva), in a discussion between the Rishis Bhishma, Vasishta
and Vyasa, is a sloka, a verse:
Cows constitute the
stay of all creatures. Cows are the refuge of all creatures. Cows are
the embodiment of merit. Cows are sacred and blessed and are
sanctifiers of all.
One should never,
in even one’s heart, do an injury to cows. One should, indeed, always
confer happiness on them.
When treated
humanely, as is the case with all mothers, there is a magical quality
to the milk of a cow. In 1929, Dr. J.R. Crewe of the Mayo Foundation
published an article called The "Milk Cure." The treatment was a
combination of a detoxifying fast and nutrient-dense feeding. The milk
used was, in all cases, the only kind of milk available in those
days—raw milk from pasture-fed cows, rich in butterfat. The patients
were all fed small quantities of milk all day coming up to 5-10 quarts
total and nothing else. Striking results were seen in diseases of the
heart and kidneys and high blood pressure as well as edema, which is
even more surprising because it is unorthodox to treat dropsy (edema)
with large quantities of liquids. In the old Ayurvedic texts, milk
acts often as an “anupasana,” a carrier of medicinal herbs. In his
wonderful Ayurvedic cookbook, Dr. Lad lists different medicated milks
for different doshic disorders. Ayurveda strongly recommends a glass
of warm milk with ginger and cinnamon at bedtime to help one sleep.
Milk is considered both an aphrodisiac as well as replenishing after
sexual activity. It is said that it takes up to 35 days for food’s
nutritional value to reach the reproductive tissue but that milk goes
straight to it.
There is also a
protocol to the drinking of this nutrient rich elixir. Since milk is
a fortifying food/beverage, it has a kapha increasing nature;
basically this means that it should not be had in addition to your
meal. The concept of a glass of milk with breakfast, lunch or dinner
is alien to Ayurveda for common sense reasons. Milk, because of its
nourishing properties, which include cold and heavy, usually needs to
be drunk warm and, unless you have a very strong agni, (the
digestive fire) some digestive herbs like ginger or cinnamon should be
added. It can be drunk at night before bed or as a complete morning
beverage. Milk also gives us some of our other favorite foods: butter,
ghee, lassi, yogurt or curds and of course, cheeses. All of these
should be used with care and not indulged in because of their
richness. It is said that the poorer nations suffer the curse of
malnutrition and that the richer ones, where overindulgence is the
norm, suffer from the curse of malabsorption.
We live now in an
age of convenience. Many of our children in the big cities associate
apples with a supermarket shelf and not a tree in an orchard. We
expect to find any and all foods at any and all times conveniently
provided, forgetting that Nature gives us seasonal foods for a reason.
Milk is associated with plastic and paper cartons with the picture of
a grazing cow, and yet the reality is what is inside that carton, not
in its outside advertisement. It is understandable to want this
convenience, after all it is the fruit of our social and cultural
advancement, but we must at some point ask not just at what price but
also how many of God’s fair creatures, of whom we are supposed to show
the most promise, are actually paying this price and in the end, we
have to ask ourselves, what does this say about us? In the war between
cows and humans and there is no question that we have subjugated them
much as prisoners of such a war, there can never be any winners. After
all, we started out as the best of friends and how could a war between
friends ever end in a victory for one? They have not only been our
partners all through our rural growth, but in a mutual trust and
respect, continued to act as our mothers after we had become adults,
providing us with milk, cheese, butter, and even fuel for our fires as
cow dung and buffalo chips.
A cow digests the
essence of the earth through its grass, a very concentrated and hard
food to assimilate, but because of their four stomachs, they are able
to draw the earth’s energy out of it and, having fed their babies,
they share this wonderful panacea with us. When we treat a cow as a
commodity to increase our convenience, when we refuse to see it as a
living being, we demean ourselves. And in the end, when we make a cow
sick with the wrong foods and inhumane treatment, it, in turn, makes
us sick with mutated and perverted milk that is no longer a panacea
but is instead very much a poison.
When we respect
Nature, she will respect us. When we divorce ourselves from her, she
has no choice but to honor that by staying away from us. In this age
of convenience we have created diseases that reflect our alienation
from that which gave us life and from whose elemental structure arises
our own elemental structure. In this age of irrefutable global warming
we have forgotten that in the end we must return to Nature in the
shape of dust and that when we go to war with her, we actually go to
war with ourselves. In this age of Kaliyuga, when Surabhi,
the celestial cow, stands on one foot, Milk, the complete food, turns
into Milk, the complete destroyer. If we heed the cries of Nature, we
will in fact, hear the cries of the Mother. Every mother wants her
milk to nourish her child, not be its poison.
It is also
imperative that in this age that we see the potentiality of the next
age of perfection. We can begin living it by honoring one of the
symbols of that age, the cow standing on all four of her legs…if we
begin to drink only milk that comes from cows that roam free, that eat
good grass, that are able to nurture their calves, we may just find
that indeed, milk is the perfect food of the yogis, both a cure and a
rejuvenative.
Arun Deva practices yoga and
Ayurveda in Los Angeles. He has a Diploma in Ayurveda from the
Ayurvedic Institute of America. He has twice completed the Ayur-yoga
Teacher Training from the Ayurvedic Institute, New Mexico and has also
done teacher trainings in both Vinyasa Krama and Anusara Yoga. Having
started his studies as a child growing up India, Arun has made his
home in Los Angeles for the past 30 years. He is the founder of
Arunachala Yoga & Ayurveda, teaches Ayurvedic and Yogic lifestyle
workshops, writes articles for different publications and does
ayurvedic and yoga cikitsa treatment therapies called “Yoga Rasayana”.
He can be reached at
yogarasayana@yahoo.com .
Sanmukhi Mudra
Six-Mouth Breaths
By Leza
Lowitz
Who owns the
wind?
Who owns my
breath?
These impossible
riddles
haunt me.
Turning into the
wind
The wind turns
into me.
Those possible
answers
Keep me
breathing.
Reprinted from Yoga Poems: Lines to Unfold By,
Stone
Bridge Press.
Leza is a published author, yoga instructor and co-owner of
Sun and Moon Yoga
Studio located in
Meguro, Japan.

For Beginners:
Anjali Mudra
By Shiva Rea
Anjali
means "offering," and in
India
this mudra is often accompanied by the word "namaste."
If you have
attended even one yoga class, it is a familiar gesture: the drawing
together of one's palms at the heart. Your teacher may bring his or
her hands together while saying "Namaste" at the beginning or end of
a class. You may find his gesture within certain asanas—in
Tadasana (Mountain Pose), before you begin Sun Salutations, or
in balance poses such as Vrksasana (Tree Pose).
This sacred
hand position, called anjali mudra (AHN-jah-lee MOO-dra), is
found throughout Asia and has become synonymous with our images of
the East, from the smiling face of the Dalai Lama peering over his
fingertips to images of devotees before a Hindu or Buddhist altar.
In the West, we
translate this gesture as a posture of prayer. Because we have grown
up with this gesture as part of our culture, each of us probably has
our own personal connection to this mudra—positive or
negative. Some of us may find a subconscious resistance to bringing
our hands together as if it were a sign of submission. However, the
beauty of this gesture, which positions us right at the core of our
being, is timeless and universal.
I know a
3-year-old who is delighted to greet people this way and an actor
who prepares himself with this gesture before entering the stage. As
we explore the significance and potential of this mudra, be
open to your own experience and ways that this simple yet powerful
hand position can be a practical tool in your practice and daily
life. In Sanskrit, mudra means "seal" or "sign" and refers
not only to sacred hand gestures but also whole body positions that
elicit a certain inner state or symbolize a particular meaning.
Anjali mudra
is but one of thousands of types of mudras that are used in
Hindu rituals, classical dance, and yoga. Anjali itself means
"offering," and in India this mudra is often accompanied by
the word "namaste" (or "namaskar," depending on one's
dialect). As the consummate Indian greeting, like a sacred hello,
namaste is often translated as "I bow to the divinity within you
from the divinity within me." This salutation is at the essence of
the yogic practice of seeing the Divine within all of creation.
Hence, this gesture is offered equally to temple deities, teachers,
family, friends, strangers, and before sacred rivers and trees.
Anjali mudra is used as a posture of composure, of returning to
one's heart, whether you are greeting someone or saying goodbye,
initiating or completing an action.
As you bring your hands together
at your center, you are literally connecting the right and left
hemispheres of your brain. This is the yogic process of unification,
the yoking of our active and receptive natures. In the yogic view of
the body, the energetic or spiritual heart is visualized as a lotus
at the center of the chest. Anjali mudra nourishes this lotus
heart with awareness, gently encouraging it to open as water and
light do a flower.
Begin by coming
into a comfortable sitting position like Sukhasana (Easy
Pose). Lengthen your spine out of your pelvis and extend the back of
your neck by dropping your chin slightly in. Now, with open palms,
slowly draw your hands together at the center of your chest as if to
gather all of your resources into your heart. Repeat that movement
several times, contemplating your own metaphors for bringing the
right and left side of yourself—masculine and feminine, logic and
intuition, strength and tenderness—into wholeness.
Now, to reveal
how potent the placement of your hands at your heart can be, try
shifting your hands to one side or the other of your midline and
pause there for a moment. Don't you feel slightly off kilter? Now
shift back to center and notice how satisfying the center line is,
like a magnet pulling you into your core. Gently touch your thumbs
into your sternum (the bony plate at the center of the rib cage) as
if you were ringing the bell to open the door to your heart. Broaden
your shoulder blades to spread your chest open from the inside. Feel
space under your armpits as you bring your elbows into alignment
with your wrists. Stay here for some time and take in your
experience. What initial shifts of consciousness do you experience?
Is there a change in your mood?
Now imagine that
you are beginning your yoga practice—or any activity in which you
want to be centered and conscious of how your inner state will
affect the outcome of your experience. Take anjali mudra
again, but this time slightly part your palms as if to make a cup,
so that your hands resemble the bud of a lotus flower. Depending on
your spiritual orientation, you can metaphorically plant a seed
prayer, affirmation, or quality such as "peace," "clarity," or
"vitality" within your anjali mudra. Drop your chin towards
your chest and awaken a sense of humility and awe with which to
begin your practice, as if waiting to receive a blessing of good
things to come. It is important that this anjali or offering
be true to your Self as that will be the most effective and
uplifting for you. Traditionally, yogis might visualize their
ishta devata or personal connection to God within the shrine of
their hands. For some people this may be a sacred mountain, for
others, Jesus,
Krishna, or the Mother Goddess. Align your mind (awareness),
feeling (heart), and actions (body) within this gesture. When you
feel your invocation is complete, draw your fingertips to the center
of your forehead, ajna chakra, and pause there feeling the
calming effect of your touch. Bring your hands back to your center
to ground your intention within your heart.
From here you can
begin your yoga asanas, meditation, or any activity from a place of
connectedness. Notice how much easier it is to be present and joyous
with whatever you are doing. Look for other times to integrate
anjali mudra into your practice and life. Besides the beginning
and end of your yoga sessions, anjali mudra can be used
within the Sun Salutations and many other asanas as a way to come
back to and maintain your center. When your hands come together
overhead in Virabhadrasana I (Warrior I) or in Tree Pose,
this is still anjali mudra. Consciously connecting this
upward movement of your hands through an invisible line of energy to
your heart will help your posture and your inner attitude.
In daily life,
this prayerful gesture can be used as a way of bridging inner and
outer experience, when saying grace before meals, communicating our
truth within a relationship, or as a means of cooling the fires of
stress when feeling rushed or reactionary. Anjali mudra is an
age-old means of helping human beings to remember the gift of life
and to use it wisely.
Shiva Rea
teaches flow (vinyasa) based yoga integrating alignment and
intuition, strength and fluidity, meditation and wisdom in action at
Sacred Movement
in Santa Monica, California, and UCLA's World Arts and Cultures
Program. She is the author of the home practice CD, Yoga Sanctuary
(Sounds True), and leads workshops and adventure retreats worldwide.
Visit Shiva
at
shivarea.com.

Workshop
Report: Whole Yoga with Saul David Raye
By Charlotte Holtzermann
January 6-8, 2006
at
Shakti's Elements
"The secret of
energy is breath." Saul's voice wraps around thirty strong bodies
in morning practice of meditation, pranayama and asana in a recent
workshop at Shakti's Elements in
Santa Monica.
Living Yoga in Balance and Peace is the name of this weekend, one in
a deepen your practice series, which offers a yogic way of living in
the world - our dharma.
We reach into
shafts of sunlight. It's early Saturday morning in the first
weekend of the New Year. Everyone is lunging low in the deep
rooting flow of sun salutes; each of us in the freedom of our own
rhythm of breathing. Diving down through dog and up into snake.
Then up into warrior. Rooting our legs in the New Year. Drawing
arms outward like a bow and arrow. I am setting my course for '06.
Feel buoyed up by others in class. We let our breath settle out
through our limbs.
Members of this
workshop acknowledge each other. This is a group of yogis who know
the way we are in the world with each other in any moment is yoga,
is dharma.
Saul writes in a
booklet we each get: The word bhava means feeling or mood in
a devotional sense. The qualities of our heart that are expressed
in the world through our words and actions. Bhavana is
associated with the practice of Bhakti - devotional yoga. In
a large sense, this quality is entwined with everything we do, who
we are. Devotion is the heart of yoga practice. As we open
ourselves up, we allow reverence for life. We experience sacred
moments.
The mood of
bhavana is palpable in the room. I am grateful to be here, home
in the sunlight of southern
California
after twelve days of rain up north. These yogis are breathing
independently. No one is saying "okay, now everyone inhale." It
feels like free will in the room. The pores in my skin open. I'm
glad to be in warm space with breath stirring the air. Knowing this
is my path, my dharma; moving with yogis. It feels healing
to be home after the distance of holidays away. We gaze upward in
cobra through an arched window to a dome ceiling into skylights.
During twists,
seeing the burnt orange, fuchsia and lime green walls of
Shakti's Elements.
Owner’s Nisha Rodrigo and Zi Malonga chose these Indian/African
colors from their native
Sri Lanka
and the Sudan, for their communal center for dance, martial arts and
yoga. The shelves are lined with clothing, books, oils, herbs,
incense and jewelry.
Bathing my face
in the steam of a cup of chai tea, watching the crowd at the coffee
and tea bar engage after class. The break is filled with body talk
among the group, many of whom know each other from Saul's teacher
training programs. It's lively. Nisha and Zi saw yoga class in
India amidst the market place and wanted to have a studio like a
house in a village, open to everyone, full of community life.
Saul offers an
embodied approach to Yoga. He aims to integrate the teachings of
Yoga, Ayurveda, Tantra and Universal Light which he considers the
essence of all spiritual teachings. Practicing yoga within a warm
community is my experience of this crowd, this house, this weekend.
In pranayama
practice, Saul guides us through three part breaths; inhaling
through the low, middle and upper chest and exhaling out through our
upper, middle and low lung. We also practice long, slow nadi
shodanum, alternate nostril breathing, through the right and
left nostril. Listening to the smooth snake flow of my breath.
Saul weaves
strands of thought around us while offering precise, hands on
corrections to individual students. Yukiko Amaya and three other
assistants offer guidance in poses to everyone in class. There is a
mood of careful support with deep, relaxed working in the poses.
Feeling aches in
my joints, I'm inspired to hear Saul say: "About 300 billion cells
are created in our body’s everyday. The regenerative power of the
universe is inside us." Ah......hearing a fact of science assures
me. These aches too shall pass.
Saul teaches
asana as a process of self healing. He refers to the teachings of
pancha kosha, the five sheaths, the layers of our outer and
inner being. I am reminded of the layers in life, to keep breathing
through them, integrate them, recognize them and let them dissolve.
A transparent feeling of just breathing returns. I am grateful to
be in a morning class which begins with an hour of pranayama
and meditation before asana.
In our closing
session on Sunday afternoon, we are sitting on mats taking notes on
Saul's introduction to Auryvedic philosophy; an explanation of the
three doshas, the three types of energy which are present in
everyone and everything: Vata, Pitta and Kapha.
Understanding
these qualities can help us understand the wisdom of Auryvedic
philosophy which is balance. "In asana, he said, this means working
with your unique constitution, learning to balance your doshas with
appropriate asana." Questions from the group reveal self exploring
thought.
Our weekend in
Holistic Yoga touched on a wealth of ideas to incorporate into our
practice. Our 60 page booklet contains diagrams, poems, mantras and
articles by Saul and other authors on the yamas and
niyamas, tantra, principles of alignment, laws of healing and
the art of balanced action. There is much material to take home and
absorb.
A revered teacher
of Thai Yoga Massage, Vinyasa flow and teacher training programs,
Saul David Raye
offers his students a plate of deeper practice with a rich menu of
reference. In his presence, he offers bhavana, more bowing to the
whole tradition of yoga, to dharma - our way of being in the world.
Charlotte
Holtzermann teaches Beginning Hatha Yoga at LMU Extension and for
children
in STAR Education. She works with individuals in Alexander
Technique, Aquatic Exercise
and Watsu.
mailto:Charlotteholtz@yahoo.com

What
Is Ayurveda?
Part II: The Vision By Arun
Deva
Vata, Pitta, Kapha
While in Albuquerque, attending an
Ayurvedic workshop, a group of us went to a restaurant to have some
lunch. When the waiter overheard us talking “shop” he became quite
excited. “I know all about Vata, Pitta and Kapha!” he said, “I just
know I am a Pitta!”
There are many aspects to this story. The first is that I believe he
was right. The second is how heartening it is to see the knowledge
of Ayurveda spreading into the general consciousness of our society.
I even know people who do not know the word “Ayurveda” but know Vata,
Pitta and Kapha! The third has more serious consequences for those
of us who teach about it. As the awareness of the doshas spreads, it
becomes our responsibility to make sure that the truth of what they
are does not get distorted.
Vata, Pitta and Kapha collectively are known as the tri-dosha. The
word Dosha is difficult to translate as it has so many layers.
Literally, it means “fault” or “blame.” It also has been translated
as “humor.” If we think of humor as an “ill wind” then we can see
how this connects to the first translation. However, taking
responsibility for our actions does not necessarily mean taking
“blame” for them. Therefore, the best way to look at the doshas is
as “that which is responsible.”
To understand the doshas we have to first understand their
composition. Ayurveda believes that all creation arises from five
basic elements. The first of these is Ether and it is the container
for all the others. It symbolizes all space within which structure
can exist, from the space in the heavens to the space in your mouth.
When ether begins to stir it takes the form of Air, which is as much
the movement of wind as it is the force that moves our hands and our
thoughts. As this wind moves through you (and the universe) it
creates friction leading to heat and is symbolized by Fire which is
not only the visible fire we are familiar with but also the fire of
our digestion. As this fire heats, it liquefies, leading to the
Water element and in this manner, water is water as we know it but
it is also the blood, plasma and other fluids within us. Eventually
it will cool and cohere and we are left with the last and most
stable element, Earth. Earth includes the structure of our bodies:
the skeleton as well as the muscles and flesh.
Not only are these five elements the basic fabric of the Universe,
they are also what make up the tri-dosha. Vata is composed primarily
of the elements of air and ether; pitta of fire and water; and kapha
is water and earth. These three together are the governing
principles of our existence. As such, each lends its qualities
towards creating our personalities and that is where we begin to
learn about our individual natures. What makes us unique is the
proportion and combination of these forces within us.
Because these principles are in reality nothing more than a
collection of their qualities, even if you and I have the same
dominant dosha, we may have quite different personalities. We will
however have more in common with each other than with someone of a
different doshic constitution.
Vata dosha will have certain qualities inherent from its elemental
roots of air and space. People of this dosha may tend to feel cold
and have dry skin. While either tall or short, they are invariably
light framed: if they do put on weight, it will be mostly around the
hips. They may be easily excited, and tend towards poor or light
sleep. Under stress, they tend towards nervousness, anxiety, or
fear. Although they grasp concepts rather easily, they have poor
retention. In balance, vata types are creative and expansive, and
can be very sensitive and intuitive individuals.
People of a predominantly Pitta nature have the qualities of fire
and water, reflecting courage and intensity. They have a strong
metabolism and their physique will be better formed than that of a
vata. With their radiant eyes and sharp features, they are very
focused and dedicated and are blessed with intelligence and a good
memory. They generally eat well and often. Due to their fiery nature
they are subject to inflammatory diseases and often their skin will
reflect this by breaking out. Emotionally they may foster anger,
hatred and jealousy. When in balance, they are focused, decisive and
passionate, thus having good leadership qualities.
Kapha being primarily water and earth, people of this constitution
are well built, even stocky. They have excellent bone structure and
are very strong. Unfortunately they tend to put on weight easily and
can end up becoming heavy. They have well-rounded faces with large
eyes, a pleasant nose and full lips. Slow to comprehend things, once
grasped they rarely forget them. Although they have tremendous
stores of energy, they tend to be lazy and need motivation. Their
systems are very strong but they are susceptible to colds and coughs
when weakened. Naturally easy to get along with, they can become
quite attached to things and even people and this can make them
greedy and possessive. Given a goal, they will be meticulous in
their performance, without one, they would rather just relax! In
balance they are just, objective and easy to rely on.
Since none of us is entirely composed of just one dosha, we all have
traits that we can identify with in each of these characterizations.
However, we will also identify more with one of the dosha than the
others and that gives us a clue to our nature. It also gives a
trained Ayurvedic practitioner the keys to helping us heal. In the
end, better health is based on being in harmony with our own
inherent nature. When we are in balance, the different facets of our
constitution reflect each other as one. This leads to a state in
which we are well established and content in ourselves: swastha.
Namaste!
Arun Deva
Arun Deva practices yoga and Ayurveda in Los Angeles. He has a
Diploma in Ayurveda from the Ayurvedic Institute of America. He has
twice completed the Ayur-yoga Teacher Training from the Ayurvedic
Institute, New Mexico and has also done teacher trainings in both
Vinyasa Krama and Anusara Yoga. Having started his studies as a
child growing up India, Arun has made his home in Los Angeles for
the past 30 years. His commitment is to the “trimurti” of studying,
practicing and teaching, in order to further his travels along the
Yogic path. He is the founder of Arunachala Yoga & Ayurveda, teaches
Ayurvedic and Yogic lifestyle workshops, writes articles for
different publications and does ayurvedic and yoga cikitsa treatment
therapies called “Yoga Rasayana”. He can be reached at
yogarasayana@yahoo.com
.
Tadasana Mountain
By Leza
Lowitz
This is the place
The journey begins.
Half rooted in the earth,
half floating in the endless sky.
What would it be like
To be the mountain?
The air is perhaps thinner,
Thought the sky is not always clear.
The view is sometimes shrouded in fog
Sometimes in plain and glorious sight,
But the ascent or descent can kill.
The earth is stable
Or sometimes not.
So it is
At base or summit,
Yet the mountain never asks
Why or for what purpose
It exists.
This is the one difference between the climber
and the climbed.
Reprinted from Yoga Poems: Lines to Unfold By, Stone Bridge
Press.
Leza is a published author, yoga instructor and co-owner of
Sun and Moon Yoga Studio
located in Meguro, Japan.

Consciousness
in Motion By Shiva Rea
Vinyasa yoga teaches us to cultivate an awareness that links each
action to the next—on the mat and in our lives.
Sit back and relax. Take in these images and see if you can sense
the underlying pattern: the flow of the seasons, the rise and fall
of the tides in response to the moon, a baby fern unfurling, a Ravi
Shankar sitar raga or Ravel's "Bolero," the creation and the
dissolution of a Tibetan sand mandala, the flow of Suryanamaskar
(Sun Salutation).
What do these diverse phenomena have in common? They are all
vinyasas, progressive sequences that unfold with an inherent
harmony and intelligence. "Vinyasa" is derived from the Sanskrit
term nyasa, which means "to place," and the prefix vi, "in a
special way"—as in the arrangement of notes in a raga, the steps
along a path to the top of a mountain, or the linking of one asana
to the next. In the yoga world the most common understanding of
vinyasa is as a flowing sequence of specific asanas coordinated
with the movements of the breath. The six series of Pattabhi Jois's
Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga are by far the best known and most
influential.
Jois's own teacher, the great South Indian master Krishnamacharya,
championed the vinyasa approach as central to the
transformative process of yoga. But Krishnamacharya had a broader
vision of the meaning of vinyasa than most Western students
realize. He not only taught specific asana sequences like those of
Jois's system, but he also saw vinyasa as a method that could
be applied to all the aspects of yoga. In Krishnamacharya's
teachings, the vinyasa method included assessing the needs of
the individual student (or group) and then building a complementary,
step-by-step practice to meet those needs. Beyond this,
Krishnamacharya also emphasized vinyasa as an artful approach to
living, a way of applying the skill and awareness of yoga to all the
rhythms and sequences of life, including self-care, relationships,
work, and personal evolution.
Desikachar, Krishnamacharya's son, an author and renowned teacher in
his own right, has written, "Vinyasa is, I believe, one of the
richest concepts to emerge from yoga for the successful conduct of
our actions and relationships." In his book Health, Healing, and
Beyond (Aperture, 1998), he gives a subtle yet powerful example of
how his father attended to the vinyasa of teaching yoga.
Krishnamacharya, to the amazement of his private students, would
always greet them at the gate of his center, guide them through
their practice, and then honor the completion of their time together
by escorting them back to the gate.
The way he honored every phase of their session—initiating the work,
sustaining it and then building to a peak, and completing and
integrating it—illustrates two of the primary teachings of the
vinyasa method: Each of these phases has its own lessons to
impart, and each relies on the work of the previous phase. Just as
we can't frame a house without a proper foundation, we can't build a
good yoga practice unless we pay attention to how we begin. And just
as a house is flawed if the workmen don't finish the roof properly,
we have to bring our actions to completion in order to receive
yoga's full benefits. Vinyasa yoga requires that we cultivate an
awareness that links each action to the next—one breath at a time.
Initiating a Course of Action
Applying vinyasa in your yoga practice and daily life has
many parallels not just to building a house but also sailing a boat.
Like sailing, moving through life demands a synchronization with
natural forces that requires skill and intuition, the ability to set
a course yet change with the wind and currents. If you want to sail,
you have to know how to assess the conditions of the
weather—blustery, calm, choppy—which constantly fluctuate, as do our
physical, emotional, and spiritual states.
The teachings of yoga include a view called parinamavada, the
idea that constant change is an inherent part of life. Therefore, to
proceed skillfully with any action, we must first assess where we
are starting from today; we cannot assume we are quite the same
person we were yesterday. We are all prone to ignoring the changing
conditions of our body-mind; we often distort the reality of who we
are based on who we think that we should be. This can show up on the
yoga mat in any number of inappropriate choices: engaging in a
heating, rigorous practice when we're agitated or fatigued; doing a
restorative practice when we're stagnant; going to an advanced yoga
class when a beginning class better suits our experience and skills.
In order to avoid such unbeneficial actions, we need to start out
with an accurate assessment of our current state.
So what are the observations a good yogic sailor should make before
initiating a vinyasa? Like checking out the boat, wind, and
waves before you sail, an initial survey of your being can become an
instinctive ritual. Ask yourself: What is my energy level? Am I
raring to go? Holding any tension? Am I experiencing any little
physical twinges or injury flare-ups? Do I feel balanced and ready
to sail into my practice? How is my internal state? Am I calm,
agitated, focused, scattered, emotionally vulnerable, mentally
overloaded, clear and open?
These questions are relevant to how we begin any action, not just
our asana practice. In choosing what foods we eat, when we sleep,
our conversations and our actions with others—everything that we
do—we must understand where we are coming from and choose actions
that address any imbalances.
In teaching my students about vinyasa, I offer them ways of
checking in with their current state at the start of their session.
I also will suggest specific strategies for addressing impediments
that may break up the flow of their practice. For example, on the
bodily level students can choose a more calming practice or one that
provides them with a more invigorating opening. If they have a
twinge in the lower back, they might want to modify certain
postures, perhaps substituting Bhujangasana (Cobra Pose) for
Urdhva Mukha Svanasana (Upward-Facing Dog Pose). If they're
suffering from typical urban tensions in the neck and shoulders,
they can use a small series of stretches—a mini-vinyasa, you
might say—to encourage softening and release. On a more internal
level, agitated students can focus on releasing tension by relaxing
the face and breath; if their energy is more lethargic and diffused,
they can focus on their drishti, or gaze, to increase their
concentration.
The same insight that we use on the yoga mat can be applied to the
way that we initiate actions elsewhere in our lives. Are you feeling
anxious on your way to a big appointment? Drive more slowly and
listen to some calming music to ensure that this imbalance doesn't
carry over into your meeting. Such adjustments do not show an
unwillingness to accept what is or a compulsive attempt to fix
everything until it is just right. Rather, they are evidence of a
deep awareness of and appropriate response to reality. A yogic
sailor embraces the changing winds and current and the challenge of
setting course in harmony with the ebb and flow of nature.
Sustaining Power
Once you've properly assessed conditions and initiated action, you
can focus on the next phase of vinyasa: building up your
power, your capacity for a given action. Power is the sailor's
ability to tack with the wind, a musician's ability to sustain the
rise and fall of a melody, a yogi's deepening capability for
absorption in meditation.
The vinyasa method has many teachings to offer about how to
build and sustain our capacity for action, both on and off the mat.
One of the primary teachings is to align and initiate action from
our breath—our life force—as a way of opening to the natural flow
and power of prana, the energy that sustains us all on a
cellular level. Thus in a vinyasa yoga practice, expansive
actions are initiated with the inhalation, contractive actions with
the exhalation.
Take a few minutes to explore how this feels: As you inhale, lift
your arms up over your head (expansion); as you exhale, lower your
arms (contraction). Now try this: Start lifting your arms as you
exhale, and inhale as you lower your arms. Chances are that the
first method felt intuitively right and natural, while the second
felt counterintuitive and subtly "off."
This intuitive feeling of being "off" is an inborn signal that helps
us learn how to sustain an action by harmonizing with the flow of
nature. Just as a sagging sail tells a sailor to tack and realign
with the energy of the wind, a drop in our mental or physical energy
within an action is a sign we need to realign our course. In an
asana, when the muscular effort of a pose is creating tension, it's
often a signal that we are not relying on the support of our breath.
When we learn how to sustain the power and momentum of the breath,
the result is like the feeling of sailing in the wind—effortless
effort.
To build real change in a student's capacity for action,
Krishnamacharya utilized a method which he entitled vinyasa krama
("krama" means "stages"). This step-by-step process
involves the knowledge of how one builds, in gradual stages, toward
a "peak" within a practice session. This progression can include
elements like using asanas of ever-increasing complexity and
challenge or gradually building one's breath capacity.
Vinyasa krama is also the art of knowing when you have integrated
the work of a certain stage of practice and are ready to move on. I
frequently see students ignore the importance of this step-by-step
integration. On the one hand, some students will tend to jump ahead
to more challenging poses like Pincha Mayurasana (Forearm
Balance) before developing the necessary strength and flexibility in
less-demanding postures like Adho Mukha Svanasana
(Downward-Facing Dog), Sirsasana (Headstand), Adho Mukha
Vrksasana (Handstand), and other, easier arm balances. The
result: They strug-gle to hold themselves up, becoming frustrated
and possibly injured. These Type-A students should remember that
strain is always a sign that integration of the previous krama
has not yet occurred.
On the other hand, some students may congeal around the comfort of a
beginning stage and become stagnant; they often become totally
energized when given encouragement to open to a new stage which they
had written off as beyond their abilities.
The Art of Completion
All of us are better at some part of the vinyasa cycle than
others. I love to initiate action and catalyze change but have to
consciously cultivate the completion phase. As Desikachar explains
it, "It is not enough to climb a tree; we must be able to get down
too. In asana practice and elsewhere in life, this often requires
that we know how to follow and balance one action with another. In
the vinyasa method this is known as pratikriyasana,
"compensation," or literally counterpose-the art of complementing
and completing an action to create integration. Can you imagine
doing asanas without a Savasana (Corpse Pose) to end your practice?
In vinyasa, how we complete an action and then make the
transition into the next is very important in determining whether we
will receive the action's entire benefit. These days I invite my
students to complete classes by invoking the quality of yoga into
the very next movements of their lives—how they walk, drive, and
speak to people once they leave the studio.
Pathways of Transformation
It is important to remember a vinyasa is not just any
sequence of actions: It is one that awakens and sustains
consciousness. In this way vinyasa connects with the
meditative practice of nyasa within the Tantric Yoga
traditions. In nyasa practice, which is designed to awaken
our inherent divine energy, practitioners bring awareness to
different parts of the body and then, through mantra and
visualization, awaken the inner pathways for shakti (divine
force) to flow through the entire field of their being. As we bring
the techniques of vinyasa to bear throughout our lives, we
open similar pathways of transformation, inner and outer-step by
step and breath by breath.
Visit Shiva at
shivarea.com.
This article can be found online at
yogajournal.com/wisdom/909_1.c
.

What
Is Ayurveda?
Part I: The Vision By Arun
Deva
As with all things whose origins are shrouded in the mists of time,
the beginnings of Ayurveda are rooted in a mythological past. A myth
is not necessarily a lie. Very much like a parable, it usually
expresses a higher truth.
It is believed that the Ashwini twins gave the secrets of
“the science of self-healing” to Indra and he, in turn, passed it on
to Bharadwaja, one of the seven seers of the Rgveda.
As Indra, the king of the Devas, represents Prana, and
the Ashwini twins represent the duality of all cosmic creation, this
myth can be seen symbolically as the natural progression of the
eternal life force into the two sustaining forces of the Universe:
inhalation and exhalation: the cosmic “spanda” or pulsation of all
life. Bharadwaja represents the ability of man to access deep
truths when in a state of full awareness or “samadhi.”
Similar to this are other myths with other persona, some divine,
some mystical and some human. What is easier for us to comprehend is
the belief that the great Rishis (seers) of India, moved by
compassion for the welfare of all living beings, went into a deep
state of samadhi (absorption) from which they extracted and
made available the “science of life.”
The root words for Ayurveda are “Ayus” and “Veda”.
Since Ayus refers to all life and Veda is pure
knowledge, Ayurveda is much more than a medical codification; it is
actually the knowledge of all life. As all healing arises from a
“knowing” of health and what constitutes ill health, Ayurveda is
thus best suited to address our well being and the lack of such.
It is said that perfect health is equated with happiness. It follows
thus that perfect health means not thinking about your health. This
is not as simple as it sounds. Every day we think about our aches
and pains, about whether we have a headache, are stressed, are tired
and worn out and even about whether we are constipated or worse!
Imagine living in a state of such harmony that none of these factors
are an issue. We are not talking about cancer, heart disease or
immune system deficiency. We are talking about states that we
consider normal! If we accept headaches and/or constipation as our
“normal” state, worrying instead about the arising of any of the
major diseases that afflict modern man, imagine what our lives would
be like if even our “normal” state of discomfort did not exist! That
we had no aches and pains, no stress related exhaustion, always
fresh and alert, able to rest exactly when we need to, eat correctly
and wisely and function with clear, content minds, what would our
lives be like?
This is the goal of Ayurveda and to achieve this goal, this
wonderful science has mapped the human terrain: physical, mental and
spiritual. It has mapped the terrain of the world that we live in.
It has mapped the interaction between the two and found that the
microcosm and the macrocosm do not exist independently, that when
the two do not support each other harmoniously, we suffer ill
health. That the further we get away from nature, the unhappier our
lives become.
Ayurveda believes that each one of us has an original “blueprint”,
not unlike that of RNA/DNA. As long as we stay true to this
“blueprint” which we call Prakruti, we will be healthy.
Prakruti refers to our unique constitution or our “first
nature”. Over our lives we deviate from this Prakruti for a
variety of reasons, of which Ayurveda lists eleven. We move away
from harmony, which is nothing less than the correct balance of the
forces and elements within us, not unlike the perfect “idle” of a
car. Just as a car, over a period of time, needs to be serviced and
the idle brought back to normal, similarly, to counteract the forces
that shift us away from our Prakruti, we need to “be
serviced” and then we need to “maintain”.
Ayurveda is a living science in that it is based upon universal
truths and not upon external circumstances that may and do change
constantly. This allows it to be as valid to our lives today as it
was to the lives of the people of the Indus/Saraswati Valley
Civilization from where it arose, thousands of years ago. It has
stood the test of time; it has survived countless invasions, the
burning and other losses of its texts, the suppression of its
practice and the lack of faith in its own homeland after the advent
of western medicine.
Today, it is recognized once again as a valid, holistic science
whose theories and texts are responsible for the discovery of many
modern medicines and techniques. Many of our medicines today have
arisen from research into the qualities and effects of herbs that
were listed in the Charaka Samhita at least 1500 years ago. There is
a society of surgeons in the United States named after Sushruta, who
wrote surgical texts just as long ago. The two German scientists
responsible for plastic surgery and rhinoplasty credit and
acknowledge this same text as their primary source and inspiration.
Ayurveda has stood the test of time because it is a living science.
It has and continues to evolve to meet the needs of all people at
all times. Many great physicians have come along and using the
theories of Ayurveda, created new healing modalities to address new
illnesses. From the original texts of Charaka and Sushruta, through
Vagbhatta and Madhava to present day scholars and teachers such as
Drs. Lad, Robert Svoboda and David Frawley. What remain true and
unchanging are the original principles. Principles that explain the
very fabric of our existence and what that is woven from.
Arun Deva practices yoga and Ayurveda in Los Angeles and a very good
friend of Yogaeverywhere.com. He has a Diploma in Ayurveda from the
Ayurvedic Institute of America. He has twice completed the Ayur-yoga
Teacher Training from the Ayurvedic Institute, New Mexico and has
also done teacher trainings in both Vinyasa Krama and Anusara Yoga.
Having started his studies as a child growing up India, Arun has
made his home in Los Angeles for the past 30 years. His commitment
is to the “trimurti” of studying, practicing and teaching, in
order to further his travels along the Yogic path. He is the founder
of Arunachala Yoga & Ayurveda, teaches Ayurvedic and Yogic lifestyle
workshops, writes articles for different publications and does
ayurvedic and yoga cikitsa treatment therapies called “Yoga
Rasayana”. He can be reached at
yogarasayana@yahoo.com
.
|