Hello Friends!
Among many of you, I am known to be, shall we say, "particular" about the correct names of the poses and their meaning in Sanskrit.
I decided this month to address an inconsistency that has bothered me for some time. And that's "bakasana". Now, almost everyone calls this crow pose, but "baka" means "crane" in Sanskrit. The Sanskrit word for "crow" is "kaka". So why does this matter and who cares? Well, I care, and I tell you why it matters! ;)
First, let me show you some pictures:
Here's a crow:
Here's a crane:
Big difference, yes? Take a close look at the crow. Notice how it has short, sturdy legs, that are bent slightly. And yet there's a sense of lightness to the bird --- you've seen a crow hopping on the ground. That's what I mean, the legs are bent, and strong, and though the crow is much lower and closer to the ground you get the feeling that the bird is strong and could just hop, jump up and fly at any moment.
Now look at the crane. It's a water bird, and the legs are long, skinny and often straight. (I know, you are thinking my long skinny legs remind you of a crane- but I digress). The "rasa" or "essence" of the crane is a patient vigilance waiting for it's prey, it's large body perched high atop those long straight legs.
How does this translate to the physical poses? First, most people have to learn "kakasana" (crow pose), with arms bent, before they can straighten their arms and perch their body high up on top in "bakasana" (crane pose). Look at the difference between these two poses:
A young girl in kakasana (crow):
A woman in bakasana (crane):
Pretty obvious difference, right? Now compare them to the images of the actual birds above and determine for yourself if the "rasa" (essence) and feeling you get from the two poses is different and closely resembles the bird after which they are named.
If you come to my classes, you often hear me say that the name of the pose will give you an idea of what you are going for in a pose, and what qualities are there for you to receive from a pose when you are in it. Next time you lift your body up and balance on your hands, imagine yourself not just IN the pose, but AS the pose.
Be Flighty!
Liz Doyle
Www.LizDoyleYoga.com
Friday, June 4, 2010
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Vote for Best Yoga in Area Code "425"!
Last year, I was voted runner up for best yoga on the Eastside. And it was because people like you took the time to vote for me. It's really easy and fast, and if you're so inclined, I would appreciate your vote again this year! Here's how:
Go to http://www.425magazine.com/best_of_425.php and you'll be directed to the 425 Magazine website. Scroll down to the "Health and Beauty" section, look for "best yoga studio" and type in: www.LizDoyleYoga.com
I also teach kids yoga at various schools each week, and you can vote for me for
"best after school program" by finding the "kids" section, and typing in: www.LittleFriendsYoga.com
Thanks for your help!
Wishes and Kids
What you see above is a hand gesture known as "Kubera Mudra". It is considered to be a very powerful mudra for manifesting things you want. It also cultivates inner repose, confidence and serenity.
Here's how it works:
Simply place your ring and pinky finger into the palm of your hand, say outloud the thing you desire, and then connect the index and middle fingers to the thumb.
There is a palpable feeling of energy in the tips of the fingers!
This week we did this in one of my kids classes and when I asked if the kids could feel energy in the connection between their fingers, one little girl said, "It's like your fingers are talking to each other!" Indeed.
Wringing Things Out In Twists
Hello Friends!
Wringing Things Out In Twists
This month one of the studios where I work asked me to write an article about twisting in asana. This is that article:
I will cover the importance of twists, their physical and energetic effects, symbolism of twists, benefits, some tips for going deeper comfortably in twists, and a few caveats.
Twists are a significant part of the practice because the central nervous system is housed in the spine (and brain). So when you want to influence the physical body and the energetic body, you have to manipulate the spine. When you are in an asana, consider what the spine is doing.
Think very simply about these poses: feel the body, what is the body telling you? Is it hot, or is it cold? etc... Based on the heat level in the body, you can feel where things are going on an energetic level, and if the spine is twisting, there is some obvious heat. You may wonder why twisting poses are known as detoxification poses-- twisting wrings out the organs, and stimulates the spiraling movement of the energy.
On a physical level, twists stretch the deepest back muscles, especially those closest to the midline of the body (the spine). As you are twisting, every organ inside you is being twisted and compressed, and when the twist is released, your system can flush fresh blood through your organs cleansing and stimulating them. Equally important, twists maintain the range of motion of the spine, both on the structural and muscular level.
Energetically, the spiraling of the spine has profound effects. If you look at a tree, or the growth of a bone, there is never a straight line, it's always in some kind of a spiral. Even as your nose is working a turbine effect, swirling and spiraling the breath through your body, your spine is making the same shape, magnifying the energetics. In my own practice, I feel the adding of a twist to a pose doubles or even triples the energetic effect of what I am doing, and sometimes magnifies or speeds things up.
Twists are very balancing in general, and can have the effect of decreasing frustration, anxiety and fear. Often as we feel these emotions, we hold our body differently, so twisting may be simply releasing the tension we hold as a result of experiencing these emotions. Regardless of whether the resistance is emotional, mental or strictly physical, this is good reason to move into twists mindfully, and without speed. Take time to feel your way into these poses, breathing the whole time. Have a sense of the twist happening in your whole spine, including your thoracic (mid back) spine, rather than isolating the twist in the cervical (neck) or lumbar (low back) spine. I often see practitioners initiate or drive the twist from the neck. The best way to approach twists, in my experience, is to keep the front of the spine as long as possible and think of articulating each vertebrae in the twist from the bottom to the top of the spine. There is a tendency for a forward or side bend when we twist, and this is not conducive to maximum twisting and comfort. It requires more effort, but go for a mild backbending of the spine first, and then twist. Play around with it in your own practice, you'll find you can twist significantly more with the front of the spine elongated.
An entire article could be dedicated to just the symbology of twists, so I'll try to keep it brief. Each pose has its own essence, and there is something you can receive each time you take a twist, although it may not always be the same every time.
In the case of twists, how many times have you heard someone say:
"They're all wound up!"
"I just need some time to unwind."
"The road of Life is full of twists and turns."
"It's a vicious spiral."
Spirals are physically, energetically and mentally ubiquitous. When you come into your next seated twist, consider how winding around and looking behind you might give you a new perspective. Twists remind us of the need to reflect on what we've done and notice as things come full circle- pun intended, of course!
In challenging twists like parivrtta trkonasana (revolving triangle pose), it becomes clear for the need to be well grounded. A strong foundation is critical for a sense of lightness and freedom as you move in all directions. What is the right balance between effort and surrender- especially when there is much to manage- and how can we relate this to how we are in the world?
In a situation where right and left become ambiguous, what does this teach us? In a world where things aren't always as they seem, how do we move from disorientation to integration?
Ultimately, your yoga practice is a microcosm of Life. The situations you encounter in the practice room have application where the real yoga takes place- with your friends, family and co-workers. If twists can teach us to let go of our attachment to the right and left sides of our body, perhaps we can also learn to relinquish our search for security through attachment to that which is transient.
Stay twisty,
Liz Doyle
Www.LizDoyleYoga.com
(Fine print: 1. Deep closed twists are not recommended for those who are pregnant. 2. Please let your teacher know if you have vertebrae, disc or sacroiliac issues. 3. Never force yourself into a twist- be well grounded and take your time breathing your way into it. 4. Have fun!)
PRAN(A) MUDRA
This is a mudra (hand gesture) I use in kids yoga. It is the gesture of Life and offers the following benefits:
> increased vitality
> increased self-confidence
> reduces anxiety
> helps turn Life's challenges into adventures
We use it with a self affirming chant while marching through "scary" parts of a yoga story.
As grown ups, we can do it at any time, while in a yoga asana or not to enjoy it's benefits.
A Quietus
Hello Friends!
One of my dear friends is scheduled for brain surgery this week. She was supposed to have her surgery last week, but her neurosurgeon sprained his ankle badly and had to postpone the surgery for a week. Can you imagine going through the mental preparations for something like that, getting yourself "psyched up", and having it canceled the day before? Unbelievably stressful. She was understandably upset, in tears and distraught, not sure how she would be able to go through it again.
Fortunately, one of her best friends called her and invited her to go skiing. My friend refused, because she was busy at home in her pajamas, crying and scared to death of facing another week of anticipating this surgery. Even more fortunately, her friend is very strong and called back and simply told her to get ready, and she would pick her up in 20 minutes.
My friend went skiing and it completely changed her mindset. Talking with her after she got back, she sounded like a different person, and she was so glad she went.
Coincidentally, the word of the day on my iPhone app was:
quietus
-noun,plural-tus·es.
1. a finishing stroke; anything that effectually ends or settles: Having given a quietus to the argument, she left.
2. discharge or release from life.
3. a period of retirement or inactivity.
It seems that we often think that these times of rejuvenation, or removal from "activity" must be an event, large and/or final. What I'm learning is it doesn't have to be like that.
There's a fantastic metaphorical lesson from camel pose (ustrasana). The camel takes what it needs when it is available and stores it for later. Ustrasana teaches us about replenishing when we can, and saving up for the long haul and times when there isn't enough. Life requires stamina, which requires energy and judicious expenditures of that precious energy.
And this doesn't necessarily mean that you work yourself silly until your vacation. Back to the camel-- although the camel can consume up to 30 gallons of water in 13 minutes (a vacation if you will), it is also able to glean enough from winter desert plants for the camel to last weeks without water.
Life is a constant juggling act of responsibilities, activities, and energy exchange. Don't squander the opportunities for joy, play, time with loved ones and rest, even when they seem to brief to matter, or it seems challenging to take advantage of them. We need them to balance those times when we're "building character."
p.s. in the process of the time it took me to finish this letter, my friend has had her surgery and is doing amazingly well!
Warmly,
Liz Doyle
www.LizDoyleYoga.com
lizdoyle@msn.com
PRATYAHARA (withdrawal of the senses)
At a recent class with one of my teachers, something happened that was the perfect example of citta vrtti (fluctuations of the mind) and the power of pratyahara (withdrawal of the senses).
We were at the end of class, and we usually sit for 5-10 minutes. The teacher had a CD in the CD/radio player of Gregorian chant-like repetitions of the word OM. It was quite trance inducing. At the same time, the radio must have been picking up a strong feed because I could hear a staticky talk radio feed in the background. Not loud or clear enough to understand what was being said, but loud and staticky enough to be completely annoying and distracting.
Being the Buddha-like practitioner that I am, I began screaming (just kidding). It was interesting though, because I thought after a while that this must be exactly what my incessant mind chatter (citta vrtti) must be like. Not loud enough to be a conscious thing, but steady, full of static (metaphor for annoying and negative), and damned distracting.
The whole point of yoga is to ultimately quiet the mind - Yoga Sutra 1.2: Yogah cittavrtti nirodhah: yoga is the cessation of the fluctuations of the mind - and here was this perfect metaphor right in front of me.
So, I began listening to my breathing, feeling for my heartbeat, looking inward, and guess what? I know it sounds like I'm making it up, but it really seemed that the distracting static went away for a while. I didn't believe it was really working, because I could still hear the OMs, and I thought, "Oh, well, it just isn't picking up static anymore." So I started listening for the static again, and sure enough, it was still there. The other thing that happened, was that even though I wasn't even thinking about it, I came up with an idea for which I'd been searching for weeks.
Why am I telling you this? For two reasons:
1. These yoga practices really do work.
2. Your practice is a microcosm of Life. Figure this stuff out in the practice room, and you will have tools to manage and improve your life.
We all have distracting, destructive mind chatter, and most of it is pretty repetitive. The easiest thing is to distract the mind with something positive, a short phrase or word (a mantra of sorts, if you will). As long as your brain is on a hamster wheel, it might as well be a positive - or at least neutral- one.
Eventually, the mind really does quiet, and the more you practice, the easier it gets and the quicker the quietness comes. When your mind is quiet, that's when the good stuff arrives. Try it out- your creative brilliance might surprise even YOU!
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Yoga Sutras and Contentment
What Do the Yoga Sutras Have to Say About
Santosha (Contentment)?
Everything you need is inside you.
2.42 From an attitude of contentment (santosha), unexcelled happiness, mental comfort, joy, and satisfaction is obtained.
(santosha anuttamah sukha labhah)
santosha = contentment
anuttamah = unexcelled, extreme, supreme
sukha = pleasure, happiness, comfort, joy, satisfaction
labhah = is acquired, attained, gained
Santosha brings happiness and joy: From an attitude of contentment (santosha), unexcelled happiness, mental comfort, joy, and satisfaction is obtained.
Contentment comes from within: We humans seem to always be seeking satisfaction in the external world and our internal fantasies. Only when we comfortably accept what we currently have will be able to do the practices that lead to the highest realization.
Santosha (Contentment)?
Everything you need is inside you.
2.42 From an attitude of contentment (santosha), unexcelled happiness, mental comfort, joy, and satisfaction is obtained.
(santosha anuttamah sukha labhah)
santosha = contentment
anuttamah = unexcelled, extreme, supreme
sukha = pleasure, happiness, comfort, joy, satisfaction
labhah = is acquired, attained, gained
Santosha brings happiness and joy: From an attitude of contentment (santosha), unexcelled happiness, mental comfort, joy, and satisfaction is obtained.
Contentment comes from within: We humans seem to always be seeking satisfaction in the external world and our internal fantasies. Only when we comfortably accept what we currently have will be able to do the practices that lead to the highest realization.
Respect
Hello Friends!
I was talking with one of my teachers, and relaying a story a yoga teacher once told during a class, and my reaction to it. Her immediate reaction was, "You HAVE to write about that in your next newsletter!!!"
So here you go: I was in a class with a yoga teacher we'll call "Bob". Bob was telling us how he was in a public restroom and before he washed his hands, he turned the knob on the paper towel dispenser so he didn't have to touch it after washing his hands. (He was preaching to the choir so far, because I do the same thing.)
Bob commences washing his hands, splashing his face, whatever... While he's taking care of business, he notices the guy next to him is done washing his hands and is shaking the water off his hands, wiping the water off his hands, and repeating. Bob finally figures out that this gentleman saw Bob get his paper towel ready and was WAITING for Bob to finish so that he could dry his own hands.
Bob then pauses for dramatic effect, and says theatrically, "Now THAT is respect." Pardon me, for being so contrary, but the first thing that popped into my mind was, "Sorry, Bob, RESPECT would have been you telling the poor man to take the towel and THANKING him for noticing and waiting so politely without rushing you."
The lesson here is that we all get very self-centric, and think that WE are the ones due respect. (Check this out next time you're in traffic and get angry when someone won't let you merge, yet you find yourself behaving the same way when you're in a hurry.) We forget that everyone is due common courtesy and respect and the best way to engender respect is to be respectful and behave in ways worthy of respect. Given that we aren't (well, I'll speak for myself!) all perfect, I hope that when we realize that we have not behaved in a way that is worthy of our fellow humans and their respect, that we acknowledge it, and apologize-- if not to them, at least in our own hearts.
Respectfully, :)
Liz Doyle
www.LizDoyleYoga.com
lizdoyle@msn.com
206.660.2321
LOYALTY
Writing about respect got me thinking about loyalty and rewarding quality. So here're some links to people who are highly talented in their profession, and decent human beings. If you are able use them, please do!
Robert Varley (www.eleveightsalon.com) has been cutting my hair since I was 15. Robert's amazing; I had a precision haircut once that was so incredible, strangers would stop me on the street and ask who did my hair. He just opened his new salon. He also does stunning container gardens for your deck.
Dr. Russ Nomi (www.nomidds.com) is my dentist. Very down to earth, and an unbelievably talented dentist. Russ is an impressive businessman -- wait until you see the efficiency with which his business runs, that's a study unto itself-- and a great guy.
Lucy (www.lucy.com) is a yoga and active wear apparel story, with locations in Redmond, Bellevue and UVillage. The people that work there have been very kind to me, and it is likely the friendliest staff you'll find around. Very helpful and upbeat, and their clothes are great.
Phyzz Yoga (www.phyzzyoga.com) has been featured on local television,
and is run by my friend Karen Lindenberg. Phyzz Yoga is a Seattle-based mobile yoga studio that brings yoga and meditation classes to offices and unexpected spaces. Karen is fun, funny, and a quality instructor and person.
Be Truly You (www.betrulyyou.com) is a Seattle Based company born out of the passion of two women, my friend Ann Caiola, and her business partner, Heather. They offer eco-and soul-friendly clothing and lifestyle products. Be Truly You is one of the first companies to offer a line of eco-friendly glass water bottles encouraging us to reduce our bottled water usage and lessen our environmental footprint. I love mine!
SANTOSHA (Contentment)
I realized recently while washing dishes in my "step-saver" kitchen, that I am feeling a sense of contentment I have never felt. I'm living very simply, well within my means and have whittled my personal belongings down to very little.
It's quite liberating really. I will say that I got here kicking and screaming all the way. It's hard to let go of things of which we're fond.
I know that this is a feeling I should have had all my life. I have spent most of my life striving for more and bigger and better, and thought that if I was truly content with my current situation it would make me complacent.
Of course, that's not true. It's human nature to excel and explore the boundaries of what we're capable. What I've found instead is that I have more energy, and I'm more excited about life in general and my plans.
All of this simply because I've allowed myself to enjoy what Life has offered me so far.
Upcoming Events!
I'll be leading a gentle movement and Yin Yoga class at Lucy in UVillage February 5, 2010 from 12-1PM. It's free, so grab your mat, a blankie, and come on down!
See other events (Backbending workshop, teen yoga, yoga alignment workshop) in the below post.
See other events (Backbending workshop, teen yoga, yoga alignment workshop) in the below post.