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What is Yoga to me?

Monday, April 30th, 2012

In a conversation with a friend I once described love as “water”. As we all know, water takes the shape of its container, and in my metaphor, I essentially explained that love takes the shape of the relationship you have with another person; so whether your relationship with another is intimate, or merely a friendship, love is still present, but in a different form.  I know you’re asking the question in your head, “well what does this have to do with yoga?”

 

Relax… I’m getting there.

 

I’ve only been on this yoga journey, on and off, for 2 years but it has had a significant impact on how I deal with the world around me. Three years ago, I found myself stressing out over my first year of university. In the present day, I still stress out over school; it’s just that now, when I find myself lacking drive or energy, I’ll do a few sun salutations to get me back on track. Essentially, I use yoga to cleanse myself of things that are unnecessarily cluttering my mind. It was during a strong practice recently, that I realized the link between this mental de-cluttering and my (somewhat clever) analogy of love.

 

Yoga, to me, is a river. Like a river, yoga can be gentle enough to smooth the rough edges of a pebble, but powerful enough to carve an entire landscape; in other words, it can help us get through the little issues (like school stress) that come in everyday life, or it can truly change your entire outlook as a person.

 

Just like a river, in a yoga class we’re constantly active; whether it is the actual physical movement of a flow, or the constant stream of thoughts moving through our minds while we’re trying to keep our tree pose still, we’re always dynamic. While some try to suppress this mental movement, I’ve realized now that the only way to get through a class smoothly is to embrace these thoughts, acknowledge them, and move on.

 

Most importantly, yoga and rivers share the same endpoint. While rivers are always running, they will, at some point, end in a larger body of water, like an ocean. Relative to the river, these larger bodies of water are quite still, and although they do move, they move on a larger, more profound scale.

 

In yoga, while we may not be able to completely detach ourselves from the happenings that occur off the mat, the eventual destination is a place of stillness that is deeper than the shallow, and sometimes rocky movement of our practice; the endpoint is the ocean to our river. The changes that occur when we reach that stillness, like the waves of an ocean, are much more profound and have a greater impact on who we are, compared to the small waves of thought that may occur during our practice. In my mind, this is why instructors always say that savasana is the hardest, but most important pose of that entire hour, despite its simplicity. While no two classes are ever the same, having this understanding of where I’m trying to end up adds some consistency to my entire practice. On the larger scale, I will always be seeking stillness.

 

“Your innermost sense of self, of who you are, is inseparable from stillness. This is the I Am that is deeper than name and form.” – Eckhart Tolle

 

In spite of this long-winded explanation, all this talk of rivers, love and yoga can be illustrated in a simple equation.

 

Love = Water.

Yoga = Moving Water.

Therefore Yoga = Moving Love.

 

That’s exactly what yoga is to me. It’s a moving expression of our affection for ourselves, which allows us the opportunity of real transformation. It’s an hour to shape our proverbial container and create a relationship with ourselves, so that we can fully express our love in a way that is uniquely contoured to who we are. It’s a set of postures and breaths that are all trying to move us towards stillness. When we reach that point, even if it’s only for a brief moment, we realize that it is in stillness that real changes happen.

 

Three mental health habits to cultivate in yoga

Monday, April 30th, 2012

The benefits of yoga for flexibility, strength, and endurance are fairly well known but (unfortunately) less publicized is the effects that yoga has on mental state.  Recent studies from the Boston University School of Medicine and Dartmouth Medical School have revealed what most people who have done yoga already know – yoga improves mood!  Particularly the studies revealed that yoga tends to reduce anxiety.  Our 100-mile-an-hour Albertan pace of life often takes a toll.  Work demands more than full time hours, advertisers scream for our attention, all our various devices ding, sing, and ring to remind us to go to this meeting, text that person, it all keeps us running, running, running.

Fortunately, there are at least three mental health habits that we can cultivate in yoga that are conspicuously absent from our everyday life: Breathing, centering, sweating.

  1. Breathing:

Considering we cannot go more than a few minutes without oxygen, it seems odd to say that we do not breathe in our everyday life.  Yet yogis will tell you that breathing is one of the most difficult habits we attempt to cultivate in yoga practice.  Most people are not in the habit of using their breath to calm, relax, and empower.  Yoga helps us to cultivate our breath and tap in to the power it represents.  The calming effects of breathing are powerful!

  1. Centering

In our ultra-busy world taking even an hour to center yourself is precious.  The opportunity to indwell a place of silence, concentration, and calmness allows our mind to have a few moments where there are no demands beyond the mat.  Rather than having your mind being pulled by a hundred stresses at once, in yoga you take to the mat with only one focus – having an excellent practice.  Moments of serenity where you truly know that you are doing the one thing that you need to do all the anxiety to melt away.

  1. Sweating

Who doesn’t love to sweat!  We have become so surrounded by automation that it becomes difficult to be active in our day to day lives.  Though none of us would want to give up our car and walk through winter temperatures of -40, there is something that we miss by having inactive bodies.  Yoga – especially hot yoga – lets you come to the mat and get the workout your body craves!  With so much tension and anxiety residing in the body – not the mind – something as simple as a sweat can be all you need.

As you continue down your journey to health wholeness we wish you peace and calmness.

See you on the mat!

Calling in sick…

Tuesday, April 17th, 2012

At Yogalife, to reap the full physical and mental benefits of practice, we encourage all our students to come on a regular basis. Yoga has been known to be paramount in maintaining a healthy lifestyle, but in recent times, people have been practicing as a means of alleviating the symptoms of every day illnesses. This has been met with some mixed reviews. So the question remains, should you practice while sick?

 

From the viewpoint of our studio, our immediate answer is “no”. Our goal is always to provide the best experience possible for our students, so coming to practice while sick compromises that aim. While hot yoga is beneficial for detoxification, the humidity and heat, along with the closeness of clients can accelerate the spread of illness in the room. Pathogens thrive in a hot yoga room, no matter how well we try to maintain the cleanliness of the studio.

 

Consider this: we spend a significant portion of our class forcefully exhaling, and if ill, any airborne pathogens can travel quickly to nearby practitioners who, at the same time, are inhaling deeply. Heat also has the physiological effect of opening up the skin’s pores, further exposing our bodies to the environment, so any physical contact with bacteria or other viruses can result in immediate illness.

 

Practicing hot yoga while sick may also aggravate any symptoms one may be experiencing. In the online article, “Yoga and Your Immune System”, Kreg Weiss explains:

 

“[In yoga] the energy highly needed for your immune system is instead being transferred to the muscles to create movement. This energy is depleted from the body either as mechanical energy (movement) or as heat. This transfer of energy strips the immune system of precious energy resources and begins to limit the immune system’s capacity to produce antibodies.”

 

So while practicing in the heat may temporarily alleviate symptoms, and provide that feel-good high that only Hot Flow can provide, it may be short-lived and, in the process of healing, make things worse.

 

So before practicing at the studio while feeling ill, consider your fellow students and whether it may compromise their yoga experience. Also consider whether the practice will benefit your body. For more information on practicing while sick, read the full article by Kreg Weiss: http://kregweiss.ca/2011/11/11/yoga-and-your-immune-system/.

 

Excitement builds to help Ronald McDonald House

Tuesday, March 27th, 2012

This past Sunday, March 25, we gathered at Leo’s for a delicious lunch. We had an overwhelming number of volunteers who took time out of their day to come listen to our plan for the Home for Dinner program offered by the Ronald McDonald House. In hopes of making a difference for those families whose lives have been greatly affected by their child’s illness, the Home for Dinner program is a great way for us to offer up some free time to prep and cook a wonderful dinner feeding 60-80 people so that these families do not have to worry about food after a long day spent at the hospital. I took some pictures of the amazing feast that Leo (if you don’t know, frequents the studio and has a huge heart) had prepared for over 20 of us on Sunday.

Big Thanks to Leo and all who came and also to those who plan to help us out but couldn’t make it on Sunday.

A photoshoot at Yogalife…

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

We had a great time goofing off during our photoshoot last week. Here are some yogini shots that got snapped. Let us know what you think!

 

 

 

Workshop with Patrick Creelman

Monday, February 13th, 2012

Last Tuesday and Wednesday, we had an international guest instructor hold 4 different workshops. You may have noticed it was very busy at the studio during those nights.

Here is a glimpse of what Patrick taught us during his time here.

Patrick Creelman: Coming to Edmonton

Monday, February 6th, 2012

Monday February 6, 2012.

Patrick Creelman makes his way to our studio tomorrow afternoon! We are excited to have him and can’t wait to see what he teaches us! Check out his flow:

Yoga Flash Mob: City Centre Mall

Saturday, January 28th, 2012

Yoga Mobbing! Once again, the yoga mob decided to share some yoga love with the downtowners during the noon hour at City Centre Mall. Check out what went down.

Power Upside Down

Saturday, January 14th, 2012


Let’s talk about going upside down and what good comes out of being ‘head over heels’ in Yoga.

There are some special set of benefits that is provided by inverted poses. Because the body is put into such an unfamiliar setting, our focus and concentration (physically and mentally) becomes enhanced. For many of us, one of the first responses to being upside down is fear. It doesn’t feel safe to be inverted and it’s easy to doubt our own abilities to be stable and supported. Gradually, as we practice yoga more and more, we learn to acknowledge the physical messages of safety such as “My neck doesn’t feel good in this pose” and compare that to “I’m scared to do this pose.” This helps us identify what is our fear and how to challenge or overcome them. With regular practice, we start to challenge postures that once seemed impossible.

 

 

First of all, inversions are going to make you super strong! The shoulders, back, abdomen, and legs work especially hard (when done correctly), as they are learning to work against gravity from the opposite direction. These are areas of the musculo-skeletal system that are particularly supportive, so they are good places to be strong and have many options. These upside down poses also stimulate circulation, since everything is now moving in the opposite direction. Usually, blood from the heart has to pump up toward the head and down toward the belly and legs, this is reversed of course when you are upside down. Because the blood carries in nutrients and carries away waste, strong circulation is a very important part of good health. Being upside-down flips around the internal and digestive organs and inversions are particularly good for digestive troubles of any sort. Headstand and shoulder stand in particular also stimulate the glandular/hormonal system, bringing vitality and balance.

 

 

Above all else, it’s just a lot of fun!

If you ever want to start practising your inversions, check out our Power Upside Down class on friday evenings at 8:30pm.

Guest Teacher: LJ Milman

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

LJcolor

The Yogalife community sends a big thank-you to our first-ever guest instructor, L.J. Milman! His energy and zest for instructing was definitely felt throughout the studio, breathing a little more life into

Yogalife! Those of you who attended his classes got to feel that energizing vibe first hand, and those who were present at his Teaching Authentically workshop got a chance to expand your instructing skills and search for that true, guiding voice. He not only made an impact on the Yogalife clientele, but also the entirety of Edmonton’s yoga community, teaching at Shanti, Noorish and Prana (to name a few).Within a matter of da

ys, L.J. developed a following, with a dedicated group of yogis touring with, and attending his classes from each location to the next. Front desk staff member, Dean Tumibay, explains, “it was great to see so many Yogalifers at yoga events outside of the studio! It’s an awesome feeling to see that people are inspired by L.J. to expand their practice into the greater Edmonton yoga community.”

A little bit about LJ
LJ has  taught  for about  8 years in Vancouver, travelled to Hong Kong to practice with Patrick  Creelman for 5 years, and has travelled to many places  spreading the joy of yoga including Bali, Australia, Toronto and Russia. He originally studied  Anusara, then wandered away from the practice to do some training with Ana Forrest.  He has now  found his way back into the Anusara world. While in Bali he had the opportunity to study very closely with Tara Judelle, who is a senior Anusara Certifed teacher, and is currently Anusara-Inspired.  LJ facilitates teacher trainings in Toronto at My Kula.

workshopauthentic

L.J., as a lover of inversions, treated our clients, to an extended, 2-hour long power upside down class! It was definitely a fun-filled workshop with laughter echoing all the way from the Sun studio to the Yogalife lounge. Yogalife staff member, Maia Benz, described the class as simply “invigorating and inspiring”.
Students attempted arm balances, as well as new variations of handstands and headstands. Many discovered an ability to do poses they never thought possible! Thanks to L.J.’s guidance, many of our students reached new heights when it came to their upside-down practice, leaving all attendees excited about their new-found abilities. Dedicated Yogalife student Chris Miller describes L.J. as one who “rocks the upside down yoga world! His instruction on ‘understanding your body balance’ had me accomplishing poses that I didn’t think I was even capable of doing at my level of practice!”. We, at the studio, are so grateful to have hosted L.J. at Yogalife. He has treated our students to a whole new perspective on instruction and we hope to have him back in the near future! Thanks LJ!