Thursday, December 20, 2012

Tools for managing anxiety

Anxiety tools

Dance
Kick
Hops
Lift heels and drop them
Bring your awareness to feet and tailbone

Wrap yourself in blankets
Cover yourself or just your abdomen in savasana

You have all you need

Vigorous exercise followed by relaxation

A flowing yoga practice- movement within the postures
Talk to people you trust

No caffeine

Eat regular, small meals

Sand bags on the tops of thighs as you sit or lie in savasana

Lie on belly w hands under forehead and breath

Inhale through O shaped mouth, exhale out mouth

Walk and say "om namah sivaya"

Hip openers:
hands inside front leg
pigeon- slide everything to the side
fire log
cobblers pose
happy baby
side angle
triangle

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Pranamaya kosha- breath body

"The system of yogic breathing exercises called pranayama is designed to increase and cultivate the quality of the pranic body. When you start to know where you are in your physical body through the alignment of the poses, you will have more freedom to explore the flow of your breath. By shifting to deep, slow, and rhythmic breathing in your yoga practice, you are becoming conscious of and affecting this second kosha. As you increase the amount of oxygen in your body, this pranic body starts to come alive. The coordination of your inhalation and exhalation with the movements of your physical body, as in the Sun Salutations, is one of the ways in which the physical body and breath body become synchronized with the mental body (concentration and awareness)."
- Shiva Rea, You are Here, Yoga Journal online article

Annamaya kosha- food body

"A human being is the Self encased in five wrappings like a Chinese puzzle, starting from the material body, the first "self" we are generally aware of, and progressing inward to the "bodies" of vitality (prana), mind, intuition, and finally joy.  Along with quantum leaps in awareness as one ascends these "levels of significance," the awareness of joy grows exponentially in intensity and duration until one is joy; it can never go away."
- Eknath Easwaran, The Upanishads p. 135

There are five koshas, or sheaths, that make up the body.  The outermost and most easily accessible is the annamaya kosha, or food sheath.  It is made up of the food we eat.  The Upanishads have long passages about how we are made of food from the earth.

"When I teach yoga or do my own practice, I start with a keen awareness of the first kosha- the body sensations- to make the more subtle layers of the self more accessible.  In other words, if you want to deepen your breath or affect your state of mind, you have to honor and pass through the gateway of the physical body."
- Shiva Rea, You are Here, Yoga Journal online article

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Iswara Pranidhana- seeing the big picture, whole-hearted dedication to the Lord

This niyama is the pinnacle of all the niyamas.  It requires that we accept there is something bigger than us at work in our lives.

When we think we are the master controller of our lives we get caught up in our own personal drama.  We get frustrated when things don't go our way.

This niyama is related to "don't sweat the small stuff."

Take a wider view.  See the big picture.

Meditation is a profound way to touch into the vastness of life; it's a great way to feel your connection to all things.  "By setting aside enough time to get quiet and clear, we can begin to differentiate between the cluttered thoughts of our ordinary mind and the resonant intelligence that comes through as intuition.  Rather than trying to unravel the mystery, we start to embody the mystery of life"- Donna Farhi, from Yoga Mind, Body, and Spirit


Santosha- contentment

An underlying steadiness
A deep inner peace
A faith and a trust that things are as they should be
A letting go
A softening and an opening to what the present moment is
Swadhaya- self-study

Self-study comes in many forms (any activity that cultivates self-reflecion): parenting, playing an instrument, athletics, meditation, etc

Whatever the method, it's important to stay with it even when times are tough.  It's often when times are tough that we learn the most about ourselves.

Authentic self-study uncovers are addictions, weaknesses, etc.  We must accept all that we find without berating ourselves.  We train with the deep intention to know ourselves fully.  When we get close to these so-called negative characteristics we became able to see their roots.  "The degree to which we can do this for ourselves is the degree to which we will be tolerant of other people's weaknesses and flaws", Donna Farhi.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Tapas-burning enthusiasm, zeal, sincerity

"Charging all your actions with zeal and sincerity- whether serving family, the greater community, or yourself- transforms them into spiritual practice.  This concept applies to the formal practices as well.  When practicing asana, pranayama, or any of the other practices, the main benefit comes from embracing the deep spiritual intention." - Nischala Joy Devi, The Secret Power of Yoga, p. 213

Imagine there is a rolled towel across your hip points and you are folding over the top of it
Round your back like cat pose- a little bit in all the postures

Intensity, devotion, love, joy
Tapas comes from deep within and is fueled by positivity and love