Our Blueprint For Health and Fulfillment

Dear Yogis

Last weekend I went to the most entertaining all-day lecture with Dr N G Kostopoulos and Vaidya A Barot on the Principles of Ayurveda. Laughter flowed freely. They also give their knowledge freely but ask that we, in payment, “leave 1% of yourself for others. Open your heart by giving to others”. 

Dr Kostopoulos began by telling us that Ayurveda is very specific, nothing is vague. It is 10 times more precise than modern medicine which is too general. Ayurveda gives us easy access to information about ourselves, both physical and mental. Ayurveda views us in terms of our physical energies, Vata, Pitta and Kapha. These are our ‘doshas’, our blueprint for health and fulfillment, telling us about our type, our leaning, our disposition and vulnerabilities. When these energies are out of balance, certain diseases can be explained.

To illustrate Vata, Pitta and Kapha he used animal examples. Look at the monkey, he said to illustrate Vata - which derives from the elements of Space and Air and translates as “wind”. The monkey has a lot of kinetic energy, a lot of Vata, moving erratically, constantly and aimlessly. Vata is prominent in his brain and in his genetics. Survival comes from moving fast to escape predators. They eat banana, a settling, Kapha food. They can’t eat more Vata foods, not chillies! They would be flying! This is how nature works.

Vata people can’t make up their minds about doing this or that, preferring to go here or there. If you have a lot of vata kinetic energy your body will be a little thinner, fast moving, and your ideas will be fast moving as well. Enthusiastic but you can also lose your enthusiasm easily. You go for something but you can also withdraw from something as well.

Pitta derives from the elements of Fire and Water and Dr Kostopolous illustrated this dosha with Tiger energy. This is a Pitta animal, representing aggression, concentration and combustion. They have penetrating eyes, very careful movements and they hunt and kill for food. (The monkey doesn’t have to hunt, bananas don’t run away! This food needs a totally different mind-set to the food-hunting tiger). The tiger is total Pitta. They have so much Pitta, they can consume raw meat. Pita people are precise and have an intense, sharp, fiery nature. They know exactly what they want. They know exactly when the need to eat and when they are hungry they get irritated.

Kapha derives from the Sanskrit word ‘shlish’ meaning ‘that which holds things together’. This type is about strong structure. Look at the elephant which is very strong, smooth, deliberate movements, plenty of reserves of energy, stoic. He can survive; he is difficult to attack. Kapha people are patient, grounded, heavier... they love to eat.  They should do more dynamic yoga. They love Savasana, sleep, not exercising, community and family.

We are all slightly different, different percentages of these three qualities which is why modern medicine loses its grip because it needs the average person to have effect on the biggest percentage of the population. Yoga and Ayurveda are targeted processes to bring an imbalanced state back to balance.  You can google quizzes to check your dosha type. At the very least this can give you clues about what foods to avoid and what type of exercise to do.

Home Studio

November is here but we can still heat up the studio with our energy. There’s plenty of room in class next week. See attached for class availability.

Training

Tonight, I’ll be at Triyoga from Charlie Merton’s gong bath workshop: 20 minutes of working with mantra, 20 minutes of breath and mudra, 40-45 minutes postures and 40 minutes of gong bath. It’s at 19:45 - 21:45. Come with me!

Yoga in the News

Kent Online Iswar Sharma from Sevenoaks wins Euro yoga gold. ‘Ten-year-old Ishwar Sharma from Sevenoaks travelled to Bordeaux to represent the UK in the European Yoga Championship - and came home with a gold medal in the Boys 9-11 category!’  

The Hindustan Times has: Mudra an obscene gesture? UK court dismisses complaint. ‘A British court has dismissed a case against an Indian-origin woman whose daily Yoga practice by a beach near her house in Sussex infuriated a neighbour-couple, who believed her hand ‘Mudra’ to be an obscene gesture aimed at them and complained to the police.’  

Glamour UK has: Your ultimate guide to chakras and how to optimise your daily performance with them. It’s a nice little article. The writer says: ‘Each chakra also concerns itself with more direct emotional and physical symptoms, so along with the colours I want to teach you how to use these powerful energy centres to benefit your daily life’.

The Great Work Of Your Life

Dear Yogis

I have another book review for you. A dear yogi friend gave me ’The Great Work Of Your Life by Stephen Cope for my birthday. I’ve mentioned Cope before and his previous book, Yoga and the Quest for the True Self.

This book helps us understand the Bhagavad Gita, that cornerstone of yoga literature. Also called ‘The Song of God’, it teaches how to access the true self (God realisation) with the practice of Yoga. Cope says: ‘Yoga tradition is almost entirely concerned – obsessed, really – with the problem of living a fulfilled life. The yoga tradition is a virtual catalogue of the various methods human beings have discovered over the past 3,000 years to function on all cylinders’.

If you’ve ever wondered about the ability of yoga to pull you over to a better version of yourself, to a feeling of authenticity, here’s why: ‘The yoga tradition is very, very interested in the idea of an inner possibility harboured within every human soul’. Alternatively, we are blinded by the ‘false self’ – a collection of ideas about who we should be’. ‘Our capacity to see the world clearly is thwarted’ when those ideas are so strong that they override who we actually are. (Yoga’s theory of Koshas repeats the same idea.)

This is a lovely book about naming your inner gift and tapping into its power. Cope says that it’s better to fail in the pursuit of our own calling than live the fake life of the false self. That brings “extreme spiritual peril” says Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita. If you bring forth what is within you it will save you. If you do not, it will destroy you.

Home Studio

All kinds of alternatives were found this week to incorporate the usual sprinkling of twinge-prone backs, problematic hips, giddying dizziness, killjoy cramp; anxiety and all its attendants. There’s plenty of room in class next week. And if you come for a private class, perhaps you’ll have time for coffee after in the Grove’s Greek inspired coffee shop. See attached for class availability.

Training

For tomorrow I’ve booked to attend The Practice Of Yoga + Meditation According To The Principles Of Ayurveda. It’s at Triyoga Camden, 8.00 – 17.30, and it’s totally free. The schedule is: 08:00–09:00 Talk on ayurveda, yoga and Pranayama; 09:00–10:00 Practice of yoga and pranayama (by Dr N G Kostopoulos); 10:00–11:00 Discussion and practice of pranayama and meditation (Vaidya A Barot); 14:30–17.30 Lecture on ayurveda, yoga and meditation. It’s free! Come with me!

Yoga in the News

The Times has an advertorial telling us: How to be more flexible as you get older. The average drop in flexibility of hip and shoulder joints means they can move about six degrees less in any direction each decade from a person’s mid-fifties. “Lack of flexibility affects posture and the way we move, which can then affect breathing and digestion”.

The Tablet has: Bishop bans yoga for being 'unchristian'. ‘The Bishop also referred to a homily given by Pope Francis in 2015 in which he said: “Practices like yoga are not capable of opening our hearts up to God.” The Pope continued: “You can take a million courses in spirituality, a million courses in yoga, Zen and all these things but all of this will never be able to give you freedom.”’

Have a Zen weekend.

Om Yoga Show 2019

Dear Yogis

The trees are in their autumn beauty. Thank the various and many gods for the Om Yoga Show, marking October twilight, the end of the summer, and giving us inspiration to keep up an energetic and varied yoga practice into winter weather. It’s a weekend of yoga chaos, hullabaloo and overmuchness at Alexander Palace. It’s celebratory and I’m going with my usual addict’s helplessness.

I’m assisting Marcus Veda in his Saturday 2:00 - 3:30 workshop The Divine Spine: A Rocket Yoga Workshop. Marcus promises to give you ‘all the vitalising backbends of Ashtanga’s second series’ as well as inversions and arm-balances.

I have my eye on Claire Missinghams's The All New You in which she promises an inspirational lecture, asana, Kriyas and meditations to give and internal upgrade to the nervous system. That’s on Saturday at 10.30-12.00 for £18.

On Saturday at 16.30-17.30 Emily Brett who is the founder of Ourmala is teaching Slow Flow. Ourmala is all about teaching refugees, suicide awareness, yoga for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, for people who have survived war, torture, trafficking, slavery and persecution. I have to be in her class!

On Saturday in the Soul Food Kitchen at 16.00-16.30 is chef Edward Daniel teaching How to Ferment and Create Great Bacteria For The Gut - How to make Sauerkraut, Kombucha, Water Kefir and nut cheeses. It's Free!

As usual I have to beg you to come to David Sye's How To Get High On Your Own Supply. It's on Sunday at 14.00-15.00, £15. David Sye is someone you should know. He teaches joy in the most challenging of places. (I’ve written about him before: for example in 2017, and 2018.)

Home Studio

It’s a bit booked up next week. See attached for class availability. There are some spaces left. Come if you possibly can.

Training

On Friday 1st November, 19:45 - 21:45, Charlie Merton is teaching her beautiful Friday evening workshop, A Complete Practice: body, breath, mind + mantra with gong bath: 20 minutes working with mantra, 20 minutes of breath and mudra, 40-45 minutes physical asana practice and 40 minutes of sound meditation with gongs and other instruments.

Yoga in the News

The Guardian has: Swami Shivapremananda obituary – the monk credited with spreading the teachings of Sivananda yoga throughout the world.

The Jerusalem Post has: Yoga and the Jews. “But is it Kosher?” A yoga teacher comments: “The strongest therapeutic elements of yoga get us out of our own minds, or those looping stories that we repeat in our heads. And one of the great parts of Sukkot is this approach of, ‘You did all your work and you did all this reflecting. Now quiet the mind and get out of your story and be in this moment.’

This is great! Lifehacker Australia has: How To Start Practicing Yoga With Your Kids. The article is an excellent resource for people who want a list of books and ideas to teach their children yoga.

Yoga Hullabaloo

Dear Yogis

The trees are in their autumn beauty. Thank the various and many gods for the Om Yoga Show, marking October twilight, the end of the summer, and giving us inspiration to keep up an energetic and varied yoga practice into winter weather. It’s a weekend of yoga chaos, hullabaloo and overmuchness at Alexander Palace. It’s celebratory and I’m going with my usual addict’s helplessness.

I’m assisting Marcus Veda in his Saturday 2:00 - 3:30 workshop The Divine Spine: A Rocket Yoga Workshop. Marcus promises to give you ‘all the vitalising backbends of Ashtanga’s second series’ as well as inversions and arm-balances.

I have my eye on Claire Missinghams's The All New You in which she promises an inspirational lecture, asana, Kriyas and meditations to give and internal upgrade to the nervous system. That’s on Saturday at 10.30-12.00 for £18.

On Saturday at 16.30-17.30 Emily Brett who is the founder of Ourmala is teaching Slow Flow. Ourmala is all about teaching refugees, suicide awareness, yoga for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, for people who have survived war, torture, trafficking, slavery and persecution. I have to be in her class!

On Saturday in the Soul Food Kitchen at 16.00-16.30 is chef Edward Daniel teaching How to Ferment and Create Great Bacteria For The Gut - How to make Sauerkraut, Kombucha, Water Kefir and nut cheeses. It's Free!

As usual I have to beg you to come to David Sye's How To Get High On Your Own Supply. It's on Sunday at 14.00-15.00, £15. David Sye is someone you should know. He teaches joy in the most challenging of places. (I’ve written about him before: for example in 2017, and 2018.)

Home Studio

It’s a bit booked up next week. See attached for class availability. There are some spaces left so come if you possibly can. My lucky Home Studio isn’t the only exciting thing happening in The Grove! A Greek inspired coffee shop opened this week. The coffee is, I think, the best I’ve tasted – very smooth and rich. Let’s go there!

Training

On Friday 1st November, 19:45 - 21:45, Charlie Merton is teaching her beautiful Friday evening gong bath workshop: 20 minutes of working with mantra, 20 minutes of breath and mudra, 40-45 minutes postures and, what we’re all there for, 40 minutes of sound meditation with gongs and other instruments.

Yoga in the News

The Guardian has: Swami Shivapremananda obituary – the monk credited with spreading the teachings of Sivananda yoga throughout the world.

The Jerusalem Post has: Yoga and the Jews. “But is it Kosher?” A yoga teacher comments: “The strongest therapeutic elements of yoga get us out of our own minds, or those looping stories that we repeat in our heads. And one of the great parts of Sukkot is this approach of, ‘You did all your work and you did all this reflecting. Now quiet the mind and get out of your story and be in this moment.’

This is great! Lifehacker Australia has: How To Start Practicing Yoga With Your Kids. The article is an excellent resource for people who want a list of books and ideas to teach their children yoga.

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Yoga is Everyday Mental Health Awareness Day

Dear Yogis

Yesterday was Mental Health Awareness Day and companies have been taking advantage all week to get employees involved. Companies that offer yoga at work are doing such a positive and worthwhile thing! One person told me of their day-long stress, things hadn’t gone right, deadlines missed and a sense of disappointment infused the end of the day with that tight feeling in the stomach and throat. That’s not great to take home! Along comes yoga on its white horse to rescue the situation!

Yoga is really a fancy way of meditating. The crucial thing is the breath awareness. Postures come and go and try to teach us about ourselves, mainly that we can’t keep the mind in one place! Kristina Karitinou Ireland says: ‘There’s a playfulness to the practice: the mind goes; you bring it back to the breath, in one second it's gone again. That is the nature of things. You don't have to feel guilty or bad or critical.

It’s through the practice that we re-educate ourselves: good postures give you a good feeling; postures that give you fear teach you that you can overcome difficulties; strength postures teach you that your strength is there to build.  When you achieve difficult postures, it’s not that the ego has to go crazy; you create what Kristina calls ‘reference points’ and you remember what it's like to be in a good situation and overcome restrictions. That gives you mental strength. That’s the feeling that you take off the mat to energise and benefit your day and benefit the people around you. That’s the beauty of yoga.

Retreat

If you’re interested in a retreat with emphasis on Meditation, check out Deborah Smith’s Grow Your Own Happiness retreat. (See flyer). Her brilliant book of the same name has had a load of media coverage. (Here’s my blog from her last  retreat.)

If you’d like to come to Kythera with me next year, please let me have your preference for May or September. So far, four people say September... so it looks like September at the moment! And like a sign from the heavens, a Greek inspired coffee shop will be opening up in The Grove next week. Let’s have a coffee there!

Home Studio

I’m lucky enough to find people come to yoga class with their conditions, illnesses, recovery processes and aches and pains. It’s humbling and a privilege to teach. Yoga boasts that it is for every condition and I’m interested to hear people report their feelings of how yoga has helped with various problems. This week classes had people getting over cancer, a broken back from a car accident, Parkinson’s and  high blood pressure. Hopefully we can lessen some symptoms and some prescription charges! See attached for class availability. There are plenty of spaces left on Monday and Tuesday in the stretchy classes.

Training

On Friday 1st November, 19:45 - 21:45, Charlie Merton is teaching her beautiful Friday evening workshop, A Complete Practice: body, breath, mind + mantra with gong bath: 20 minutes working with mantra, 20 minutes of breath and mudra, 40-45 minutes physical asana practice and 40 minutes of sound meditation with gongs and other instruments.

Have a look at the attachment for some of the Triyoga workshops coming up. I haven’t looked at other studios yet... Also, the Om Yoga Show is next weekend, the 18th, 19th & 20th.

Yoga in the News

Financial Times has: ‘Do mindfulness activities really work?’ FT colleague Claire Barron leads the in-house meditation and yoga classes. She says corporate mindfulness can lead to happier staff. “They’re less stressed, they become more innovative in their thinking, creative, productive.”

India’s Times Now has: Benefits of Viparita Karani yoga asana: What happens when you put your legs up on the wall? ‘This yoga posture is considered as one of the most calming and nourishing poses for the mind and the body.’ I’m a fan of this posture.

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Three Types Of Yoga Knowledge

Dear Yogis

Last weekend, Kino MacGregor talked about the spiritual journey of yoga and I lapped it all up. I used to be the type that denied I had any sort of spiritual dimension. I just didn’t like the lack of scientific knowledge and blindness that I thought it implied. I wish I had known the following from teenagehood...

Kino talked about the three different types of knowledge (Yoga Sutra 1.7). The first is the most common: reason or rational knowledge, appealing to the intellect, the rational, the logical, the Sherlock Holmes... Find a clue! But this is limited by the known universe and known facts which change! The facts that the earth was flat and the centre of the universe were replaced with newer facts. However, ancient yogis said that you should pursue the knowledge of rational thinking on the understanding that this is a foundation to another, deeper type of knowledge.

Next is emotional, devotional, faith-based knowledge. We all have this capacity. Children have this, trusting the parent. You take knowledge from a teacher that you trust. This type of knowledge carries a danger of institutional pressure or abuse potential if taught by self-serving or only partially enlightened people.
Thirdly there is the knowledge of direct experience and evidence.  It needs to be experienced as true for you, for knowledge to be complete.  This has a problem too; it can supersede and block out all other types of knowledge.

Ideally the three types of knowledge don’t fight with each other but line up. This is when the potential for spiritual progress to occur can be tapped.  Yoga is the tool to do this. Yoga practice wants you to evolve as a human being, wants to uncover your true nature which has somehow been forgotten or obscured by behavioural patterns of the mind the ego and material and physical measurements of self-worth. Yoga is the only practice from orthodox India to emphasise personal practice which starts are journey from rational knowledge through to devotional knowledge through to experiential knowledge.

Retreat

What a lovely retreat!  if you’d like to come to Kythera with me next year, please let me have your preference for May or September. So far, four people say September. And f you want to squeeze in a retreat this year, please get in touch with Andy Gill to find out about his Himalayan monastic yoga retreat, 5th -12th October. You will become part of a Monastic community for a week. I’ve done that in the UK and it is special. I didn’t have added Andy and yoga, though!

Home Studio

October is the best month of all! It’s a bit like January and it’s New Year Resolutions. Gyms fill up a bit more and more newcomers find their way to my Home Studio. See attached for class availability. There are plenty of spaces left. See attachment.

Training

The Om Yoga Show is coming. It’s on the 18th, 19th & 20th of this month. David Sye will be there. I beg you every year to do his workshop! This year it’s called How To Get High On Your Own Supply! Teachers/’presenters’ that are always great to be with will be there like David Kam, Dan Peppiatt and Adam Hocke, Marcus Veda, Tara Styles... so many! Fancy coming?

Yoga in the News

Popsugar has:  Amazon Is Selling Yoga Skeletons, and Yes, They're Still More Flexible Than You Are. I chose this story about spooky yoga decorations because the picture is good!

If you’re thinking of buying a yoga mat, have a look at this... The Evening Standard has: 10 Best eco yoga mats in the UK. Lifeorme comes out well but you can probably do better for the price. You can check out the yoga mat market at the Yoga Show this month.

Yoga Teaches Self Acceptance

Dear Yogis

I’m writing to you in the dead of the night under the deep black night-time Kytheran sky. You can’t imagine a sky so jam-packed with stars and constellations and the white cloud of a galaxy millions of light years away. It’s breath-taking.

Sprinkles of stardust attended our classes and workshops this week and everyone made progress in their postures and wider experience of yoga: Pranayama (breathing) exercises, visualisation, and daily techniques and drills to better understand the fluidity of yoga.

During the workshops, Valentina’s main message of the week was: ‘don’t make it complicated, enjoy yoga’. She said that there are so many rules that these can often form distractions and obstacles instead of aiding your practice. ‘Yoga is practical’, she says.

This is interesting. She said that in order to move on and progress through the postures, you need self acceptance. You are faced with the physical body and confronted with its restrictions. Actually, postures are not so important, in the great scheme of things, but in that moment, they are the most important thing in the world. We get upset and stressed and self-critical. Eventually yoga will make the mind discover the reality... that you can’t escape from what is. This is your body. This is what is. Yoga is how you find out who you are. Only when you accept your body can you move on and improve. The system is to expose yourself to your higher self but you have to start where you are.

Retreat

I can’t imagine not coming here next year! if you’d like to come to Kythera with me next year, please let me have your preference for May or September. And f you want to squeeze in a retreat this year, please get in touch with Andy Gill to find out about his Himalayan monastic yoga retreat, 5th -12th October. You will become part of a Monastic community for a week. I’ve done that in the UK and it is special. I didn’t have added Andy and yoga, though!

Home Studio

October comes next week and we’re back in the game. See attached for class availability. There are plenty of spaces left. See attachment.

Training

This weekend, starting tonight, is Kino MacGregor. She’s back all weekend at the Oval Space near Cambridge Heath, 14:30 - 17:00.  I’ll go on Sunday 29th of September for ‘the spiritual journey of asana‘ workshop

Yoga in the News

The Telegraph has: Find your inner selfie: how 'InstaYoga' became the ultimate cultural paradox. An odd article about yoga on Instagram. ‘InstaYoga...despite representing almost every antithetical value to the practice of yoga itself (ie ego, self-obsession, and a focus entirely on the physical body), it is bringing people to the yoga practice in swathes, and a large number – admittedly not all – are finding the greater depths it has to offer.’

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Beryl's Power Yoga

Dear Yogis

It’s a moonless sky over Kapsali Bay as I write this. The sky and sea are shades of black and an occasional ship passes through the view carrying a couple of stars to light the vessel up. It’s my unbelievable luck to carry a couple of stars myself and be back here to teach yoga. Since last weekend’s workshops with Beryl Bender Birch I’ve been thinking about how yoga changed my life with what she called its ‘brilliant methodology’ and ‘subtle transformation’. We do yoga to become a little more flexible and it doesn’t occur to us what’s going to happen after we’ve been doing yoga for a short while...

Physical yoga pulls us in but it’s really meditation. What is brilliant about the methodology, Beryl says, is that it is such a subtle transformation. One minute you’re doing the postures but really the training is about learning to pay attention. You’re learning to bring your attention into the present moment.

Beryl Bender Birch is known for inventing Power Yoga and teaching the New York Road Runners club for 22 years. Power Yoga doesn’t mean that you approach yoga like the Incredible Hulk and doesn’t mean a rejection of the non-physical aspects of yoga. It was simply an alternative name to ’Ashtanga’ which she thought would attract no one. Power yoga conveyed that this practice ‘was a strong, sweaty, physical workout, unlike most of what had been presented as hatha yoga in the United States up to that time’. She said of Ashtanga: ‘I believed that there were a lot of tight, stiff, stressed, and searching people who could benefit from this specific method of yoga’.

There are interesting changes she has made to that Ashtanga sequence (she cuts out forward folds where people tend to round the upper spine) but it is still, essentially, the Ashtanga sequence. During class Beryl constantly reminds us to breathe with sound, that Ujjayi breathing turns on the heating mechanism making heat in the body and gets the system heated up. She tells us that ‘Pranayama is not only incorrect, it's impossible without mula bandha.’

And then the philosophy.  Here’s an amalgamation of the things Beryl said about yoga: Yoga changes your life when you learn to pay attention and become more mindful.  It’s about not becoming a slave to whether you’re comfortable or not comfortable. Think of all the things you do to avoid discomfort which is essential for our journey and contributes to our evolution. Without challenging moments there is no impetus to grow. The definition of yoga given by Patanjali’s second sutra is ‘the cessation of the fluctuations of the mind’. That isn’t really the definition. What Patanjali is saying is that yoga is what happens when you learn to focus your attention. We go to yoga class with tight hamstrings but eventually what drives us is to answer the question who am I?

Retreat

I’m already here on retreat, doing yoga, running, hanging out in cafes and tavernas! Unless you’re a total last minute-er, you can register your interest for next year. What about May instead of September? Teachers have always complained that they can’t come in September so it’s time to make that change.

If you still want a retreat this year and want to avoid the creeping darkness of the autumn for a little while longer, what about Andy Gill’s retreat in Nepal, 5th -12th October, held in a beautiful Tibetan Buddhist monastery in foothills of the Himalayas! You will become part of a Monastic community for a week, joining monks for morning meditation before Yoga practice. Lovely!

Home Studio

For another week I’m not there to teach so I suggest another The Grove dweller, Savita Khemlani who teaches every Sunday, 11.00-12.15 at Yogi’s Studio, 1 Springbridge Mews, W5 2AB. Your first class is free but email first.

Training

Next weekend I’ll be back from Kythera in time for Kino MacGregor. She’s back all weekend. I’ll go on Sunday 29th of September for ‘the spiritual journey of asana‘ workshop held in the Oval Space near Cambridge Heath, 14:30 - 17:00. Come with me!

Yoga in the News

Right on cue, the telegraph asks: ‘Is Yoga The Key To Becoming A Better Runner?’. Charlie Dark, former globe-trotting DJ and ex-creative writing and poetry teacher, founder of Run Dem Crew running club says:  “Yoga is just like running – it’s learning to be comfortable uncomfortable. “Runners need yoga. They need to learn how to be in the present, and that’s exactly what yoga teaches you – to live in the moment, for now.”

“So just like we dedicate our yoga practice to someone or open a vinyasa flow with a mantra – to love more generously, to be kinder, to stay curious, be present – we should also create a ‘run mantra’ to help push us to the finish line, he advises.”

Evening Standard gives us: Somatic yoga is the mindfulness practice burnt-out Londoners are loving. It is apparently ‘designed to reorganise the central nervous system, ground and realign the body and mind’. ‘The Human Method uses somatics and some aspects of Pilates, restorative yoga and yoga Nidra, which is a guided meditation, to kind of wake you up, make you more conscious and have a a really strong powerful practice that’s very in the moment’. Good idea!

Rebellious Hippies

Dear Yogis

I’m not at all in favour of this November chill on my skin! Yoga comes from a warm country, and so I must head off to one! To Greece, in fact, to hold my Kapsali yoga retreat. I know, Yoga doesn’t come from there, but Ashtanga Yoga was introduced to Europe via Greece in the late 80s by the uncontested most colourful personality of the Ashtanga world, the late Derek Ireland. I mention him often in class when I teach his extra Ashtanga postures.

Derek was many things including a Brighton and Hove football apprentice and a band promoter for the Sex Pistols, The Clash, and the Stranglers. He eventually took to yoga like it was rock n roll, practicing with weights and even a weighted jacket until it nearly killed him when he went upside-down.  According to his obituary, ‘on his daily run he generally wore nothing but trainers, the thong and a personal stereo’. He practiced yoga on the beach in similar kit! He exists in the hearts of the hundreds he taught as an example of how to be daring and free with our lives.

Derek and other senior teachers have in common that they couldn’t take to societal norms. They stayed as rebellious hippies and remain examples, helping us to become a bit more free-thinking and free living. It’s so easy to become imprisoned by norms and expectations. I nearly turned down being part of a Dove advert because I thought I shouldn’t take time off my office job. But, my sister pointed out, who on the deathbed wishes they had spent more time in the office!

Retreat

There are places left. Invest in yourself and your wellbeing. Nothing is certain in the future so if you're thinking about it for next year - don't wait Come now! Even the Guardian wonders: Is Kythera the Perfect Greek Island? (Get in touch to discuss flights. See Sky Scanner options. You can also check BA from Heathrow to Athens and then Aegean or Sky Express individually.)

Home Studio

For the next couple of weeks you have to find an alternative to my Home Studio. May I suggest another The Grove dweller, Savita Khemlani who teaches every Sunday, 11.00-12.15 at Yogi’s Studio, 1 Springbridge Mews, W5 2AB. Your first class is free but email first.

Ealing yoga teachers, write to me and let me know if you hold independent classes in the area and I’ll pass it on. I’ll be teaching again on Monday 30th.

Training

This weekend, starting tonight, I’m doing workshops at Triyoga Soho with Beryl Bender Birch who, as Triyoga says, pioneered the introduction of yoga into the world of sports and has taught yoga and meditation to tens of thousands of athletes since 1974. She published a book called ‘Power Yoga’, and was Wellness Director of the New York Road Runners for 22 years. Come with me!

(Heads up; July 25 – 29 2020 has Timothy McCall at Triyoga!)

Yoga in the News

The Telegraph gives us: Fitness on trial: Is Aerial yoga worth leaving the sofa for? ‘It’s yoga, but not as you know it: with aerial yoga, poses are done while suspended in a sling dangling from the ceiling.’

Parade has 25 Celebrity Yoga Quotes to Get You Motivated and Out the Door and Into Class. Why not! Madonna, Sting, Adam Levine, Lebron James, Elen DeGeneres, Jenifer Aniston, Megan Markle, RuPaul, Christina Aguilera, 50Cent... Of course, yoga-celebrity-in-chief Russell Brand is there.

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Last Call For Kythera

Dear Yogis

The bookends of the day are darker for longer. Bright mornings and light evenings are fading now and there’s chill in the air. Saying ‘goodbye’ to summer is an annual heartbreak. As we dive into autumn’s dusk, a yoga teacher sent me a little list of reflections à la Baz Luhrmann:

Everything has a lifecycle and will end eventually, whether you want it to or not. Get comfortable with the parting-of-ways that you hadn't planned on and find peace with change. You're not fooling yourself. Somewhere deep down you know who you are, you know the answers, and you know what's good for you. It's never too late to recreate yourself. Stop comparing. Stop Judging. Avoid negativity like a fast food. It will make you ill eventually. Have gratitude. Practice the above.

Retreat

Come with us!  Take a week where you don't have to rush to work, rush home, rush to the shops, rush back, rush to the class, rush back, rush dinner... or worse... miss yoga because the boss keeps you at work! All you have to do on a yoga retreat is yoga and relax.

A yoga retreat will gift you all sorts of unexpected benefits. A retreat can shine new light on your approach... something can click! We so easily get stuck in routine at home, in taking the same spot in the studio, in expecting the postures to feel the same as the day before, and expecting the same difficulties. A retreat relieves you of unnecessary self-perceptions. (Nothing changed about my flexibility when I finally included upside-down Lotus Pose in my Shoulder Stand sequence. My mind changed, that’s all, on retreat!)

Kythera is not the quickest place to get to but it’s special. Once you come you’ll realise what the fuss is about. People return again and again to the magic of the island. It’s my favourite place in the world... it might become yours. Come with us!!! Take a last grasp of warmth on the skin and flip-flop footwear. Details here. (See flight options from Sky Scanner attached. You can also check BA from Heathrow to Athens and then Aegean or Sky Express individually.)

Home Studio

There’s plenty of space next week in my lucky Home Studio. I love how many newcomers to yoga find their way here. Book now! I’m not here for half of September. Have a look at the latest availability attached to this email and  on my website. In the following week, beginning Monday 16th, I’m only holding classes on the Monday, then back on Monday 30th.

Training

I’ve booked Beryl Bender Birch workshops next weekend, all of them, (13th, 14th and 15th) at Triyoga Soho. On the 29th of September Kino MacGregor’sthe spiritual journey of asana‘ workshop held in the Oval Space near Cambridge Heath, conveniently near Hackney City Farm. Come with me!

Yoga in the News

The Washington Post has: 12 etiquette tips for yoga class — and the reasons behind them.  I had to laugh when I read this. The writer says: ‘I’ve been both culprit and victim when it comes to causing distraction in yoga class; I’ve walked into an already-underway session during the opening meditation...’ (She’s talking about my Friday class at Eden Fitness!!!) ‘Yoga class guidelines are undergirded by the concept of ahimsa... not to harm or injure... nonviolence in all aspects of our life, in our thoughts and our behaviours and our actions toward ourselves and others’.

The Times has: The DJs who are swapping wild nights for wellness and yoga. It’s a good read. I’ve noted these teacher quotes: “The grace of your entire past comes rushing to meet your body” and “enter the rainbow and explore the cosmic and creative realms”. Spottily and Sound Cloud have the Above & Beyond Burning Man yoga class track.

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