Eddie Stern/Deepak Chopra – Urban Yogis of New York City: Web-Episoeds

There is a new video series created by the Chopra Center and Ashtanga Yoga New York in which we are to meet yogis of different and unusual areas/stages of life.  In the first episode we meet young people who have lost deeply, lost parents or siblings, to the street violence of the urban setting and how yoga is helping them cope, become less reactive (at least stop further violence) and maybe look at things from a new perspective.

At eight minutes the episodes are refreshing, very well shot, and they have a message of peace.  Can’t see the video? Click here. You can read more about it here.

SUNDAY YOGA BLOG TIMES: MARIHUANA AND PRACTICE?

I completely agree with Richard Freeman on this: marihuana may temporarily give some focus to the practice, but overall it is a huge leak.

Remember the New York Times article about a study on how yoga does or does not help? Well, here is Eddie Stern, telling them they need to smarten up!

Manju talking about meeting Krishnamacharya and Iyengar

Aaaannnd now she believes in those “openings

Grimmly gets a breakthrough too as he touches toes to head in raja kapotasana. Nice. Reminds me that yes all IS coming.

Also, watch the cute pictures of Maya’s daughter who enters raja kapotasana as if is nothing! God bless her!

Of course it is OK and human to celebrate, I mean, she binded in Mari B! that is pretty huge. You go!

How to deal with ‘crappy people’

VIDEO
Great Video explanation on learning to float into Bakasana (crow pose) by David Garrigues.  Love the energy he puts into the explanation!

Want More?
Last Sunday Yoga Blog Times: YOU CAN DO IT!

Sunday Yoga Blog Times: Sharath Starts Teaching TODAY

Found Picture Here

Thank you ElephantBeans for keeping track of the blogs streaming right from Mysore! It’s the season indeed and Sharat-ji starts teaching this Sunday.

Why did I call him Sharath-ji?  Because even then Shala now acknowledges him as Sharath-ji! check out the picture.  I actually called him Sharath-ji before, but you knew that.  (Ji is a sign of respect when added at the end of a teachers’ name signifying you respect him or her as ‘holder of the tradition’ or Guru)

In one paragraph SereneFlavor reveals what took her 4 years to finally conclude! (and she gets it through the prasarittas)

Eddie’s blog tipped me into this INCREDIBLE photos of Hindu Festivals from the Atlantic.

Hm, my secret is out!

Ooops! Kino reveals a secret from Richard Freeman on a Puja you can do to get mula bandha and invite the Goddess to flow upwards (towards the end of the article)… Delish…

Mysore Napper blogging directly from South India receives a guest, an Iranian woman and she takes on to the practice with gusto! loved it. Ashtanga Yoga Iran? Anyone?

If you could take one pill that gave you the experience of yoga, Samadhi and all (whatever that is), would you take it? There is a poll at Nobel. Looks like most of us would, I would!

Check out this public declaration of very detailed yoga life goals, Go Svasti!

Video of the Week:
I looooove Ashtanga Yoga Teacher Kiki talking about misleading in men… and what to do about it. You tell’em Kiki!

Previous Sunday Yoga Blog Times: Iggy Pop Drops Back

SUNDAY NEW BLOG TIMES: Check Artur Out

Is ideology like cocaine? – picture –

Yogi Arturo wonders if oreos in pinaple, raspberry and blueberry flavors are just an Asian thing, are they?

Vinyasa Flow or Ashtanga?

This Yogi needs help with his dilema of what to call his class?

Grimmly returns to his roots of Vinyasa Krama after a few weeks of Ashtanga. We understand, the Vinyasa Krama does include all limbs in each practice, and that is priceless!

The 9 ways to guarantee success at James’ blog, look awfully similar to yoga sutra #… can you tell which one? – Interesting that one commentator noticed!

7 Surprises I got from the yoga sutras, via Ramaswami and from Patanjali

I found this incredible video at Eddie Stern’s Blog, check Artur out, such control, such grace…

RELATED:
Last Sunday’s New Blog Times

Found! One Lost Student of Krishnamacharya, in NYC

…It was the spring of 2009. I had just finished teaching a yoga class at a health club in Manhattan, when a man who had been waiting by the door entered and began to do his own practice. I immediately took note of his uncommon form. He was moving and breathing just as I had seen demonstrated by Srivatsa Ramaswami and A.G. Mohan, two notable students of Krishnamacharya’s.  I begged the man’s pardon for interrupting, but asked if he wouldn’t mind my asking where he had learned to practice in such a way.

“I learned in Madras, back in the 70’s” he said.  “May I ask from whom?” I inquired, to which he replied” “You probably haven’t heard of him”. I believe I then said, “Try me”. I was soon glad I had persisted; much to my delight, he said he had studied with “a man named Krishnamacharya” – (Longer intro here.)

This is how the article starts in the latest edition of NAMARUPA MAGAZINE.

I have just finished reading the article and I highly recommend it to anyone interested.  Richard -the student of Krishanamcharya- is a man of the theater but he studied with the master and kept a journal, pictures of which you can see in the article.

Krishnamacharya’s business card is one of the gem
images you can see in the article

Gratitude to Eddie Stern and Leslie Kaminoff for interviewing him and putting out the article and of course, to Daniel Dale for recognizing Richard Schechner!

You can read the article in full by downloading the US$ 2.16 Namarupa digital edition here.

Thanks also to Krishna who pointed me to the article which I had not had time to download with being busy studying with Ramaswami. What a week!

See also:
8 Stories from A.G. Mohan that Reveal What Kind of Man Krishnamacharya Was
My Favorite 8 Yoga Books of 2010

Books I am Waiting on

UPDATE  🙂 

http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?t=earyog08-20&o=1&p=8&l=bpl&asins=5914780039&fc1=000000&IS2=1&lt1=_blank&m=amazon&lc1=0000FF&bc1=000000&bg1=FFFFFF&f=ifrI am waiting to finally read the legendary Lino Miele‘s book.  There is a lot of stories surrounding it, which he tells in the Guruji book- like when Guruji told him to print 10,000 copies, then Lino asked: “how much should we charge” and P.Jois  replied 100 dollars.  Lino then goes on to explain his own interpretation that it did not really mean 100 dollars but that the value of the book is really that much, and back then!

The book is out of stock at amazon, I just put the picture on the right as a tease, I believe I found it at ashtanga.com

Lino wanted to have three series included in the book, including primary, intermediate and Advanced A, and John Scott had done the drawing for the advance 3rd series,  but Pattabhi Jois said to him:
“Good, well done, but take the last part out, Advaned A – we don’t want”.

Lino agreed but was still dubious, so he asked John Scott to call Eddie Stern who happened to be in Mysore to see if further clarification could be achieved, this is what Guruji told Eddie:

“…People will look at the book and imitate, and that is no good.  Look at advanced A, they want to do it, the ego is very high, and they break themselves, for what reason” There is no reason to do this. We don’t want

And so the book (have not seen it yet) only has primary and intermediate.

http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?t=earyog08-20&o=1&p=8&l=bpl&asins=B0019FM5YE&fc1=000000&IS2=1&lt1=_blank&m=amazon&lc1=0000FF&bc1=000000&bg1=FFFFFF&f=ifrAnother thing I have on order which is also quite exciting is the first DVD set that I know of on anatomy, by David Keil.

I am very grateful to David whom one day, and out of the blue, took time out of his day to answer our nutation question here at the blog.  The article continues to be in one of the most read in the past 30 days even though I do not control that part it is done by google/blooger and based on the number of people that read the article.   On that day I realized that David is dedicated to adding value and I am very much looking forward to the DVD, have you seen it?

David teaches with his wife Gretchen in Miami.  He says they are always travelling.

I just realized that David teaches anatomy together with John Scott who was mentioned on the context of the previous book.  I like how interconnected this small world of ashtanga yoga is.

Then, as a suggestion from Grimmly I found out about a) the led classes of primary and intermediate series dictated by Guruji you can also buy them here, by donation, 25 dollars within the US or 30 dollars outside.  Thanks Grimmly!

Finally, my recent fascination with the story telling abilities of A.G. Mohan in his book “Krishnamacharya His Life and Teachings”I have ordered two other books of him, I thought he had written two in total but it turns out he has 3!, the two I have not seen yet are:

Yoga Therapy: A Guide to the Therapeutic Use of Yoga and Ayurveda
and
Yoga for Body, Breath and Mind: A Guide to Personal Reintegration

So, should be a week full of reading, not to mention I am still delighted to read the Yoga Makaranda, which is available free, here

RELATED POSTS
8 Things I learned from Sharath Jois in his Recent Tour to NYC
Krishnamacharya: 8 Short Stories that Reveal What Kind of Man He Was

I don’t think that we can save yoga, I think yoga will save us

Those are the words of Kausthub Desikachar, grandson of Sri T. Krishnamacharya, who has produced a book with just photographs of all the masters that studied under his grandfather’s guidance (Iyengar, Devi, Jois, Desikachar, Mohan)

The book is a bit pricey at US$175, but if you do happen to get it (see here) I am sure it would be a feast to look at, so if you do, please let me invite you for tea so we can look at it together.

He says “I don’t think that we can save yoga, I think that yoga will save us” in the context of an interview in the latest Namarupa magazine (published by Eddie Stern and Robert Moses),  and as part of a response to the question “Is there anything else that you want to add… in terms of the future of yoga and its enduring growth” by Rachel Stark.

On another question on how to bring the traditional student/teacher relationship back to our time and age, he suggest patience and for teachers to be good examples.

What surprised me the most was how he talks about the book.  Born in Chennai in 75 he had the rear privilege of growing up, mingling and forging “intimate relationships” with all of these masters of yoga.  He believes that having a book with just photos will somehow transmit to us or give us something, believes that our own projections when looking into the family album type of photographs might trigger a spark of understanding.

I want to look at it, the photos in the interview are stunning, for example there is one of Iyengar relaxing in his living room or one of Krishnamacharya at a picnic with his wife circa 1965, you can see them if you click on the “preview” for the Namarupa magazine.

Curious about him I got to his website.

10 yoga things I learned in 2010

This year has been one of extremes for me, I got happily married yet my father died, I earned a new family yet my sister stopped talking to me.  All of these provided big challenges and yet also opportunities to practice off the mat, they took me to where I am today and along the road I learned:

1.-When a family member dies there IS something we can do to help him or her:  Having someone close to you die is disorienting and painful, yet, in the midst of my pain last April, I asked Eddie Stern if there was a way we can help those that have departed.  He told me “Yes, absolutely I will write it down for you“.  When I inquired after class he had written in a piece of paper “Tibetan Book of the Death”, “Om Namah Shivaya”.

http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?t=earyog08-20&o=1&p=8&l=bpl&asins=0553370901&fc1=000000&IS2=1&lt1=_blank&m=amazon&lc1=0000FF&bc1=000000&bg1=FFFFFF&f=ifr
His instructions were to read the book within the first 46 days and to recite the mantra.

I read the whole book of the Tibetan Book of the Death to my father, out loud, and I know it worked because a bee hit me on the head.  Mostly telling the departed to search for the light will help them.  It is up to you weather you believe or not, all I can say is that knowing I could somewhat help made the whole process more intimate, real, and perhaps helped take the edge off things.

2.Preparing for my own death is important, it can happen at any moment.  Having a sudden death in the family makes everything more real, more present, it lets the chill of departing come around and sit down for tea.

It is said that the last thought in our minds when we pass will determine our next life, so, that last moment is important.  The Gita has a section on “how to die” which left me thinking, and I turned into a post which was called “How to die, four simple tips.

3.-I like to collect sutras or short sentences from teachers I come across on the journey, lines that I can remember and that help me along the road, things like “yoga is a breathing practice” which Kimberly Flynn taught me, or  “We meditate to clear up our old samskaras and be happy” which the Vipassana teachers taught me.  Here are five more that come from Ashtanga teachers.

4.- I can learn intellectually all I want about dropping back, but in the end it comes down to just doing it.  And doing it is something I have not quite managed to do yet.  However, I probably know so much about dropping back right now that I could lecture for hours on it, starting with foundations, bandhas, opening, and so on and on and on.  In the end, “do your practice” is what it all comes down to.  And by the way here are the 9 things I gathered throughout 2010 on backbends.

5.- Sitting down in silence with myself can be a challenge of Arjuna’s battlefield proportions.  I was blessed with the opportunity to attend a Vipassana meditation retreat again this year. It was just a three day course this time, but it worked out to be exactly what I needed to reconnect with the cushion and recommit to daily meditation practice.  The thing that dawned on me this time around was the part where we just sit with the sensations on the body, without intellectualizing.  I had heard it before, but this time I got it, I actually was able to sit with the body and scanning for sensations throughout it.  I am completely sold on the efficiency of this technique.

6.- My book was published.  OK only one copy of it, I don’t know if you knew but “book2print” allows you to print your own blog as a book.  Seeing the printed copy helped me organize new ideas, come up with posts, and overall see the progress in my writing and understanding of yoga.

7.- Being “satvic” means sometimes being rajasic or tamasic. Being a yogi is all about being satvic, or balanced, in the middle, right? nope! it turns out if we are “trying” to be in a state of balance all the time then by the very nature of the trying we are already in an extreme or in “rajasic” mode where we are forcing things through.  Allowing our natural state to manifest is sometimes the most balanced thing we can do, like that old day when I ate marshmallows and they were not the good kind. Here is a great cartoon illustrating this.

8.- Most ashtanga yogis out there seem to have started second series only AFTER they dropped back from standing. This was a surprise to me as I thought that everyone would need the extra help I get from those early poses of the intermediate series for opening the back.  But the poll I run in October proved me wrong.

9.- When a yogi can suspend the breath for about 1.5 hours there is very little in this world that is not possible for her.   I read lots of books about yoga throughout 2010, one of the most remarkable ones is Path of Fire and Light by Swami Rama.  It was cool to see how he just goes all out and tells everything about pranayama like no other book out there.  Here are 5 very curious things I learned while reading.

http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?t=earyog08-20&o=1&p=8&l=bpl&asins=0195395344&fc1=000000&IS2=1&lt1=_blank&m=amazon&lc1=0000FF&bc1=000000&bg1=FFFFFF&f=ifr10.- Our beloved Ashtanga series-es of poses, all six of them, may or may not have come to us the way in which we thought.  Reading Yoga Body was an eye opener.  Mark Singleton is a scholar that studied and worked on it for a very long time, he went over government and military records, he looked at all yoga literature of the early 1900, and his conclusions lead us to believe there may not have been a Yoga Korunta book, (the book where we all tend to think is what Krishnamacharya used to teach yoga to Pattabhi Jois and then in turn he taught all the people who are teaching us these days).  Singleton’s book produced controversy in the world of yoga, and I found the topic fascinating, here is my review.



Here are  the 12 yoga things I learned in 2009.


So, what are some of the yoga things you learned throughout this year?

Utitta Hasta – Before and After

Last week I wrote a post about Utitta Hasta that generated a lot of comments and so I started looking at the pose a little closer.  It is easy to become a bit “lazy” in this asana unless we are being adjusted, and here comes my suspicious as of why this might be one of the “most adjusted” poses out there.

For example: at Eddie’s studio if you did not want an adjustment you had to either “rush” or “hide” otherwise, you were getting it.

I am beginning to see that one of my -yoga- resolutions for next year might have to be to clean up primary series, and this is perhaps a good place to start.  Breathing the full slow five counts has been a challenge for this year, but now lifting the leg straight, focusing on getting the standing leg solid, straight and as strong as possible while maintaining balance and engaging bandhas/breathing are what comes next.

I did an “AFTER” video in the blue leotard, and although not perfect (and when is it really?), it does show some improvement.  Added the Before too, for comparison purposes.

After

Before

Martha and Ashtanga and to do yoga you need COURAGE, yes…

A few weeks ago, yoga teachers were giving some very basic pointers about Ashtanga and Vinyasa at the Martha Stewart show. It is television time so it is very compressed and short…  it  reminds me of a story of Swami Satchitananda I saw in a video of him.  Apparently when he first came to America he was usually surrounded by groups of people smoking and drinking and they would ask him “tell us about yoga”… he did not know where to begin…  can you imagine?

It is better this time, at least Martha is not smoking or drinking but just taking a break from baking and gardening,  things are getting better after all!

I appreciate Eddie’s advice for beginners saying that nowhere does it say that flexibility is a requirement for yoga, rather patience, and courage.  Right on.

 here it is in case you are curious.