Posts Tagged ‘yoga video’

SUMMER YOGA PROGRAMME: Jan Update

Hello All,

Quick note:

1. Yoga mats are in. Cost $20.00 each
2. Blocks are in. Cost $15.00 each
3. Ditto for belts too. Cost $12.00 each
4. I can also provide mat bags for sale if you fancy. Let me know if you’d like to know more or oder one. Cost $22.00. I have to order a min of ten to be able to offer them at this price.

5. Bec’s Wednesday night Mudclub class has started. She’s looking for feedback from you all about what times would suit best for her, as yet unscheduled,early morning class. Early morning practice is an excellent way to start your day; I recommend it! Here’s her info:

WED 13th JAN, 20th JAN & 27th JAN 2010
Time: 6pm-7:30pm MUD (03) 6334 0033 www.mudclub.com.au
becburns.osteo@gmail.com

I (Bec) plan to continuing teaching at Tasdance (which is such a tranquil and beautiful space) and need your feedback to decide on the ideal time:
We can only use the space in the mornings – so TUESDAY & THURSDAY MORNINGS are best.
As for times, I was thinking: 7am-8:30am or we can do 6:30am-8am for those that need to rush to work…
These morning classes would possibly begin on THURS 21st JAN and run as a complement to Daniela’s Tues night beginners course.
There are change rooms and showers at Tasdance (197 Wellington St) and plenty of FREE parking!
Email me on becburns.osteo@gmail.com if you’d like to share your thoughts.

6. There WILL be a class on Australia Day, Tues 26th Jan and WILL NOT be a class on Tuesday Feb 2nd.
7. Beginners Course is coming along brilliantly. Thanks for your focus and energy. This coming Tuesday we will be introducing Salutes to the Sun to absolute beginners and advancing those with established practice.

Thanks everyone !

D + Bec

Here is a dinky retro video of the Sun Salute sequence. He’s hardly a fashion icon, but technically his salutes are worth a look. Enjoy.

2 NICE YOGA VIDEOS

Good yoga videos on the net are few and far between. I found this one today and consider it to be quite ok. This sequence is worth a go (not a beginner’s). It’s a sun salutation variant with postures that are very good for core strength. If you come to my Saturday class, this video will be good revision for you. If you’re in my beginner’s course this sequence will be interesting to you and be a good sample of information that you are coming to already. ENJOY !!

Earths Power Yoga with JoLynn Geissler from Steven Earth Metz on Vimeo.

The following video is another bag of goodies all together. This one’s for my new male students; inspiration perhaps. WATCH AND WONDER!

Tanutara: Making of the Anusara Syllabus Poster from Ross Evans on Vimeo.

Class Update: May 2009

Class started only a few weeks ago @ the new location and time-slot. The class culture has evolved very quickly. This post is a wee report on what the class has become: content, style, current level and future vision of practice. If you’ve stopped by this blog to get info about the class, this post will give you a good impression of what the ongoing Saturday morning practice has to offer you. There are more classes planned for the near future so please drop me a line if you’d like to go on my contact list for class info updates: moveoften@gmail.com :)

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When a new series of classes begin, I can never foresee in advance what kind of practice will evolve. Y’see, I’m not a purist in my teaching. I really believe that to teach yoga down here in a small regional Aussie town, where there isn’t a strong and prolific yoga culture/community and history, there’s a need to create content for the group based on what the individuals bring with them, rather than set the participants a rigid yoga template to squeeze themselves into. Having said that, there’s a really important place for a more didactic approach to teaching and learning especially in the case of this old tried and tested form that I respect immensely. If I’d been asked for a breakdown of what might be expected from this class 4 weeks ago, I’m not sure what my reply would have been. Perhaps: “…as the group grows, I’ll know more, but I hope it’s a physically strong, internally challenging and a socially easy class.”

I’ve not taught many morning sessions in the past, and this variable on my teaching methods is a relative challenge to me. Morning practice requires a different approach to instruction and practice than evening practice. I’m far more experienced and better aligned toward evening teaching. I’m enjoying the challenge and see my own learning process in the group as somewhat nascent. I’m grateful for the group’s faith.

I see the class very much as a place to come and practice as a group to ready ourselves for the weekend’s rest and recreational character. Every participant comes with an existing yoga practice. It seems to have already evolved away from beginner’s group.

We’ve agreed to learn the Ashtanga Primary Series together, at the groups pace. We come, work quite hard, focus on postural techniques, have a giggle and take away something learned or remembered. This is not a very passive, therapeutic class. I see it as a pool for learning that participants, me included, dive into with the intention to take something away for development in personal practice. I’m advocating this goal/method at the moment, yet don’t expect that personal/home practice has become habitual, YET.

K (a group member) and I were chatting after class last week about her sense that there is a logic to the Primary Series sequence that the body seems to understand and know inherently. I fully agree with her. In a nut shell, the ongoing Saturday morning class is for those who see that corporeal logic, understand it on some level, and intend to study it’s potential further within a small group of like-mind/bodied people.

To elaborate personally on K and my quick chat about yoga body-logic: in my experience this topic is the core purpose for developing a strong & regular practice. This logic doesn’t exist without good reason OR on it’s own. With practice (again in my experience) a story comes from the logic, a body narrative. It’s the story told to the practitioner via the body’s narrative that holds all the reasons for me to continue with my journey into learning yoga, because it keeps and makes me brightly faced toward life, with faith. I feel that I’m at the tip of this lesson’s iceberg.

I’m going to Japan in a month for a few weeks, so no new classes are on the cards for the short term. I’m planning a beginners evening course, open to all levels, in August some time. Beyond that point, I’ll be encouraging the Saturday group to attend a beginner’s class as a drop-in option. As the beginner’s group/s develop they will be invited to the Saturday session as their private practice evolves. I’d like to aim towards bringing beginners and more experienced students together, but only when their practice has a clear independence from the instructor (moi).

Guruji: RIP, passed away May 18th 2009

How To: suryanamaskara A

I love requests and dedications. This one’s for you, Mandi. There are thousands of these clips on the net. Most are horrid. This one I chose for a number of reasons: his shorts are funny, he holds a stick (weird), he’s clearly a bit obsessive and mostly I love that the mic operator let the tip of the mic in the frame a few times. This version of suryanamaskara A is a tad ‘cheese’, a splotch ‘shmults’ and quite a good tool for learning the first small part of the Primary Series. Enjoy!

… and this clip is for good measure. The teacher in this class is Sri K. Pattabhi. He’s the ‘dude’ of Ashtanga yoga. Again, enjoy!

How To: jump through

It’s All About the Space

The search for a new space to take yoga classes in this year has been a wee trial. The Tasdance space of last year was a special thing indeed, especially with that glassed garden view. Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to secure the same times for the entire year in advance. I’d noticed that quite a few people like the option to attend in a drop-in class. At least half of the group likes the commitment of pay-in-advance style. Continuing at Tasdance made drop-in attendance impossible.

With that phase over, we enter a new one in a new space and it’s a doozie. Here t’is:

I promised myself last year that if I couldn’t find a good space that was free for the full year long, I’d not teach at all. Reason being is that the space is all-important; it’s all about the space!

The new studio has bags of character and is home to Launceston’s precious Stompin youth contemporary dance company. Sarah, the company’s GM, has been super easy going and open about our making ourselves at home in her company’s space. The facilities are perfect: loo, great audio system, hot drinks, beautiful floor, lots of light & a couch and table corner for a cuppa after class.

I’ve just returned from Melbourne where I did an Ashtanga Primary Series class with a teacher I’ve not met before. He was a hard-liner; bags of rules, looked like a small army man, take-no-shit attitude, rules rules rules. I loved him! What a goose! He doesn’t like yoga tourists and asked those on tour to leave. Officially he could have been speaking to me, but I like small hard Irishmen, so I took the risk and stood there pretending to be a hard-core Ashtanga yoga head.

At one moment he came over and made an adjustment on me in Virabhadrasana A and the way he held and spoke, in that briefest of moments, was no mean Irish task master. It was a gentle souled, open man. Something happens each time I do yoga. Something inside me tells me something that feels good and right to hear. A good teacher, no matter what theire teaching method is, can make it easier and safer for us to stand and wait and listen for the important stuff.

The class smelt horrid. People were sweating like hairy monsters. As I always do, standing is a horror posture, I questioned what draws me to this room with these people, why do I continue? I’m not sure exctly why, but it has something to do with love. Perhaps it’s as simples as just loving yoga. But it stinks and the people are mostly a tad … kind of odd, to me, but I dig them and what we’re all trying to learn. I’m unsure what it is, but I’m in for life.

Here’s a vid about Ashtanga Yoga

Here’s a link to more inspirational Ashtanga yoga photos on Flickr by
http://www.flickr.com/photos/nat_sf_05/sets/990381/ Nathalie Mullen-Briquet

ENJOY!

D

To Yoga DVD or to Not Yoga DVD?

I just got this yoga video in the mail. It’s the full Ashtanga Primary series with R. Sharath.
Should we be doing our yoga practice in front of the television? Well, simply, Yes. If you don’t do home practice, then anything that serves as a motivator is good by me.

Some days I hit the mat and nothing happens. Some days my practice is sloppy and seemingly pointless. Inside I know and accept that any practice is better than no practice. I tell the lovely peeps in my class this over and over as both a personal reminder and hope-filled motivator to their fine selves.

Today I did the Primary Series in front of the telly, and it busted my bottox, to say the least. I’m still only a few months into restarting my home yoga practice after stopping when my mum died (of all the least helpful times to stop??) 2 years ago. So I’m still puffing, panting aching and struggling with my monkey-mind and tired body. I know from experience that if I just keep it up, my yoga will boot in … it is already. So, for me, right now, this DVD is perfect, especially since the intensive wkshops that I’m attending on the weekend are Ashtanga based.

Visually the video is fine. Aurally it’s easy peasy (no over articulated American accents and schmaltzy new age music). The content is brilliant. The Ashtanga Primary Series is a huge challenge and worth committing to over the long haul; it takes years and years, if not forever, to embody with comfort. OUr 4-year old has already taken to it, so … Just DO IT, as they say.

So, in a nutshell: $30 well spent. Here is a sample: