Yoga Teacher Training India
December 10, 2009
Filed under Indoor Activities
India is often recognized as the center of the Yoga world. Certainly, there are more practitioners here than anywhere else. However, the practice of yoga has spread throughout the world. As it has spread, it has been changed and modified through experimentation and the application of creative approaches. In the West, yoga practice has taken on many different dimensions. Yoga purists may find it easy to be critical of many of the new ways and would not agree that these ways are “real” yoga. Be that as it may, the experiments in West have come up few very unique aspects, which have the potential to deeply impact your yoga practice and your relationships. One the these is “Couple Yoga”. It is one of the most successful techniques used by the Yoga teachers in USA and Europe.
Couple yoga is a method in which you team up to learn and practice yoga. Most often, the “couples” are what we understand by the traditional interpretation of the term – a man and a woman. In fact, most of the couples who are practicing couple yoga are men and women who are involved in a loving relationship. But, the term “couple” here can also mean two people. They can be friends of the same gender, a girlfriend or a buddy. They can be a parent and a child. What seems to be most important to a successful yoga “couple” is that they share a caring relationship.
In the practice of couple yoga, each person not only performs individual Asanas, but also performs many yoga exercises together with their partner. Some couple postures involve only minor physical contact, like holding your partner’s back as they bend. Others are such that they cannot be performed alone. A Pascimottanasana is an example in which the couple is seated on a mat with the bottoms of there feet together and their hands clasping their partner’s wrists. Together, they perform a double forward bend and help each other stretch leg, back and arm muscles.
One might ask, “what are the advantages of practicing couple yoga? There are many.
Couple yoga helps each person to perform the most difficult postures with greater ease.
Mutual practice creates a greater level of intimacy. It can take the relationship to a different level and helps develop deeper understanding of ourselves and our partner.
In our busy lives when we do not know how to create time for rejuvenation of our own individual health, sharing the practice of yoga with a loved one can become an important means of improving both personal health and the strength of a relationship.
Practicing couple yoga helps each partner to understand their own and their partner’s strengths and weaknesses and creates the opportunity for each to add to their own and their partner’s strengths and to help improve each other’s deficiencies.
Couple yoga can create a surge of energy in the relationship. It can improve the way you “dance” together. The supportive hand of a partner helps to unlock all those blocked energy areas in your body.
It is difficult for many people to perform postures like chakraasana alone. When you have a partner to give you a helping hand you can do it without any effort at all.
Doing yoga with your kids enhances their feelings of being safe. Your loving touch and protective presence will make them confident and will help in them to grow into healthy adults.
We all know that there are two basic forms of communication – verbal and non-verbal. Doing yoga with your partner will improve the quality of your non-verbal communication and this communication without words gives another dimension for the expression of emotions.
Doing yoga with your partner will help you become sensitive to when your partner is in need and aware of how to help. The combination of touch and caring adds to the healing capacity of your shared yoga relationship. Because partner yoga creates the space and the opportunity to hear each other beyond words, each will be able to hear “inner sounds” of the other. This heightened awareness adds to the feelings of peace and grounding often noted as one of the main benefits of traditional yoga.
Couple yoga creates a feeling of mutual harmony and helps each partner stay in touch with the other. It is one of the best ways to sustain health on physical, emotional and spirit to spirit levels..
The yoga couple will be more flexible and together they will have more energy.
One of the most important advantages of couple yoga is the atmosphere it creates. Humor and laughter are not characteristics of traditional yoga. They are common in couple yoga. They contribute to an atmosphere of lightness, which is one of the best signs of health and happiness.
Couple yoga is not for everyone.
Many people benefit from their daily, solitary practice of yoga or from the yoga classes they attend with others. Many need the individual time as much as they need the benefits they derive from yoga practice. Some people are not comfortable with physical touch or with performing asanas with others watching.
For those who are beginning a new relationship or have been in a comfortable and caring relationship they would like to take to another level or for people, who are looking for a unique and mutually beneficial way to be with their children, couple yoga can open the door to wonderful new relationships.
Partner or couple yoga is about health and happiness and caring.
YogaLife (RYS 200), offers Yoga Alliance registered Teacher Trainings Course (TTC) in India, in 3 attractive locations: the beaches of Goa in February, the Himalayan foothill of Dharamshala, Himachal Pradesh in June, the desert and Holy places of Rajasthan in October. All 3 choices are enticing place to study Yoga.
Find a Great Yoga Teacher: 5 Questions You Must Ask to Find a Qualified Yoga Teacher
November 28, 2009
Filed under Indoor Activities
Yoga provides great stress relief and other health benefits. The Mayo Clinic recommends yoga for stress management and relaxation, and medical journal articles have proven yoga's effectiveness in treating serious medical conditions such as arthritis, back pain, carpal tunnel syndrome, depression and multiple sclerosis.
How do you make sure that you get the great stress relief and other benefits of yoga? Easy! Ask any yoga teacher the questions listed below. If the teacher's answers closely match the ideal answers, you have found a great teacher.
QUESTION 1: DO YOU PRACTICE YOGA NOW?
IDEAL ANSWER 1: YES, I PRACTICE YOGA EVERY DAY.
If you wanted to learn to ride a bicycle, would you take lessons from someone who wrote a book about bicycles but had never actually ridden a bike? Only if you wanted to find the quickest way to fall off the bicycle! No amount of reading or theoretical knowledge will enable you to understand how to ride a bicycle. Sooner or later you have to get on the bike. The same is true of yoga. Only someone who is currently practicing yoga can safely and effectively teach you how to do yoga.
QUESTION 2: ARE YOU CURRENTLY TAKING LESSONS WITH A YOGA TEACHER?
IDEAL ANSWER: YES, I STUDY WITH A QUALIFIED TEACHER IN A RECOGNIZED YOGA TEACHING STYLE.
Even your yoga teacher needs a yoga teacher. Why? Yoga is a process, and there is always more to learn. Everyone learns more about yoga by getting feedback from a great teacher. You want your yoga teacher to be aware of the latest discoveries on how to teach yoga. The best way for your teacher to do this is to take lessons with another yoga teacher.
QUESTION 3: WHAT TYPE OF YOGA DO YOU TEACH, AND HOW DID THAT STYLE OF TEACHING YOGA DEVELOP?
IDEAL ANSWER: I TEACH "Y" STYLE OF YOGA WHICH HAS EXISTED FOR AT LEAST 10 YEARS.
If a yoga teaching style has existed for at least 10 years, the teachers in that system know the best ways to teach and the pitfalls to be avoided. In addition, if a situation comes up that your teacher does not know how to handle, your teacher will be able to ask a more experienced teacher in that teaching style for advice.
QUESTION 4: WHAT TYPE OF YOGA TEACHER TRAINING HAVE YOU HAD?
IDEAL ANSWER: I HAVE COMPLETED (OR AM CURRENTLY ENROLLED IN) A 500 HOUR TEACHER TRAINING PROGRAM WHICH INCLUDES CLASSES, EXAMS, AND APPRENTICE TEACHING.
Suppose a pipe burst in your house and sent a fountain of water gushing through your kitchen. Uh-oh, you need a plumber! There are two plumbers in your neighborhood: Plumber Smith and Plumber Jones. Plumber Smith used to be an electrician but took a one weekend plumber certification course and is now a plumber. Plumber Jones enrolled in a year long plumbing certification course at a special plumber training school, passed the plumbing certification exam, and apprenticed for one year under a master plumber. Which plumber would you choose?
Since yoga can have an enormous impact on your health, shouldn't you take as much care in choosing a yoga teacher as you would in choosing a plumber? Your yoga teacher should be enrolled in or have completed a yoga teacher training course that lasts at least one year, and includes classes on how to do yoga, classes on how to teach yoga, apprentice teaching under a certified and experienced teacher, and certification exams.
One of the most comprehensive yoga teacher training programs in existence is the Iyengar Yoga Teacher Certification Program. If you are new to yoga, or suffer from a disease or injury, I strongly recommend that you seek out a certified Iyengar Yoga teacher.
QUESTION 5: DOES YOUR YOGA TEACHER HAVE A KIND AND EMPATHETIC HEART?
IDEAL ANSWER: YES.
Only you can determine if the answer to this question is yes.
A kind yoga teacher really cares about his or her students.
This doesn't necessarily mean that a teacher is quiet or a pushover. A teacher may speak loudly because your attention has wandered off and he or she is trying to get your attention back. A kind yoga teacher will carefully watch what you are doing, and guide you into doing yoga more correctly. Find a great yoga teacher, follow his or her instructions, and the health and stress relief benefits of yoga will be yours!
YOGA FOR SLEEP, INSOMNIA, OR DEEP RELAXATION
October 25, 2009
Filed under Yoga Videos
SWITCH YOUR BODY INTO A CALM, RESTFUL AND RELAXED STATE INSTANTLY! GREAT FOR GETTING TO SLEEP. CALMING EMOTIONS AND FOCUSING YOUR MIND. Go to www.SadieNardini.com for more about Sadie and to see her Power Hour DVD, and free Power Hour practice at www.iYogaLife.com!
Five Tips From Chirunning
October 13, 2009
Filed under Running

Danny Dreyer, a marathon runner Ultra America and the Tai Chi practitioner, created a method of execution called ChiRunning, which combines the inner focus and flow of Tai Chi with the power and energy of operation. Here are five tips that ChiRunning has helped many runners begin to learn to run without injury:
1. Danny explains that Master Zhu – his Tai Chi teacher in Boulder, Colorado – said to keep your spine straight, but for the rest of the body relax and let the chi flow "like water through a pipe. In Chinese philosophy, "chi" is the vital energy or life force. This principle applies not only to Tai Chi, but to run too.
2. An efficient operation is not leg strength and leg speed. You have to let your body be removed from the center and allow the legs to simply go for walks. Let your speed is a function of their ability to relax more deeply, not their ability to push harder.
3. Let go of the pain, "No, no gain" attitude that many Westerners have toward the sport. Instead, the clear objective of establishing a communication link between mind and body. If you pay close attention to your body will learn what can and can not do. This is called "Body Sensing. By developing a good system of communication with your body can teach new skills and habits, without exaggeration and therefore hurting.
4. Lean slightly forward when running, about a quarter of an inch, and let gravity do some work for you.
5. The land at the foot instead of mid-heel, thus preventing the movement of breaking the heel, which is common in most of the runners.
Former drug addicts find new fixation on triathlons
(CNN) — When rehab and Alcoholics Anonymous meetings didn't work for Eddie Freas, he sought another way to kick his 20-year drug and alcohol addiction.
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| Eddie Freas fights drug addiction by putting all his energy into training for triathlons. |
He swam 2.4 miles. He biked 112 miles. He ran 26.2 miles. The Pennsville, New Jersey, resident found relief in triathlons.
"I feel better when I'm working out," said Freas, 33. "It does wonders for the mind. The reason I started running — it was a switch that went off in my head. I started feeling positive and feeling great about myself."
Freas spent his youth in pursuit of drugs. At the age of 13, he snuck bottles of Amaretto and rum from his mother's liquor cabinet. He also developed a taste for marijuana and cocaine. By his senior year of high school, Freas was kicked off the wrestling and football teams after failing a drug test.
Then in 2007, after a three-day binge, "I came home and was crying," Freas said. "I was so depressed. I turned on the TV." The set was tuned to ESPN, which was airing a story about a former drug addict who competed in triathlons.
The program's subject was Todd Crandell, who had lost a college hockey scholarship because of a drug addiction. After 13 years of using drugs, Crandell started competing in Ironman races and championed finding positive ways to fight addiction through his program called Racing for Recovery.
"Having an athletic background, I was drawn to getting back in shape," Crandell said. "It makes you turn intellectually and spiritually fit. Exercise is essential. It decreases addiction, depression and you use it as part of the recovery."
Freas was entranced by the parallels.
"His whole story seemed like mine," Freas said. "That's why it hit me so much. It was my story but it happened to somebody else. I knew I had to get back into fitness."
He took a bus to Racing for Recovery's office in Sylvania, Ohio. There, Freas said he learned to "stay clean and use other things — fitness, instead of drugs." On his first day, Freas pushed himself to run 10 miles.
"It killed me," Freas said. "I was just motivated. I was sore for a week and I gradually got into it. As soon as I started including fitness into my everyday lifestyle, it made it so much easier. It kept me busy and because of the physical fitness, it was making me feel better about myself."
He pushed himself to run farther and raced in his first Ironman competition in 2008.
"It's different when you use drugs, you temporarily feel good and afterwards, you feel like doing more drugs," Freas said. "When you go for a long run and do physical fitness, you feel good doing it."
Research in animals and humans show that exercise can be a mild antidepressant.
"It isn't a huge surprise when you consider many positive effects exercise can have with regards to the brain chemistry: dopamine, serotonin, endorphin, epinephrine — these are all associated with mood altering effects," said Dr. Cedric Bryant, the chief science officer for the American Council on Exercise. "If they're able to get this natural high, through a natural endeavor such as exercise, it allows them to replace the means to achieve that high with a more positive approach."
One study showed that women trying to quit smoking were more successful when they exercised. And the National Institute on Drug Abuse held a conference last year to explore the possible role of physical activity in substance abuse prevention.
"The thought centers around the release of mood-altering brain chemical, mainly endorphins," Bryant said. "It gives you euphoria or what you call 'runner's high.' "
Crandell said some people who battle drug addiction "want something more than sitting in support groups filled with smoke, complaining about drinking."
"I've had some of my naysayers from other programs who say you've taken one addiction and replaced it for another," Crandell said. "I've taken addiction and put into a new focus that includes exercise. Exercise for me is essential to my recovery and well-being."
The purpose of Racing for Recovery is not to turn everyone into an athlete, but to focus on positive pursuits in a person's life.
"Whatever you lost during your addiction, that should be your Ironman, not just running," Crandell said. "If your goal is to become a teacher, let that be your Ironman."
After Freas spent six months in Ohio, he returned to his hometown.
"I didn't want to come back home, because this was where I did all the dirt, all the partying and stuff," Freas said. "As time went on, I had to come back here. My life is turned around. I got to help people in my hometown."
Back in New Jersey, Freas helped train Dustin Deckard, 19, a former high school star wrestler, who is recovering from a four-year heroin addiction. Deckard wanted to get clean after a near-fatal overdose.
"I have to be clean the rest of my life," Deckard said. "Sometimes that overwhelms me. I just feel that sometimes it's not fair that other people can go out and have fun and drink and do whatever at a party. But me — if I do anything — it's off. I can't stop. I definitely have troubles with that."
Freas and Deckard have developed a brotherhood.
"I know how he was feeling, being down, not wanting to use drugs," Deckard said. "I just relate to him in every way. We both used. He's also into sports and into wrestling like I was. That's what's cool."
The Fifty-Plus Triathlete (Or, I May Be Slow, but I’m Not Last)
July 25, 2009
Filed under Triathlon
I never used to be much of an athlete. My current co-workers would be shocked to hear me say that—since I’m now known as the office athletic fanatic.
I spent most of my life existing only from the neck up. Back home in Grand Island, NY, outside of Buffalo, I was the one who got the “D” in Gym; the one who pretended to have my period so I wouldn’t have to go in the pool on Pool Day (an excuse only good at most twice a month, and then only if the teacher was distracted); the one who dropped like a fly off the chin-up bar during the President Kennedy Physical Fitness Test in fifth grade.
So nobody is more surprised than I am at how my life has gone.
Sometime around age thirty, for some reason I don’t even remember (but it was probably related to calories) I decided to try running. By that time (the late seventies, the start of the running boom), you could all of a sudden do things like that without being any good at it, and nobody laughed at you. In fact, they cheered for me at local races.
Now that it didn’t matter if I got an “A,” I got really, really into running. Lost many pounds; logged more and more miles; read books by with titles like Running and Being and What It Takes to Go the Distance. Accumulated bored friends and relatives.
Sadly, though, not knowing anything about the body, and especially the feet and knees, I wound up with some chronic injuries that propelled me off the roads and into the gym (aerobics classes, etc.) and the pool. At some point, I got the cycling bug, too, and bought myself a fancy Terry Classic that I rode for years. At some other point, I discovered yoga, which has been my trusted companion ever since.
A couple of years ago, I happened upon Masters swimming: your workout dream come true. It has structured swim workouts, coaching, good buddies in your lane, incredibly fun competitions with people your age (honest to God, I’ve seen ninety-five year-olds in there) and ability level, and even Happy Hour once a month. You don’t have to be good at it (is this shaping up as the theme of this article?).
At Masters, I started hearing rumors about people doing triathlons. I thought, “Oh, no, that’s way beyond the likes of me.” Swim a mile in some lake, then hop on a bike and ride for miles and miles, then get off the bike and run for more miles? I’d for sure come in last.
I put it out of my mind, until my lane-mate Diane’s husband Flip, age fifty-eight, together with his twenty-something daughter, finished Ironman Lake Placid together: 2.4 mile swim, followed by 112 miles on the bike, and topping that off with a mere 26.2 mile marathon. They had a blast. He did not drop dead. Hmmm … fifty, huh? Not to mention the one or two other women my age I met in locker rooms who had also done that, and more. None of them were career athletes or even ex-college-athletes.
So I embarked upon my latest, and likely not my last, new athletic endeavor—dug up the local triathlon training groups, and started reading books like “Transformed by Triathlon” and “Becoming an Ironman.”
My first experience training with my new triathlon club was less than stellar. At the very first meeting of the “New to Triathlon” program, I listened to an excellent talk about running technique. Then I watched the entire group, plus volunteer coaches, promptly disappear over the horizon as I ran by myself for the entire time. Bike day…same result.
But I stuck it out. And I saw results. Within a few weeks, I could actually see people, way out ahead of me, but at least they weren’t disappearing over the horizon anymore. Everyone was, unfailingly, encouraging. Nobody cares that I was slow—what matters is showing up and giving it your best effort. This is the first lesson of amateur athletic competition in the twenty-first century.
Eventually, I started competing. My first “tri” was a collegiate event at Stanford, a shorter “sprint” distance, with a few hundred yards around the pool, fifteen or so miles on a bike around Palo Alto, and then a three-mile run through the campus. The participants were about eighty percent gorgeous young college kids. Since they write your age on your left calf in big, black numbers, everyone knew I was fifty-five. Think that was humiliating? No way! People cheered louder when they saw me! Young kids told me I was an inspiration to them! One even said I looked “just like Demi Moore” (what could be a greater compliment, huh?). On top of all that … I was not last. (Second lesson of amateur athletic competition: no matter how bottom-of-the-barrel you think you are, if you have done any training, you usually are not going to be last.)
Propelled by that motivating experience, I continued to enter competitions, moving “up” to the Olympic distance (.9 mile swim, 25 mile bike, 6.2 mile run) after a couple of months. Given the dearth of women in my age group, I have been “on the podium” twice. I’m in the best shape of my life, I feel strong and powerful, and I have an endless supply of wonderful experiences (and harrowing horror stories) to treasure.
You can too!
By Mary Leigh Burke















