Archive for September, 2010

Ashtanga Yoga in Balance

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

Here’s another look at Kino MacGregor, one of our Circle of Grace members, who shares a demonstration on Ashtanga Yoga and how to move through several difficult poses.

Kino MacGregor is dedicated to carrying the torch of Ashtanga yoga throughout the world and sharing the amazing tradition of Ashtanga yoga with everyone who is inspired to practice.  Kino will be traveling around the world (literally) this Fall including Italy, China, and Japan. To learn more about Kino and where you can find her, go to kinoyoga.com.

Yoga Advice to Better Understand Your body in Your Daily Practice

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Posted by Mercedes Ngoh (Circle of Grace member)

As for my experience with injury and alignment in yoga class, something I learned that really changed my teaching, as well as my own practice,  is to work with your own body’s alignment rather than trying to fit your body into a “universal” alignment. There is no “universal” skeleton, so “universal” alignment is an impossible task and a belief that can lead to injury and unnecessary frustration. Not listening to the maximum edge of resistance of one’s body, but  rather forcing oneself into a picture perfect image of a pose can not only lead to injury, but to a practice void of self-awareness. This lends to the old adage of “use the pose to serve your body, not your body to serve the pose.

A second common thing I often notice that can lead, not only to injury, but to a disconnection from one’s practice is to slip into what I refer to as “Watchasana” – the habit of constantly “watching” others and comparing oneself. It is so important to get out of the practice of “watching” to see if a fellow student is doing a pose “better” or looks different and then trying to make one’s own body do what the person next to them is doing so as to not be outdone. This is a sure recipe to eventual injury as everyone’s body “resonates” in the postures differently. Instead, to avoid injury, one needs to keep the focus on their own mat and stay connected and aware of their own practice and keep constantly aware of what their body is telling them.

Mercedes Ngoh has spent most of  her life studying creative movement and its use as a form of self-expression and spiritual exploration. Having studied various forms of yoga the primary style she now teaches is Vinyasa Flow. Most of Mercedes studies have been in California where she has completed many different certifications. She views yoga as a lifelong, never ending study. For her it is a living science, a practice and an art form. She is constantly learning alongside teaching and has been very fortunate to have studied with various wonderful teachers.  To find out more about Mercedes and her next teacher training, go to her website.

Simple Vinyasa Advice

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Posted by Shannon Paige Schneider (Circle of Grace member)

Simple advice to avoid shoulder injuries in Vinyasa yoga!

When LOWERING from plank to the earth or chaturanga dandhasana, keep the shoulder blades on the back and the collar bones wide and the back of the neck as long as the front of the throat.  In fact, consider dropping the knees and gaining authentic strength before trying to power through a bunch of full on repetitions just on the other side of empowered alignment.  When the caps of the shoulders collapse forward, one is not only more prone for shoulder tweaks and injury, but also, strength remains elusive.

Shannon Paige Schneider is an author, sacred activist, inspired life coach, and dedicated teacher of Shiva Rea’s Prana Flow Vinyasa Yoga. She interweaves her students’ unique purpose driven inspiration into the divine play of body and breath to unlock the secret wisdom held within the heart.  Shannon is the founder and yoga director of om time yoga centers and Anjali Restorative Yoga. To learn more about Shannon and where she will be teaching next, go to her blog.

Simple Recipe for Labor Day Weekend

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

Posted by Christina Turner (Zobha Team member)

Labor Day weekend adventure? Here’s a delicious and simple meal to bring with you on your weekend excursion.

If you have a ferocious appetite, like me, which increases exponentially after any outdoor activity, then you’ll understand the phrase, “I’m so hungry, I could eat my own arm!”

Fagioli e tonno – White Bean and Tuna salad — is my top lunch choice for my post skiing or sea kayaking adventure.

Save the protein bars for your Emergency Preparedness Kits and instead savor this simple Italian contorni which packs protein, carbs and flavor!

This salad can be easily packed in a Ziplock bag – minimal weight for you to schelp along on your back.  Forget about needing a container; just grab a fork and eat it right out of the bag.

Ingredients:

1 can of cooked Cannellini /Tuscan-Style White Beans

1  6-oz. can olive-oil-packed tuna, lightly drained

Red onion or shallot thinly sliced – as little or as much as you like

Fruity extra-virgin olive oil

Freshly ground black pepper and sea salt to taste

A few sprigs of fresh Flat Leafed Italian Parsley, roughly chopped

Place beans in a large serving bowl, and add tuna. Break up tuna with a wooden spoon. Scatter red onion over tuna.  Sprinkle in the parsley.  Then drizzle with oil, and season generously with pepper.  Ta-da! You’re done. Easy, eh?

Now let’s talk tuna.  This salad is so pure that I recommend buying the highest quality canned tuna you can afford.  Get to know Flott brand tuna.  It’s a seasoned and well oiled Yellow Fin tuna.  Who knew canned tuna could be so tender, flavorful and divine?

As for those thinly sliced onions, you can soften the sharpness of flavor (your tummy may be grateful too!) by squeezing a bit of fresh lemon juice or pouring a teaspoon of  white vinegar over the onions and letting the mixture rest for a few minutes prior to adding to the tuna, etc.  Draining off the excess liquid of course.

Taking care of yourself as you enjoy the outdoors is so essential to your overall experience.  An easily prepared dish like Fagioli e Tonno will sustain you throughout the day, allowing you to venture farther and focus on the infinite benefits of being outdoors.

How To Jump Back in Padmasana

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Over the next week, we’re going to share yoga tips from our Circle of Grace members. Keep yourself in check with the right alignment and instruction.

Kino MacGregor, of Miami Life Center, shares this YouTube video on how to jump back in Padmasana. Not only does she give you a step-by-step demonstration, but she looks good wearing her Zobha outfit too!

Kino MacGregor is dedicated to carrying the torch of Ashtanga yoga throughout the world and sharing the amazing tradition of Ashtanga yoga with everyone who is inspired to practice.  Kino will be traveling around the world (literally) this Fall including Italy, China, and Japan just in the month of September. To learn more about Kino and where you can find her, go to kinoyoga.com.