Posts Tagged ‘yoga tips’

Can I do yoga in my second trimester?

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

Jane Austin Yoga TeacherThank you everyone for participating in our Yoga Expert Corner on Yoga for Fertility and Pregnancy. Our experts were thrilled with all the questions we received. Over the next month, Jane Austin and Mercedes Ngoh will be answering questions on fertility and pregnancy. Jane Austin, our yoga pregnancy expert, begins with our first question.

I’m just entering my second trimester. Can’t I just go to my regular classes? When should I start going to prenatal yoga classes?

Good question, I get it all the time! You can certainly go to “regular” classes if you have a teacher who is knowledgeable about the changes that happen in a pregnant mama’s body and can give helpful instructions to modify postures. Some women have long standing relationships with their yoga teachers and may wish to continue to go to regular class as long as possible. I usually recommend that when you need to modify more instruction than you take, this might be a good time to switch to prenatal classes. I do think it is helpful to check out a prenatal class earlier in pregnancy, so you can incorporate some of the prenatal postures into your regular practice. Some women do both.
A healthy mama can start prenatal yoga at any time in her pregnancy. My classes are specifically designed to support women at all stages of pregnancy. Many women find that the prenatal classes are a great way to meet other pregnant women. In this time of great change, having a community of mamas can be very helpful.

Jane Austin specializes in teaching prenatal and postnatal yoga. For two decades she has worked with mamas, not only as a yoga teacher but also as a midwife, doula and childbirth educator. She has developed a Prenatal/Postnatal Teacher Training for yoga teachers as well as birth professionals in order to make yoga accessible to women in many different settings. For Jane’s workshop schedule click here.


Interview with Allison English – Certified Forrest Yoga Instructor

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Yoga Teacher

Allison English is a certified Forrest Yoga Instructor and a Teacher Trainer at Pure Yoga. We are thrilled to have Allison as a new member of the Circle of Grace and for you to get to know her better through this interview. Allison’s focus is on “connecting to the strength of the core, deepening the flow and energy of the breath, and realizing the power of a yoga practice to transform in mind, body and Spirit”. Continuing to advance her teaching skills and intensify her personal practice, Allison regularly travels around the United States to attend workshops, teacher trainings, and intensive practices. For Allison’s class schedule click here.

Zobha: How did you start your yoga journey and what does yoga mean to you?

Allison English: I started yoga because of a serious back injury from figure skating. It was the only thing that alleviated my pain, both my physical, mental and emotional pain. I was fascinated by why it was working and asking questions led me to delve deeper and become a teacher. Yoga to me is a personal expression of Spirit, of the path of healing by coming to know oneself better and better. Yoga is a practice of moving deeper into the many layers that make up our self and enjoying the mystery of reading those layers as they arise. I knew from the moment I started teaching yoga that I had found my life path. At the time I was an anthropologist considering going back to school for an advanced degree, and nothing made me as happy as the few classes I taught. I knew there was something to that feeling, and I have never looked back at my choice to be a yoga instructor full time. It is the most rewarding career I have ever had and something deep inside me stirs every time I get the opportunity to teach yoga, talk about yoga or help someone else.

Zobha: What style of yoga do you practice and what drew you to that particular style?

Allison English: I practice Forrest Yoga. I was drawn to Forrest Yoga because of its strong emphasis on healing, spirit and intentionality. As a style it helps you deal with what is going on for you individually. I never felt that I had to do what everyone else was doing. I could be on my own path during practice and it was respected. Forrest Yoga also pushed my buttons, it made feel everything at a time when I didn’t want to feel anything. It is empowering, sweaty and fun and was the only yoga style that reached me at a level deeper than my external body. I really credit my outlook on life and my development as a person to my daily Forrest Yoga practice. It has given me the tools to grow in ways I never imagined.

Zobha: What is your favorite Yoga Pose and why?

Allison English: This is a hard one! I love so many! I have two: handstand and wheel pose for two completely different reasons. Handstand reminds me of my strength, exhilarates my spirit, and reminds me that I can soar through my day. Wheel pose took me many years to even attempt because of my injuries and reminds me that transformation takes time. It is a constant way I connect to my healing path and it opens my heart to the knowledge that change is always possible.

Zobha: What do you do in your free time when you don’t teach yoga?

Allison English: I am an avid reader and writer in my free time. I love watching movies when I get that much free time in one chunk! I enjoy cooking new dishes from new cuisines and baking. I follow a gluten free and dairy free diet, so experimenting with new things I can eat is endlessly fun when I’m not teaching. I also enjoy dinners out with friends, taking other teacher’s yoga classes and learning different movement modalities – from hip hop dance classes to martial arts.

Zobha: What is your favorite Zobha piece?

Allison English: I am obsessed with all the pants Zobha makes. They are supremely comfortable, fit like they were made for me and make my legs look great. They never lose shape no matter how much I sweat or wash them and they always come in cute colors.

Zobha: Where can we attend your classes?

Allison English: I teach at Equinox in Chicago and at workshops, conferences and festivals around the country.


Yoga for Fertility and Pregnancy

Friday, April 1st, 2011

Zobha is excited about launching a Yoga Expert Corner where you can ask questions on different topics, and we’ll connect you with the right experts to answer them. Since Mother’s Day is around the corner, we are kicking it off with blogging about yoga fertility and pregnancy.

First, meet our two amazing yoga experts, Mercedes Ngoh and Jane Austin, who specialize in fertility and pregnancy yoga.

Then submit your questions on the Zobha Facebook Page, Twitter (mention @zobha) and Zobha Blog by April 15, 2011. We’ll have our experts answer them in May.

Fertility Yoga

Our first expert is Mercedes Ngoh. She has been living yoga for over a decade. Having studied with various inspirational teachers, she is passionate about sharing what she has learned. “I view yoga as a lifelong, never ending study. For me it is a living science, a practice and an art form”, says Mercedes. Mercedes created Fertility Flow Yoga™, flowing fertility Vinyasa practice that has been specifically designed to focus on postures that strengthen and unblock the various muscles, organs and pathways that support the reproductive system. Mercedes will  by answering your questions about increasing a women’s chance of becoming pregnant with yoga.

Pregnancy Yoga

Our second expert is Jane Austin, who is passionate about yoga and the transformative power of motherhood. She specializes in teaching prenatal and postnatal yoga. For two decades she has worked with mamas, not only as a yoga teacher but also as a midwife, doula and childbirth educator. She has developed a Prenatal/Postnatal Teacher Training for yoga teachers as well as birth professionals in order to make yoga accessible to women in many different settings. Jane will be answering your questions about yoga and pregnancy.

We look forward to helping you with your questions!


Yoga Journey – Interview with Circle of Grace Member, Wendy Wyvill

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

Yoga Apparel

Wendy Wyvill, Zobha Circle of Grace Member, took time to share her personal experiences with yoga and what impact it has on her everyday life. With a background in competitive gymnastics and professional snowboarding, Wendy discovered her calling in yoga in 2001. She is trained in both the Vinyasa and Kundalini traditions, and has studied under the guidance of Bikram Choudhury and Baron Baptiste. Wendy teaches at Pure Yoga Hong Kong.

Zobha: What is your experience with teaching different level of yoga?

Wendy Wyvill: I love teaching beginners. Both to help me grow and them. In Hong Kong, students tend to be quite good at asana. So I get used to the class just flowing and moving with my instructions. But every once in a while a green brand new student will be in socks and fear on the face in the front row. I like to make them comfortable and give them permission to just play rather than perform. I give them basic instructions for their first lesson and give them space to just feel the flow of the class rather than be all over them and make them feel awkward. I feel this is so important to get them to have fun and feel connected to the bigger community of yogis that they now have become a part of.

Intermediate students are great. They come with such passion and dedication. Some of them are so hungry for teacher training, and retreats and taking 3 classes a day. I try to court them back to more simpler times and help them to realize it’s not so much about how much information they can obtain to become ‘better’ yogi’s rather it’s about how connected they can become to their own hearts and truly learn to listen to that guidance from inside.

Advanced students to me do not always mean that they can perform great amazing asanas rather they perform whatever they are doing (whether it is child’s pose or handstand), they do it authentically and they do it with truth and integrity.

Zobha: How and when did you start practicing yoga?

Wendy Wyvill: I have been practicing yoga since my early years. I was a gymnast since I was 2, practiced yoga with my mom in front of the tv and then she took me to my first yoga class at the YMCA. I was always intrigued by the strange energy that yoga seem to emit. But it wasn’t until I was in my later teens that I started to understand its truly healing benefits and its sacredness. I was a professional snowboarder for many years and thank goodness that yoga was already deep within my routine. It helped nurse me back from 3 knee surgeries and many other injuries. As well as help me deal with a terrible body image and the challenges of being a professional athlete.

My teacher training started with Bikram in Los Angeles, then Baron Baptiste level 1and 2, Kundalini TT in Santa Rosa, California, Ana Forest yoga in Hong Kong, Jon Friend in Hong Kong, Hatha Yoga TT in India with Vishva, Yin Yang TT with Sara Powers in Bejing.

Zobha: What is your favorite Zobha piece?

Wendy Wyvill: My favorite Zobha piece is the Asymmetrical Zip Pullover. I love the feel of the material and it is so great to wear in the cooler months.


Best Yoga Techniques by Kino MacGregor, Part 2

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

In the second part of Yoga Tip segment, Circle of Grace Member, Kino MacGregor, teaches the best techniques on how to transition from Kurmasana (a Tortoise Pose) to Supta Kurmasana (Sleeping Tortoise). We find both poses challenging but Kino makes it look so easy. What is your most challenging pose?

Kino is a co-founder of Miami Life Center, where she teaches daily classes, workshops and intensives together in addition to maintaining an international traveling and teaching schedule. Kino founded Miami Life Center to build a community around yoga, holistic health and consciousness. For Kino’s schedule click here.


Influence of Yoga on Zobha Circle of Grace Member Kino MacGregor

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

Kino MacGregorKino MacGregor, Zobha Circle of Grace Member and one of a select group of people to receive the Certification to teach Ashtanga Yoga by its founder Sri K. Pattabhi Jois in India,  shares her personal experiences with yoga and what impact it has on her everyday life. Kino’s story is truly inspirational.

Zobha: What have you learned about yourself by practicing Yoga?

Kino MacGregor: So much of my journey has been about the discovery of strength. I was not naturally strong or able to perform the challenging postures of the Ashtanga Yoga method. But with patience, dedication and grace, I have learned how to be strong both in body, mind and soul. Before I practiced yoga I had a different conception of strength. External force carried the message of a strong person. I learned through sincere self-inquiry that the mask of strength worn on the outside often belies a vulnerability within. When I started practicing yoga I got a glimpse of the nature of true strength, and I was humbled to see how far I had to go in order to realize the strength and steadiness of mind that the spiritual path demands. Rather than being superficial, strength in yoga comes from a intimate place inside. When you touch your spiritual center you find the warmth of an open heart. This compassionate place within allows you to connect more fully to other living beings and actually be a force of healing the world.

Yoga TeachersZobha: Tell us about  your Yoga Journey?

Kino MacGregor: When I was 19 I suffered a debilitating injury and turned to yoga for health and healing.  I joined a traditional Mysore Style Ashtanga Yoga practice group.  I loved it because I was for the first time really feeling my body’s innate potential. It was like graduating to a new level of yoga and I loved every moment of it.

I learned that this tradition of yoga was taught by the then-living master, Sri K. Pattabhi Jois. On the night that I finished reading his book, Yoga Mala, I dreamt of Jois, though I had not met him at the time. Plagued by doubt, insecurity and anxiety a latent fear and unsettled quality infiltrated my life. In the dream this fear took shape as an angry deity and Jois played the role of a savior by reaching over and placing me safely on a boat bound for India. I woke up with the words “I have to go to India” on my lips.

I arrived at the Ashtanga Yoga Nilayam. I walked the steps up the back alley entrance and found Sri K. Pattabhi Jois teaching a group of  yogis. He turned and looked me in the eye while asking if I was there to practice. Before doubt surfaced my heart opened. I was on knees saying “Yes, I’m here to practice. Thank you Guruji.”

I knew I had met my teacher not only because I saw him in a dream but because his very presence opened my heart, eased my pain and brought peace. But also because his teaching was essentially that each student must work the sometimes arduous path of Ashtanga Yoga if any peace is lasting. He never promised to be a magical healer. Instead when questioned he always responded that he was just a simple man, teaching the yoga that his teacher, Sri T. Krishnamacharya taught him.

Zobha: What’s your favorite Zobha piece?

Kino MacGregor: I love the Zobha yoga halters. They have the best fit with fun colors and are super feminine and flirty at the same time.

Kino is a co-founder of Miami Life Center, where she teaches daily classes, workshops and intensives together in addition to maintaining an international traveling and teaching schedule. Kino founded Miami Life Center to build a community around yoga, holistic health and consciousness. For Kino’s schedule click here.

Share with us what is your personal yoga story? How has yoga changed your life and what influence it has on your everyday being?


Yoga Tips For Advanced Practitioners

Thursday, February 24th, 2011

Jill Miller

In the second part of “Yoga Expert Tips”, Jill Miller shares her best tips for advanced yoga practitioners. What would you add to this list?

Tips for Advanced:

1. Improve your balance: do your entire practice while blindfolded. This will light up the vestibular system (the balance sensors in your inner ear) and make you even stronger from inside out.

2. Increase the length of your Savasanas by one minute daily until you are up to 20 minutes. Long restful Savasanas WITHOUT FALLING ASLEEP are sometimes the most challenging thing for any yogi.

3. Bump it up a notch: take an immersion, teacher training, or go on a retreat and deepen your knowledge of the practice!

To see Jill’s beginner and intermediate tips, click here.

For more fitness and yoga tips and Jill’s class schedule, click  here.


Yoga Tips for Beginner and Intermediate Practitioners

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

Jill MillerIn the first part of “Yoga Expert Tips”, the creator of Yoga Tune Up®, Jill Miller, shares her best tips for beginner and intermediate yoga practitioners.

What other tips would you add to this list?

Tips for Beginners and Intermediate:

1. Limit yourself to just 3 poses after your regular workout. That way you won’t feel overwhelmed by needing to accomplish too much at once.

2. Timing is everything! Set a kitchen timer, or your cell phone so that you hold each pose for 30 seconds on the first day, then up it by 5 seconds daily. Once you hit 1 minute, you’re ready to add 3 more poses!

3. Think of Yoga as “getting pretty on the inside” so that you move better throughout your day and whittle away at gnawing aches and pains.

4. Instead of chanting OM, listen to the sound of your breath, and try to follow it through the entire inhale and exhale. If your mind wanders, return to concentrating on the breath.

5. Find a yoga friend, yoga teacher, or video forum to share your experience in the poses. They may have some great pointers to help keep you motivated!

For more fitness and yoga tips and Jill’s class schedule, click here.


Yoga Teacher and Circle of Grace Member Shares his Yoga Journey

Friday, February 4th, 2011

Yoga TeacherMartin Scott is a San Francisco-based yoga teacher and Zobha Circle of Grace member who believes in yoga as a lifestyle.

Martin teaches a vinyasa-based yoga practice that focuses on health and wellness for the body and the mind. His attentive teaching style is accessible to students of all levels. Martin’s classes build strength and flexibility and he encourages students to always maintain a sense of humor and lightheartedness while inspiring them to further their practice through dedication.

As a founding board member of Headstand, Martin strongly believes in a sense of community and how important it is to give back. He recently opened a studio in San Francisco, Union Yoga, and donates 100% of the proceeds from his Saturday morning classes to Headstand. For Martin, this is yoga in action, directly sending the fruits of the classes to those who are less fortunate.

Zobha: How did you start your yoga journey?

Martin Scott: I started my yoga journey during a turbulent time – my father died. I had challenging family dynamics, and I lost my job. There was a yoga studio close to my house, and I decided to see what all the fuss was about. I didn’t know what I was looking for until I found it, or rather, yoga and I found each other. The critical time in my life became less critical and things slowly started to fall into place. That was 11 years ago.


Z: Please share with us your journey to becoming a yoga teacher?

MS: Teacher training was amazing. The first time was with Sri Dharma Mittra at his ashram in New York. He says, “If you can really do yoga at the corner of 23rd & 3rd in Manhattan, then you can do yoga anywhere” and he is 100% correct. It was an amazing experience. I thought that I knew myself inside and out, but I quickly discovered how little I knew. That teacher training was a huge leap forward, not only in the development of my practice and my journey towards becoming a teacher, but in learning who I really am. The second round of training was with Stephanie Snyder and Elise Lorimer and that just took me to a whole new level. They helped build my skills and confidence as a teacher and as a yogi. I can’t imagine how it can get any better, but I’m sure it can somewhere down the road!

Z: What is the best piece of Yoga advice you could give to someone?

Beginners: Go to a Yoga 101 class. Learn the basics, take the time to get some knowledge about yoga, lay a solid foundation for a practice, so you will feel comfortable going to a class. So many people just jump in and start going to classes, but miss out on fundamentals which are so important to carry you through the long, long journey of the practice of yoga.

Intermediates: Find the balance between challenging yourself to try more advanced classes while still focusing on refining your basic practice. So many of the “fancy poses” are variations of basic postures, so when you master the basic form of the pose then the more challenging ones become easier.

Advanced: Keep going back to your roots. Sometimes the most challenging class for an advanced practitioner is Yoga 101. As an advanced yogi, I constantly focus on balancing my strength with my flexibility. When we become advanced practitioners, we are able to really get down to the depths of the mind-body connection and work from the inside out. We focus on harnessing our energy, controlling our breath and using advanced techniques to make the asana practice more fluid.

The great thing about my yoga experience is how it has enhanced me as a whole person. The people closest to me who knew me very well before I started on this path have noticed over time how I seem to be happier, more fulfilled and balanced. I know it is the yoga and for me it is a really, really great thing. It has allowed me to do things that make a difference in the lives of others and help those who are less fortunate than me. According to my teachers, it is my duty to do so. To me, it is just what you do.

Yoga Teacher-Marting Scott

(left to right): Richard (Martin's partner), Martin Scott, Casey Carr of Zobha, Katherine Priore of Headstand

Z: What’s your favorite Zobha item?

MS: Right now my favorite Zobha item is the Black Essential Zip Jacket. The fit is perfect, the weight is perfect and black goes with everything. It is just lightweight enough to be a great layering piece but heavy enough to keep me warm. The fit, though, is what really makes it. The height of the collar keeps the neck warm acting like a turtleneck sweater and it hangs low enough to cover the waistband of your shorts or pants. I LOVE IT!

You can practice yoga with Martin at his Union Yoga studio in San Francisco.


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.