Monday, 11 November 2013

Welcome to Ayurveda School

Ayurveda School: Ayurvedic, Panchakarma Massage Training & Videos

Welcome to Ayurveda School

   School of Ayurveda and Panchakarma offers affordable yet comprehensive Ayurveda and Panchakarma courses. At Ayurveda School, we use the time tested Vedic approach to Ayurveda learning, teaching Ayurveda from an oral tradition based on personal growth through spirituality. In contrast to the analytical approach of western medicine, Ayurveda adopts a holistic approach to life and health. It defines health as a state of comprehensive equilibrium of all bodily functions whether it is physical or mental.
STED Council Approved Ayurvedic Study Center: Ayurveda School
Herbal Body Massage: Ayurveda School, Kerala, India
Ayurvedic Massage Videos
Natural herbal products: Ayurvedic Medicine

 Our Ayurveda Massage Videos are one of the best available in the market to learn Ayurvedic massages and Panchakarma Therapy for experienced practitioners and beginners alike. Our videos and study materials can teach you the techniques covering all aspects of Ayurvedic massage and Ayurvedic Treatments. With the help of our Tutorial Videos you can learn Ayurvedic Massages and improve your life and help others to feel well. It could also help qualified practitioners to improve their skills in Ayurvedic Massages. These videos are designed to help you learn various Ayurvedic massages with step-by-step instructions...Read More>> 

Ayurveda and Panchakarma Training

  Our training wing, School of Ayurveda and Panchakarma was started few years back with the aim to provide a professional training for those aspiring students of Ayurveda. The practical training at our Ayurveda study center include Elakizhi, Navara kizhi, Pizhichil, Shirodhara, Udhwarthana, Abhyanga, Shirovasti, Netra vasti , Kadivasti etc. The practical training also includes traditional kalari marma massage and ayurvedic feet massage, which are very much effective for body rejuvenation. Our training program also covers the important internal cleansing method of Ayurveda -  the Panchakarma therapy. They include the treatments like Vamana, Virechana, Vasti... Read More>>


Contact Details

 School of Ayurveda & Panchakarma
UNION Complex, Near INDUS Motors
South Bazar, Kannur (District)
Kerala State, South India - 670002
Phone: +91 - 9895268511 / 9895238916

Sunday, 10 November 2013

Master Class Features

Hot Wheel
backbendsized
Urdhva Dhanurasana (Upward Bow Pose) is an uplifting posture. It stimulates the nervous system and opens the heart, and can leave you glowing with energy and vitality for the rest of the day. But Urdhva Dhanurasana can also be used as a tool for gaining clarity and focus. In the Yoga Sutra, Patanjali writes, "Effort toward steadiness of mind is practice" (I.13). If you apply that principle to your Urdhva Dhanurasana practice, you'll discover a whole new layer of potential in the pose.
"Urdhva Dhanurasana is a challenging posture," says Natasha Rizopoulos, a senior teacher at YogaWorks, who lives in Boston. "But challenging postures are the best places to work on steadying the mind. The challenges become a place for you to really focus and pay attention." To begin a mindful approach to Urdhva Dhanurasana, start by setting an intention to open evenly and progressively into it, as opposed to simply going for your biggest pose at all costs. The most intelligent and advanced Urdhva Dhanurasana is not the biggest one you can muster, but one in which the spine is an even, rounded curve.
It takes mindfulness to achieve this. The evenness of the spine is often thwarted by tightness in either the shoulders or the hip flexors. To avoid the resistance from that tightness, you overcompensate at the junctures where the spine changes direction. This results in an uneven backbend with little points in it, which causes jamming and potential injury. However, if you bring focus and patience into your practice, you can learn to open into the spine deliberately and evenly. "We tend to rush through hard things," says Rizopoulos. "If you go slowly and can be more interested in the actions than in the result, you'll be better able to find that even curve and do so from a place that is calmer and more composed."
Once you are in Urdhva Dhanurasana, you can continue to cultivate a steady mind. Tune in to the places where you feel tight—the hip flexors and shoulders, for most people—and make a mental note for the next time you practice to address those areas with preparatory poses like the ones offered in this sequence. When you do feel resistance in the shoulders or hip flexors, Rizopoulos suggests that you stay present enough to linger for a moment with the tension instead of trying to avoid the discomfort by forcing yourself further into the pose. You can also use a soft and unwavering drishti (gaze) to steady the mind throughout this sequence as you prepare for this demanding posture.
Practice with the clear intention of maintaining a quiet mind, move slowly and deliberately, and stay present with sensation. You'll not only enable your body to practice this pose for years to come but also cultivate the ability to keep a steady mind in stimulating situations—a great tool you can use in everyday life.
Benefits:
  • Opens the chest and shoulders
  • Stretches the internal organs in the front of the body
  • Increases the mobility of the upper back, improving posture
  • Lengthens the hip flexors
  • Strengthens the arms and legs
  • Energizes and uplifts
Contraindications:
  • High blood pressure
  • Glaucoma, detached retina
  • Wrist problems, carpal tunnel syndrome
  • Back problems, especially disk injuries
  • Second and third trimesters of pregnancy
Watch: A video of this Master Class sequence can be found online atyogajournal.com/livemag.
Before You Begin
Warm up your thoracic spine with eight cycles of Cat-Cow Pose. Then practice three rounds of Surya Namaskar A, followed by some simple lunges in which you emphasize pressing the back thigh up toward the ceiling as you drop your tailbone toward the floor. Next, do three rounds of Surya Namaskar B. This short sequence will begin to open your chest, shoulders, and hip flexors. To stretch the quadriceps and imprint the parallel orientation of the legs, sit in a modified version ofVirasana (Hero Pose), with the thighs parallel, and the knees and thighs hip-distance apart. Feel free to sit on a block if you need to. From here, place your arms in Gomukhasana (Cow Face Pose) position to continue opening your shoulders.
Adho Mukha Svanasana (Downward-Facing Dog Pose)

Adho Mukha Svanasana teaches you to keep your arms straight, parallel, and shoulder-distance apart, and your feet and legs in a neutral, nonrotated position, parallel and hip-distance apart. It also teaches you to distribute weight equally in the arms and legs. It will be easier to learn these actions here, because Adho Mukha Svanasana is less disorienting than Urdhva Dhanurasana and can be held longer. Adho Mukha Svanasana is also known to promote steadiness of mind, a quality you want to cultivate to prepare for Urdhva Dhanurasana.
Start in Balasana (Child's Pose) with your arms reaching forward, your hands shoulder-distance apart, and your elbows straight. Root down evenly through your knuckles to create some resistance, and lift the forearms away from the mat. Track your attention up your arms to the part of your shoulders that is closest to your ears. Lift your inner shoulders up toward the ceiling to broaden around the base of your neck. Simultaneously, firm your outer upper arms in to engage your triceps and keep your arms straight. Inhale as you come to all fours, then exhale and push back to Adho Mukha Svanasana. Focus your attention on a soft and steady drishti toward your feet.
Create a straight line from your hands to your hips, with a 180-degree angle in the shoulders. Press down through the whole of each hand, creating power in your forearms, and keep the lift of your inner shoulder toward the ceiling. Avoid sinking through the armpit. From the strength in your arms, continue to press your hips back and up, and lengthen the back and front body equally. Have a sense of your shoulder blades gently pressing in toward your chest, while directing your front ribs toward your frontal hipbones. Use long, even breaths to create steadiness in the pose and still the mind.
Rizopoulos recommends a long hold for Adho Mukha Svanasana (start with two minutes, and build up to five). The longer you hold it, the more it will open your shoulders, imprint the alignment in your shoulders and legs, and teach you to create the same quality of mind that is useful for Urdhva Dhanurasana. When you are ready, return to Balasana.
Adho Mukha Vrksasana (Handstand)

Adho Mukha Vrksasana continues the themes of keeping the arms parallel and opening the shoulders at 180-degree angles. In this pose, you also bring your shoulders directly over your wrists, which is an action you'll repeat in Urdhva Dhanurasana.
Take Adho Mukha Svanasana, with your fingertips four to five inches from the wall. Set an intention to stay focused and quiet as you head into an energizing inversion. On an inhalation, rock your shoulders forward so they stack directly over your wrists, and look slightly forward of your fingertips. Step your feet in a few inches to get your hips a little higher, and come onto your tiptoes in a short, high Adho Mukha Svanasana. Commit to a steady drishti to draw your attention firmly into the present moment. Exhale and step your right foot forward, halfway to your hands. Then inhale and gently push off that foot as the left leg lifts to the wall, with the right leg following. Lengthen toward the ceiling equally through both legs, flex your feet, and shimmy your heels up the wall. Spin your inner thighs toward the wall and keep the same neutral position of your legs that you had in Adho Mukha Svanasana. Move the flesh of the buttocks toward your heels and direct your gaze in front of you.
Begin to repeat the actions you took in Adho Mukha Svanasana, and root down through every knuckle in your hands as a way of moving energy up toward your feet. Every breath or two, shimmy your heels up the wall again. Continue to cultivate mindfulness by paying attention to maintaining balance in the pose. Draw your inner shoulder blades away from the base of your neck and gently press your shoulder blades in toward your chest while directing your front ribs toward your frontal hipbones. Observe how this prevents you from sinking into the lower back or the armpits. Stay for 8 to 10 long, steady breaths.
To come down, keep one leg reaching up the wall for as long as possible as you gently release the other leg toward the floor. You can lift back into Handstand from here two or three more times. Practice switching your lead leg, and take Balasana to rest between lifts.
King Arthur's Pose

For this sequence, you'll practice King Arthur's Pose in two stages. In the first stage you'll stretch the iliopsoas (the muscle that runs from the lumbar spine through the pelvic region to the top of the thighbone). In the second stage, you'll stretch the rectus femoris (the front of the quadriceps). Lengthening these muscles will open your lower body in Urdhva Dhanurasana, but it can feel intense. Remember to remain present and calm in the face of these sensations.
Have two blocks and a blanket nearby. Start in tabletop position with your feet at the wall. Tuck your toes under, with the balls of your feet touching the wall. Stack your hips above your knees and your shoulders over your wrists. Take your left knee to the base of the wall where the floor and the wall meet (you can use a blanket to pad your knee). With your left shin against the wall and your left toe pointing straight up, step your right foot forward until your right knee is at 90 degrees. Plant your palms on blocks on either side of the right foot to bring openness in the chest. Drop your tailbone and lift your lower belly and chest. Hold for 10 to 12 breaths.
Move slowly and deliberately to the next stage, remaining attentive and responsive to your body's messages. Use support from the blocks to shift your hips back to the wall. Take your left hip to the inside of your left heel so your left leg is in Virasana. Shimmy your right foot back, bring your right knee to 90 degrees, with your buttocks and back at the wall (be mindful and back off if the sensation in your left knee becomes more than a dull ache). If your buttocks are at the wall, lift your arms to a parallel-arm Urdhva Hastasana (Upward Salute), reinforcing the parallel arms and the 180-degree angle in the shoulders you'll need for Urdhva Dhanurasana. Keep dropping the tailbone and move the front ribs toward the frontal hipbones, lengthening the lower back and directing the stretch to the hip flexors. Slowly release and change sides.
Setu Bandha Sarvangasana (Bridge Pose)

Setu Bandha Sarvangasana will teach you how to position your legs for Urdhva Dhanurasana as well as how to create length in your lower back.
Lie on your back, knees above your heels, feet and thighs hip-distance apart and parallel. Recommit to remaining even and balanced in the pose, in both your physical body and your mental approach. Reach your fingers toward your heels and adjust your feet so your fingertips graze the back of your heels. Pull your shoulders closer to your ears to soften the trapezius muscles, and turn your palms to face the ceiling. On an inhalation, slowly press down with your feet and lift your hips. Tune in to the places that feel tight, using the physical sensations to focus and direct your mind. Keep your thighs and knees parallel and, while keeping your feet fixed, isometrically draw your heels toward your buttocks. This will help you use your hamstrings rather than your gluteus muscles to lift, and will release compression across your lower back by preventing your thighs from separating. You'll repeat this movement in Urdhva Dhanurasana.
To complete the pose, interlace your fingers beneath you and, without pulling your shoulders further from your ears, roll your outer upper arms under and press down through your outer shoulders. Release your inner thighs down toward the floor and extend the flesh of the buttocks toward your knees, lengthening your lower back. This will make the pose feel both wide and long, a spaciousness you'll want to re-create in Urdhva Dhanurasana. Continue to practice smooth, steady breathing, establishing a tone of evenness and calm.
Take 8 to 10 breaths in the pose. Keep your knees directly over your ankles as you release.
Urdhva Dhanurasana (Upward Bow Pose)

Before you press up into Urdhva Dhanurasana, take a moment to establish an intention to remain present and patient as you explore the pose. Let it become a vehicle for mindfulness in addition to being a powerful backbend. The real work of the pose happens before you go up, says Rizopoulos. Focus on the set-up, and you will be physically and energetically more aligned and relaxed as you build to the final shape.
Lie on your back with the wall behind your head and with your feet and legs in the same position as in Setu Bandha Sarvangasana. Place your hands on the floor beside your ears, shoulder-distance apart, fingertips just beneath the shoulders. Draw your elbows shoulder-distance apart and turn your hands out slightly if you need help moving the elbows into alignment. You don't want your elbows opening out to the sides, away from the midline, which can cause damage to the soft tissue in the shoulder and create tightness at the base of the neck and in the upper back. On an exhalation, lift up partway and lower onto the crown of your head. (Avoid dragging your head into position, which can compress the neck.)
From here, Rizopoulos advises three steps to prepare yourself to go up. First, keep your feet and knees hip-distance apart and recommit to maintaining your elbows back, shoulder-distance apart. Next, pull your elbows away from the wall to draw your arms deeper into their sockets. Then lift your sternum toward the wall (without lifting your head) to bring a deeper curve into the thoracic spine.
Now you're ready for liftoff. Maintain these actions and inhale; slowly lift your shoulder blades and sacrum simultaneously and evenly to press straight up. Stay focused on the intention of creating an even curve as opposed to getting as high up as you can. Move toward a 180-degree angle in your shoulders, re-creating the openness you worked on in Adho Mukha Svanasana andAdho Mukha Vrksasana. Keep your arms and legs parallel to each other. Spin your triceps toward your face to maintain the external rotation in your arms that will prevent your armpits from puffing out toward the wall behind you. Keep your knees slightly bent and stack them directly over your ankles—straightening your legs in Urdhva Dhanurasana can cause compression in the back and overstretching in the armpits.
Most important, stay with the true shape of your pose. If you notice tightness in the hip flexors or shoulders, simply make a mental note of it and be present with the sensation there; avoid compensating by pushing into the lower back. Re-create the hands of Adho Mukha Vrksasana and the feet of Adho Mukha Svanasana. As you move into your full backbend, see if you can bring your navel to the highest point of the curve.
You can step your feet closer to your hands to go deeper, but only if your knees remain stacked over your ankles and your shins stay perpendicular to the floor.
Hold for five to eight breaths, maintaining smooth, even breathing. Then tuck your chin, bend your elbows (keeping them shoulder-distance apart), and lower back down to the same place on the mat where you started, keeping your knees directly over your ankles. If you thrust your pelvis forward on the dismount, says Rizopoulos, your knees will move forward past your feet, which will put your knees at risk for injury.
To Finish
After you come down, roll to your side and gently push yourself up to Dandasana (Staff Pose). Take several breaths here in preparation for a series of quieting poses. Advanced backbends should always be followed by 15 to 20 minutes of quieting poses so you can bring your energy down in a progressive way, Rizopoulos says. Follow Dandasana with Janu Sirsasana (Head-of-the-Knee Pose), Paschimottanasana (Seated Forward Bend), Salamba Sarvangasana (Supported Shoulderstand), Halasana (Plow Pose), and a simple reclining twist.
Finish by spending a few minutes in either Savasana (Corpse Pose) or seated meditation. Observe the way your practice has affected the quality of your mind. Over time, you'll notice that practicing Urdhva Dhanurasana with patience, deliberation, and a spirit of inquiry will not only open and strengthen you physically but also teach you to be calm and focused on and off the mat.

Get Your Sexiest Body Ever!

Introducing a breakthrough program that melts away flab and reshapes your body in as little as one hour a week!

Dear Friend,
If you’ve been looking for a way to lose stubborn pounds and inches…
If you think you’ve tried everything to flatten your tummy, slim your thighs, firm your butt, and tone those jiggly arms…
And if you’ve had it up to here with exhausting, boring exercise that eats up time you don’t have and leaves you sore and achy…
Then I’ve got great news for you.
I’m going to tell you about an easy, relaxing, and FUN way to lose the flab, lose the inches, and lose the stress. It can help you finally fit into your “skinny jeans” and get your sexiest body ever!
Not only that, it can help you enjoy non-stop energy, banish tension and anxiety, sleep better than you have in years, soothe everyday aches and pains, and much more.

You don’t have to join a gym or exercise class—in fact, you don’t even have to leave home. You can do it no matter how inflexible or out of shape you are now, and you won’t hurt or strain a single muscle. And you can see a significant difference in as little as 20 minutes a day, three days a week. That’s just one hour a week!
What am I talking about? A breakthrough approach to yoga—yes, yoga—that reshapes your body…while transforming your health and your life!

Slow down, relax…and get into your “skinny jeans” again

Now, chances are you may not think of yoga as “real” exercise. Maybe you think it’s simply stretching…holding what may seem like awkward poses…or humming “om”.
But there’s so much more to yoga. That’s why I want to get the word out to as many people as possible about the amazing body-shaping and life-transforming benefits it can offer you.
My name is Kris Fondran. Years ago, I was the last person you’d think of as doing yoga. I was a long-distance marathon runner—and a classic, hard-charging “type A” personality. I always felt I had to run harder and faster in every area of my life: wife, mother, graduate student, and teacher.
Then I discovered yoga. Fortunately, I discovered it at a studio that taught yoga in its truest sense: slow-moving, focused, relaxing, and connected to the body. Doing yoga this way transformed my life by helping me finally slow down, instead of always going too fast.
Yoga also transformed my body. It’s like the ultimate anti-aging medicine! I’ve had three kids and am hitting my late forties. Yet I can still put on a bikini and feel great about how I look.
I also sleep like a baby at night and feel healthier than ever. I don’t have the usual aches and pains that crop up at middle age, even as a former marathon runner. Plus I enjoy more energy than people I know who are 10 or 20 years younger than me!

10 Ways To Reduce Your Carbon Footprint

   Inevitably, in going about our daily lives--commuting, sheltering our families, eating--each of us contributes to the greenhouse gas emissions that are causing climate change. Yet, there are many things each of us, as individuals, can do to reduce our carbon emissions. The choices we make for our homes, travel, the food we eat, and what we buy and throw away all influence our carbon footprint and, chosen wisely, can help ensure a stable climate for future generations.

footprint2.jpg

Pay attention to packaging.

When out shopping, try to go to stores or co-ops that keep packaging to a minimum. For example, buy loose tomatoes rather than boxed or plastic-wrapped tomatoes. Also, avoid items, like cereals and crackers, that include a non-recyclable bag inside of a box, and you'll also avoid more heavily processed food. Take reusable bags to the grocery store, includingreusable produce bags, which can save a countless amount of plastic!   

Stop buying bottled water.
This is likely no news flash for you, but let's review: Bottled water has a huge carbon footprint--it's bottled at one location in small plastic bottles that were made at another location and shipped long distances. Many plastic water bottles are recycled, but most are not, making the footprint even bigger. Get yourself a reusable water bottle like Klean Kanteen. Also, a lot of restaurants have made the switch from offering fancy bottled water, usually imported from an exotic source, to using in-house filtration systems that make tap water a good choice. Ask about it next time you dine out. 

Sign up for Green Power 
Here is probably the quickest and most effective thing you can do to reduce your carbon emissions: Enroll in a green power program with your utility company. While the exact electricity mix varies from state to state, based on the average mix in the United States, by choosing green power from your utility you can reduce you carbon emission by some 7 tons per year. And at the same time send a message to your utility that it better start investing in some more wind farms, because more and more people are committed to greening the national power supply. Yes, a few minutes and one phone call can reduce your personal carbon emissions seven times as much as recycling.

Skip the flight.
Simply skipping one mid-range flight (say from New York City to St. Louis, Missouri) reduces your emissions as much as one full year of recycling, by about 1970 pounds per flight on that route. If you travel frequently for work, investigate other options such as Amtrak or evenvideo conferencing, and if you have family that live halfway across the country, try to combine smaller trips into one longer one or simply go less frequently.

Unplug it!

Unplug appliances that you don't use frequently. Most electronics have a standby mode that siphons energy even when not in use. Cell phone chargers, laptops, televisions, stereos--there's a whole list of items that should be unplugged when not in use. Try using a power strip for groups of electronic items. One flick of the switch and it's all off.

Buy organic and local.

Local food cuts down on miles and miles of traveling to get to your plate. And it's fresher than what's transported across the globe to your mega mart. Supermarket produce is often picked a week before it's ripe, and has to do its final ripening in transport. This also goes for that cup of joe--coffee beans have to travel long distances and go through a complicated production process before they even make it to your local coffee shop.  Also, try eating at restaurants that serve locally produced or seasonal foods.

Go Vegetarian (or Vegan) 
Cutting meat out of your diet has a large impact on your lifestyle carbon emissions. And can lower your food bill by 20 percent to boot! The emissions and resources needed to raise animals for food are so much higher than for raising vegetables that by eating a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet you can save about one ton of carbon emissions each year compared to your carnivorous friends. Cut out eggs and cheese and save two tons per year.  I've written previously about becoming a Weekday Vegetarian, which is a nice way to start if you don't want to abandon meat altogether. 

Keep your car.
What? How can keeping your car reduce carbon?  With gas prices seemingly always on the rise, it's tempting to buy a hybrid or electric vehicle. But if your older-model car is in good condition, you're better off keeping it in good running condition. Even hybrids create a big footprint when they're built, so consider driving that old clunker for a little while longer. Also, try more eco-friendly modes of transport when possible, like buses, trains, a bicycle, telecommuting, or even walking.

Use cold water.

No, not in the shower... but maybe in the washer. I spoke of this in my last post about green laundry, but it's important to repeat as it relates to carbon impact! Try using cold water to launder things that don't need to be cleaned in hot or warm water.It takes a lot of energy to heat up water -- multiply that by the number of loads, and that's a big footprint. Most major detergent makers sell detergents designed to have the same cleaning power as with regular soap. Try washing mixed loads in cold water, too.

Make time for errands.

A lot of us try to run errands in-between work and other commitments. Try bundling errands together to reduce how far you need to travel. Going back-and-forth to the same part of town on different days to run errands uses more gas than if you planned and did everything in the same area all at once. And if you really want to make it a "carbon freebie," try carpooling and running errands with a buddy.

Build Core Strength, Learn Control

    Rolling Like a Ball is a move borrowed from Pilates that helps us transition from reclining to sitting. Beyond this practical application, the move teaches lessons about momentum and control that apply to other dynamic transitions, like the kick up to Handstand, as well as to control of the body in space, whether that’s on the field, the road, or the trail. Include this exercise in your practice to develop the ability to right yourself in shifting situations.
Start on your back, knees hugged in. Tuck your chin toward your chest and curl your spine into a C curve. Try a few gentle rocks forward and back. If this is tough on your back from the outside, add padding under your spine. If, instead, it feels like too much pressure on a particular part of the spine, don’t work any further into this exercise. When you do roll back, go only as far as your shoulders to protect your neck.

   Use a breath pattern that works for you—this could mean inhale back, exhale up, or the reverse. When you are comfortable rolling forward and back, try these steps.

Balance
1. Balance on your sitting bones. Rocking up, find a still point where you are still in a tight ball, but can pause for a breath or two balanced on the spot between your sitting bones and tailbone. You’ll have to negotiate between using enough momentum to lift you up and enough control to slow you down.
Happy baby
2. Rolling like a Happy Baby. Bend your knees and spread them to shoulder distance, then try rolling back and up to balance again. With this new distribution of weight, you’ll need to work again to find the right balance between momentum and control.
Straddle
3. Rolling straddle. If your back and hamstrings allow, try straightening your legs into a V straddle, then rolling again. Keep your knees a little bent, so you aren’t too deep into a hamstring stretch, and find the balance point here.
In any of these variations, you’ll be strengthening your core, challenging your balance, and developing the ability to adapt to a change in the placement of your body in space by coming back to a still center point.

Friday, 8 November 2013

Bharadvaja's Twist


 BharadvajasanaI_248

Bharadvajasana I

  (bah-ROD-va-JAHS-anna), Bharadvaja = one of seven legendary seers, credited with composing the hymns collected in the Vedas 

Step by Step
Sit on the floor with your legs straight out in front of you. Shift over onto your right buttock, bend your knees, and swing your legs to the left. Lay your feet on the floor outside your left hip, with the left ankle resting in the right arch.

Inhale and lift through the top of the sternum to lengthen the front torso. Then exhale and twist your torso to the right, keeping the left buttock on or very close to the floor. Lengthen your tailbone toward the floor to keep the lower back long. Soften the belly.

Tuck your left hand under your right knee and bring your right hand to the floor just beside your right buttock. Pull your left shoulder back slightly, pressing your shoulder blades firmly against your back even as you continue to twist the chest to the right.

You can turn your head in one of two directions: continue the twist of the torso by turning it to the right; or counter the twist of the torso by turning it left and looking over the left shoulder at your feet.

With every inhalation lift a little more through the sternum, using the push of the fingers on the floor to help; with every exhalation twist a little more. Stay for 30 seconds to 1 minute, then release with an exhalation, return to the starting position, and repeat to the left for the same length of time.

Anatomical Focus

  • Upper back


Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Yin

What it is

   A quiet, meditative yoga practice, also called taoist yoga. Yin focuses on lengthening connective tissues and is meant to complement yang yoga—your muscle-forming Anusara, ashtanga, Iyengar, or what have you. Yin poses are passive, meaning you're supposed to relax muscles and let gravity do the work. And they're long—you'll practice patience here too. 
 
Best For    Preparing the body and mind for meditation practice. You'll develop a deeper, more thorough understanding of your entire body, aiding both your meditation and yang yoga.

Who's gotta have it   Athletes and yang-aholics whose joints may be getting crowded by muscle; yin can create space and restore range of motion. Beginners in meditation—the long-held poses lend a good opportunity to practice quieting the mind.

Need to know     Be prepared for long poses—they can be held from 5 to 20 minutes at a time. Yin yoga enables you to release deep bundles of tension in our key joints: ankles, knees, hips, the whole back, neck, and shoulders. The goal is increased flexibility and appreciating your individual abilities. "The fact that someone bends further than you isn't an indication that they are healthier," says Paul Grilley, anatomy scholar and yin yoga teacher. "It is only in relation to our own skeleton can we ask, 'Am I adequately flexible and strong?'"

Trends and trivia   None to speak of. It's under the radar—for now.