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Search Results for: Ashtanga yoga.

Shiva Rea on the Evolution of Prana Vinyasa Yoga {video interview}

May 6, 2016 by Kara-Leah Grant Leave a Comment

by Kara-Leah Grant She's sometimes referred to as "the Madonna of Yoga" - at least, that's what Vanity Fair called Shiva Rea when she did a desert photo shoot for them in 2007. But magazines love catchy monikers and as someone who grew up idolising Madonna and has studied with Shiva... the two women are nothing alike. "I'm not sure what exactly what they were referring to, whether it was my boldness, but I'm not into being a yoga celebrity at all. At all! Humility for me is a really important … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Featured Video Interview, Teacher Interviews Tagged With: B.K.S. Iyengar, consciousness, cultural change, desikachar, evolution of yoga, Pattabhi Jois, shiva rea, wanderlust

The Truth on Drinking Coffee and Teaching or Practicing Yoga

March 8, 2016 by Kara-Leah Grant 33 Comments

by Kara-Leah Grant Since stopping regular coffee drinking back in 2013, I have become fastidious about never drinking coffee before practicing or teaching yoga. Since I practice every day, and teach often, there are very rare windows when caffeine is an option for me. At a recent summer festival, I realised how deeply this belief I have about the importance of not having caffeine in the system when practicing and teaching was ingrained. A couple of hours before I was teaching a class, I … [Read more...]

Filed Under: The Foundations Tagged With: addiction, coffee, intoxicants, teaching yoga, Yoga Sutras

I’m Afraid my Students are Going to Get Bored with my Yoga Sequences

June 30, 2015 by Kara-Leah Grant 4 Comments

by Kara-Leah Grant This came up in conversation this week - a new teacher expressing a fear that her yoga sequences weren't interesting enough and that she was going to be boring her students. She wanted to know how to make her sequences more interesting. However, there is a fallacy of logic here. The teacher has a fear arising - that of boring her students. Her approach to working with that fear is to ensure that the external circumstance triggering the fear is removed - bored … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Teaching Insights Tagged With: fear, samskara, sequencing, shiva rea, teaching yoga, yoga mentor

The Real Stories Behind The Top 4 Yoga Myths

March 10, 2015 by Lucinda Staniland 1 Comment

By Lucinda Staniland The internet is full to bursting with articles debunking the ‘Top Yoga Myths’. They tell us that contrary to poplar belief, Yoga is not a religion, that it’s not just for skinny, rich, flexible young women, and that it really is good exercise, as well as a holistic spiritual experience. Opinion is divided in these articles as to whether yoga really does or doesn’t give you great abs and fantastic orgasms. But, in general all these articles paint the same picture. Don’t … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Yoga & Body Image, Yoga in the Media Tagged With: yoga body image, yoga media, yoga myth

How Many Years of Yoga Practice Does it Take to Get Flexible?

December 17, 2014 by Kara-Leah Grant 14 Comments

by Kara-Leah Grant This is an impossible question to answer - at least, to answer definitively, but I'm still going to give it a damn good crack. And with good reason. Despite the fact that yoga has nothing to do whatsoever with flexibility - that flexibility is a side benefit of one's yoga practice and no measure of the depth or strength of one's yoga practice - yoga and flexibility are intimately intertwined in the modern idea of yoga. There's a good reason for this. We are predominantly a … [Read more...]

Filed Under: The Foundations Tagged With: compression, duncan peak, flexibility, flexible, forward bends, Paul Grilley, Peter Sanson, Peter Sterios, tension

J. Brown on the Three Sensibilities that Shape Our Yoga Practice {video interview}

October 3, 2014 by Kara-Leah Grant Leave a Comment

by Kara-Leah Grant I've been following J. Brown for a few years now, inspired and impressed by the consistent and constant magnifying glass he applies to the yoga world. J. has no qualms about challenging the accepted flow with his articles, calling into question elements of yoga teaching and practice that he finds problematic. But then, J. Brown is an upstart who has always gone against the grain right from the beginning of his career, deliberately taking a different approach from the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Teacher Interviews, Video Interviews Tagged With: Gentle, j. brown, mark whitwell, video interview, yoga DVD

An Overview of Patanjali’s Eight Limbs of Yoga

September 10, 2014 by Kara-Leah Grant 1 Comment

This article is an edited extract from K-L's new book, The No-More-Excuses Guide to Yoga, from the section called Yoga History, Philosophy and Concepts. It's a huge topic area, but in seven chapters, there is a succinct overview of much of the territory you might come across in yoga class - including Patanjali's Eight Limbs of Yoga.  by Kara-Leah Grant, author of The No-More-Excuses Guide to Yoga One of the most famous of the yogic texts is The Yoga Sutras. These were either written by, or … [Read more...]

Filed Under: The Foundations Tagged With: eight limbs, Matthew Remskis, Namas, patanjali, The Yoga Sutras, Threads of Yoga, yamas

How to Find Your Perfect Yoga Class After Relocating

July 26, 2014 by Guest Author Leave a Comment

by Andrea Leber, author of BEST of YOGA: Melbourne I’ve lived in Germany, France, Hungary, and Malaysia, then spent seven years in the UK and finally, two years ago, moved to the other side of the world: to Melbourne. Apart from the usual challenges relocating always throws at you (no matter how often you’ve gone through the whole process!) if you’re a dedicated yogi, one particular challenge is finding a new place to roll out your mat. No, not just any yoga studio, but somewhere that … [Read more...]

Filed Under: The Foundations, Yoga & Community Tagged With: Andrea Leber, Best Yoga Class, Guide Book, Melbourne, Melbourne Yoga Classes, Perfect Class, Relocation, yoga class, Yoga Guide, yoga teacher, Yoga travel

What are Vasanas and How Do They Affect Your Yoga Practice?

June 15, 2014 by Kara-Leah Grant 3 Comments

by Kara-Leah Grant, Musings from the Mat Earlier this year I took a short workshop with Duncan Peak from Power Living. In the workshop he mentioned the term 'vasana', defining it as character traits or tendencies and he talked about how our practice stirs up these tendencies and brings them into consciousness. Now I'd never heard of vasanas, and struggled to remember the term after the workshop, which happened the day before Wanderlust. The day after Wanderlust, I was driving from … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Musings from the Mat Tagged With: ambition, duncan peak, gunas, rajas, sattvic, vasanas

How I Learnt to Build Core Strength and Heal My Injuries with Yoga

September 16, 2013 by Guest Author Leave a Comment

Jonathan from CoreWalking

By Jonathan FitzGordon, The CoreWalking Program Way back in 1998, following the last of three knee surgeries, and after a year and a half of physical therapy, I was finally back on my yoga mat, when a teacher asked me a life changing question. "What are you doing to avoid a fourth surgery?" "Nothing," was my sheepish response. Yoga had saved my life but it also broke my body. My childhood had been active though no one taught me how to do anything so I was particularly horrible at baseball, the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: How Yoga Helped Me Tagged With: core, core tone, CoreWalking, Jonathan FitzGordon, knee surgery, movement patterns, pain relief, Walking

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