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Search Results for: depression

What Is iRest® Yoga Nidra Meditation and How Can It Help You?

December 7, 2016 by Guest Author 64 Comments

by Neal Ghoshal, Sacred Moves  As the popularity of Yoga continues to expand, more and more people are being drawn into practices beyond Yoga asana (posture), into breath work, into meditation, into the subtler aspects of the tradition. One of the practices that is becoming increasingly lauded is Yoga Nidra. I first came across Yoga Nidra back in 2003 when learning to teach at the Ashram Yoga School in Parnell, Auckland. Ashram Yoga, a Satyananda style inspired Yoga school, included Yoga Nidra … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Yoga Styles Tagged With: anxiety, chronic pain, depression, insomnia, iRest, meditation, Neal Ghoshal, NZ Yoga Nidra, PTSD, Richard Miller, yoga nidra

The Only Two Things Your Children Really Need From You

August 24, 2016 by Guest Author Leave a Comment

by Ben Ralston I’ll tell you straight: I didn’t have a clue what to do when my son was born. I had good instincts, I’d read a number of books and done my due diligence, but the stress of the situation I found myself in overwhelmed me. I didn’t have the internal resources to be able to cope because I wasn’t yet a man. I was really a 30 something year old scared little boy, and I found myself way, way, way out of my depth. This is true for the vast majority of Fathers: they aren't men … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Yoga & Community, Yoga & Parenting Tagged With: community, discipline, parenting, The Heart, unconditional love

An Interview with Tom Myers of Anatomy Trains on the New Anatomy of Interconnectedness

March 31, 2016 by Kara-Leah Grant 2 Comments

by Kara-Leah Grant Back in 2001, movement specialist Tom Myers published a book called Anatomy Trains. In it, he put forward an idea that was to forever change the way that people understood "stretching" - a systems-oriented view of our musculo-skeletal anatomy. That is, that when we stretch, we're not just stretching separate and individual muscles, but that we're also working with fascia, which is a webbing overlaid and connecting all muscles. This book was born out of the work that Tom … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Reviews, Yoga & Community Tagged With: anatomy trains, fascia, online couse, Tom Myers, webinar

The Benefits of Yoga: Are They Proven By Science?

May 19, 2015 by Lucinda Staniland 1 Comment

Albert Einstein

by Lucinda Staniland The benefits of yoga are well advertised. We hear that yoga will help us (among other things): lose weight, breathe better, live longer, have better sex, recover from depression, cure sciatica, heal our digestive system, build core strength, alleviate back pain, heal mental illness, and build bone health. But does science agree that yoga can really heal us in all these ways (and more)? Is Yoga really the silver bullet we've been waiting for? It turns out that yoga and … [Read more...]

Filed Under: What's Real Yoga & a Real Yogi?, Yoga in the Media Tagged With: Benefits of Yoga, Lucinda Staniland, science, science of life, science of yoga, yoga

How Deep Do You Really Go in Your Yoga Practice?

February 23, 2015 by Kara-Leah Grant 2 Comments

by Kara-Leah Grant On Friday, a friend who is a talented healer, did some energy release work on my shoulders. He stood behind me, pressed into each shoulder and breathed. It was a simple technique and yet I could feel pressure evaporating into the ether. Afterwards he shook his head. You had half a ton of pressure in there. I know this. I feel it and I see it in my body when I watch myself on video - this held tension that isn't so much about the muscles but the underlying … [Read more...]

Filed Under: The Foundations Tagged With: chakras, consciousness, prana, subtle body, The Mandukya Upanishad, vayus

Teenage Kicks! The Impact Of Yoga On Teenagers

January 23, 2015 by Guest Author 2 Comments

YogaTeens getting their kicks!

By guest author Charlotta Martinus, TeenYoga I was 37 when I started yoga and to be frank, I thought it was all pretty weird! And so did most people. A lot has changed since then. There has been a 25% year on year increase in the UK in people involved in yoga, one way or another in the last ten years. So, clearly, perceptions have changed! When I started thinking about offering yoga in schools, it was fun and easily accepted at primary school, as little kids are so open to new experiences … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Teaching Insights, Yoga & Community Tagged With: meditation, mindfulness, neurobiology, schools, Teenagers, trauma and yoga, yoga for young people, yoga in schools, young people, youth yoga

The Release of Yoga and Body Image: 25 Personal Stories About Beauty, Bravery + Loving Your Body

October 14, 2014 by Guest Author 1 Comment

Melanie Klein loves her yoga body

By guest author Melanie Klein, Yoga and Body Image Coalition. Anna Guest–Jelley, founder of Curvy Yoga and the co-editor of Yoga and Body Image: 25 Personal Stories About Beauty, Bravery + Loving Your Body, and I both struggled with a distorted body image, our perception of ourselves, from early childhood on. In the process, we tried countless diets and experimented with a variety of fitness trends – all of which left us feeling shame, guilt and punishment for the bodies we lived in. Our … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Activism, Yoga & Body Image Tagged With: diversity, equity, yoga and body image, yoga and body image coalition, yoga body, yoga culture, yoga is for every body, yoga practice

Getting Out of the Yoga Studio: What I’ve Learnt Teaching Yoga in Prisons

September 19, 2014 by Guest Author 5 Comments

This is the second article is this series looking all the ways in which people are excluded from yoga - reasons like social class, race, money, incarceration or general access. In this article Adhyatma shares how the Yoga Education in Prisons Trust (YEPT) got started, what the challenges have been and what she's learned from the experience.   by Adhyatma, Yoga Education in Prisons Trust After I finish teaching my Yoga classes, the men in my class often come up respectfully and shake my hand … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Activism, Teaching Insights Tagged With: accessible yoga, adhyatma, satyananda yoga, teaching yoga, yoga education in prisons

How Yoga Helped Me Deal with the Emotional and Psychological After-Effects of Trauma from Living and Working in Afghanistan

July 31, 2014 by Guest Author Leave a Comment

by Marianne Elliott When it comes to working with fear, yoga is one of my secret weapons. Fear is not just a thought or idea. Fear is a neurobiological reaction to perceived threat. This is where modern neuroscience catches up with the wisdom of yoga and meditation. The autonomic nervous system (i.e. the part you don't consciously control) is divided into two sections: the sympathetic and the parasympathetic nervous systems. The sympathetic nervous system acts to mobilize the body's 'fight or … [Read more...]

Filed Under: How Yoga Helped Me Tagged With: alternate nostril breathing, brave, bravery, courage, fear, nuerobiology, pranayama, stress, yoga

Why Older Yoga Teachers are Often the Best Yoga Teachers

October 21, 2013 by Guest Author 13 Comments

Susan Grbic of Growing Younger

By Susan Grbic, Growing Younger So many younger people are taking to yoga these days, as opposed to forty years ago when I was cutting my teeth as a student and yoga was still considered way too esoteric for your average citizen. Nowadays there’s a dizzying confusion of yoga ‘styles’ to choose from. And precisely because yoga is attracting so many young people, hundreds of young yoga teachers are emerging. I started teaching when I was forty-five, pretty old by today’s yoga teacher … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Going to Class, Teaching Insights Tagged With: aging, yoga teacher, yoga teaching, youth

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