Issue: #12: May 2010
Namaste Friends,
If you take my yoga class, you'll know my approach is very different from the traditional vinyasa class. I have nothing against vinyasa. In fact, I believe moving with the breath is an effective tool to develop mind/body awareness.
However, I always incorporate isolation exercises to work a specific muscle group before going on to explore an asana. Why? Because by waking up targeted muscles, you develop body awareness and improve your ability to do the asana correctly and easily. This is especially important if your muscles have become weak and chronically tight due to poor posture. Of course, you may still be able to do something that looks like the pose. But looks can be deceiving. If you fail to activate the right muscles, you may compensate in ways that could lead to injury down the road.
Rotator cuff injuries stemming from poor chaturanga technique are a prime example. They're often due to amnesia in the lower traps.
Another example of damage waiting to happen: weak outer hip muscles such as the gluteus medius, which you use whenever you stand on one leg. These muscles are essential in any balancing pose: tree, extended hand to foot, warrior III, you name it. If you are weak in the outer hip, not only is your balance compromised, you risk injury to your knees or your back. However, activation drills for the gluteus medius done before balancing poses will initiate a better recruitment pattern that will help align the hips and prevent injury.
The same principle applies to side navasana, which requires strong obliques, the muscles of your side core. If you can't figure out what muscles to use to hold yourself up, you'll wind up propping yourself up with your arms or falling over when you let go. However, after warming up the obliques properly, it's a breeze. You've improved your motor control and helped forge a mind-muscle link that will only improve with practice.
One final note. Remember, we are all different, with different muscular imbalances. For optimal results, you may need to repeat an exercise two or three times on one side to build up enough strength for balanced action. Just one more reason to cultivate a home practice!
Breathe well, be well,
Suzanne
suzanneausnit@optonline.net
fullpotentialyoga.com
P.S. Please join me at Play Ball: Self Massage and Ball Therapy Workshop on June 23 or 27.
Soul Food
"The art of losing isn't hard to master;
so many things seem filled with the intent
to be lost that their loss is no disaster...
"Then practice losing farther, losing faster:
places, and names, and where it was you meant
to travel. None of these will bring disaster."--Elizabeth Bishop
HEAL
Eye-Q
The eyes are the windows to the soul in more ways than one. Relaxing the eyes is not only critical to improving vision, but also helps tone down the entire nervous system. Vision occupies about 40% of the brain's capacity, one reason you sleep with your eyes closed. Unfortunately age exacts a price on our eyes, locking them into habitual patterns and undermining their ability to focus at different distances. The good news is that eye exercises can restore visual flexibility. For example, sit or lie down with your eyes open and move your eyes up and down, pausing at the top and bottom, about 10 times. Repeat, moving the eyes from side to side. Then circle the eyes in both directions. Focus your attention on one eye at a time, letting the other eye come along for the ride. Finally, rub your palms vigorously together to generate heat and cup your eyes with your hands, eliminating the light without placing pressure on the eyeballs. Focus on your breath as you let your eyes sink deeply into the back of your skull. Feel your eyes relax under your hands.
Flame Out
We know that yoga is helpful for arthritis because its isometric stretching stimulates bone cell growth and helps increase range of motion. Now, new research has shown that yoga may reduce inflammation--helpful for reducing the risk of not only arthritis, but also heart disease, diabetes and stroke. An Ohio State study found that a chemical called IL-6, an indicator of inflammation, was 41% lower in women who practiced yoga twice a week for a year. One possible reason is that regular yoga practice increases the dominance of the parasympathetic nervous system--the "rest and digest" portion of the nervous system. This may help calm an overactive immune system.
STRENGTHEN
Grab a Six Pack
Heads Up
LIVE
Lights Out Eats
Diet Docs
WORKSHOP
Play Ball: Self Massage & Ball Therapy
Get on the ball through this fabulous self-care technique used by professional athletes and dancers to literally roll muscle tension out of your body. This powerful therapy refreshes, rejuvenates and relaxes your body thanks to a series of specially designed rubber balls that follow the contours of the bony structures of the body, making it easy to find specific muscles. It's like a deep tissue massage--only better because you can increase or decrease the pressure at will.
These balls of relief and renewal will:
*Unravel deep-seated knots in your neck, shoulders and hips, calves, hamstrings and quads.
*Improve your posture, reduce back pain and increase
range of motion in your joints.
"We join spokes together in a wheel, but it is the center hole that makes the wagon move. We shape clay into a pot, but it is the emptiness inside that holds whatever we want. We hammer wood for a house, but it is the inner space that makes it livable. We work with being, but non-being is what we use."
Lao-tzu
"Insist on yourself; never imitate. Your own gift you can present every
moment with the cumulative force of a whole life's cultivation."
Ralph Waldo Emerson
"Let your awareness sink into your breath and find the
bottom of your breath. Allow the breath to come and go as it
may...As you get to the end of the out breath, let go in the same
sort of feeling that you have when you let your body drop into a
very comfortable bed--let it drop and fall. Let the weight of the
air do it. Don't push, drop. Then after awhile the breath will
return. But don't pull it in, let it fall back in. The breath will
drop in until you've had enough; then let it drop out again."
Alan Watts
"The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes but in
having new eyes."
Marcel Proust
"The mind's first step to self-awareness must be through the body."
George Sheehan
"Our own physical body possesses a wisdom which we who inhabit the body lack."
Henry Miller
"How happy is the little stone
That rambles in the road alone,
And doesn't care about careers
And exigencies never fears--
Whose coat of elemental brown
A passing universe put on,
And independent as the sun
Associates or glows alone,
Fulfilling absolute decree
In casual simplicity."
Emily Dickinson
"There is an essential difference between consciousness and awareness. I can walk up the stairs of my house, fully conscious of what I am doing, and yet not know how many steps I have climbed. In order to know how many there are I must climb them a second time, pay attention, listen to myself, and count them. Awareness is consciousness together with a realization of what is happening within it or of what is going on within ourselves while we are conscious."
Moshe Feldenkrais
"The moment one gives close attention to any thing, even a blade of grass it becomes a mysterious, awesome, indescribably magnificent world in itself."
Henry Miller
"If you do a practice and train your attention to hover in the present, then you will build the internal capacity to do that as needed -- at will and voluntarily."
Daniel Goleman