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My Yoga Online

Archive for October, 2007

Hatha Yoga Class - Yoga Poses for Menstruation

Thursday, October 25th, 2007 by Kreg Weiss

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A new article, Menstruation and Yoga, by Kreg Weiss is now available detailing the reasons why women should avoid certain yoga poses, like yoga inversions, during menstruation. This article offers an anatomical understanding of how inversions can aggravate menstrual symptoms along with a list of recommended yoga postures that can help ease these symptoms. Click Here to read this article.

Popularity: 55% [?]

Greening Coffee and Tea - Part II

Wednesday, October 24th, 2007 by Michelle Trantina

6. Loosen Up

Tea bags and coffee filters can be useful but are mostly unnecessary. Great coffee can be made at home with a reusable filter or a stovetop espresso maker. A quality tea infuser can last a lifetime and replace an untold number of (questionably compostable) tea bags. If you do use filters and bags, look for biodegradable and unbleached ones.

7. Milk and Sugar

Most people put one thing or another in their hot beverage of choice. Don’t foul up your organic, fair trade, bird friendly, solar roasted brew with chemical and hormone-laden milk and sugar from a little paper packet. If you don’t do the cow thing, look for organic rice, soy, or almond milk. Maple syrup in coffee or honey in tea is another well-kept secret.
TeaCoffeeAsian_tea
8. Press the Issue

If the local coffee shop you love doesn’t carry coffee and tea that meet your standards, start asking politely.

9. Compost the Roast

Tea leaves and especially coffee grounds make outstanding compost. Coffee’s high nitrogen content has made it a fertilizer of choice. Composting leaves and grounds helps keep organic waste out of landfills, makes great soil, and keeps waste baskets dry. If you don’t have a heap to toss it on, just spread coffee grounds on the top of your plants’ soil.

10. Gift the Good Stuff

Organic coffee and tea make superb gifts for friends and coworkers. It’s also a great way to get people appreciating the many benefits of a “greener” coffee or tea habit.

Popularity: 45% [?]

Yoga Advice - Yoga and Weight Training

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007 by Kreg Weiss

Can you tell me the best way to incorporate weight training and yoga? Is it advisable to do on same day - if so, what order? Every other day?

There are several approaches one can (or should) take when incorporating weight training and yoga. First, I would like to address the basic physiological principles with weight training. People who perform weight training do so for one of two main goals – either to gain muscle mass (low repetition exercises with high amounts of weight to build strength) or tone muscle tissues (high repetition exercises with low amounts of weight to build endurance and tone muscles).

Regardless of the approach, one needs to target muscle groups effectively and progressively in each session followed by adequate rest. Typically, a minimum of 48 hours is required for muscle tissue to recover and be ready for another bout of loading. Without this recovery period, muscle fibers become stressed and will rapidly lose strength, which ultimately can lead to poor performance and injury.

craig_twist_bound_lunge.jpg

How does this relate to yoga? This now depends on the style of yoga that you are doing. If you are doing vigorous power/vinyasa style yoga, it may become difficult to coordinate recovery time for your tissues with an in-depth weight training program. Imagine performing power yoga the day after doing a chest and shoulder workout. These muscle groups may not have the energetic capacity to perform the demanding vinyasa flows and the practice may move into a place of struggle. On the other hand, if your preferred yoga practice is a lighter, slower hatha yoga which places only a light amount of loading on the musculoskeletal system, then yoga can be a great restorative tool for your weight training program.

So here are my basic recommendations:
*Set your weight training schedule with specific understanding and emphasis on which muscle groups you wish to target and the method of training desired (muscle building or muscle toning). Establish 48 hours of recovery time for every muscle group worked.
*Determine what type of yoga best suits your body with this weight training program (power yoga versus light, restorative). Integrate your yoga schedule into the overall program addressing the recovery needs from weight training. Focus on poses that expand the muscles that have been recently conditioned with weight training along with other yoga poses that will balance out the rest of your program.

Can you do yoga the same day as weight training?

Yes! I use my yoga practice as tool to establish inner connection and to set a positive tone of thought and action for the day. I prefer to do yoga after any stimulating activity to balance this energy. Personally, I would do your weight training first (and any cardiovascular exercises) and then move into a suitable yoga flow right after. After vigorous exercise, the body remains at a slightly elevated state (heart rate and respiration) as the body needs to flush out lactic acid and re-saturate tissues with oxygen. A yoga practice following vigorous exercise can enhance this temporarily, elevated state by more effectively cooling down the nervous system while directing more conscious breath into the body.

Janu Sirsasana

If you are doing a yoga practice later in the day or the following day, I would definitely move into a gentler flow rather than a vigorous flow as your body has already moved into a recovery state from weight training.

Here is an example practice schedule:

Monday morning: 30 minutes weights (chest, shoulders, thighs) followed by a core yoga flow (that minimizes loading of the limbs and focuses on core conditioning)

Tuesday morning: 20 minutes cardio followed by a restorative, expanding flow (again, minimal loading of limbs and shoulders)

Wednesday morning: 30 minutes weights (back, arms, hamstrings) followed by a vinyasa yoga flow (primary muscles for vinyasa flows have recovered by this time from the previous weight training session)

Thursday morning: 20 minutes cardio followed by a restorative, expanding flow

Friday morning: 30 minutes weights (chest, shoulders, thighs) followed by a core yoga flow

Saturday morning: 20 minutes cardio followed by a restorative, expanding flow

Sunday: no physical activity…enjoy a meditation practice with breathing and relaxation
Repeat the schedule the following week with the “back and arms” day starting on Monday.

This is just an example program and I recommend that you consult a qualified exercise specialist to determine the appropriate program for you. But as you can see from this example program, I have integrated specific yoga flows with the weight training to balance the time needed for recovery. On alternate days, the lighter yoga flows provide the physical opening without placing loads on recovering tissues.

My other recommendations is to not incorporate weights directly into your yoga practice (holding onto weights while doing poses). This is a new trend being applied by the “fitness industry” and highly degrades the integrity of one’s yoga practice. Avoid making your yoga practice a “workout”. As you experience clear physical benefits, do not become solely drawn into the physicality of the poses.

Yoga meditation

Always return to the fundamental purpose of the practice and the definition of yoga poses: asanas are physical Yoga postures that are designed to help master the body and enhance the body’s functions, thus to create a healthy body in order to move more readily to the state of oneness and realization. Imagine now that we apply this same observance and principle of yoga to our weight training program. How powerful would that be?

Popularity: 65% [?]

Greening Coffee and Tea

Thursday, October 11th, 2007 by Michelle Trantina

Before you drink coffee and tea, keep these tips in mind:

1. Think Local Brew

Seek out the coffee and tea that have traveled the least distance to reach you and also aim at supporting local, independent farms, cafés, and roasters.

2. Mug shots
Find that perfect mug and make the investment. Not only is a reusable mug more pleasurable to sip out of than a paper cup, but it will replace an untold number of disposable cups, plastic sippy tops, “java jackets,” and other disposable paraphernalia. Make a quick tally of how many disposable coffee or tea cups you use in a month…yeah, it’s probably a lot.

3. Organic

Coffee and tea that bear organic certification are more eco-friendly because they are grown and processed without toxic chemicals, are cultivated and harvested in ways that protect sensitive ecosystems, and spare workers from exposure to harmful pesticides and herbicides. Shade grown coffee is another important category that preserves habitats for migratory birds on coffee farms, also letting beans mature more slowly and creating richer flavors.

4. Fair Trade

Not only does certified fair trade coffee and tea help ensure living wages and safe working conditions for farmers, but TransFair Canada and Rainforest Alliance both include rigorous environmental standards in their certification criteria.

5. Home brew

The local café is great. It’s got your friends, good food, free wireless. But if you think you can be greener and/or tastier in your own kitchen, give it a try. When you brew at home you know where the beans and leaves are coming from and also where they go when they’re spent. Plus, you can’t forget your mug, you can choose organic milk, and never toss out another paper sugar packet, make your coffee exactly as you like it, maybe try dark brown sugar or raw honey instead of plain old white sugar… And try a bit of quick math on the cost savings of making your morning cup at home. The savings definitely add up.

Popularity: 64% [?]

Vinyasa Yoga Class - New Video At MyYogaOnline

Friday, October 5th, 2007 by Michelle Trantina

This advanced Power Yoga class explores long standing sequences and arm balancing postures. Build strength and steadiness while expanding your awareness to inner connection.

To experience the full video go to VINYASA YOGA CLASS

Not a Member Yet? Learn More on how to JOIN MY YOGA ONLINE NOW.

Popularity: 70% [?]

My Yoga Online New Videos - Padma Yoga and Meditation

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007 by Kreg Weiss

We are pleased to announce two new videos available on My Yoga Online featuring Padma of Padma Yoga and Meditation:
Mountain - Classical Yoga postures and breathing to develop a gentle foundation.
Ocean - Classical Hatha Yoga flows creating fluid movement and rejuvenation.

Padma integrates the body and mind, awakens inner joy, and refines awareness of inner stillness. Padma is one of Canada’s best-known teachers of Meditation and Yoga, and hosts a nationally syndicated television program called ‘Living Yoga with Padma’.

Popularity: 49% [?]

Yoga Tips - Purposefulness and Focus By Reducing Viksepa

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007 by Kreg Weiss

We live in an age of distractions and clutter that cloud the mind, create heaviness on the physical and burden the soul. In Yoga, these distractions and obstacles are called Chitta Viksepa. With even small adjustments in behavior, thought, and action, we can shift to a greater state of clarity and focus. This clearer sense of focus allows purposefulness to abound and abundance to flow.

The Yogi Inside Us all Unpath of Yoga Yoga, The Radiance of Oneness

There are a variety of categories that narrow down Chitta Viksepa including:
*Alasya - Laziness
*Samsaya - Doubt or indecision
*Pramada - State of indifference
*Bhranti Darsana - False knowledge
*Vyadhi - Sickness which disturbs one’s physical equilibrium
*Angamejayatva - Unsteadiness of the physical body
*Styana - Lack of mental disposition for work
*Avirati - Sensuality and the state of being drawn to sensory objects
*Alabda Bhumikatva - Lack of concentration or continuity of thought or concentration
*Dukha - Pain or misery
*Daurmansya - Despair
*Svasa-prasvasa - unsteady respiratory flow

We often grow accustomed to allowing distractions to move us from tasks that help us achieve our goals and that move us towards a more positive existence. Often, in order to accomplish and follow through on goals, we must move out of our comfort zone, jump face-first into fears, perform uneasy tasks, or experience a period of sacrifice. Distractions are often the states of existence that are easy for us to fall back into; states of habit, of insecurity and doubt, of laziness, of indifference. Rather than moving away from these states to a place of focus, we collapse into this lack-luster state of interruption.

After decades of distractions, we come to the end of life looking back with regret that we didn’t dissolve those distractions with the radiance of focus and drive. What holds us back from experiencing our true potential? What habits and behaviors keep us from expressing the inner self?

For myself, most of the distractions start from the exterior and leave echoes of clouding vibrations. These unnecessary external stressors leave the muscles and joints tense, digestive system in chaos, and the entire body weak and lethargic. Take some time to write down all the distractions and menial tasks that are bombarding you daily. You may be surprised at the substantial length of your list. With your list, go through and see which 3-5 you can eliminate within 24 hours. Let this adjustment set in for 21 days especially if this is the removal of habit(s).

Then return to your list, see if you can add more (some may have surfaced since the original list was done) and explore how you can remove another 3-5 distractions. What is keeping you from accomplishing your goals? What is moving you from living a life of true happiness?

Some simple adjustments that can provide wondrous results:
1) read and respond to emails maximum twice a day - schedule specific times to read and respond to emails and don’t diverge from this schedule - many find this alone can add a substantial amount of extra time to one’s day
2) answer your phone only a specific times of the day and then turn it off - you don’t always have to answer the phone - your phone is for your convenience, not for those calling you
3) complete or remove tasks that annoy you - the longer you leave things that annoy undone, the more you move into a state of indifference (repaint those marked walls, fix that broken step, empty the garbage from the shed - find what annoys you and follow through)
4) reduce and organize - clean out unorganized closets and draws - create a zen environment in your home and office leading to a calmer internal state - be able to start your days with the eyes not burdened with disarray - don’t hide your clutter behind a door - organize inside and out
5) give yourself a minimum of 30 minutes a day with complete solitude and reflection - let quiet flood the nervous system - yoga, meditation, a walk in nature - anything that creates connection to the now and self

Just by completing a few small tasks or changing a few small habits starts us on a path of achievement. Confidence begins to replace indifference. We see ourselves and the world as having more potential for greatness, and we see goals with joyous appeal rather than as difficult mountains to climb. We start to surround ourselves with others who create their destinies and we see ourselves moving away from those who live by default in the distractions. We can gradually develop a powerful sense of discipline with each successful change and each reduction in viksepa.

Popularity: 54% [?]