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Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Yoga Retreat in June at Talalla 1-4 June 2012

RETREAT NEWS



I am really happy to say that I am organising a yoga retreat weekend in Talalla over the first weekend in June, which happens to have a Monday as poya day.  This is going to be an extra special retreat over three days with 5 yoga classes.  Anyone who is interested in getting away for a weekend of yoga is free to come. I know there are some families out there who enjoy yoga and you are free to bring along the kids as there are lots of things to do (even a bit of yoga if they are interested). 

Talalla Retreat is a dedicated yoga retreat and a lovely place to do yoga, swim in the sea or the pool, and relax.  You can check it out at http://www.talallaretreat.com/  If you have never been on a retreat before this is the perfect place to start!

Yoga Classes
Each yoga class will be two hours.  Don't worry--you will be able to do it!  This will include some simple meditation, pranayama (breathing), the asanas--including a nice long savasana at the end.  There is a lot of grass around so I expect we can start to practice some inversions (if you want to) outside as well.



Prices
Prices include all taxes, 5 yoga classes, 3 nights accommodation, and brunch and dinner.

Triple = Rs22,000 per person
Double = Rs26,000 per person
Single = Rs35,000 per person




Timetable
The retreat will start with arrivals on Friday night and finish after class and brunch on Monday morning. 

Arrive Friday night 1st June for dinner.  Relax!

2nd June Sat 7-9am  - yoga followed by big brunch
FREE TIME
2nd June Sat 4-6pm - yoga followed by dinner

3rd June Sun 7-9am - yoga followed by big brunch
FREE TIME
3rd June Sun 4-6pm - yoga followed by dinner

4th June Mon 7-9am - yoga followed by brunch
CHECKOUT

Booking
We need to book and pay in advance to confirm.  Talalla is quite a busy international yoga retreat with lots of bookings so we need to confirm soon.  This retreat requires a minimum of ten people to go ahead but it is such a great place I don't think we will have a problem.  Please reserve your place by sending me a message and paying to confirm. We need to pay by the middle of next week to have our booking confirmed.  If you cannot make it you will need to find a person to replace you.  Please feel free to pass this on to friends!

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Don't have a cow: Reduce pain in your wrists in yoga poses




Cow pose (not shown here but I couldn't resist these pics of cows doing yoga) is one of the most common beginner's
postures and is also one where yogis might first encounter wrist pain


It has become very clear to me that when new students come to yoga class the portion of my brain dedicated to recall of names drifts off and starts doing complicated inversions.  I had been calling a student named Sanjeewa Sanjay for a long time before someone else kindly pointed out his real name.  I think I was calling Udeni Upeksha for a few months before her friend quietly came up to me after class one day to politely point out my ongoing error.  I was so proud to have remembered Arosha's name that I used to call her name out all the time.  About a year later she told me it was Aroshi.  In any case, if you have been coming to yoga for a long time now and I have failed to call you anything then I think it is safe to say that your name is suspended in neon lights on a billboard out there that I just can't seem to read and I'd be more than happy if you told me, or, if you are too shy, just came up to class wearing a name badge for a little that you display prominently on your mat.  Ditto if I have been branding you with a secret yoga alias.

That said, while I seem to have some semantic blockage (which I am trying to fix with some training in arbitrary mnemonics), the thing I have found most new students have difficulty with when turning up to class is with taking pressure off of their wrists. 

When you start out yoga (at least in my classes) we spend a bit of time on all fours, first in cat/cow variations and later in adho mukha svanasana (downward facing dog). 

Cat-cow pose--many students find this tires their wrists out

The cat/cow variations look like a piece of cake.  How hard can it be to be on your hands and knees for a few minutes?  Don't babies spend months there?  But as most of us soon find out babies seem to be much better at yoga than us and pretty soon the wrists start to ache.  The most common question I have after class is what to do about sore wrists, which makes me very happy. Not the bit about wrist pain but the fact that someone identifies an issue and asks me questions.  Yoga shouldn't be painful so if it is then we need to do something about it!

There are many reasons your wrists can be sore when you practice yoga.  I, for instance, fell off a rock climbing wall many years back and landed on my outstretched wrist.  It has not been the same since.  Some people also have diagnosed wrist conditions that are aggravated by placing weight through the wrist joint (if you fall into the category of people with known conditions then please do let me know--I always need to know about injuries or conditions).  Injuries and medical conditions notwithstanding, I think it is fairly safe to say that one of the most common reasons for wrist pain is that most of us do not know how to use our hands, forearms, and upper body properly to generate a feeling of lift and to distribute weight evenly throughout the hand.

Try the following suggestions the next time you try the cat-cow pose combination). 

Mindful Placement
So much of yoga is about being mindful.  Whenever you place your hands on the ground, do so mindfully.  If you look at the back of your wrists and bend your wrist backwards you will see lots of little lines running from one side to the other.  These creases of your wrist should be parallel to the top of your yoga mat.  Your middle finger will end up pointing roughly straight ahead (not completely).  Spread your fingers apart comfortably and lengthen them into the floor.

With your hands correctly positioned, it is time to generate lift. 

Generating Lift
I can't think of a yoga pose offhand where you are not trying to generate lift.  This does not mean we are trying to fly or levitate as we practice--we are still firmly connected to the ground.  It simply means that we need to use our connection to the ground and align ourselves in such a way that we are not simply sinking downwards. 

To generate lift we need to be mindful (there's that word again) of the natural arches that exist throughout our body.  The arches all of us would be most familiar with are the arches of the feet (even if you are flat-footed you will be aware of the absence of a well defined arch) and, to a lesser extent, the arches in your spine.  What you might not be aware of is the fact that your hand has natural arches too.  

The arches in your hand are important.  Without them you would find it very difficult to do things with your hands.  If you turn your palm up to the sky, hold your hand loosely, and bring your wrist up to eye level you will see there are dips and mounds on the surface of your palm--it is not flat.  As you practice yoga, therefore, you do not want to practice "flat-handed".

To cultivate the arches through your hands as you practice, I like to envisage that I am trying to pick up the floor or a very large ball (say a basketball) with my hand.  The point about this is that to pick up the ball or the floor you would first need to spread the mounds of your knuckles wide.  You would need stretch your fingers long, and press down through your fingertips.  Then, once you have your "grip" you'd then need to lift up. Imagine your hand as a suction cup--stuck to the floor around the edges but sucking up through the centre.  There is no way you would ever be able to pick up the floor or a ball if you only pressed down through your wrists. 

This is not the whole story though.  When you generate lift like this, what you will notice is that the mounds of your fingers (below your knuckles) have a tendency to lift off the ground, as do the fingers themselves.  The next step is to engage through the mounds of your fingers.

The Mounds of the Fingers
When you cultivate the arches of your hand, the mounds of your fingers will undoubtedly lift off as will the fingers and you will find yourself connected only through the fingertips.  This is normal due to the structure of your hand. 

Once you have generated your lift then, you need to try to press the mounds of your fingers down into the floor without collapsing the arch structure entirely.  

Most people find that the base of their index finger is tough to keep down.  Be mindful (there I go again) of not letting it become a habit to let it float in mid-air.  To help keep the index finger mound down bring try to roll your wrist and hand from the outer corner of your wrist in a diagonal towards the mound of the index finger.  This action is coming from your forearm, just above your wrist, and you should see that your forearm rolls in (pronates) when you do this. 

This is good to practice because if you get into the habit of putting too much pressure on the outside edge of the hand and letting the mound of the index finger stay airborne you will find it difficult to do some of the more advanced postures (especially handstand).
Props and Modifications
There are other strategies to minimise pressure on the wrists.  These include:
  • making a fist in certain poses such as cat-cow and plank (I had to do this when I had my wrist injury),
  • being on your forearms instead of your wrists (such as forearm plank or forearm downward dog), 
  • making a little wedge or hill on your yoga mat to elevate the wrists slightly and send more weight down into the base of your knuckles and fingers (you could fold up a hand towel),
  • placing your wrists slightly in front of your shoulders rather than beneath your shoulders (which will change the angle of the joint and make the stretch less extreme)
  • practice 'Namaste' at your chest, pressing your hands together and keeping your wrists in contact as you draw your palms down towards your navel without letting the wrists come apart (to stretch across the palm side of your wrists if this is tight)
I am happy to explore these options with you in class if you are still experiencing wrist issues.  If you are not a one of my students then your own yoga teacher will surely be able to help!

Summary
You'll no doubt find using your hands and forearms correctly is hard work.  Spreading your weight evenly through your hands is tough and first when you are used to working that way, but, as with everything, with practice it will come.

A discussion about how you use your hands is not really complete without thinking about what is happening around your shoulder blades (scapulae), shoulders, and elbow joints but I will have to save that for another post.  Suffice it to say that no part of your body works in isolation and you will find that a lot of stress can be removed from your wrists if you are using the rest of your body correctly.

For now, happy and safe practicing!

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Kiss The Hunch Goodbye

In the spirit of trying to keep the Thursday sequence class relevant to your needs I am always open to suggestions.  I have had several requests for the new Thursday sequence that will start this week.  Well, to be honest I had two.  One was for core strengthening and the other was a request to help with posture, especially the upper back and shoulders.  So I have blended the two requests in order to help you "dump the hump" and kiss your hunch goodbye.

I think there is hardly a person out there who would not benefit from a bit of chest and shoulder opening, especially if you are at a desk or computer for large parts of the day.  Even if not at a desk, many of the activities of our daily lives involve leaning forward and reaching forward, all helping to cultivate a hunch.  I have noticied, from time to time, that even in yoga we can accidentally cultivate hunches if we are not mindful (e.g., when trying to reach the feet or the floor in a forward bend by reaching from your arms rather than from your pelvis).

Look forward to helping you stand tall for the next two months.  This class is open to all levels!


 

Saturday, January 28, 2012

How not to injure yourself practicing yoga

My family.  We've injured ourselves more times than we care to remember. This photo was taken after another of our little adventures.

I am really pleased some of my students thought to send me an article about yoga published in the New York Times recently (thanks Christina!).  I've copied the link here so you can read the article for yourself (always a good idea to go to the source).   If you can't find it then just google the title, "How Yoga Can Wreck Your Body".  The title gives you an idea of what the article is about!

The article uses an interview with an experienced yogi and some selective anecdotes about people who have been injured practicing yoga.  There are stories of strokes and arthritis and spinal stenosis and thoracic outlet syndrome and you could possibly walk away after reading this story feeling like a yoga classroom is some sort of casualty ward and wonder why I don't have a medical team on stand-by for you all! 

Of course you can injure yourself while practicing yoga, just like you can injure yourself doing a million other things in life.  I have injured myself doing yoga and am quite open about it in classes, hoping you might learn from my mistakes!  I think I have shared with many of you my famous story of me starting out doing yoga with an obsession to be able to do the splits (hanumanasana), which utltimately lead to a hamstring strain.  But have I told you about how I once fell off a rock climing wall and dissocsiated a bone in my wrist? What about how I fractured my hip running?  How I fell of a slippery dip when I was about ten years old when I tried to walk up it backwards and broke my arm.  What about when I walked into the dark garage bare-footed and stepped on a maddock (a very sharp garden implement if you've never seen one)?  When I was about three I once fell asleep on the toilet (my family has pictures to prove it).  I count myself lucky I did not fall in and drown.

I am not "proud" that I seem to have hurt myself so much, although it does seem to run in the family (my dad, for instance, has been pinned to a tree with a tractor, fell 3 metres out of a tree while trying to prune it, drilled a hole in his hand, broken his thumb when a weights machine he was using broke on him, tripped on a ladder while running at full speed trying to chase 'hoons' who were doing burnouts and generally terrorising his neighborhood.  Spiders have bitten him, snakes have attacked him, he's fought bush-fires, been in combat, and generally had a colourful life.  My sister has gotten away relatively unscathed, with just two broken arms--though she broke them at the same time when a very large 40 year old netballer pushed her out of the way to get to a ball when she was just 14.  She also almost drowned once trying to swim across a lake in a wetsuit that was too big and became water-logged and I would have to say the severity of these incidents outweighs the infrequency).  We like to think of ourselves as "active" and "involved".

Sometimes I have inflamed my old injuries practicing yoga.  But yoga didn't injure me.  I injured myself.  Usually because I was not being mindful.  Mindful to what was happening in my body from moment to moment.  Detecting the subtle changes and warning signs that could indicate I was about to do something wrong.  Either that or I was mindful and I let my ego take over.

Being alive is an inherently dangerous and, ultimately, deadly business indeed (we may not know the details all know how our life story ends).  We can hurt ourselves intentionally and unintentionally.  We can take all of the precautions we want and still end up getting hurt, both physically and emotionally.  Mindfulness is key to everything.

Having said that, here are a few things you should consider while you are practicing yoga to help prevent yourself from getting injured.  I think many of you have heard some of these things before.  I try to make a point of saying them whenever a new person joins the class and I don't think it can hurt to keep repeating them.  They don't just relate to yoga, but to trying not to injure yourself in life as well. 

Don't forget to breathe. 
This, to me, is probably the most important tool you can use to help mindfulness and, therefore, prevent injury (I associate these two things very closely).  Bringing awareness back to your breath helps to place you 'inside' your body and can help to attune you to the subtle (and not so subtle) changes that are going on. There is a dual awareness going on in yoga: the awareness of the breath that directs our attention inward, and the travelling awareness that moves throughout our bodies checking in to make sure everything is ok.

Focussing inward is important as we can often get distracted by what is going on 'out there'.  Sometimes we find ourselves checking out what other people are doing, checking out the hairs on our legs or looking at our fingers/toes wondering if we need a manicure/pedicure (yes, girls, I have seen it in class and I must confess I catch myself doing it too!).   Obviously you need some outward focus in class because you are trying to follow the teacher, but as we practice we are trying to direct most of our attention inward--noticing what the teacher is saying but always coming back to our own bodies and trying to figure out what that means for us.

If it doesn't feel good, it's not good (you don't have to do everything the teacher says)
This leads to another important point.  Sometimes what the teacher is saying or directing you to do is not going to feel good.  If it doesn't feel good, it's not good.  It is important to remember this.  You don't have to do what the teacher tells you to do (obviously, you need to take this statement with a measured intellect because your teacher will be giving you important safety information and tips and you need to listen to those).  You do not have to move into a pose that does not feel good.  Listen to your body.

Take the alternative poses--rest when you need to rest
Something important to remember is that when you come to a yoga class, there are always going to be many different people of different experience and abilitites in the class.  Your teacher will be trying to manage this and will always try to give different options--some easier than others.  You don't have to always take the hard option.  Why not take the easy option?  I like to point out in class that there is always the rest pose.  If you feel tired then take it. You do not have to keep up with everybody else (see point about ego below)!   

Back off the intensity (and find comfort in your pose)
If a pose does not feel good, then it's not good.  We've just established that.  So should you just come out of it completely?  Maybe, maybe not.  Sometimes you might need to come out of the pose completely.  But sometimes you can just reduce the intensity a little and you will find the pose feels much better.  I don't like to burden people with too many 'rules' about yoga.  But a good one to follow if you were into following such things would be to ask yourself  "do I feel comfortable and free?".  If the answer is no, then back off a little until you do.  Find a way to be so comfortable and free in your posture that you could stay there for a few minutes if I asked you to.  Just be careful not to back off so much that you fall asleep unless, of course, that is what you want to do (see my next point).

Learn the difference between a good stretch and a bad one
This is hard.  It is especially hard when you first come to yoga.  If you have not moved your body in a long time, everything can feel uncomfortable.  If you have not stretched your hamstrings before then they are certainly going to let you know when you come to class.  The rule about finding comfort in your pose is a good one.  But if you back off too much in some postures then you might end up being in relaxation the whole time!!  Of course, that is fine (sometimes I do nothing but relax in my own practice, listening to what my body feels it needs on a particular day), as long as that is what you are intending to do.  However, if you are hoping to develop more strength and flexibility this won't happen if you just relax all the time.  Your body  needs to be challenged.  It is about finding just the right amount of challenge.  You need to get intelligent about what your body needs and is feeling.  You need to feel some intensity, but intensity at a manageable level.  Be mindful that the intensity is in the muslces, however, and not the joints (see next point).

Avoid joint strain (free the joints and generate lift)
We are not trying to stretch our joints in class.  If anything is going to get stretched it is your muscles.  Be very clear on this.  You do not want to feel strain in your joints.  Particular areas you need to look out for are knees, wrists, shoulders, elbows, lower back, and neck.  Use your breath awareness to bring you back inside and continue to "check in" on your joints. If you feel any strain then back off (and find comfort in your pose).

I have observed (in myself and others) there is a tendency for people to either lock their joints (particularly knees or elbows) or otherwise to sink into them (particularly wrists, shoulders, lower back).  Your joints should be free to move as you practice (especially the elbows in cobra and upward/downward dog) and you should avoid sinking into them.  To avoid joint strain you need to free the joints and generate lift. 

Talk to me
If you are in a pose and you find you are in discomfort, tell me!  I like to know and I will try to find out why the pose does not feel good and help you to learn how to fix it!  Don't be shy.  It is your body.  You have to live in it and I'd like to help you do so.  

Another point, if you are finding some poses difficult or you don't understand them properly, feel free to ask questions.  Feel free to come up at the end of class.  Feel free to come a bit early to the next class and we can work on it for you.  If you can't do downward dog because it makes you feel sick or your shoulders are funny, talk to me, we'll figure something else out!  There is always another option.  I'd rather help you find that option so you can keep practicing yoga rather than stop altogether because you think there is no way around the issue.

Let go of your ego
Yoga mats are small and there is no room for your ego.  Yoga is not about being the best or beating other people.  It's not a competition (with yourself or anybody else).  Trying to do what other people are doing when you are not ready for it may lead to injury.  Remember you've come to yoga for yourself, not for anybody else and make sure you stay within your own limits.  It does not matter if you can do a particular pose or not.  If you never get to touch your feet on your head in a backbend or do the splits will your life really be the worse for it?

Don't forget to breathe (again)
I'll begin where I started, since it is so important.  Don't forget to breathe.  Focussing on your breath also has a calming effect on your mind, helping to abate anxiety and fear.  I constantly remind myself when I am coming into poses that invoke fear (for me this is pretty much all inversions) to come back to my breath. Fear can stop you reaching your full potential and make you avoid things that might be good for you.  If you practice with fear your body will usually stiffen and become rigid, often because you hold your breath.  Practicing yoga stiffly means you are more likely to injure yourself.  So, if fear arises, come back to the breath.  Make sure you are breathing and not holding your breath.  Also pay attention to whether your breath is becoming too rapid or shallow.  If your breath is getting out of control then you are probably too deep in a pose so back off a bit until your breath relaxes (note that some poses will cause your breath to become shallow and more rapid but you should still feel like you have control of it.  If you don't, back off). 

The end
Sometimes accidents do happen.  Sometimes we are in the wrong place at the wrong time.  It can get us hurt or even killed, no matter how mindful we are.  But injuring yourself, whether it be while you are practicing yoga or doing many of the other activities you might love, can be prevented.  Practice mindfulness, let go of your ego, find comfort in your pose, talk to me, and don't forget to breathe!

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Holiday At the Yoga Cafe

I am on holiday (hopefully creating some great blogs though) from 17 December to 1 January 2012.  Last yoga class is Thursday 16 December and first class is Monday 2 January.  Wishing you all a merry christmas and happy new year!