tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-73028268806699359082024-03-15T18:10:01.463-07:00Ashtanga Yoga Ki Jai! with David GarriguesDavid Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.comBlogger62125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-38658702996956847772012-09-04T16:02:00.000-07:002012-09-04T16:04:22.044-07:00Everywhere looking only God seeing<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Greetings!
If you would like to read this on my current blog <a href="http://www.davidgarrigues.com/blog.html">click here</a>.
Next weekend I begin my fall workshop season. To find dates and locations please visit <a href="http://www.davidgarrigues.com/schedule.html">my website</a>. Hari Om, David
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At the root of the practice of Isvara Pranidhana, devotion to the lord, is to see what Gregory Bateson called ‘the pattern that connects’, and that is to see the fundamental interrelationship of everything in existence, unerringly simple yet seemingly vexingly complex.<br />
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To practice Isvara pranidhana is to endeavor to live your life from the perspective that everything under the sun shares a benevolent, invisible, cohesive, inescapable connection with everything else. This fundamental sacred connection is what gives integrity to existence, and is what each of us must tap in order to find peace and outgrow the terrifying, lonely, illusory divisions caused by fear and ego. Each of us must find our own way to live from this source if we are to leave behind the aberrant behaviors that are the source of the dangerous imbalances that we continue to create in our world. Part of the healing and restoring of balance is in training your mind onto the awareness that all the ingredients that go into making the ‘stuff’ of the universe are merely Self manifesting as variety. Everything that surrounds you earth, sky, mountains, ocean waves, and everything within you, your bones, organs, and psyche made up of thoughts, yearnings, feelings, fantasies, and projections is part of the large I. You exist as an individual person only in the way that you are an individual cell among billions of other cells that form the body of the Cosmic Person, and thus you are inseparable from this Self.<br />
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To experience the spiritual dimension of existence you must look around and see only Self, this calls to mind Sri K Pattabhi Jois’s definition of drsti: ‘everywhere looking only God seeing’. Look anywhere in the cosmos, to the farthest extent in any inward or outward direction, at friend or enemy, feel the antagonist pull of the greatest opposing forces, use your imagination, or apply the most penetrating, concentrated awareness, you will arrive at your origin, you’ll see the grand pattern that connects your essential place in it. And if this knowledge penetrates your being deeply enough, you will feel radically compelled to care for everyone and everything in existence in the ways that you now reserve exclusively for yourself and a small circle of others.<br />
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Isvara pranidhana is nothing more or less than the practice of devoting your self to experiencing the Self in everything. Taking up such a serious practice will cause you to grow, to see the traps of your ego, to live your own life less selfishly, to become more devoted to peace, to have more concern for the people, animals, and things around you and to have more compassion for all suffering.
This calls to mind the life and teachings of Peace Pilgrim a woman who became a living saint through her vow to continually walk the earth until there was world peace. Her vow kept her walking for decades with nothing more than the clothes on her back and her message of simplicity and peace through surrender and devotion. Her travel mat was her consciousness and her yoga was her voice that she used to call for peace. And you may ask your self how would I start from where I am and end up as spiritually pointed and alive as Peace Pilgrim?
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The answer for most of us is that we can do it in baby steps with patience and persistence. One such baby step is to use isvara pranidhana to come to know and follow your own individual calling. To identify and follow the ‘signs’ that come to you, to learn to trust that there is the potential for a greater significance in what happens to you, especially things that you don’t voluntarily choose. Towards the end of his life and his long time study of consciousness Carl Jung defined God as: “….. the name by which I designate all things which cross my path violently and recklessly, all things which alter my plans and intentions, and change the course of my life, for better or for worse.”<br />
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Part of surrendering to the Lord is to trust in the directions that are thrust upon you by life, by forces that are beyond your control. Opportunities to let go and follow such signs are abundant, part of your job as you are faced with them is to grow rich in self reflection, to look for ways to allow what happens to you to continue to lead you meaningfully in the direction that you are being led from within and that you know you must travel.<br />
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Another baby step to isvara pranidhana is in fearlessly examining your thoughts as a way of ceasing to identify with the unworthy contents of your mind, a major subject of the yoga sutra’s. In the yoga sutra’s the instruction on Isvara Pranidhana appears in a section of sutra’s about how to arrest the mind, overcome ignorance, and realize your spiritual truth by means of ‘citta vrtti nirodha’, causing thought (vrtti’s) to cease.
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Contemplating devotion to god within the context of stopping thought gives you practical and tangible teachings that you can immediately put into practice. Stopping thought involves a patient, persistent screening of thought, an ongoing qualitative assessment of what passes through your mind, and an endeavor to discard and withdraw your energy from thoughts that don’t serve you in developing a mature relationship to your inner life. Your devotion to Self can grow out of such efforts to stop thought and help you in concentrating your mind on what matters to you.<br />
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Abhyasa (practice) is defined as the effort to remain ‘there’. ‘There’ refers to the state of experiencing the pattern that connects, seeing Self everywhere. To cause thought to cease is to sort, discard and refine your inner psychic contents to such a degree that you cease to pay attention to and give energy to ‘junk’ thoughts. Peace Pilgrim said ‘I don’t eat junk food and I don’t think junk thoughts’. She did pay attention to the thoughts within her that enabled her to have a effective voice about world’s acute need for inner and outer peace and her life became a vivid example of how to accomplish ‘citta vrtti nirodha’ through isvara pranidhana, and also an example of how to center yourself in what is truly important to you.<br />
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When you choose to practice Isvara Pranidhana, you will leap forward in your understanding of what yoga is and how to make best use of its teachings in your life. Sometimes your efforts may seem small, clouded, or difficult to sustain. You may not be able to define precisely what either devotion or God mean to you or how to centralize them in your life. But any effort that you make to become devoted to the self within you will be rewarded, any surrender to what is beyond your little ego world, will remind you that Self is literally everywhere and it is entirely natural for you to express your share of the sacred. The little seed of isvara pranidhana that you plant in your consciousness will eventually sprout and grow into a powerful force within you, leading to action that will yield its transformation, its benevolent, world changing fruits.<br />
_________________________________________________________________________________ If you would like to learn more about Peace Pilgrim here is an excellent video clip.<br />
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David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com33tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-11825646834684924722012-06-26T21:17:00.000-07:002012-06-26T21:18:06.368-07:00The Yogi’s Map of Imagery or “Help me. I still don’t understand Mula Bandha.”Greetings,
I am back home in Philadelphia for the summer and am thoroughly enjoying eating consistent home cooked meals ala Chef DG, going to the farmer’s markets after the Sunday Mysore class, and finishing my soon to be released book and dvd on Ujjayi breathing and the Ashtanga pranayama sequence. Joy and I haven’t decided the title of either the book or the dvd but I will be sure to let you know when it is finalized.
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Today’s blog post might appear super advanced but imagery is an important step in the yogi’s journey and I have seen several students advance their asana practice drastically once they start incorporating Yogic imagery into their asana work. A yogic image can make the difference between utilizing the power of mula bandha or (in other words) being able to jump back or not. For a less advanced practitioner I highly encourage you to start understanding the Yogic language of imagery and for an advanced practitioner beginning to incorporate imagery into your practice will help refine and open up a whole new world of Yoga you never knew existed.
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<h1><center> Yoga’s Map of Imagery</center></h1>
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There are multiple internal maps that are intended to take you into asana practice, to orient you physically, inwardly in specific ways.At first the maps may appear to be overly elaborate or complex, however if you take the trouble to focus your mind where they lead to, you will soon find that becoming fluent in their unusual language, gives you an undreamed of ability to tune in, concentrate, and become absorbed in. The maps are necessary because we often don’t know well enough how to inhabit our bodies with a deep true enough centered, presence to connect to and create within our spiritual core.
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The system of maps devised by and utilized by Yogi’s appears complex and heady, something that takes a lot of brain work to wrap your head around, something not intuitive. In fact when you first work with these concepts there is often so much analytical thinking required that people get overloaded and throw up their arms and say “to hell with it, I like to flow”. However the left brain, cerebral part of working with the maps of consciousness is only a phase, like learning a language.
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<b>**One of the most important maps is visualization or imagery.** So that rather than being physical first, you approach practice from a place of imagery or visualization.</b> <br/><br/>
This is one of the most fascinating aspects to the work. You work with your mind, your imagination as a way of accessing your physical body. Often the conscious attempt to make your muscles ‘do’ the actions will cause you to apply too much effort, cause you to adopt forced or unnatural mannerisms based on your habituated bodily misperceptions about what good form is supposed to look like.
When working with Yoga images, you invite the body to organize itself according to new pictures, the images you are consciously embodying. There is something full, round and organic in this process, an emerging from within, an awareness, a trust that allows the body to find it’s grounded, spacious center using ancient, esoteric technology of how to become a tuner, a harnesser and transmitter of Shakti, power.
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<b>Mula Bandha Imagery</b>
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I have four different images you can work with in order to access Mula Bandha. The first two are classic yogic images that can be found in the classic texts of the Shiva Samhita, Hatha Yoga Pradipika, and the other two are modern images that can also help you.
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1) The pelvic floor carries the image of a flower known as muladhara the root support. To glimpse muladhara imagine the four corners of the pelvic floor as petals of a red lotus flower. The number four conveys completeness, a strong foundation, while the lotus conveys a deep rootedness and an upward reaching trajectory. The color red helps infuse the lotus with vitality, increases it’s ability to support you at the root and helps you to become more dynamic within the immovability of your pranayama position.
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2) Within the 4 cornered red petals of the muladhara Chakra is an upside down triangle. Within this triangle is a smoky ‘lingum’ and it is here that Kundalini in the form of a coiled serpent is wrapped 3 1/2 times around the lingum. She sleeps here with her tail in her mouth until the redirection of prana and apana vayu’s creates enough sealed in heat within the torso to awaken her. The triangle then turns and points upwards and she then uncoils her self, enters Shushumna Nadi, the glorious central axis and rides flowingly upwards to meet Shiva, the auspicious, in Sahasra, the thousand petalled lotus at the crown.
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3) The pelvic floor is the source of a powerful geyser, imagine that your powerful life energy wells up from a deep source within the pelvic basin. Then this geyser of prana bubbles and shoots upwards from your base, up the core of spine and then flows outwards horizontally along either collarbone to the sides.
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4) The pelvic floor is a magic carpet that ‘floats’ your pelvis atop the femur heads and gives your pelvic base a light, buoyant feeling. Your whole body feels supported by the effortless elevation of the magic carpet at your root.David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com23tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-33508046287431895702012-03-03T19:40:00.003-08:002012-03-03T19:45:29.785-08:00Ashtanga's Dynamic DimensionGreetings from Kovalam,<br />The Mysore Intensive is coming to an end and its been an amazing month of learning and teaching. Joy and I are headed back to Philadelphia in 5 days. We will be there for only a couple of weeks and then we will be off to my annual <a href="http://breitenbush.com/events/mar15-18gar.html">Mysore Intensive retreat at Breitenbush Hot Springs</a> in Oregon. So within only two weeks we will be seeing the sun over the Indian Ocean and the moon in the Oregon forest!<br /><br />I haven't posted in a few weeks because I have been crafting this very important blog post on Ashtanga and Dynamism. Joy has been working her magic on the Dynamic Transition music video that accompanies the written piece. A lot of love has gone into this post and I encourage you to make an intense art out of studying dynamism because it will forever change your practice. <br /><br />Hari Om,<br />David <br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgra5I9Olg0T8eEuesODw6k9y4wShtCJrrt2YuEhx-hNLrjaMHmm4alYTerzMO2WZxLZ49R7uHqaNkQ5IP7yt0M7FQpC88_BdGTO5vayxVvw2yYy_ytxFf9vTlhPxNilxFX4c4Qqz2Pj04/s1600/imgres.jpeg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 205px; height: 246px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgra5I9Olg0T8eEuesODw6k9y4wShtCJrrt2YuEhx-hNLrjaMHmm4alYTerzMO2WZxLZ49R7uHqaNkQ5IP7yt0M7FQpC88_BdGTO5vayxVvw2yYy_ytxFf9vTlhPxNilxFX4c4Qqz2Pj04/s400/imgres.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5715882363759333218" /></a><br /><br /><br />Dynamic is a word that aptly describes the personality and teaching of my late teacher Sri K Pattabhi Jois (Guruji). And what I learned about the connection between vinyasa and dynamism from him has been a major source of my love for the Ashtanga yoga method. In 94' when I began studying with Guruji at his old shala in Mysore, I used to stay after class just to watch him teach. He would work in many different ways to help each person better tap into the inherent dynamism that is found in every aspect of the practice. Here's a little story about Guruji on this subject. <br /> <br />One day it happened that there were several of us students hanging around in the front room of Guruji's old house hoping for some of Amma's delicious coffee. The atmosphere was rather loose at that time, there was no official conference, no distinct timing or plan, no official teaching from him. We'd just mosey over there towards sunset and see what was up. Sometimes questions about the practice would be introduced and if Guruji were in the right frame of mind, he'd answer. So the topic whether some people were teaching the method correctly or not came up, something that had to do with the speed of the practice. <br /> <br />During the discussion there was an interval of cross talk and commotion, and during this time Guruji looked at me, and for a moment it was as if it was only he and I in the room. He let me know that the method was to be done swiftly, that tempo, rhythm, and dynamism were essential to learning the practice properly. He said 'quickly you do, that is the method'. Without too many words he let me know that he was was trusting me to understand what he was telling me and that I was somehow responsible for remembering and sharing this aspect of the practice. <br /> <br />To me he was not saying that the practice is to be done in haste, unthinkingly fast, or in any sort of hurried fashion. Instead he was saying that the proper method is done by practicing dynamically, by moving into and out of the asanas in complete gestures born of free breathing, animal surety, confidence and energetic enthusiasm. <br /> <br />Learning from Guruji, observing his teaching, and hearing the repetition in his instructions was a true gift and his broken english, staccato commands still guide me in my practice daily. His limited use of english was perhaps extra eloquent in conveying the distinct nuances that he wanted to impart to you at any given time. Again and again he repeated: "yes you do!', 'No problem you go.', 'no fearing you go', 'why stopping?', 'Why waiting?', 'Hey bad man quickly you do!' 'yes you take it!', 'Why fearing?' 'Free breathing you do' or simply a gruff, guttural 'Breathe!'. <br /> <br />Through his instructions he often made sure you felt a sense of time pressure and urgency as you practiced. His tone could be stern, intimidating, and even dominating to the point of leaving you feeling that there was almost no escape from at least trying to do what he wanted you to do. He purposely created this tension so you would find new postural and movement patterns. By following his commands you bypassed habits born of inhibited breath, hesitation, lethargy and doubt so that you could start really breathing, you could do new things in new ways. He commanded you to become more brave, vigorous and focused; his words would send electricity, and a thrill of fear through you that would wake up your entire body with readiness and anticipation. <br /> <br />At times in a distinct reversal he would speak the same commands but with a different tone, with encouragement, humor, play and support. And thus he would continually play the line between pushing you and accepting you. He taught you to relax, accept your self, to champion your own style, to be patient and to let things come to you. In fact perhaps the most frequent commands I heard him give were: 'very good!',, 'Today is better!', 'Better!', 'Why crying?', 'Don't worry, after it's coming', 'no problem, it's coming', and the very special 'Very correct!' <br /> <br />The closing ritual of touching his feet and saying goodbye to him each day often included him giving you an extra lift, a boost of encouragement so that you finished on a high note. It made all the difference to feel his generous, weighty support when you felt exhausted, like a failure or incompetent. He would say something to disarm you, something poking fun at you, humorous, or distracting, to help you drop your inner battle for the time being and thus be more ready to take it up again in the morning. <br /> <br />The vinyasa knowledge that is developed in carefully studying the transitions is essential in understanding how to refine your awareness, how to see the practice as chiefly dhyana, as meditation. To this end experienced students and teachers within the lineage learn to list, from memory, the number of vinyasa positions in each asana. This memorization becomes more interesting and useful when you combine it with an ongoing investigation into the role of dynamism in the movements. <br /> <br />I'm saying that knowing what constitutes proper vinyasa extends beyond memorizing the number of positions of the asana; you are also meant to know the vinyasa positions dynamically within your body. There is a great art to understanding the subtle progressions of movement that bring you into and out of each asana, exploring this refinement is what brings you into readiness, poise, beauty and alignment in your postures. <br /> <br />Through the dynamic study of vinyasa you experience important energetic awakenings along the vertical axis known as shushumna, the most glorious channel. Using dynamism to find your vertical core helps you direct your mind inwardly showing the universal forms of the asanas, the underlying patterning that each asana shares no matter how different its external appearance may look. In this way dynamism leads you further into immovability and stillness, helps you accurately observe your fluctuating mental states. You learn to better see the context of your perceptions, and to enjoy a wider, expanded view that encompasses the greater wellspring of consciousness. <br /> <br />Following vinyasa positioning in its increasingly more subtle and dynamic aspects will also lead you back to the intimate connection between movement and breath. Practice becomes focused on moving through the sequences by tracing these two allies back to their common root source and this knowledge helps you to shape your postures with the presence and sense of adventure of an animal and at the same time with buddhi, (intelligence) and ananda, (bliss). By his buoyant and tangible enthusiasm Guruji showed you that yoga is found when you make it a long term daily endeavor to truly inhabit your body. This enthusiasm is the true source of dynamic awareness and alignment, and is what enables you to continue to renew the thrill and the fun of practice each day. <br /><br />And it all starts with "...Samastihiti!"<br /><br /><br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/37558549?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="500" height="281" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-5645203642106630592012-02-06T16:29:00.000-08:002012-02-06T16:33:09.864-08:00Turn out or lift the heels in drop backs? Feeling sore, should I take a day off? My doctor says I should stop practicing Ashtanga?--Ask a questionStudents often write me with specific questions concerning their practice. Here are a few of the answers I have given the past couple of months. Enjoy!<br /><br /><br />1) Hi David,<br /><br />I have been attempting to come up from drop back by pushing into my arms and using momentum to rock up to standing. I am able to rock up about 50% of the time. My heals tend to come up most of the time. I noticed in the PT3 video your student's heel also comes up but in the other video's the students heels don't come up but sometimes the toes go out like in 2nd position in ballet. What is the correct position?<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Hi ____,<br />The correct position for coming up is variable, it can be different for different people. Generally I prefer lifting the heels to turning the feet out. Or another good option is to use a little combination of heel lift and turn out. I do caution people not to turn out too much, because it can compromise the joints, especially knees. Also lifting the heels can be felt more like transferring the weight forward into the mounds of the toes. It is best to minimumize both lifting the heels and turning the feet out. Rather try to track the hips, knees, feet as straight as possible, but this can be very challenging! Hope this helps. Thanks for writing!! David </span><br /><br /><br /><br />2)Hello David,<br /><br />Thank you so much for your videos. I think they are great. Now I'm new to yoga (a month or so) and I want to practice every day but i feel so sore sometime i cant even do the asanas right. Any advice? I appreciate any help and thank you in advance.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Hi _____, thanks for your message. That's great you've taken to yoga. It's natural you're feeling so sore because it's all so new. Practice as often as you can, but don't be too hard on your body or your self. You can do a smaller practice on those days when you feel you can't do the asana's right. But it is good to try to do a little bit each day, it's only if you get really, really sore and tired that you should take an extra day off when you need it. Best Wishes, David</span><br /><br /><br /><br />3)Hi David,<br /><br />I've been practicing Ashtanga yoga since October last year during a vacation in Bali from Prem & Radha. And I've been following your blog since then.<br /><br />Since learning the primary series, I practiced every day at home.<br />Unfortunately I live in a place where there is no authorized/certified teacher. After a medical check up, I was diagnosed with mild scoliosis to the right. Another doctor also found I have a carpal tunnel syndrome (right wrist).<br /><br />I told the doctor my sole fitness regime: Ashtanga 6 days a week. <br />She told me to quit Ashtanga as it seems it gives lots of pressure to my wrist. And the inversions, will only make my scoliosis worse. <br /><br />I stopped practicing this week and substituted it with swimming every day just like the doctor told me. And I feel terrible. I miss my practice. Is there any way to keep doing my practice with carpal tunnel syndrome & scoliosis?<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Hi _____, thank you for sharing your challenges with me. <br />First I will say yes most definitely you can continue to practice with scoliosis and carpal tunnel syndrome, but there are some extra challenges involved. You most likely will need to modify things and having a teacher can be a big help with this. Concerning your wrist (or wrists), the pain can tend to be episodic or more cyclical. Sometimes the pain may flair up more than others. In that case you have to be sensitive and aware and have a good plan for when you have pain. For instance you can take the pressure off your wrists when you do surya namaskara by: 1) not bending your elbows in catauranga dandasana, and instead go from plank to your next position. Or 2) you can make a fist out of each hand and do the catauranga on your knuckles. Or 3) you can buy a set of those wrist protecting props made by hugger mugger that accomplish the same fist idea but in a little fancier way. And 4) you can simply minimize or not do the postures that involve weight bearing on your wrists. For example you can go through both surya namaskara a and b using the wall without putting weight on your wrists. 5) you can do less surya namaskara and spend more time on the standing postures and other postures that don't involve weight bearing on the hands/wrists. When you get to the seated postures you can modify, reduce or eliminate the jump back/jump through vinyasa. These are just some of the possibilities, please know that there is always a way to modify the practice to suit specific problems or other extra requirements. <br /><br />The essential ingredient is a love of ashtanga and in maintaining a steady devotion and trying to do the practice as accurately as your given circumstances allow. Inversions don't necessarily have to contribute to your scoliosis, but I would advise you to eliminate them until you are able to receive instruction from a highly qualified teacher. There are many aspects of the practice besides inversions to develop and enjoy at this time. Hopefully sometime sooner than later you'll be in position to get some hands on help with the challenges you are facing. But in the meantime you can try experimenting with the suggestions I've made and let me know how it's going. <br /><br />One last small note is that there will always be someone to tell you that you can't do ........... the list of possible things or activities or dreams is endless and so is the list of people who will tell you can't do that something. Sometimes they may be right but equally sometimes they are wrong. And ultimately you have to decide how important something is to you. And when you've decided on that something that is important enough to you, you may need to guard and protect the heck of it in order to for it to remain a strong, positive force in your life. As people we can tend to be suspicious of what we don't know about, and if on the surface something looks strange or exotic or very different from what we know or are used to, we can tend to form negative impressions of that thing. But our own fear and unwillingness to be open to new or different things can us cause to make wrong assessments of things and to unfairly judge what we don't have enough information to be judging. I believe it would be a true waste for you to stop developing the ashtanga yoga practice that you have begun and love. If you practice properly there is a strong chance that ashtanga can help correct or at least minimize the negative effects of both of your problems better than any thing else that you will try. I have found that ashtanga applied properly, has huge potential for transformation and healing. Om! David </span>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-81632538006081438142012-01-31T22:33:00.000-08:002012-01-31T22:34:57.184-08:00Ashtanga Discussion Room: Guruji said, "Medium breath!"Greetings,<br />Joy and I have landed in Kovalam and are enjoying our house nestled up in the jungle (there is a quarry near our house where I go swimming each evening!) It is now less than a week before the Mysore Intensive begins. I have been using the days off of to help Joy on her upcoming film, resting, practicing, and of course writing and talking about Yoga. <br /><br />Last week Joy asked me the question about the difference between receptivity and effort in the practice? (This turned into the second video posted below.) However, the next morning while we were on a walk she asked me about how the role of breath plays into receptivity (first video posted)...so the discussion continued! <br /><br />I decided to post both videos. If you only have time to watch one then I recommend the first video posted but if you want more information and to go deeper into the conversation then I recommend you watch both. <br />I hope you get some useful info out of these videos. Over the past 20 years of teaching I have realized that receptivity is one of the hardest aspects of the practice to teach but once a student understands and starts to truly work with the idea through their breath the students practice will completely change.<br />Hari Om,<br />David<br /><br /><br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/35546948?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="400" height="181" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe><br /><br /> <strong>Notes on the concept of receptivity (it could also be thought of as simply receiving). </strong><br /><br /> The deepest person within each of us knows the larger, more comprehensive nature of things beyond the limited appearance of things that the ego and senses apprehend. Learning to identify ourselves with this greater perspective is the subject of receptivity. When we use our ego and senses to become aware in an inward direction, we will find that there is a sort of knowing that has its own direction, its own intelligence, its own necessity to fulfill something through us. And so in a practical, on-the-mat way, receptivity is the sustained effort to give up control enough to receive the wisdom that lies within our inmost core. And then to follow the direction of this wisdom with as much trust as we put in our ego and our ideas and feelings of how we control or shape our lives through our choices. <br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/35564314?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="400" height="181" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-18386364123580071062012-01-14T07:56:00.000-08:002012-01-14T07:58:29.850-08:00Set up to the JUMP BACK or Can a woman jump back?Joy and I have been extremely busy the past five weeks with workshops and traveling. We have finally settled down in Kovalam where I am preparing for the month long Mysore Intensive and working hard on some short Asana Kitchen videos! You can expect my bimonthly blog posts to start in motion again.<br /><br /> <br /><br />Hari Om,<br /><br />David<br /><br />P.S If you are near Kovalam and want to make your way for some Mysore classes and some beach time there is availability! More info on my website.<br /><br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/34933450?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="450" height="231" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-10141323485526417392011-12-09T14:15:00.000-08:002011-12-09T14:21:23.932-08:00Asana Kitchen: PasasanaThis will be my second to last blog post in the year 2011! In the month of December I will be traveling to Spokane for a workshop, holding a one day workshop on backbending in Philly, beginning the year with my Second Series workshop at A.Y.S, and then off to Tel Aviv, Mysore and Kovalam to start 2012 off with a bang.<br />I've had many students write in regarding Pasasana and since its the first posture of the second series I thought it would be fun to leave 2011 with an Asana Kitchen post on the ever challenging pose that wields Ganesha's noose. Please read the summary of notes and then scroll down for the video.<br /><br />Hari om,<br />David<br /><br />Summary Notes On Pasasana (The Noose Posture)<br /><br />1)Establish a Grounded, Immoveable Foundation<br /><br />Balancing in a full squatting position is one of the most important and challenging aspects to this posture. The feet are your foundation, they are directly in contact with the earth. Organize your posture directly over this foundation noticing when/if you are either too far behind or in front of your foundation. Start by planting the feet while feeling the support of the arches. Squat all the way down. Close the knee joints entirely. Lower the hips, touch buttocks to the backs of the lower legs. Orient your squat directly over your feet. If you have any difficulty squatting you will feel unstable when you squat as though the hips are too heavy, that they drag you down and back. You may want to lift up the heels. But instead elevate your heels with just enough height to truly balance on the feet as you feel your hips, torso and head align more clearly over this foundation. When you feel stable, centered and immoveable in your squat, then you are ready for the next step.<br /><br />2) Remember the Twist<br />As you develop and refine how you work in the posture remember to return your orientation to the twist along the central axis. Study the rotation of the torso in order to study the middle channel. Remember that part of creating a satisfying twist is in becoming receptive, especially within the torso and spinal area. And so position yourself to receive the action of turning the spine, and endeavor to rotate your spine more evenly from base to crown. Notice the inner refinement that can take place along shushumna, the middle pranic axis.<br /><br />3) Position of the feet/knees<br /><br />To make the posture easier place one foot or knee slightly forward of the other. If you are twisting to the left you can facilitate the twist to the left by moving the right foot and/or knee forward of the left. This also brings the right hip forward of the left hip and thus makes twisting to the left easier. For some of you this will serve to clarify the central axis, and give you more freedom in a certain direction to twist, and will help establish a more stable, grounded foundation. Your posture and twist will not be served If you are too strict and insist on keeping the feet/knees together or the heels down.<br />But for others keeping the feet and knees more together will help you to hone in on the vertical axis and improve the feeling of the rotation. In each case you want to continue to refine your sense of the breath, cultivate an awareness of the actions and the resulting counter actions along the glorious axis set in motion by the breath, and observe how that awareness leads to intelligence in your asana's.<br /><br />4) The Energetic Chain of The Noose<br /><br />At one point in the video, using Rob as the model, I trace what I call an 'energetic chain' formed by the upper back, shoulders, arms and connected hands (the parts of the body that form the 'noose' that give the posture its name) Rob was twisting to the right and I used my hands to trace the energetic chain in a counter clockwise direction. But what I didn't mention was that the direction of the chain that I indicated in the video was actually the more subtle counter loop. If you are twisting to the right, first try experiencing a clockwise direction to the energetic chain formed by the loop of the upper torso, arms, and hands. And afterwards experiment with a counter clockwise direction to the loop.<br /><br />Enjoy!<br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/32745135" width="400" height="225" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe><br /><br />I have also included an extra clip that didn't end up in the final video on How to work on lengthening your achilles tendon.<br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/32755947" width="400" height="225" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com76tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-10498246891483316762011-10-26T10:59:00.000-07:002011-10-26T11:00:56.677-07:00Asana Kitchen: BakasanaIf there is one idea that you take from this week's blog it is this:<br /><br /> <br /><h1>B*A*K*A*S*A*N*A</h1><br /><h1> A*W*A*R*E*N*E*S*S</h1><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/30841522" frameborder="0" width="440" height="248"></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-50325191960249912362011-10-09T15:00:00.000-07:002011-10-09T15:06:49.230-07:00From David's Ashtanga Journals: Perfect that Single Sacred Asana"From David's Ashtanga Journals" are unedited excerpts from my ongoing Ashtanga journals.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgTyn4WimEFUPpJLmaY0_iIAYmuj93jpOY0xK6tWMwWxt4uYWcoIOfFnzuOhXVCWRupI2tTQmhS7pS6oiih9rnzN03tkY-mOJ5gEaqse0OH-aX3D-su86J56XQDkegoy0zSAkMzDO4LdqE/s1600/336996_10150301582848797_174683048796_8028248_590691328_o.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 224px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgTyn4WimEFUPpJLmaY0_iIAYmuj93jpOY0xK6tWMwWxt4uYWcoIOfFnzuOhXVCWRupI2tTQmhS7pS6oiih9rnzN03tkY-mOJ5gEaqse0OH-aX3D-su86J56XQDkegoy0zSAkMzDO4LdqE/s400/336996_10150301582848797_174683048796_8028248_590691328_o.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5661616794510458290" /></a><br /><br /><br />Greetings,<br />Fall is in swing here in Philly. At the <strong>A</strong>shtanga <strong>Y</strong>oga <strong>S</strong>chool of Philadelphia the heaters are on high as the tapas burns. I would like to thank <a href="http://www.dhyana-yoga.com">Dhyana Yoga</a> (Dhyana Vitarelli and John Vitarelli) who have been supporting our school in many ways! Several students from their strong rooted Philadelphia Vinyasa program have taken up ashtanga and I am so happy they are part of our community!!<br /><br />In the next couple weeks I will begin solidifying my spring schedule and am excited to announce that I will be teaching further south (<a href="http://www.ashtangayoga.info/yoga-world/yoga-teacher-and-classes/item/marsha-mcneight-jennifer-smith-atlanta-balance/">at Balance Yoga in Atlanta</a>) and north (<a href="http://www.florenceyoga.com/index.html">at Florence yoga in Northampton</a>) ! My teaching is reaching a wider circle of people partly due to you all who enjoy my blog, thank you for continuing to show your support and spreading the DG word! Hopefully this year I will get the opportunity to meet new people and share yoga with many of you.<br /><br />Now to the goods!<br /><br />Below are two excerpts from my journals. They were both drawn out of a notebook I used last winter in Mysore. Enjoy!<br /><br /><strong>Excerpt One</strong><br /><h1>Perfect that Single Asana!</h1><br /><p>The theme or premise is that asana practice is based on a single asana created by breath. That posture could have several names including</p><br /><br /><p>Shavasana, Sarvangasana,</p><br /><p>Hanumanasana, Samasthiti</p><br /><p>Tadasana, Bhairavasana</p><br /><p>Mula Bandhasana</p><br /><br /><p>Generally speaking in our daily practice we can get sucked in by the lure of our fantasy about the forms of the asanas in sequences. Each asana in the sequence could be thought of as an excursion towards and/or away from that one single asana that is the essence of all asana. In our fantasy of what we will look like and how good it will feel we overextend ourselves in our efforts to achieve what we consider to be the end goal or final pose. Our excursions take us too far away from the center where the skeletal support is, where our breath really does lead the way-- where we make optimal use of our muscles and organs and where our brains are situated properly to minimize reality obscuring ego striving.</p><br /><br /><p>For example, to go for a drop back and be unheeding of the position of the skeleton in order to get your hands to the floor is a long term mistake. In the short term there might be a thrill, a sense of accomplishment and a sense of <span style="text-decoration: underline;">maximizing progress</span>. a feeling like you are working at the edge so you will improve and be an intense student--- (like yoga sutra 1-21 for the intense student--- yoga--nirodah is near). How strict are you going to be? How close to center are you going to stay? How many props (please note: only if necessary and desired and under certain, specific conditions) are you willing to use to remain close to center, close to principles?---We want to explore the foundational principles of the positions and see how those principles will always lead back to that central asana that has so many important names---but actually is unnameable---</p><br /><br /><p>--- this is precisely why asana is limb 3 and Samadhi is limb 8--- samadhi is more based around the center, where movement is subtle and stillness reigns---</p><br /><br /> <p> you have to be sure you are not sacrificing your body to your ego. That you are not going too far in order to compensate for unconscious feelings of unworthiness--- you don't need to use your asana practice to 'prove' you are good and worthy. </p><br /><br /><p>and yet don't underestimate the amount of shakti, energy, both physical and mental, that it takes to strike a pose and remain utterly centered in dynamic absorption.</p><br /><br /><p>It is ironic that the more gymnastic posture appears to be more difficult---But from an energetic and emotional place, sitting, working with breathing, can be more challenging, require more energy--- because of what will be revealed about you, because of what you will experience about yourself.</p><br /><br /><strong>Excerpt Two</strong><br /><h1>The World is a Sacrament</h1><br />Never mind that to many people it is blasphemy. The truth is that you don't need to be inside a church or in some official place to worship God. In fact, I've found that for me being outside, under the sky, feeling the air, seeing the sun, or the sea, or the mountains puts me in touch with God. I've taken to saluting the sun, facing the sun and moving through a set of exercises. I coordinate my movement with breath and I become prayerful. Filled with joyous connection and know a sense of deep peace and belonging. To me the entire world is a sacrament--- everything and everyone everywhere is sacred--- and its up to me to attune to this ever present beauty wherever I may be.David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-62341890727735720212011-09-23T08:44:00.001-07:002011-09-23T08:44:57.536-07:00Ashtanga and Diet (pts 2 and 3)Greetings and welcome back!<br /><br />Here are parts 2 and 3 of my series on Ashtanga and Diet. If you haven't watched part 1, I strongly suggest you watch it. I have included it in this post for your convenience. I am so pleased to see such a strong and enthusiastic reaction to these diet posts. I have seen amazing progress in students practices once they alter their diet. Even the slightest changes can result in less injury, faster recovery and FULL STRENGTH! I have also added some great diet books on my reading list page of this blog. <br />Joy and I have bought our tickets for Mysore in January and my one month Mysore intensive in Kovalam! We are looking forward to meeting some new faces and having lunch with some old friends. <br /><br />Hari Om and enjoy!! <br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/29201178" width="440" height="248" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen></iframe><br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/29348863?byline=0&portrait=0" width="440" height="248" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen></iframe><br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/29381636?byline=0&portrait=0" width="440" height="248" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com13tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-763473089342264602011-09-19T09:52:00.000-07:002011-09-19T09:55:26.292-07:00Ashtanga Discussion Room: David, what do you eat?<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg9NXGuXH8vAbrzUV0zzsgkUwlHfPEe9RmShaO4etdF5-75uOxfJKWen1rJ-6rt-KFeZyV51JC3L-IE0up8do-Z-KOIaiEhmnV7SCWBUgp6pxXIOcSwGz3hNKqgl0QlHp5tT-H7AcwB_Eo/s1600/davids%2527+diet+circle+smaller+size.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 289px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg9NXGuXH8vAbrzUV0zzsgkUwlHfPEe9RmShaO4etdF5-75uOxfJKWen1rJ-6rt-KFeZyV51JC3L-IE0up8do-Z-KOIaiEhmnV7SCWBUgp6pxXIOcSwGz3hNKqgl0QlHp5tT-H7AcwB_Eo/s400/davids%2527+diet+circle+smaller+size.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5654114789739928098" /></a>
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<br />For years I have been asked what do I eat? Two weeks ago I posted a Ghetto Kitchen on how to make brown rice and gomasio and it occurred to me after the posting that there wasn't enough context for where the rice fits in a Yogic diet and specifically how it can help your daily asana practice. So I created a 3 part video series on Yogic diet and how food can positively and negative effect the Ashtanga practice.
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<br />So here is part one. Part one is a discussion room between Joy and I on the Yogic diet. Part 2 and Part 3 take you into a local Philly farmer's market and into a huge corporate supermarket.
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<br />I have also included in this post a rudimentary listing and circle diagram attempting to set forth the Yogic Principles and the specific foods that the practitioner should both adhere to and avoid.
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<br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/29201178" width="428" height="217" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen></iframe>
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<br /><strong>Whole Grains</strong>
<br />
<br /> <strong>Staples </strong>
<br />up to 50% of the diet
<br />(if desired take with gomasio sesame seed condiment)
<br />brown rice
<br />millet
<br />quinoa
<br />buckwheat
<br />fresh ground wheat for chapati's
<br />Whole grain noodles
<br />whole grain, hearty real bread
<br />hot cereals, cream of wheat, sweet brown rice cream, steel cut oats, and occasionally oat bran, instant natural oat meal
<br />
<br />
<br /> <strong>Vegetables</strong>
<br />(based on what's in season)
<br />
<br /><strong>1st Tier</strong>
<br />Burdock root
<br />carrot
<br />daikon radish
<br />turnip
<br />rutabega
<br />Greens (swiss chard, spinach, kale etc)
<br />cabbage (all variety)
<br />broccoli
<br />cauliflower
<br />winter squash (kabocha, delicata, butternut, pumpkin, red kiri etc)
<br />
<br /><strong>2nd Tier for use more sparingly for variety, freshness, flavor, texture, color etc</strong></em>
<br />onion
<br />mushrooms
<br />peppers (bell, chili, etc)
<br />summer squash
<br />tomatoes
<br />potatoes
<br />salad
<br />
<br />
<br /> <strong>Vegetarian Protein Sources</strong>
<br />tofu
<br />seitan
<br />tempeh
<br />beans (adzuki, pinto, chick peas, black etc)
<br />legumes (red lentils, small french lentils, toor dal, split peas etc)
<br />occasional use vegan chorizo, vegan sausage, vegan hot dogs, ready made tofu or tempeh
<br />
<br /> <strong>Oils</strong>
<br />high quality sesame oil
<br />extra virgin olive oil organic, first cold pressed
<br />canola oil
<br />ghee
<br />
<br /> <strong>Snacks </strong>
<br />whole grain crackers
<br />apples or other select in season fruits
<br />rice or corn cakes
<br />
<br /> <strong>Beverages</strong>
<br />spring water
<br />eden soy milk, or rice etc
<br />teas (bancha,herbal, green, black etc)
<br />
<br /> <strong>Sweeteners</strong>
<br />organic cane sugar
<br />agave
<br />barley malt
<br />rice syrup
<br />fresh apple cider
<br />fresh seasonal juice
<br />
<br /> <strong>Sweets</strong>
<br />dark low sugar chocolate 60% or more of caoco
<br />heathy whole grain, less sweet cookies,
<br />soy pudding, yogurt
<br />juice
<br />
<br /> <strong>Occasional use foods</strong>
<br />Cheese
<br />goat
<br />romano or parmesan
<br />soy
<br />
<br /> <strong>Off limit or rare use foods</strong>
<br />Animal Protein Sources
<br />if you must then choicely wisely
<br />organic, cage free eggs
<br />fresh fish
<br />organic free range chicken
<br />game
<br />
<br />Intoxicating substances
<br />alcohol
<br />marijuana
<br />pain relievers
<br />
<br />Dairy products
<br />milk
<br />cheese
<br />yogurt
<br />ice cream
<br />butter
<br />
<br />Dairy Substitutes
<br />soy and other grain milks
<br />cheeses
<br />yogurts
<br />margarine
<br />
<br />Processed Foods
<br />frozen
<br />canned
<br />packaged
<br />processed
<br />white flour pastries
<br />fried foods
<br />restaurant food
<br />bad oil chips
<br />
<br />Sweet drinks
<br />soda
<br />ice tea
<br />vitamin water
<br />juice
<br />coffee
<br />smoothies
<br />Tropical fruits or out of season fruits.
<br />David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-15954390830844281472011-09-04T11:30:00.001-07:002011-09-04T11:30:59.658-07:00Ghetto Kitchen: Brown Rice and GomasioGreetings,
<br />The Ghetto Kitchen with Chef DG is back! In this installment I will be teaching you how to cook brown rice with a pressure cooker (one of two keys to tasty brown rice) and how to make the condiment gomasio (the second key to eating brown rice). The video is self explanatory but if you would like to learn more about the Macrobiotic diet you can email me and I will send you some resources. I truly believe that the practitioners diet is often the final frontier to a strong and fruitful practice.
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<br />I hope you enjoy and get to cooking!!!
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<br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/28572653?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-35887456319806358642011-08-21T15:45:00.001-07:002011-08-21T15:51:29.498-07:00The Diaphragm is Key!! Don't Forget It. Observe It.<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjBcNPm69vKjhIt2lJiuY3_wRiIXPlSnCNGywipSCYrEBZgZIKgOSm1yELXCjlkkxvfxtHyBmY_46OxopRzeBewFjYZXuh0055R_XDhcXExP1fTc65eqK4D-Gsiokx6rngKf9c1nQ7hm0g/s1600/imgres.jpeg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 206px; height: 245px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjBcNPm69vKjhIt2lJiuY3_wRiIXPlSnCNGywipSCYrEBZgZIKgOSm1yELXCjlkkxvfxtHyBmY_46OxopRzeBewFjYZXuh0055R_XDhcXExP1fTc65eqK4D-Gsiokx6rngKf9c1nQ7hm0g/s400/imgres.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5643445225860873938" /></a>
<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjI9xWo3sTkfDMScQxeVqRDClRRBMLxqRdlR7cNjvEx-pV9XR-8O5oq2cvQ4fDExSqj8zhhtCfN3VYAe02C0bvRpNcShyYbo-txbDgRvM0gBuB5OA_NqTYPUbKF73wJhDPofVNcdxiOtTo/s1600/imgres-2.jpeg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 251px; height: 201px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjI9xWo3sTkfDMScQxeVqRDClRRBMLxqRdlR7cNjvEx-pV9XR-8O5oq2cvQ4fDExSqj8zhhtCfN3VYAe02C0bvRpNcShyYbo-txbDgRvM0gBuB5OA_NqTYPUbKF73wJhDPofVNcdxiOtTo/s400/imgres-2.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5643445221332294914" /></a>
<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjrX-faUJhBcGF091qGq2cWBgJtuCZguy85RRVUiYW7PXNN6_ag4L2O9uxHCf1hiQ9RoNqTHr9uY2VOsc-0eq_nJ6wmUcDKHV8wQDGBGTAngmHV0tpvVuDSk9iKIkZnnj3T0mTBp4gItOQ/s1600/imgres-1.jpeg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 256px; height: 197px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjrX-faUJhBcGF091qGq2cWBgJtuCZguy85RRVUiYW7PXNN6_ag4L2O9uxHCf1hiQ9RoNqTHr9uY2VOsc-0eq_nJ6wmUcDKHV8wQDGBGTAngmHV0tpvVuDSk9iKIkZnnj3T0mTBp4gItOQ/s400/imgres-1.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5643445220183603922" /></a>
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<br />The diaphragm is the main muscle involved in breathing; when you get an experiential feeling of its actions, that knowledge helps you breathe better and thus helps you develop your yoga practice.
<br />You can learn to sense the diaphragms anatomical location within the torso and to follow its contraction (inhalation) and relaxation (exhalation) phases. The diaphragm is a large sheet or dome shaped muscle that resembles a mushroom or a parachute and divides the upper and lower abdomen. It has an unattached gathering of fibers called the central tendon at its top that helps give its dome shape.
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<br />It attaches to several sets of ribs and has 'stems' that are called crura that attach to vertebrae along the front of the lower spine. The diaphragm is both a particularly large muscle and a core muscle. This is significant because, being large, its rhythm, actions and movements are quite easy to observe. And considering its deep and central location , the basic observation of its actions can take you far within your self, into the root and center of you.
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<br />Here's an image for you to work with: Imagine that your torso is a vast inner ocean. And the diaphragm is a giant jelly fish that is entirely at home floating up and down on the ocean currents within your torso. As you inhale experience its fibers contract, move down, flatten and spread and as you exhale experience its fibers relax, move up, bunch together and reform their dome like shape. Work with this image until you feel that the diaphragm's coming and going rhythm is THE fundamental rhythm within you; feel how central this rhythm is and how when you really tune into it, this rhythm pervades your entire body, and imagine that this rhythm could be the source of all of your movements. Following your diaphragms actions can lead you to discover and activate bandha's. For example, the elusive and challenging practice of mula bandha can be accessed with more ease and more logic when you approach it through observing the movement of the diaphragm. As you watch the rising and falling and expansion and contraction of the diaphragm see how the pelvic floor mimics the diaphragm by lowering and widening as you inhale and then rising and 'bunching' together as you exhale. When you tune into the diaphramatic and pelvic floor actions particularly during exhalation, you can better understand how to effectively 'seal' the pelvic floor in order to 'pull up' and redirect apana vayu. Both the pelvic floor and the diaphragm are horizontal, sheet like surfaces within the torso, one large (diaphragm) and one small (the pelvic floor). These two areas share a synergy, they act symphonically, and tuning into the larger, grosser one helps you tune in to the smaller, more subtle one.
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<br />Mula bandha is often defined as 'forcibly pulling up apana vayu' and causing the otherwise downward apanic energy to flow upwards. The upward movement of the diaphragm during exhalation provides you with the means of finding this redirection, the 'against the grain' energetic upward direction that characterizes mula bandha. You can achieve mula bandha by causing your perineum to ride on the coattails of the diaphragm as it ascends the torso when you exhale thoroughly, and there by seal your prana at the root. Following the grosser rhythm of the diaphragm and then the more subtle rhythm of the pelvic floor is what trains you to 'master' your senses, by moving mentally inwards towards center and gaining the ability to discern more and more subtle plays of opposing energetic, skeletal and muscular patterns.
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<br />Due to it's ability to help you tune in to Muladhara, the root support at your base, following the diaphragm also helps you to sustain your attention along the central axis from it's earth origins upwards. Observing the vertical action of the diaphragm and its influence on the pelvic floor is the key to aligning your self along the axis known as the pillar of light or most glorious (Shushumna). To be able to sustain your focus along the center line of the body from the base through the crown is one of the rewards of practicing pranayama partly due to observing the diaphragm within your torso and understanding how to optimize its muscular actions. Start by befriending the giant jelly within, see how to shape and guide the movements of this large muscle, and see how that skill leads to awareness of the more subtle physical actions following the breathing patterns all the way to their ends and awakening the the subtle actions of the bandha's.
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<br />And here's one more note: because the diaphragm drives the ever repeating cycle of the breath, it has a major role in helping you understand vinyasa. When you study the diaphragm you study vinyasa from a a central vantage point; through breathing you follow the opposing movement patterns that make up the ashtanga sequences. In Ashtanga yoga practice, through combining vinyasa and breathing, you endeavor to generate and to harness the dynamic bio rhythms at the heart of you. That is why Sri K. Pattabhi Jois called Ashtanga a 'breathing and movement system'. The most accessible way to get to the heart of the rhythm of this breathing and movement system is to doggedly follow the actions of the diaphragm and see how those actions translate into vinyasa, into sequences of rhythmic opposing movement patterns.
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<br />See if you can follow the diaphragm's vertical, up and down actions within the torso, focus on the connection between rhythm in breathing and rhythm in creating actions in your asana's and in your movement transitions. Each time you effectively tune into the deeper rhythms of your breath, you are in a position to have some small epiphany about your movement or your posture at its source. Go into your earth support and along your glorious axis, find the immovable state of the asana, get the spectacular view all through the simple act of tuning into the diaphragm and heartily enjoying your breath!David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-48077568407655665022011-08-07T18:59:00.000-07:002011-08-07T19:01:37.475-07:00From David's Ashtanga Journals: Patterns of ChangeGreetings!<br />If you are in the Philadelphia area, Sunday, August 28th, the Ashtanga Yoga School of Philadelphia will be having its opening party. I will be teaching a special class in the late morning and then a potluck will follow. <br /><br />Today's post deals with the idea of Samskara and how our daily practice is a pressure cooker and an avenue to change these past patterns. <br /><br /><strong>Yoga Sutra 1:18</strong><br />Another form of thorough knowledge is preceded by resolute practice to completely cease identification with the contents of the mind. As a result, only subliminal impressions remain and their residue has no impact on the mind. <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><strong>Excerpt One</strong><br />Make the connection, the crystal clear connection between Samskara, a latent impression or conditioned groove that perpetuates ignorance (Avidya) or illusion (Maya)...and how these translate into the body, into your movement and postural patterns. To become aware of alignment and to adjust your movement and postures according to alignment principles helps you neutralize Samskaras. It helps you replace ignorance and blindness with knowledge and insight.<br /><br />Krishna says in the Bhagavad Gita that only one in thousands reaches him. It is too easy to remain steeped in Maya, to fail to wake up, to remain unconscious playing habituated roles, dead ending. Never seeing through the veil. What a diligence, a fierce, committed, sustained effort is necessary to see through your patterns. It is a major step to even want to see through, to face your automatic reactions, the nature of which is automatically deficient, unoriginal, painful and ignorant. <br /><br />The ignorance EXTENDS to the body-that's the point-you can move ignorantly. Ignorance is not confined to behavioral or emotional thinking, failure in relationships, or in love. Maya and Avidya extend to physical movement. Your asana practice can provide a perfect microcosm that shows the impossibility of your predicament. Asana practice can show you how entrenched your conditional patterns are, how difficult it is to change even a little bit, and in the end how unwilling we are to be deeply hurled in the nitty gritty process of real change. <br /><br />We often practice as though we are not interested in being bothered with the details of our ignorance. We have better things to do--like catch our heels in Kapo or land our set of drop backs for the day. We don't want to be bothered with how we achieve our posture, we are more interested in simply achieving it in any manner that gets results. Deep asana practice requires a high degree of what I call Hanuman like energy-- or animal intelligence that is coupled with human self awareness and reflection. Hanuman is famous for being a nearly unconquerable warrior, for his magnificent strength and agility but also for his learning, diplomacy and erudition. Working for true alignment during your unfolding practice requires you to inhabit the body in an intuitive, animal like way, <strong>with reflection and awareness</strong>.<br /><br /><strong>Excerpt Two</strong><br />To some extent developing your asana practice means developing your ability to handle power and force. The depth of asana is partially determined by how energy is set in motion and how much energy is within you in the posture. Distraction, pain, extra weight, unawareness, sudden bouts of lethargy, depression, all serve to dampen the energy that goes into play in an asana. All manners of diversions share the characteristic of dampening life force--Do you see that? To be truly engaged in life, living your dreams, putting your self, your creativity, your love on the line takes tremendous energy. <br /><br />You have to be able to manage those levels of energy--going into a depression, or eating, or day dreaming about a different life, or thousands of other diversions give you an escape value. If you go and have a beer or smoke a joint or dip into the pint of B and J's, you are temporarily relieved but that relief is not really relief. Because a large source of our panic, desperation, anxiety, loneliness, and unhappiness comes from not attaining the full capacity of our life force. <br /><br />You can learn to enlarge your capacity to enjoy, process, and transform large amounts of energy within yourself. Do you really need to divert and dampen your energy with old often repeated patterns? Isn't time to really observe, really feel, go through fear, and allow more love to enter into your world? That is what practice is ultimately for so why not let it do its work? Stop interfering, stop standing in the way, let the fire in, the challenge, the risk, let your love in and let it come out.<br /><br />The practice is there in front of you each day, now do what is necessary to really do it. Do all the advance preparation, arrange your life so that you show up at your best, ready to dive into that special world. That world of posture, breath, sequence of intense concentration and exertion. You've had at least glimpses of what is there for you, now is the time.David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-63065720131674709012011-07-24T20:28:00.000-07:002011-07-24T20:29:28.892-07:00David Garrigues: From Guru Nanak<iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/26849788" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-69016445344777125712011-07-23T19:27:00.001-07:002011-07-23T19:29:56.872-07:00Indepth Study Day Four: Alan Watts Creative Meditation<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh3Sf4w6eTP0FYMoCWjXJCXN2n9K869KveMDRolthV8V3eQo6JXOA7looETHqa98cpDUzBUanf3gog53I_PZXQ2SKHS1CNaLTTP-Gg5zsugVGyv20K-KSmAn5wmHmeSg4Z_812hTVptF6g/s1600/indepth+study+pic+26.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 225px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh3Sf4w6eTP0FYMoCWjXJCXN2n9K869KveMDRolthV8V3eQo6JXOA7looETHqa98cpDUzBUanf3gog53I_PZXQ2SKHS1CNaLTTP-Gg5zsugVGyv20K-KSmAn5wmHmeSg4Z_812hTVptF6g/s400/indepth+study+pic+26.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5632740384786369474" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj17nrDnkMydHU2-FJ5WDXJznccBP5X7rnikYZ5sRIE4OVzyGw3p9URIPOlRcCsTBBpYP1ak2Ai609Qsl0l2u71KAtPzvYOIm5ZlURz1vjYCKwsdNqGn2dy2B4mq5Z7lD7VFxcmYUNmdZg/s1600/indepth+study+pic+18.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 336px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj17nrDnkMydHU2-FJ5WDXJznccBP5X7rnikYZ5sRIE4OVzyGw3p9URIPOlRcCsTBBpYP1ak2Ai609Qsl0l2u71KAtPzvYOIm5ZlURz1vjYCKwsdNqGn2dy2B4mq5Z7lD7VFxcmYUNmdZg/s400/indepth+study+pic+18.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5632740379307813762" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiS3BNMEtRcEmBrRO_P7E1Z0pLD7pTQBu8fKp_gikqIKCc135EPTlKTPa2fg2PgXj-iTAd3NJNT6GYKaM0vpteLt1MxjUDAn_V2TYsfo2HPIzcfM-ErxHEZkq2P-vfqIZ85Z748cp6JX0I/s1600/indepth+study+pic+48.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 382px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiS3BNMEtRcEmBrRO_P7E1Z0pLD7pTQBu8fKp_gikqIKCc135EPTlKTPa2fg2PgXj-iTAd3NJNT6GYKaM0vpteLt1MxjUDAn_V2TYsfo2HPIzcfM-ErxHEZkq2P-vfqIZ85Z748cp6JX0I/s400/indepth+study+pic+48.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5632740380626144274" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhINNryRUsesB8FEfmrinnzD5-IQvL0xkDvX6aMD1iLzfQoBSUCRLucxUAL1PwtilTa2ZbCfurERsOQqFMcsDhBIOgXhJqKszDCb5rA7Tk0Dxf-sjY-EP2XmkgnA2cQrbn7cOensi14hws/s1600/indepth+study+day+one+pic+11.png"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 250px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhINNryRUsesB8FEfmrinnzD5-IQvL0xkDvX6aMD1iLzfQoBSUCRLucxUAL1PwtilTa2ZbCfurERsOQqFMcsDhBIOgXhJqKszDCb5rA7Tk0Dxf-sjY-EP2XmkgnA2cQrbn7cOensi14hws/s400/indepth+study+day+one+pic+11.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5632739947052373266" /></a><br /><br /><br />Here is an excerpt from the book Om Creative Meditations by Alan Watts. This passage explains one of the major themes I am playing with during the Indepth Study.<br /><br />"What is actually going on in the world is far, far different. Every view that we take of the world and every selection we make of what is important to notice is simply one way of looking at things, and there are infinite ways of looking. Considering such things makes us aware of how much our knowledge of the world is conventional knowledge. We tend to a selection of particular things which we have been brainwashed to notice, and we disregard the rest. It is as if the world were a Rorschach blot and there is one offical interpretation of the blot. Everybody agrees that is the way it is. Along will come some great genius who points out that we can look at the world an entirely different way, and at first everyone will say it is crazy. But if the genius persists long enough, we come to accept the new vision. Now we can look back at Cezanne's paintings and see that it does look like that. We can look at Van Gogh and see that he really did understand how it feels. They have taught us to see.<br /><br /><br />The moral is that each one of us has a certain veiw of the world which both horrifies and delights us. We have a program for cradle to grave of which we believe society approves, and we get very put out if we do not get to follow it exactly. This social interpretation of the cosmic Rorschach blot is expressed in words and conventions and we think it is what life is all about. Well, it is nothing of the kind. In trying to escape convention and the barriers that words create between you and reality, you may choose to renounce your identity, in effect saying "Now the game is over. Let's find out what lay behind it. What is really going on?" Be very careful that the next passing swami does not sell you on still another institutionalized version of the real world. For instance, the notion that when you are awakened all differentiations will vanish is a conventiaonal view of the universe.<br /><br />Now obviously there is a way in which you can see the world for yourself; it may very well agree with what other people see and you will be able to communicate that way of seeing to others. It may be by no more than a glint in the eye that you will know someone else sees it just as you do.<br /><br />All our meditation practices are simply to open our consciousness to what is going on, as distinct from what is <em>said</em> to be going on. To do that, we must suspend our words, suspend our descriptions, and be alert to the actual happening.<br /><br />It is as simple as that.<br /><br />-Allan Watts (Om Creative Meditations)David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-29676733099333905802011-07-23T07:41:00.001-07:002011-07-23T07:43:16.530-07:00Indepth Study Day Three: How to work with a resistant student<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhWr2nXhScFAeeC0o74JvyUtzE04ySgOOrHhu4a8LICpofOIwOLyA83kJ0_w3MvbEpYGIlE_crI0-sOo-0sh1nMCA_WIvmaga2m-cr0aesFFv3YICUqpDXeRytKklTvyKYp36lkwnXSWlY/s1600/indepth+study+day+one+pic+7.png"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 250px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhWr2nXhScFAeeC0o74JvyUtzE04ySgOOrHhu4a8LICpofOIwOLyA83kJ0_w3MvbEpYGIlE_crI0-sOo-0sh1nMCA_WIvmaga2m-cr0aesFFv3YICUqpDXeRytKklTvyKYp36lkwnXSWlY/s400/indepth+study+day+one+pic+7.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5632558223274064994" /></a><br /><br /><br />Here is an excerpt from day three of my Indepth Study!! This was filmed during the Apprenticeship session when I discussed how to work with a student who is resistant to instruction. <br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/26792940" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-32957563356963453252011-07-22T20:10:00.000-07:002011-07-22T20:14:36.864-07:00Indepth Study Day Two<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgHv3s8CtbEj9Aivm3e5iT7l_kgHO2MzW0N51e96AeVLgLyn7B20hf8pMtG8jxHDaUcagKM1gltjwXpTQMqaCV_6vzAjS60_zA_2yCHPJgmh0pCGSVm9RpBBLJflhcm6lF8dX3-jCjNNNs/s1600/indepth+study+pic+37.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 322px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgHv3s8CtbEj9Aivm3e5iT7l_kgHO2MzW0N51e96AeVLgLyn7B20hf8pMtG8jxHDaUcagKM1gltjwXpTQMqaCV_6vzAjS60_zA_2yCHPJgmh0pCGSVm9RpBBLJflhcm6lF8dX3-jCjNNNs/s400/indepth+study+pic+37.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5632380888593626114" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjNm3DaRSNkHJlfA490f8sHOYZu04KQJUbZhPPBo_DAwzws1Jx1vbUqlCYZR5hQjvYRDMMzmeOe9mKG9rv3WlDTThvRmUuWt2o52V2Ctwa0mJXC2m3eGAkaVIeSIR414x6a44CYnKs4ENE/s1600/indepth+study+pic+32.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 225px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjNm3DaRSNkHJlfA490f8sHOYZu04KQJUbZhPPBo_DAwzws1Jx1vbUqlCYZR5hQjvYRDMMzmeOe9mKG9rv3WlDTThvRmUuWt2o52V2Ctwa0mJXC2m3eGAkaVIeSIR414x6a44CYnKs4ENE/s400/indepth+study+pic+32.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5632380880675898626" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhk0cIDzXBTki9a-XTPmgjEc2A276UJ6aMmVtsxMRYfu-3zzSZlvqut5ZmhGnq2cQ-oNqQWSyNfQy2Q6BHIQ6ut9P-PN2UrWaW75wEFLJLoPDNpr9-5_kJA5mnMYMhokwx-mg4_Q-huBvE/s1600/indepth+study+pic+25.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhk0cIDzXBTki9a-XTPmgjEc2A276UJ6aMmVtsxMRYfu-3zzSZlvqut5ZmhGnq2cQ-oNqQWSyNfQy2Q6BHIQ6ut9P-PN2UrWaW75wEFLJLoPDNpr9-5_kJA5mnMYMhokwx-mg4_Q-huBvE/s400/indepth+study+pic+25.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5632380875098727890" /></a><br /><br /><br />I have started a new track in this year's indepth study, an apprenticeship program. I have 6 apprentices and each day we meet for an hour and discuss a wide range of topics from specific adjustments, to the students own individual practices and much, much, more. <br /><br />Here is a clip from today's apprenticeship session. <br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/26751252" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-10304464556786075802011-07-20T20:35:00.000-07:002011-07-20T20:41:14.317-07:00Indepth Study Day One<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyx9fCzQacp66zHXYqns9guLaOzL5akTZFjqTc87fEkrzkEJnajO7n5rZXZJheQrnqr7-9LoJT0lNNTZ9-XvtjNyZLk8uz3T5RRkPdkXy7B4qHe3LftUOhc5Yb-o-JpbtphvczRuq8GZ4/s1600/indepth+study+2011+pic+1.png"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 232px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyx9fCzQacp66zHXYqns9guLaOzL5akTZFjqTc87fEkrzkEJnajO7n5rZXZJheQrnqr7-9LoJT0lNNTZ9-XvtjNyZLk8uz3T5RRkPdkXy7B4qHe3LftUOhc5Yb-o-JpbtphvczRuq8GZ4/s400/indepth+study+2011+pic+1.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5631645578796617058" /></a><br /><br />Its about 8pm and I'm in Spokane, WA (almost directly across the country from Philadelphia!) and I'm reviewing and prepping for day two of my annual In-depth Study program. Today was the first of the ten day program. I'm very pleased with the students, their intelligence, kinesthetic awareness, and overall enthusiasm. I have decided to post an excerpt each evening from the day's events. This is from the afternoon session where I discussed and walked the students through the vinyasa. <br /><br />I hope you enjoy and come back tomorrow where I will have some more goodies for you and your practice. <br /><br />David<br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/26704077" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-86843371178197815392011-07-14T10:43:00.001-07:002011-07-14T10:43:53.848-07:00Guru Purnima 2011Happy Moon Day and Happy Guru Purnima!!<br /><br />In honor of Sri K Pattabhi Jois, my teacher.<br /><br />Hari Om, <br />David <br /><br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/26434573?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-32526189785403927992011-07-06T17:08:00.000-07:002011-07-06T17:09:54.094-07:00Ashtanga Discussion Room: Ashtanga is Bhakti (Pt 1-3)Welcome back to my discussion on Ashtanga is Bhakti. I have posted part three below and have also included part one and two if you missed the first two parts. I would also like to mention that I will be teaching a Mysore intensive in Kovalam, India this Feb 2012 for the entire month. Please spread the word. Its going to be a small group of students and an excellent way to go deep into your practice. If you would like more info or to apply you can visit my website or the Yoga in India page on this blog. <br /><br />Hari Om! <br />David <br /><br /><strong>Part One</strong><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/25865307?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe><br /><br /><strong>Part Two</strong><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/25866344?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe><br /><br /><strong>Part Three</strong><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/26037869?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-29137186707496459502011-07-02T07:52:00.000-07:002011-07-02T07:55:24.186-07:00Ashtanga Discussion Room: Ashtanga is Bhakti Parts 1 and 2Joy and I have been running around like crazy this week trying to get Ashtanga Yoga School of Philadelphia opened by July 3rd and on top of it all Joy had a screening of her short film The Medicine Wheel in the big Apple this past Wednesday so we made a mad dash to the city!! In between all of the craziness we managed to film a three part Ashtanga Discussion Room title Ashtanga is Bhakti. I have posted the first two parts below and will post the final part on Wednesday.<br /><br />One extra note: please watch, ponder, and absorb the themes in these video’s! Personally I feel that the content of these discussions is of vital importance for us continuing to mature and really enjoy the fruits of practice. The play of the universe that we are all part of has reached such critical proportions that there is an urgency to bring forth what is sacred within of each us. Even our tiny contribution is vital and essential. What we choose to focus our energies on makes a huge difference in giving ourselves and the coming generations a fair chance to play the beautiful game at a higher, highere levels. I’m calling out to all of us to bring more intentional Bhakti into our practices, more devotion that goes to to the root of us, to the heart of us, where we know what is really important and sacred. Enjoy! Om Namah Shivaya! David<br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/25865307?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe><br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/25866344?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-90435904521832058442011-06-10T06:26:00.000-07:002011-06-12T05:36:23.354-07:00Yoga is Youthfulness InterviewOver June 24th-26th I will be teaching a workshop in Mountainview, California and the Yoga center, <a href="http://www.yogaisyouth.com">Yoga is Youthfulness</a>, interviewed me for their newsletter. I think it came out really well and I would like to share it with all of you.<br /><br />I have also decided to teach a month long Mysore style intensive in Kovalam, India this February. The intensive will entail a six day a week Mysore class with extra classes of pranayama, chanting, and other yoga studies. You can apply or find more info on <a href="http://www.davidgarrigues.com">davidgarrigues.com</a>. I hope you can join me in India~~ its going to be a great way to go deeper into your practice!<br /><br />Hari Om,<br /><br />David<br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />Yoga is Youthfulness Interviews Certified Ashtanga teacher David Garrigues</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">When did you first go to india and what took you there?</span><br /><br />I first went in 94′. In 93′ I saw a video tape of Guruji teaching Richard Freeman, Tim Miller, and Chuck Miller. A couple weeks later I saw an ad in the Yoga Journal saying Guruji was going to be teaching in LA so I went there and studied with him for the month. After that month he went and taught in Maui so I followed him there and studied with him more. On Maui he and Chuck Miller encouraged me to travel to Mysore and to take practice in India. I didn’t hesitate. I knew Ashtanga was for me so I bought a plane ticket, waited tables to save money, and went to India.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">What happened and how long were you there that time and over the years?</span><br /><br />When I first arrived I was completely blown away and overwhelmed. I can distinctly remember being woken up by prayers blasting out of mosques and temples, the smells, riding my bike to Guruji’s house early in the morning and how small the room we practiced in was (Old Shala). There were so few of us in the space. If there were 20 of us there that was a lot of people.<br /><br />Often in the evenings Guruji and Amma would sit outside their porch. We would all walk by and talk with them and hope Amma would offer us coffee. Going to India was something I never imagined or even day dreamed about so I had no preparation or expectations. In my life I never thought I would be doing this or thought I would be searching for someone, a guru, to study with.<br /><br />Sometimes India was so intense I would walk outside and then go back inside. At that time India was not used to foreigners so the Indians were extremely curious. As a westerner I was paid attention to all the time. It was hard for me to be so conspicuous. Sometimes too hard. I also meet a dear dear Indian friend of mine, Ravi. He was playing a flute on the street and he took me in to his house. We would hang out and listen to Indian music. I became hooked on Indian culture from my first visit. Ravi introduced me to my future singing teacher, Virabhadraya. At this time I wanted to learn how to play tablas so I started taking lessons from Virabhadraya’s friend.<br /><br />But mostly, I remember loving the practice.<br /><br />My first visit I was there for four months. Since then I have been there over 15 times. My longest stay being a year.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">What was meeting Guruji like and when did you first know he was your teacher?</span><br /><br />I first meet Guruji in LA and I was very scared. I was so scared that I fasted on fruit the entire month. I thought if I ate fruit I would get less stiff. I was in a big cleanse. I practiced in the morning and then I would practice again during the afternoon. I was completely unaware this was too much tapas for my body. I was unaware of the whole scene. I never touched Guruji’s feet. I just had no idea what to do. I was in awe of the whole thing. I didn’t know what the counting was or what it meant. I had no idea that the Sanskirt was in numbers. I attached esoteric significance to it. When he would bellow out “cetwari” I thought it was something sacred, “Woah, what does that mean?”<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">What was scary to you?</span><br /><br />I had only seen Tim, Richard and Chuck practice from the videos and I saw how Guruji adjusted them and this was scary for me. In the class there was this guy who every day got the adjustment in Baddhakonasana and every day he would cry and everyday Guruji would put him through it. And Guruji would say, ‘Why crying?” and the whole class would laugh, It was good natured but intense. I was terrified it would happen to me and of course he finally adjusted me in it. At that time my knees did not come to the floor in Baddhakonasana so he put one hand on one knee and one foot on the other and one hand on my head. He pushed down on my knees and then he started to push my head outwards. It felt like I was looking down from above on to the ground and it all felt big, like a wide expanse for me. My orientation was shifted and there was this opening! I got terrified. Guruji pulled me back up and he said, “no fearing you go.” It’s one of two adjustments I can vividly remember.<br /><br />Guruji was always a strategist. If he wasn’t helping you it was part of his plan for working with you, it was not because he wasn’t noticing. For example, on my first trip he didn’t help me much, but he was nice. I figure he knew I needed to take practice so he left me mostly alone. On my second trip he didn’t help me and was not really very nice either. I was expecting and wanting more help but still he just left me to practice and work things out on my own. Occasionally when I would break out of my old patterns he would be there all of sudden to help me, which meant to me that he was highly observant of my practice and waiting for some things to shift inside me. But it was a source of pain that he wouldn’t help me and I got really frustrated. I thought about quitting. You had to earn help from him. By my third trip when I started working on third series, he began helping me a lot.<br /><br />Though there was no specific moment when I knew Guruji was my teacher, it was an almost unnoticed evolution; one day sort of all of sudden it dawned on me how much I had learned from him and how significant he was/is to me. It was a profound and happy realization but also a little bit sad because I felt that I hadn’t properly appreciated him before that time.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">How does music relate to your yoga practice?</span><br /><br />In some ways music conflicts with my yoga practice and what I’ve discovered is that music has to take a small role in things and proportionately it has to be small compared to my asana and pranayama practice and my teaching. If music takes too big of a role in my life it doesn’t serve my Yoga practice. But if music is in the right proportion it helps me to be more devotional, prayerful, and it opens me up to a part of my soul that is very deep and sacred. Music also soothing for me. At times the asana practice has a crushing kind of quality, it can really challenging and feel full of failure. It can even be hard to feel good about my self when practice is so hard; playing music, just enjoying a little song or melody can be a healing salve for me. It helps remind me of the soul and sacredness of my efforts.<br /><br />To me yoga can and ought to be used for personal expression and personal transformation but also since we are all in it together yoga can to be about collective and social transformation too. As a yoga teacher I feel that music and chanting helps me share something different with my students, sharing a little song brings a more universal dimension, something campfire like that brings you to a primal place of sacredness that we can all find a kinship with.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">How has yoga changed your music and how has the Indian musical/yogic experience you have had affected your music?</span><br /><br />I would like to talk about how I switched from the tablas to singing. My singing teacher Virabhadraya had me start singing because I have a damaged finger and couldn’t strike the tabla properly. It’s funny to me, he literally made me sing. At first I resisted it, but it was the best thing that ever happened to my music. I love singing and I needed that vocal work to really become less introverted and to open up to the power of my voice as speaker and as a singer. Its been a very important part of my psychological and emotional growth.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Do you still study music in India now?</span><br /><br />Yes, though as I balance it with my Yoga practice, I don’t have as much time as I would like. I have less time to study Indian music. To study indian music requires total commitment and dedication and I’m not on that path. I do my best to keep up a practice Indian scales and I work with the slow, ‘alap’ phase of raga development. I try to practice the things that are relevant to what I share with people in my yoga classes.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Do you see your musical practice and your yoga practice as related? How?</span><br /><br />Yoga and music share rhythm, they come from the same great source and use them both go back to that source. Since music, breathing, and asana are all based on the elemental, primal life rhythms, I feel they all support each other. To be musical helps your asana practice to become more melodic and to have rhythmic vibrancy and intelligence.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Has your practice changed as you have aged?</span><br /><br />For one, I’ve slowed down some and the physical practice is harder. As I’ve aged its been challenging to consistently keep the asana practice at its top level. Partly thats due to aging but it’s also due to losing focus mentally. There are so many responsibilities and things that seem to call for one’s attention. Its all cyclical, but consistency of focus is really challenging. It’s a marvel to see how challenging it is to put the asana practice first with a consistency that spans over decades. This commitment effects all of your choices. Also as I’ve gotten older the focus and intention behind the work is much more genuine and smarter. I’m able to utilize the asana and pranayama to open up within myself in much more powerful ways even though I can’t necessarily bend as swiftly or even though I don’t consistently have quite as much ready energy. Now I have to listen to my self and my body more attentively and be willing to go into what is there today. Sometimes that means being satisfied with less and being more subtle in my awareness.<br /><br />Also, I used to need a lot of asana practice, a lot of sweat and rhythm as a catharsis, as a way to wrestle with demons and overcome things within myself. I needed to exhaust myself through that kind of battle. Now that isn’t as necessary or relevant and so I don’t need that same kind of intense rhythm every day that I needed in the past. Through my practice I’ve worked through a lot and understand what constitutes a deep asana for me. Its such a curious paradox because I understand what a deep asana is and I can go there much faster now even though there’s a sometimes more physical unwillingness. Sometimes I feel a tinge of regret, I wish I had figured out some of what I know now sooner.<br /><br />As I age I have more appreciation for Guruji and his method and the sequences of asana’s. For example I see this incredible depth in the second series. Consider Krounchasana, it is more of a forward bend then all of the forward bends in the primary series. When you strike Krounchasana you are expected to be ready immediately, you are expected to bend forward deeply without the preparation and repetition that exists in the primary series. There’s an immediate depth that is asked of you in the second series. All the series have these deepening layers that continue to be revealed as you practice year after year.<br /><br />Or take Dristi, as I’ve gotten older I orient myself differently with regard to basic gazing. Now I’m more centered, steady and clear. I also have more clarity about different sets of variables that go into each posture and have more skill to work with those variables in a more immediate and balanced way.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">What made Guruji special to you? Did he permanently change your life and how?</span><br /><br />He was large enough and grounded enough to see and understand some important things about me and about many people. In this significant way he let me know that what I was doing was alright. This ‘alright’ feeling gave me permission to let my energy flow freely and in directions that were right for me. It took somebody really grounded to do that because I had so much raw energy and so much inner conflict and fear. To have somebody be so grounded and to see my fear and understand it somehow gave me permission to see it too and thus move through it and let it go. Guruji had this knowledge of Yoga and that’s what gave him this largeness and this ability to embrace so many people. He showed me the how big Yoga is; he showed me yoga’s breadth and what it can encompass and how I can find belonging and expression in it. Yes he changed me permanently. He helped wipe out my self hatred, inner turmoil, anger, lack of confidence, in a fundamental way forever. Now I have those things but they can never go as deep as they were because he helped me find that deeper place of love. Practice keeps renewing it but Guruji gave it to me in such a way that even if I never practiced again, I will still have it.David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-26195131988147096872011-05-28T14:23:00.001-07:002011-05-29T15:01:25.342-07:006 Days a week since 93'The category "From David's Ashtanga Journals" describes excerpts from David's ongoing book journal. The excerpts are minimally edited.<br /><br />April 4th, 2011<br /><br />Recently, I told this story about myself in a workshop.<br /><br />In September my partner and I went to India, it was my first trip there after the death of Guruji. I had emailed Sharath to tell him we were coming and all was set but I had this resistance to Mysore. I'd made more than a dozen pilgrimages to India and never once 'traveled' or seen the other parts of the country. Guruji was in Mysore, why would I want or need to go anywhere else? I was sad to have to directly face that Guruji wasn't there anymore and surfing had been on the back of my mind for more than a decade. As a skateboarder, I would pretend to surf the concrete like a wave. I'd always wanted to set aside some time to have a surf vacation, preferably in or near India so that I could still do some Yoga. But my practice and studying with Guruji always took precedence. But this time I decided to go with the surf yearning...sort of.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEivcjaLNjzCJp2UH_X-TFxbI-cXuplb_wvnWRLdFwcW5PetE1yn30w9Ey-6I3aT1ImZ1eS7rJKgNZTkSc0YQ8Jmv-1kCafH3aLMLZ2RSCcXsP3FMdaSo0NrJVBGqZ5J2VvRk02d_-rjNzA/s1600/72544_1526757284178_1092030812_31275419_2615708_n.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 266px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEivcjaLNjzCJp2UH_X-TFxbI-cXuplb_wvnWRLdFwcW5PetE1yn30w9Ey-6I3aT1ImZ1eS7rJKgNZTkSc0YQ8Jmv-1kCafH3aLMLZ2RSCcXsP3FMdaSo0NrJVBGqZ5J2VvRk02d_-rjNzA/s400/72544_1526757284178_1092030812_31275419_2615708_n.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5611880887930396162" /></a><br /><br /><br />Somehow my partner and I ended up on these remote islands off the east coast of India called the Andamman islands. I had a twin objective: to spend some much needed time focusing on my asana practice and surf. We found an idyllic setting on a pristine island. The color of the ocean was dreamy and inspiring. We found a resort with a largely unused Yoga room located up above the lodging area with a panoramic view spanning towards the ocean above the jungle foliage and tree tops.<br /><br />So the surfing and Yoga combo started well enough. But it didn't take long for the battering of the waves to take its toll on my body. Practice became more like trying to stretch out and 'recover' from surfing. But I was still determined to do both. So I kept pushing for intensity in my practice. Then IT happened. I was in Parivrtta Parsvakonasana-twisting side angle. I felt this little, but distinct lightning bolt streak of strong sensations run directly across my sacrum. I immediately stood up and lost my Yogic powers of detachment and content. I limped around uttering plenty of expletives. I knew almost instantly that my month of intense practice and surfing was finished. I was very disappointed and also angry with myself for pushing just beyond my edge and allowing myself to play so close to it. I regretted the energy I had put into surfing. As the afternoon and next few days unfolded I realized my nightmare was true I could not really bend in any direction forward or backwards in any capacity. I made a decision to work with my Yoga practice in whatever capacity that was available to me no matter how limited. For the next month I did several hours a day of Pranayama alternating between supine positions and dandasana with my feet at the wall.<br /><br />I thought I had reflected on what happened there and perhaps even extracted lessons out of it but it wasn't until I told this story to the people in the workshop that I realized I hadn't fully processed the event. When I told the story there wasn't really a point, whereas usually when I tell such a story there is some inspiration or message behind it. For me something was still dangling. And then an 'aha' moment came soon after. I'd always had two nagging dreams in my life; The Surfing Dream and The Yoga Dream. I'd had the surfing dream since I was a boy. It was also a fall back idea for me if the Yoga relationship didn't work out. I'd just become a surfer, spend my time in the ocean, riding waves. Then I had the Yoga dream. The Yoga dream was to continue to maintain and develop the art, grace and beauty of my Ashtanga practice. Since that time on the islands I realize there has been a shift in me.<br /><br />As we all age we see how challenging it is to continue to practice in such a way that our bodies and minds stay truly strong, fit and supple. Other priorites come along to replace the fire, zeal, and devotion we have for practice. It is tempting to let ourselves off the hook thinking that asana is for youth. That somehow being intensely physical has a cut off point-perhaps it does for some of us. But for many of us, the discoveries we make as we flow though our sequences continue to feed our body's, minds, and souls. And we continue to be willing to make the sacrifices necessary to really go into our asana practices. We also realize more and more the extent to which we have to give up other things. This is the key if you want to have a fruitful serious asana practice, you must know it and fashion your life and choices to ensure it. There really is limited time and thus limited things you have available to put your energy into. The reality is that Ashtanga Yoga asks much of you; it gives you much but also asks much. The surfing dream has lost its power over me. Stuck on the Andamman Islands unable to really practice well, unable to surf--but able to sit there with lots of time for incubation and musing--it felt like the universe was saying: ' IF YOU WANT BOTH YOU'LL HAVE NEITHER' ... whoah!<br /><br />Do you see it? What is holding you back, from going further, I'm talking about things that truly don't belong there. Not things in your life that do belong, like a great job, relationship, children, art and such, ultimately, those things feed you and your soul in just as necessary ways as your practice does. I'm talking about the things only you'll know what they are. The expendable parts of your life that you are choosing to divert your energy into. The reality is that Ashtanga might help a person be better at nearly any physical activity, but nearly any other physical activity will compromise your Ashtanga practice in some way. For me, even how much I admire the soul of true surfing, I still choose my Yoga practice. There's a subtlety to it that is not found elsewhere. Even dreaming about being a surfer diverts my attention, even the possibility that I might drop my serious practice and go surf takes away from my practice.<br /><br />I now feel more grounded, lighter, and more excited about Yoga practice. I wish I could just touch your feet and you'd feel what I feel and then you would drop those lesser dreams you are harboring that aren't worth it. Funnel your energy towards the real heart of what you want to share, create, and become-- unswerving, able to keep the target in your sights. You'll see a major shift in your experience, new found energy for what you want will arrive to help you. I'm no longer dreaming of surf vacations, I'm dreaming of dropping into my body, into my center, finding that flow, finding the depths, the athleticism, presence, power, finding that ability to illuminate the entire inner field. I prefer sensing, feeling, intuiting and thinking my way into the pure enjoyment, pure consciousness, and the profound experience of now, that Ashtanga Yoga offers.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjG18DDaSJ30EZ8O8l_KM3iWZlh5vZ3hzKMXiAs5gXVcNH-nFRKMWiQH0u2LCrMa2tS6-fTmAmjN189jcAt_4h8YasWpmsRfJIpZ0g1jW3Uc1HK_vKeeqP8_JHFTF2BMZWqnGKL6SpOSMc/s1600/248754_213309545355840_188603781159750_732287_4777061_n.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 225px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjG18DDaSJ30EZ8O8l_KM3iWZlh5vZ3hzKMXiAs5gXVcNH-nFRKMWiQH0u2LCrMa2tS6-fTmAmjN189jcAt_4h8YasWpmsRfJIpZ0g1jW3Uc1HK_vKeeqP8_JHFTF2BMZWqnGKL6SpOSMc/s400/248754_213309545355840_188603781159750_732287_4777061_n.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5611881172562343714" /></a><br /><br />May 2011 Research for my new Pranayama dvd began on the Andamman Islands.David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302826880669935908.post-14007872803902574542011-05-15T14:07:00.000-07:002011-05-24T09:26:52.461-07:00Asana Kitchen: Working Towards Viparita Chakrasana (PT 3)<a href="http://www.davidgarrigues.com/blog">To View on my new blog!</a><br /><br />Greetings! Here's the final installment of this Viparita Chakrasana series; I could easily have made this an 8 part Asana Kitchen or more! There is so much to explore about this complex, dynamic, and amazing posture. However, by reviewing pts 1-3 you should be able to make a decent start. Or if you are practicing tics tacs, I hope you can get new ideas for how to develop it and refine it and eventually nail it! Enjoy! <br /><br />I would also like to mention that the application for my 2011 and 2012 Indepth Studies are now posted on my website. I will also be teaching a Mysore Intensive in India (Kovalam, Kerala) for the month of February, 2012. You can apply for that on my website as well.<br /><br />Hari Om,<br /><br />David<br /><br />P.S I will be back with a new post in two weeks!<br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/23759236?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0" width="398" height="224" frameborder="0"></iframe>David Garrigueshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15805764274711017458noreply@blogger.com2