Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Ahimisa - non-violence

What does it mean to practice Ahimsa - non-violence or non-harming?  

A common understanding of this philosophical teaching of yoga is to not intentionally cause harm to any sentient being.  But what about what is more subtle?  In what ways can we practice ahimsa with ourselves and on the yoga mat?  

In February, our community will explore the concept of ahimsa and how it applies to our lives on and off the mat.  

Consider ahimsa this month and join us during our monthly discussion on this topic. 

Submit your essay on this topic to BYS and we'll share it with our community. 



Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Guest Blogger - Mary from Being Ayurveda

Ayurveda (Ayur – Life, Veda – Science) is yoga’s sister science.  Ayurveda believes that by establishing oneself in a healthy daily routine (dinacharya) one can avoid many common ailments, chronic diseases and daily life stresses.  With that in mind Being Ayurveda presents its

Top 10 Things You Can Do Daily (IN 10 MINUTES OR LESS) to Feel Great Everyday

1.   Go to bed & Wake up at the same time every day. 
2.   Before getting out of bed every morning, stop and be thankful for something. 
3.   Drink a glass of warm water before breakfast.
4.   Take time to go to the bathroom. 
5.   Do a self-massage before you shower. 
6.   Do 12 Sun Salutations.  (6 right leg/6 left leg)
7.   Eat Breakfast
8.   Eat lunch – Try to make it your biggest meal of the day. 
9.   Take a walk every day
10.        Before going to sleep, stop and be thankful for something. 

    These are just a sampling of common sense Ayurvedic means and methods to bring your body into health and to help eliminate 'dis-ease'.  Ayurveda teaches us how to harmonize with Nature's rhythms to bring meaningful change and to balance & eliminate conditions such as chronic pain, menstrual difficulties and digestive aliments.


Mary Guerenabarrena is an Ayurvedic Consultant and Yoga Educator and owner of Being Ayurveda. Her work combines Ayurvedic lifestyle counseling, yoga, diet and nutrition, and herbal remedies, to assist her clients in regaining balance in the body, mind, and soul. 

She offers Ayurveda classes regularly at Bristol Yoga Studio. 

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Yamas and Niyamas - An Introduction

Starting in January this year, for each month of 2012, we're focusing on the yamas and niyamas - yoga's ethical teachings.  

The yamas and niyamas are two of the eight 'limbs' of yoga outlined by the ancient sage, Patanjali, who wrote the yoga sutras.  All of this is a mouthful, already, I know, so let's just stick with  the ethical teachings for now.  (Below, I'll list all eight 'limbs' for those of you who really can't wait!)

Our focus now is simply to introduce the yamas and niyamas. Here's a quick run down of what they are.  


The Yamas :
Ahimsa ~ Nonviolence
Satya ~ Truthfulness
Asteya ~ Nonstealing
Brahmacharya ~ Nonexcess
Aparigraha ~ Nonpossessiveness

The Niyamas:
Saucha ~ Purity
Santosha ~ Contentment
Tapas ~ Self-discipline
Svadhyaya ~ Self-study
Ishvara Pranidhana ~ Surrender

The idea is that we can incorporate these ideas into our lives.  Yamas are sometimes thought of as restraints - non-harming, non-stealing, etc. etc.  We are stopping ourselves from doing something when we practice the yamas.  Niyamas are sometimes referred to as 'observances' - purity, contentnment, self-study.   We are being proactive to make ourselves do something - eating pure food, or thinking about the nature of our existence.  Yamas require us to be mindful of things we sometimes aren't mindful about, and Niyamas require us to incorporate positive action in our lives mindfully. 

What's your experience with the yamas and niyamas?  Have you heard of them before?  Do you have a similar discipline that these ethical teachings remind you of?  Comment below and we can have a discourse about it! 



*Eight Limbs of Yoga: 
  • Yama - Restraints
  • Niyama - Observances
  • Asana - Poses
  • Pranayama - Breathing
  • Pratyahara - Internal Focus
  • Dharana - Concentration
  • Dhyana - Meditation
  • Samadhi - Bliss

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

What Keeps You From Your Yoga Mat?

I talk to people all of the time about yoga.  People who have been practicing for a long time, people who are brand new to the practice, people who teach yoga, who want to teach yoga, people who have never heard of or done yoga and people who think yoga is a religion or a cult.

The people I’ve been thinking most about these past few days, though, are the ones who have told me they want to come to yoga, but have good reason why they can’t.  So, in no particular order, here are my thoughts on all these reasons to not go to yoga:

  1. “I don’t have the time” -  A basic tenet of yoga is to practice presence – right here, right now.  The present moment is no set period of time.  Since I had my son three years and a half years ago, I have been (not so secretly anymore) doing half sun salutations in the bathroom.  It takes less than a minute, allows me to reconnect to my body, my breath and my life right now. 
  1. “I can’t afford it” – I just searched “Free Yoga Class” on YouTube and it came back with more than 3,000 results. On top of that, the local library has a number of DVDs and lots of cable stations have FreeZone fitness classes, including yoga classes.  Also, many studios, including my own, offer trades where you can do small jobs for the studio and earn free classes.  All you have to do is ask. 
  1. “I don’t know how to do it and I’m embarrassed about my fitness level” – Here’s a little yoga secret:  There’s no way to do this practice wrong.  The whole point is to listen to yourself and your body.  Yoga poses are designed to allow the practitioner to find an ‘edge’ and be curious about it.  It doesn’t matter where your edge is, it only matters that you let yourself explore.  True, you can over exert yourself if you don’t listen to your body and be patient with your posture practice.  We all started somewhere, you might as well start here. 
  1. “I haven’t found an instructor I like” – I totally get it.  Not every instructor is for everyone.  That shouldn’t keep you from going to yoga.  Take what works for you from what’s being offered by the instructor and leave or ignore what doesn’t.  Yoga instructors are people, and people are all different, and sometimes people are just having bad days.  Keep practicing.  
  2. “It’s too cold in yoga studios”  - Wear layers or ask your instructor to turn up the heat
  3. “I can’t do yoga, I am a smoker” -   Quitting smoking is hard, I know from personal experience. I recognize that despite its benefits, quitting smoking might not yet be on your agenda.  .A few minutes of full breath in a yoga class does wonders for smokers.  If you begin your yoga practice now, you may find that you begin to gravitate toward healthier choices, and eliminating things that aren’t supporting you (like smoking) may become easier.   

  1. “Yoga isn’t enough of a workout for me” –Vinaysa yoga is aerobic and yoga asana is weight bearing work.  In a recent article in the New York Times the “Burpee” http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/17/magazine/mag-17exercise-t.html?pagewanted=all was noted as potentially the ‘best’ exercise there was.  I can help but notice its similarity to a sun salutation.  You might consider jogging to your local studio for your practice, or maybe do the whole asana practice standing on one leg. 

  1. “I have an injury, I can’t do yoga” or “My doctor said I shouldn’t do yoga for a while” – I am not a doctor, and I never advise my yoga students to go against medical advice.  But I will say that yoga is an individualized practice to support your body wherever you are.  I frequently will modify poses to meet my body where it is.    The poses adapt to your body; you shouldn't adapt your body to the poses.  If your doctor tells you that you can’t practice yoga, it’s ok to ask what poses or practices your doctor wants you to avoid so you don’t have to throw the baby out with the bathwater. 

 What are your reasons for not going to yoga?  Comment below and we’ll see if we can’t help each other make it to the mat as often as possible. 

Yoga Supports Your Exercise Program

As Published on RhodyFitness

While for many, yoga is the only physical exercise they do, a yoga practice can also serve as a great complement to any form of exercise.  While lots of types of exercise can be practiced with a kind of meditative, mindful attentive quality – like running or golf or Pilates, for example – yoga differs in that its purpose is to clear the mind; the physical fitness benefits are happy secondary results of the actual purpose of practicing yoga.

A regular yoga practice not only help support whatever one is passionate about by bringing more overall wholeness and well being, but by supporting the body physically.  The asana (poses) practiced in a typical class are designed to strengthen and lengthen muscles, stabilize joints and increase oxygenation of the blood through breathing with awareness.  All of this is done with the mindfulness and attention to the physical and mental being.  Sounds great, right? The sequencing of a yoga class – bending, stretching, twisting, or balancing – is typically designed to warm up the muscles, challenge the body, and require just enough thought so the focus stays on the mat and not on your ‘to do’ list.

Often my students will hear me say before and during a yoga class that students should feel free to ‘meet themselves where they are.’ So this means not necessarily trying to reach some goal for the time they are on the mat, but instead to use the poses and the breath work we do in yoga to be aware of the truth of this precise moment. How does your body actually feel?  What is your breath like right now?

Cultivating a deep curiosity about oneself and paying attention to the messages your body sends you is a key part of a yoga practice.  This is particularly helpful if you find yourself working with an injury or physical limitation. Yoga encompasses many different types of movement and breathing, so the practice can be tailored to the specific needs of whoever is practicing, depending on the day, the time and the way the person is feeling.

I’ve had many students in classes working with injuries, using the practice to heal themselves gently while staying physically connected and active.  I encourage students to use group classes a guide to developing their own personalized yoga practice.  Usually in an early part of a class, I’ll guide students into child’s pose (balasana) and I’ll use that pose as a resting pose throughout the class.  I encourage students to come back to balasana whenever they need to, no matter what the rest of the class is doing.  This practice of returning to balasana whenever one feels disconnected requires awareness of and kindness to the self, both of which are at the essence of yoga.

Sharpening the skills we learn on a yoga mat can support the rest of the work we do in our lives.  You don’t need to become a renunciate and sit in meditation for hours a day to gain the benefits of a yoga practice.  You can have a full, normal life and use yoga as a tool to support whatever it is you do and love.

Listen to Tracy read her This I Believe Essay

Listen to Tracy read her essay on WRNI

Essay By Bristol Yoga Studio Director Featured on WRNI

Bristol resident and Bristol Yoga Studio director, Tracy Ramos, will be this week's featured contributor on Rhode Island public radio for her "This I Believe - Rhode Island" essay submission.
According to the RI NPR website, "This I Believe - Rhode Island..." is a segment aired in "effort to share the many stories of people of Rhode Island... the personal experiences that have helped form the opinions of your neighbors."
Tune in to WRNI on Wednesday at 6:35 am, 8:35 am, and 5:44 pm to hear Ramos' "This I Believe" essay or listen online at www.WRNI.org/listen-live.html. Below, read about Ramos' enlightenment when she decided to take her future into her own hands.
I JUST WANT TO LOVE PEOPLE!” I sobbed into my cell phone while driving down Route 6 one early morning in the fall of 2004. I was talking to my old friend, Kelly. I was distraught. I was working for a woman I didn’t trust, doing a job I didn’t believe in. For the third time that week this unfulfilling job had me driving from Bristol to Hartford, to work on a project I didn’t like or think would be successful. To top it all off, it was slowly becoming clear that the guy I thought was the “one” wasn’t that into me. I was heartbroken.
On that drive, it seemed that all my hard work to get what I wanted from life was for nothing. And then, in a moment of desperate clarity, I told Kelly: “I just want to love people.” I believe we have to ask for what we want.
As soon as I said it I immediately dismissed it as ridiculous. “What does that even mean ‘to love people?’ Who says that?! How stupid!” I told her. Kelly disagreed. She said “If that’s what you want, you will do it.”
I lost that job working for the woman I didn’t trust. I ended the relationship with the guy who wasn’t that into me. I entered into yoga teacher training in 2005, and as I deepened my own yoga practice, I came to understand that Kelly was right; it was possible to do exactly what I wanted. So I did. I partnered with another yoga teacher to open a yoga studio in 2007. I fell in love with an amazing guy who was really into me. We got married and now have two incredible kids. With every moment, the love keeps multiplying.
I’ve learned that sometimes, in the hardest moments of life, we find clarity about what really matters. And actually saying it out loud plants the seed for whatever we want to grow into reality. Of course my life still has some challenging moments, but now I can see these moments as opportunities, knowing that my work as a mom and a yoga studio director is meaningful and filled with real love. I’ll never forget that morning when I got clear about what I really wanted, and I’m so grateful that I get to live it out every day; all because I asked for it.
Related Topics: Bristol Yoga Studio and WRNI

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