Here are some photographs taken while teaching a free Introduction to Iyengar Yoga at the Herkimer Apartments community room. Herkimer Apartments are adjacent to & above the Iyengar Yoga Center of Grand Rapids and also owned and managed by the housing non-profit organization, Dwelling Place. “Dwelling Place improves the lives of people by creating quality affordable housing, providing essential support services, and serving as a catalyst for neighborhood revitalization.” IYCGR rents space from Dwelling Place. While we have offered a sliding scale community gift class for over a year not one resident has attended. So after speaking to the community resident services coordinator, Regina, it was decided to bring class to the Herkimer and meet the community in their space. I brought some mats and we used the chairs that were there. Students with low back and knee problems and pain leaned on tables which works like a trestler (Iyengar Yoga “Horse”) to take some weight off the joints of the knees, hips, pelvis and back. It was great to meet some of our neighbors and to have children in the class with their parents. Looking forward to seeing more neighbors in class soon.
yoga is for realizing our potential
“ We all receive God-given talents, and it is our duty to develop them energetically to realize their full potential, otherwise it is as if we are turning our nose up at the gifts of life. Our talents, however much they vary from individual to individual, when realized to the full, provide the link that will take us back to a reunion with the divine.”
Family Tolāsana & Padmāsana ~pan of scales & lotus pose~~photos from 2015~~
“Who knows, maybe the root is the flower of that other life? ”
From the periphery to the core
“In asana and pranayama practice, we should have the impression we are working on the outer to get closer to the inner reality of our existence. We work from the periphery to the core. The material body has a practical reality that is accessible. It is here and now, and we can do something with it. However, we must not forget that the innermost part of our being is also trying to help us. It wants to come out the surface and express itself.” BKS Iyengar, Light on Life p. 61
Dandāsana ~~staff pose
A little progress
“On this path no effort is wasted,
no gain is ever reversed;
even a little of this practice
will shelter you from great sorrow.” 2.40 Bhagavad Gita
Eka Pāda Ūrdhva Dhanurāsana ~~one legged upward bow pose
with support of wall and two blocks
On Studying Yoga as a Healing Art: Yoga Therapy
“Yoga teaches us to cure what need not be endured, and to endure what cannot be cured.”
“Practice. It will take care of all your problems.”
First and foremost, I am a yoga practitioner in the lineage of Yogācārya B.K.S. Iyengar, as a student of his student, Mr. Manouso Manos. I do not let my practice go unkindled. This is the most valuable gift I can give my students. This human body is a laboratory for learning. This is the most valuable gift I can give my students. I have practiced from states of despair, in anxiety, in agonizing pain of injury, in illnesses, through cycles and fluctuations of hormones and seasons, in pregnancy, in childbirth, after childbirth, in nausea, in irritation, in anger, in cold, in heat, in over-stimulation, in exhaustion and distraction, in fear, in ambition, in depression, in imbalance of all kinds, for twenty years. I use practice to solve my problems. Practice is the means to find balance and to find transcendence from these changing states--this is Yoga.
I continue to be a student. I ask my teacher questions when confronted with cases outside my experience, and he answers from his experience as a yoga practitioner of over forty years, his studentship with Yogācārya B.K.S. Iyengar, including assisting in his medical yoga classes for decades, and from his long teaching career. Soon I head to the Abode of Iyengar Yoga in San Francisco, to attend or assist my teacher's public classes and the March Intensive. This will be the 21st week-long intensive since I began to study with him over fifteen years ago.
Last year, the International Association of Yoga Therapists granted me a certificate in Yoga Therapeutics, based on the thousands of hours of training and practical experience that I already have as a Certified Iyengar Yoga Teacher. As students of Iyengar Yoga, we are learning how to care for our problems, pains, and conditions from the very first classes. Yoga is intrinsically healing. Yoga teaches what to do and not do, based on the present conditions. It teaches how to become free from afflictions. "Yoga is about doing the right thing at the right time," as my teacher, Manouso has often said. While relief can sometimes come immediately for the practitioner, it can depend on how long we have been living in a certain pattern. Practice is the means to change our behavior patterns (physical, physiological, mental/emotional, intellectual) that contribute to our suffering. Yogācārya B.K.S. Iyengar's devoted and intense practice led to the innovations in the teaching of yoga, through applying all the other limbs or petals of yoga to the practice of āsana. Practicing specific asana in specific sequences, with intricacies of alignment and the use of props (for less effort, to increase timing in postures) contribute to healing and relieve suffering from health conditions and imbalances.
It takes long study, long training, and uninterrupted, devoted practice over a long period of time to understand and embody the intricacies of alignment in āsana or posture in order to teach these aspects to others. I have already been studying "yoga therapeutics" with my teacher for all these years, and yet there is so much more to learn about its potential to relieve suffering in particular examples, specific cases and conditions. After the Intensive, I am heading to the Iyengar Yoga Institute of Los Angeles for the Iyengar Yoga Therapeutics program, which is directed by Manouso as well. I am grateful for this opportunity to be a student in the program with Iyengar Yoga teachers, colleagues, from around the world, and to have a concentrated period to learn with my teacher. Its an opportunity to learn more and to give more in the future to help students on their path. "The known is finite, and the unknown is infinite...Yoga is one. Do not create divisions." Yogācārya B.K.S. Iyengar
“It is better to do your own duty
badly, than to perfectly do
another’s; you are safe from harm
when you do what you should be doing.”
So grateful to be a student in an Iyengar lineage of Yoga that acknowledges and emphasizes and explores the therapeutic, healing power of alignment in yoga asana from the very first classes. One of the gifts of studying this method of yoga is coming to understand one’s strengths and weaknesses on all the levels of the kośas(sheathes or layers of being: muscular-skeletal, physiological/energetic, mental/emotional, intellectual) and then discovering the ability to learn and seek balance and eventually transcend duality through practice.
Starting the practice asking “what are the conditions of the body/breath/mind?” as Sri Prashant Iyengar says, gets us looking and questioning and seeing what needs to be done and addressed NOW given our present condition and situation.
Niralamba Halasana & Sarvangasana with double roll blanket below shoulders and single roll blanket supporting the mid-upper back skull.
Immersion
“The practice of yogasana for the sake of health, to keep fit, or to maintain flexibility is the external practice of yoga. While this is a legitimate place to begin, it is not the end. As one penetrates the inner body more deeply, one’s mind becomes immersed in the asana.” BKS Iyengar, Light on Life, p. 24.
Ardha Baddha Padma Paschimottānāsana~~~”Half bound lotus intense stretch of the western side pose”
No, there’s no escaping, nor would I want to escape
this outgo, this foot-loosening, this solution
to gravity and a single shape.
Now I am here, later I will be there.
I will be that small cloud, staring down at the water,
the one that stalls, that lifts its white legs, that looks like a lamb. —Mary Oliver, “Life Story”
Dhanurāsana. Bow pose