Monday, January 21, 2013

I Love Yoga. Article


How many times have you tried to tell your friends about the energy body but you just can’t seem to convince it’s real?

How many times have said friends stopped talking to you altogether, or at the very least mentally categorized you as the cuckoo?
Yoga teachers are famous for saying funny things that don’t make sense to non-practitioners. It’s hard to put into words the things we feel sometimes, especially words that everyone can understand.
But those days might soon come to pass. Stephanie Shorter, PhD, presented a lecture at the Dallas Yoga Conference on yoga research, summarizing past and current scientific research in words that yoga teachers and students can understand and most importantly, connecting all our crazy new age rhetoric into hard science.
Here are five enlightening facts to help you understand what is happening in the body on a physiological level, plus practical applications to integrate into your daily practice (good news: you probably do these things already!)
When you look at an overview of the accepted, reliable research to date, you’ll find conflicting results. Many studies in the 1980’s proved that yoga is an effective practice for reducing cortisol levels in the body and promoting relaxation. But a recent study on patients using yoga to treat fibromyalgia found that a consistent yoga practice actually increased cortisol levels. Funny thing is, patients with fibromyalgia suffer from intense chronic pain because their pain tolerance levels suffer from low cortisol. The increase, in these particular cases, is actually a good thing and led to overall decreased pain. Proof that yoga will give you what you need.
If you take care of your nervous system, the rest of your body will function at optimal levels. Conditioned by society to perform in a constant high-stress state, our bodies rarely reach the rest and digest phase. Think of your sympathetic and parasympathetic systems as a teeter-totter. Both are always needed to function, rather than one dominating the other. Research has found that to balance out these two systems, an optimal breathing cycle should include six breaths per minute (think of one breath as an inhale and an exhale). Yoga takes care of this on its own with practices that emphasize breathwork.
It’s important to focus on lengthening the exhale to stimulate the parasympathetic nervous system. Set a timer for one minute and see if you can regulate your breath to six cycles per minute with a lengthened exhale. Then notice how you feel when you finish.
Yoga makes you young:
Beyond the flexibility benefits, yoga works on a cellular level. With increased oxidation in the body, cells become damaged, tissues become inflamed and acidity in the cell structures increase. This leads to illness and disease over time. But a consistent yoga practice will help reverse that damage. Research has show that practitioners showed a decreased level in oxidative stress in the cells after an eight week practice. Less inflammation, less cell damage and less acidity in the body = greater long-term health (and younger looking skin!).
In the past, researches have mostly looked at the effects of yoga on practitioners over the course of an 8-12 week program. But these days, researchers are starting to study the effects of small doses. In fact, it has been found that a shorter practice three days a week is more effective than one 90-minute practice once a week.
It’s the same principle as eating your vegetables. You can’t just eat a ton of them one day to make up for the lack of leafy greens in your diet the rest of the week. Mark Whitwell is well known for promoting yoga routines that take just seven minutes a day. According to Whitwell, that’s all you need to benefit from the effects. Plus, the more you practice the more benefits you receive, as research has also proven that the benefits accumulate over time.
This may be the biggest breakthrough of all for practical application and yoga language. There are 12 pairs of nerves in the brain that control motor and sensory function, but one of those nerve pairs is extra special—it takes on double duty and controls both at the same time. It starts from the brain and moves down either side of the neck connecting first at the heart.
Called the vagus nerve, or wandering nerve, this little guy connects with every major organ in the body. The nervous system works by being stimulated through chemical and electrochemical stimulation, but also responds to mechanical stimulation. Thus, when you do a heart opening posture, you’re mechanically stimulating the vagus nerve. When you take a deep breath into the kidneys, you’re mechanically stimulating the vagus nerve. And when you pull your leg into your chest, you’re mechanically stimulating that wondrous nerve.
When this nerve is stimulated, signals are sent to the organs to control function. For example, research now proves that yoga can increase your variable heart rate, which leads to overall greater health. Rather than expecting your heart rate to beat at exactly the same intervals, it is optimal for some variability to occur between each beat (we’re talking thousandths of a second here).
It makes sense when you think about it. If you’re heart beats with the same amount of time in between each pump, you’ve conditioned your body to perform in a very specific state all the time. What happens when you enter into a new state? You freak out. But, if there is some variability, you’ve actually conditioned your body to respond to a variety of different situations. In other words, you’re able to deal with whatever comes at you. That is why when we backbend and breathe deeply, we stimulate the vagus nerve, which sends signals to the heart to increase variability (motor function).

And isn’t that what we’ve been saying all along?

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

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Ashley Josephine has been seriously studying yoga, wellness, and life for 5 years and currently lives and teaches in Wichita Falls, TX. A writer, traveler and a whole lot of other things, Ashley believes wholeheartedly in experiences. She's currently taking names for her12 Days of Relaxation Challenge.

Friday, January 11, 2013

Module 2 Syllabus


MODULE 2   SHAMBHAVA HATHA YOGA TEACHER TRAINING    SATURDAY SCHEDULE     2013
(JAN 12, 19; FEB 2, 16;  MARCH 2,16,30;  APR. 13) 
Subject to small changes, which will be updated on the blog. 



Topics
Homework & Exams
Methods
And
Materials
ASANA/
PRANAYAMA
ANATOMY
MEDITATION
TOPICS

COMMENTS
 Jan. 2, 2013

#1
Review cueing

Pose/ counterpose

Vinyasa

Dynamic sequences
Review Assignments
Chanting
YJ handout

Class design template

Surya Namaskar
Candra Namaskar
Class design
Integrating the
Breath for
Core awareness

Witness the mind Meditation practice
Chanting
Found .of Shambhava Yoga philosophy #1
Talk on Nityananda

1/19/2013

#2
Adjustments I:
St. Poses,  BB

Modifications

Responsive Cueing
6 Week Outline
Theme Topics Due



Teach 3 poses from the Karma hat!

Mechanisms
Affecting
Stretch

Neck safety
Inner Focus
MANTRA
Found.  Of Shambhava Yoga Course #2
Talk on Muktananda

2/2/2013
#3
Adjustments II:
FB, Twists

Planning and
Composing a Class

Responsibilities
And Teaching
Guidelines
Clarify 6-week outline:
Refinements

Block 2 Essay questions given  #
Teaching Chain:  cueing without doing

Lumbar spine safety

Living in the Present

Found.  Of Shambhava Yoga Course #3
Talk on Shambhavananda



Egg practice
Om shree Nityanandaya namah
2/16/2013

#4
Adjustments III:
Inversions,, twists, savasana

Special Topics:
Ayurveda
Adding Depth with Yoga /Sutras
The art of visualization
Restorative Yoga
6-Week Outline: theme topics w. structure and pranayama progression DUE   (First draft)

Develop different scripts for savasana, opening class.

Assign vinyasas for next class


Chair Yoga
Practice
Or Partner Yoga practice
Knee safety
Found.  Of Shambhava Yoga Course #4

SURRENDER
AND THE WISH
TO GROW

Meditation practice

3/2/2013
#5
Special Topics:

Elderly/ Frail

Professional Ethics
VINYASA   ASSIGNMENT DUE
5 asanas to prepare and counterpose

Mini-Vinyasa
Teaching practice:
5 asanas to prepare and counterpose
Restorative Yoga Practice with adjustments
Anatomy
Q and A
USING DAILY LIFE FOR SPIRITUAL GROWTH
Meditation practice
Found.  Of Shambhava Yoga Course #5

3/16//2013
#6
Special Topics:
Kids Yoga
Pre/Post Natal
Block 2 essay
questions DUE
#1,2,3,7,8

Rudis Gratitude exercise
Mini-Vinyasa
Teaching
Practice:  5 asanas to prepare and counter


The Goal:
Transcending the Mind

Found.  Of Shambhava Yoga Course #6
Rudis Gratitude exercise
3/30/2013

#7
Special Topics:
Hatha Yoga for the Chair,
Back Care Yoga
Design Drop in class
6 Week Outline:
FINAL PROJECT DUE: in written form +
Block 2 Practicums
Payment for course due in full as of 3/30/2011 TURN IN  records of hrs


Students teach one class from 6-week outline


Individual conferences and feedback forms
4/13/2013

#8

GRADUATION!
Block 2 Practicums



Students teach one class from 6-week
outline


CONGRATULATIONS!
YOU MADE IT!!!