First of all, big shout out of gratitude to Christine for commenting on my blogs :)
Ashtanga yoga is physically challenging. It starts with asana, the physical part of yoga, because that is something easy to see and explain. Inhale, raise your arms, exhale, forward fold. Easy easy. The philosophy and spirituality come later- maybe! Some people don't get past the physical. I don't think that everyone is interested in the other parts, but whatever works! If just breathing and moving helps one to be a happier, more productive human, fine. Ashtanga means 8 Limbs. If you're unfamiliar with Patanjali's 8 limbs of yoga, check it out. There is a misconception that Pattabhi Jois's ashtanga is different from Patanjali's ashtanga, but Patthabi Jois actually based his system on Patanjali's. I read something that someone else wrote saying that [Pattabhi Jois's] ashtanga is a physical system and my initial reaction was to get annoyed. Would thousands of people put their lives on hold, spend a ton of money, and deal with the discomforts and inconveniences of India to travel to Mysore to study ashtanga if it were all physical? Maybe. I don't know. I guess it's none of my business what anyone else thinks of the style of yoga that I practice on or off of my mat.
You can't escape your shit with ashtanga yoga. If you don't want to deal with something- too bad, it's right there. No skipping. If you half ass it, they (teachers, assistants, your conscience) will tell you to do it again. I find my outlook and thought process on my mat to be very similar to off my mat. I look around the room, and if someone is better, flexier, stronger than me, I feel insecure. If someone is more stiff, less skilled, weaker than me, I feel confident. It's a terrible system that induces jealousy and leaves me always comparing myself to others. It's unhealthy and unhelpful, and I'm not sure how to stop it. I went to a talk the other day and the speaker, who was interesting and funny, was talking about how jealousy pushes things away. When he said it, it made tons of sense and was interesting, so apologies for not transmitting it properly but the example was, if a friend makes lots of money, and we are jealous of them and think it's not fair that they have such good fortune, we are, in a sense, pushing the money and fortune away. Any advice for diminishing jealousy?
Back home I practice ashtanga yoga about 4 days a week, and one of those days is usually a led primary. That leave three days for my complete practice: all of primary and half of second, which takes me about an hour and 45 minutes. The truth is, sometimes I am running late or don't have the time and energy, so I will skip vinyasas, rush through closing, etc. Here in Mysore, I am doing that full hour and 45 minute practice 5 days a week and led primary 1 day. My body is SO tired. I have seen some improvement on my eka pada sirsasana (yay!) but some decline in my kapotasana and backbends. I figured I was just exhausted, but Sam, one of Sarawathi's came to talk to me to tell me he noticed both of these changes, and wanted to make sure I knew about the relationship between the progress/decline. I didn't! My response was, "well should I do this, this, or this differently?" And he said, "nope." I guess it's very normal for us folks who end and eka pada and dwi pada to have a tough time with backbending. I don't completely understand why- The spine should be straight for those, but mine isn't! It's all hunched over, which is the opposite of a backbend, so maybe that's the answer. The ashtanga system is a microcosm for life, and I thought of the expression: you win some, you lose some. Maybe when your career is going really well, you have issues with your relationship. Or when you are doing lots of fun socializing, you don't have time for healthy eating and exercise and don't feel great physically. Maybe someone out there does win 'em all, but I sure don't. It was helpful to learn how common that is, and I'm glad he pointed that out to me.
I'm taking an ayurvedic nutrition and cooking course. It's three hours a day for 5 days. Half is lecture and half is practical- a cooking lesson. The we eat a huge lunch. Eating the super healthy nourishing food feels so good. It makes me feel satisfied without feeling grossly full, even when I eat a lot. We are getting all of the recipes, and I hope I do make some of the food sometimes. She wasn't into the idea of leftovers, and discussed the importance of preparing fresh food. It's hard when you live alone, and some days I don't get home from work until 11pm. I'm definitely not cooking then! Oh right, work, something I haven't done in three weeks. I need to figure the work and money thing out, but I promised myself I wouldn't worry about it until March. Here I am.... not worrying... not a bit!
You guys know how I have that shoulder injury/ issue? I've had it for a year and tried everything - acupuncture, massage therapy, chiropractor... I had one castor oil bath on Sunday, and it's felt fine all week. This is an ayurvedic method very popular with ashtangis. All you do if cover yourself with castor oil. Wait 45 minutes (or longer, but if it's your first one, start with 30 minutes), then scrub it off in a hot shower. It is a thick, sticky oil, so be careful. It removes the heat and pain from your body. I've been hearing about it for years but always thought it was just one of those things that fell into the category of hippy new age nonsense. In the ashtanga tradition, you take one day of rest per week, and on this day, oil bath! Give it a try, let me know how it goes.
Internet is working in my hotel/ apartment/ hostel (whatever you want to call it) again so I can watch stand up comedy in bed. For the authentic Indian experience :)
Ashtanga yoga is physically challenging. It starts with asana, the physical part of yoga, because that is something easy to see and explain. Inhale, raise your arms, exhale, forward fold. Easy easy. The philosophy and spirituality come later- maybe! Some people don't get past the physical. I don't think that everyone is interested in the other parts, but whatever works! If just breathing and moving helps one to be a happier, more productive human, fine. Ashtanga means 8 Limbs. If you're unfamiliar with Patanjali's 8 limbs of yoga, check it out. There is a misconception that Pattabhi Jois's ashtanga is different from Patanjali's ashtanga, but Patthabi Jois actually based his system on Patanjali's. I read something that someone else wrote saying that [Pattabhi Jois's] ashtanga is a physical system and my initial reaction was to get annoyed. Would thousands of people put their lives on hold, spend a ton of money, and deal with the discomforts and inconveniences of India to travel to Mysore to study ashtanga if it were all physical? Maybe. I don't know. I guess it's none of my business what anyone else thinks of the style of yoga that I practice on or off of my mat.
You can't escape your shit with ashtanga yoga. If you don't want to deal with something- too bad, it's right there. No skipping. If you half ass it, they (teachers, assistants, your conscience) will tell you to do it again. I find my outlook and thought process on my mat to be very similar to off my mat. I look around the room, and if someone is better, flexier, stronger than me, I feel insecure. If someone is more stiff, less skilled, weaker than me, I feel confident. It's a terrible system that induces jealousy and leaves me always comparing myself to others. It's unhealthy and unhelpful, and I'm not sure how to stop it. I went to a talk the other day and the speaker, who was interesting and funny, was talking about how jealousy pushes things away. When he said it, it made tons of sense and was interesting, so apologies for not transmitting it properly but the example was, if a friend makes lots of money, and we are jealous of them and think it's not fair that they have such good fortune, we are, in a sense, pushing the money and fortune away. Any advice for diminishing jealousy?
Back home I practice ashtanga yoga about 4 days a week, and one of those days is usually a led primary. That leave three days for my complete practice: all of primary and half of second, which takes me about an hour and 45 minutes. The truth is, sometimes I am running late or don't have the time and energy, so I will skip vinyasas, rush through closing, etc. Here in Mysore, I am doing that full hour and 45 minute practice 5 days a week and led primary 1 day. My body is SO tired. I have seen some improvement on my eka pada sirsasana (yay!) but some decline in my kapotasana and backbends. I figured I was just exhausted, but Sam, one of Sarawathi's came to talk to me to tell me he noticed both of these changes, and wanted to make sure I knew about the relationship between the progress/decline. I didn't! My response was, "well should I do this, this, or this differently?" And he said, "nope." I guess it's very normal for us folks who end and eka pada and dwi pada to have a tough time with backbending. I don't completely understand why- The spine should be straight for those, but mine isn't! It's all hunched over, which is the opposite of a backbend, so maybe that's the answer. The ashtanga system is a microcosm for life, and I thought of the expression: you win some, you lose some. Maybe when your career is going really well, you have issues with your relationship. Or when you are doing lots of fun socializing, you don't have time for healthy eating and exercise and don't feel great physically. Maybe someone out there does win 'em all, but I sure don't. It was helpful to learn how common that is, and I'm glad he pointed that out to me.
I'm taking an ayurvedic nutrition and cooking course. It's three hours a day for 5 days. Half is lecture and half is practical- a cooking lesson. The we eat a huge lunch. Eating the super healthy nourishing food feels so good. It makes me feel satisfied without feeling grossly full, even when I eat a lot. We are getting all of the recipes, and I hope I do make some of the food sometimes. She wasn't into the idea of leftovers, and discussed the importance of preparing fresh food. It's hard when you live alone, and some days I don't get home from work until 11pm. I'm definitely not cooking then! Oh right, work, something I haven't done in three weeks. I need to figure the work and money thing out, but I promised myself I wouldn't worry about it until March. Here I am.... not worrying... not a bit!
You guys know how I have that shoulder injury/ issue? I've had it for a year and tried everything - acupuncture, massage therapy, chiropractor... I had one castor oil bath on Sunday, and it's felt fine all week. This is an ayurvedic method very popular with ashtangis. All you do if cover yourself with castor oil. Wait 45 minutes (or longer, but if it's your first one, start with 30 minutes), then scrub it off in a hot shower. It is a thick, sticky oil, so be careful. It removes the heat and pain from your body. I've been hearing about it for years but always thought it was just one of those things that fell into the category of hippy new age nonsense. In the ashtanga tradition, you take one day of rest per week, and on this day, oil bath! Give it a try, let me know how it goes.
Internet is working in my hotel/ apartment/ hostel (whatever you want to call it) again so I can watch stand up comedy in bed. For the authentic Indian experience :)
















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