I wanted this post to be special and to include only those entries I read throughout the year that added value for all, and of course, relate to Ashtanga Yoga in the tradition of Bramacharia, Krishnamacharya, Jois, Ramaswami et all.
I am SURE there are other valuable posts I may have missed. Feel free to share links in the comments if you found something that taught you, left you thinking, helped you along the path and relates to ashtanga. As long as it adds value it belongs on the list. Together with the link let us know why it is relevant, what it taught you and how it relates to the practice.
Here is my 32 best posts of 2011 pertaining to Ashtanga Yoga. You know me and my 32 thing! Perhaps there is a few more than 32, but who is counting? And the more value the better, right?
Kiki Flynn made my day, or rather, my fourth quarter, with her explanation of how daily dry brushing helps the skin detoxify, shed the old, open pores, and glow. I now do it every day.
[If you cannot see pictures go to ClaudiaYoga.com]
I am SURE there are other valuable posts I may have missed. Feel free to share links in the comments if you found something that taught you, left you thinking, helped you along the path and relates to ashtanga. As long as it adds value it belongs on the list. Together with the link let us know why it is relevant, what it taught you and how it relates to the practice.
Here is my 32 best posts of 2011 pertaining to Ashtanga Yoga. You know me and my 32 thing! Perhaps there is a few more than 32, but who is counting? And the more value the better, right?
Student and Teacher
Sharath, during an early December conference, says that if
someone asks him his occupation he says yoga
student because there
is still too much to learn. (In the questions and answers portion)
I am a student and always will be, says Paul Dallaghan in his article: The
Path of The Student. He is not only a certified Ashtanga yoga teacher
and student but also a senior teacher/student of pranayama under O.P.
Tiwariji.
How
to get started with Ashtanga Yoga 32 suggestions. Now you know who wrote that one.
Asana
Fear in Back-bend -by Kino MacGregor- is what I a going through, the post hit home for me, especially the part of not rushing at the expense of technique.
On another front I also appreciated the ten
tips for dropbacks of Ashtangi Angel as she finally got to doing
it.
Also from Kino, this post explaining how to jump back (with video and in five stages) has
been the most useful thing I saw in 2011. The holding of the legs
together mid-flight is something I attempt daily these days thanks to it, and
it is helping me build stamina and sometimes, sort-of, jump back.
This is the best explanation I have found on pasasana (the first pose of the intermediate series). Just listening to David Garrigues made me aware of things I did not even fathom before. A post to savor.
Richard Freeman explores the impact that smoking marihuana has on practice, and it is not that productive.
Nobel considers how
useful are DVDs for learning a yoga asana practice? I have to say for
me they are very much so, that is how I started!
How does one go about doing a headstand? Grimmly was posed the question early this year and came up with these suggestions.
How does one go about doing a headstand? Grimmly was posed the question early this year and came up with these suggestions.
Practicing while injured is always an inspiration to non-injured practitioners watching. the sorting of the obstacles makes us grateful for what we have.
Taking Care of Our Bodies
Kiki Flynn made my day, or rather, my fourth quarter, with her explanation of how daily dry brushing helps the skin detoxify, shed the old, open pores, and glow. I now do it every day.
On that note I had a very popular post on how to do a castor oil bath, or the Ashtanga Yoga Saturday Practice, and I have gotten e-mails from people that started going for it after reading.
Don't squander life force. Remember what Iyengar says, for every 30 minutes of asana practice, 5 of savasana (rest) are indicated to let the nervous system have a chance to come back to neutral.
Anatomy
Early this year I asked out loud what does
"nutation" mean? (which I now understand as tilting the pelvis backwards and forward). I never expected that Senior Ashtanga Yoga
Student/Teacher David
Keil himself would take the time to answer, and his answer became the
3rd most read post of all times at the blog.
Mysore
James came with me to Mysore for the first time in his life in
January, a place where he never dreamed he would go and of course he practiced at AYRI. In his own words, which are very funny, he was completely humiliated
by yoga.
| James coming out of the shala in Mysore last January. "Brutal" is all he could say |
A few months later he came with me to Sharath's tour of NYC in April, where he was humiliated
again. He cannot use that line on his
next trip on January.
What does it mean to be authorized to teach by the Ashtanga
Yoga Research Institute? Here
is a post that explores the question in
a balanced and interesting way and by someone who is authorized.
Sharath's conferences are always interesting to me. Two that stand out are one from January where students asked about all kinds of 'problems' and how to deal with them, and he kept coming back with one and only one answer.
The second conference to stand out is one that Suzzy recounted from a few weeks ago where Sharath goes over how the transformation happens, what the goal of asana is and answers very interesting questions.
MysorePedia is one of my most read posts and it has lots of information on how to get around, where to go, where to eat etc while visiting Ashtanga Central. If you want to add a place or wrote a post about a place let me know, I will link!
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| Picture from a recent conference taken by Kino |
Teaching
If you find yourself ready to teach, here is an eye-opening post on how to start a Mysore program. It's in two parts, here is the second one. It takes quite a bit of energy to go ahead with this endeavour and it does not always work as Nobel explains. But it is worth pursuing if the calling strikes.
Philosophy
Bramacharya is more than sex energy. Great read on the way to harness energy for all of us, also from Paul Dallaghan.
Is there such a thing as quality vs. quantity in Mysore practice? wonders the un-ashtangi
Richard Freeman on how to save the world
Richard Freeman on how to save the world
Money
There was that article in Bloomberg Business Week that made many of us cringe because of the lack of frugality and, may I say, common sense. I was prompted to post how much I spend on yoga (coming from real experience rather than fantasy) and a bunch of other ashtangis did the same thing, like, for example: SereneFlavour and Kai, among others, many others.
New in 2011
This year Grimmly put together a practice book on Vinyasa Krama sequences, which is something many ashtangis use. It is a work in progress and a very useful resrouce because of the detail that is going into it. He is offering it for free as well.
A new (old) student of Krishnamacharya was found this year, in NYC. And he has a notebook!
A new (old) student of Krishnamacharya was found this year, in NYC. And he has a notebook!
OK, this may not be news to you but it was to me, I am still a bit shocked that the Bagavad Gita is NOT really what we thought it was
Rose compiled an Ashtanga Social Network page.
Rose compiled an Ashtanga Social Network page.
Workshop Recounts
Wonder what it is like to take a few days of practice with Lino
Miele? here
is a taste.
Flying Floating and Handstanding, a story from a David Swenson workshop
Flying Floating and Handstanding, a story from a David Swenson workshop
Ashtanga Yoga WOW Video
Watching this is surreal, you hear her talk as if she is
discussing if you want milk with your coffee? or maybe just black? You feel you can totally
do it. It just, I don't know, feels easy. She is a wonder.





How do you remember where all these great posts came from? I must set up a bookmark folder for next year so I can do the same, looking forward to reading through them all again over the next couple of days. Thank you for the book plug,thats the edition with just the subroutine posters of course. Just finishing off the last of the practice notes for the new edition, anyone interested in downloading it may want to wait a week or so and download the new version.
ReplyDeleteThanks Grimmly, great that you clarified that point, I will keep an eye to see when the link to the book can be replaced for the new edition.
ReplyDeleteYou have inspired me*! great selection of articles~
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Claudia. Thanks for the plugs to my yoga DVD post and my yoga (non)teaching post. Honestly, I didn't think the DVD post was much to rave about. But thanks for the plug anyway; as they say, there is no such thing as bad publicity :-)
ReplyDeleteKara, thanks!
ReplyDeleteNobel, I did like that post, I appreciate how your academic background makes you appreciate all angles of an argument. And I know from conversations with people that many are starting practices with DVDs. Good to hear from you!
hahaha have to agree, I saw Kino doing the deep hip rotation and it looked so easy that I went straight to my mat and tried it, I failed miserably, lol.
ReplyDeletehi Claudia
ReplyDeleteyou are most kind to have included my post in your 32 list ;-) thank you so much. and thank you for your blog - you have inspired me and taught me so many things and introduced to so many other people/ topics/ posts via your blog - keep them coming
merry xmas and happy new year ~ ivana x
Priscilla, me too, felt tempted!
ReplyDeleteIvana, thanks! and sure I appreciated the notes on the Swenson workshop, happy 2012 for you too!