Mar 31, 2011

Yoga Talent Search: The Naked, The Sci-Fi, And the Different Ones


See last line to make sense
 of my drawing 
Some yogis in the talent competition back at Yoga Journal did not put clothes on and I say: power to them!

I like that a) they gave themselves permission, and b) they are not afraid of showing that they were born this way.

The naked:
1.- The nude shot girl
2.- The guy with the dog 
3.- The art yoga nude for a cause 

The Sci-Fi
Surfing the cosmic waves
Metaphorically enlightened

The Different

Finally, here are some that do not quite fit-in with the idea of what you would normally expect to see on the cover of Yoga Journal. Examples:

MALES:
A Senior citizen trying really hard!
A nice modified triangle
Some back bend variation that looks difficult

FEMALES:
A senior citizen enjoying her yoga
A nice tree pose by the beach
A Bikram competition style of pose
A nice warrior pose

And my favorite No Coffe No Prana!

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You a Yogi? Watch This!

Found this video through Tobye at Elephant in this article and as an experiment I went to practice right after watching it.  It was magic!

Visualizing how the fuzz can go away was cosmically helpful.  By fuzz I do not mean like when I am the one doing a fuzz... you know? like when I do not want to drop back. No. I mean literarly the fuzz that is in between our tissues or something, I do not know all the terms yet, I have to watch the video again.  20 times.

I want to share this with everyone who does not stretch daily.  That will teach them! I am thinking, as if I had some power over anyone.  I know I don't but it sure worked for me.

Tobye writes on his own cool blog which is here.


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The Thursday Blog Watch - Best of the Blog-Sphere

Saharth wearing his last name
on his heart.
Sharath (Head of the Ashtanga Yoga lineage) says the yoga lifestyle is hard -second paragraph-. Yes it is!

Killer BaRbies? watch at your own discretion.

Is parsva drishti (yoga jargon for looking to the side while in a pose like this) really such a pain?

21 Things I Wish Someone Told me Before I Started Practicing Ashtanga Yoga reaches over 10,000 views. Gratitude!

An Argentinean friend says it all in one picture... on how the media scares us

Fellow yogi/blogger switches her office-desk and sits on the floor to work, nice before and after pictures.

Neti-Pot confessions
Self-Portrait by
MangaMollie.blogspot.com

My 9 year-old step-daughter gives suggestions to come up with ideas for a manga comic.




RELATED POST
Guide to Mysore for Yogis

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Mar 30, 2011

The YJ Talent Search is a Search Indeed. Among 2532 people!

The Yoga Journal talent search for the yogi-cover-model of their September issue is on.  People can now vote.

I am surprised already right at the home page of it because I can only see 8 participants out of... 2532!
That is a lot of browsing! which if my math serves me right, comes to 312.5 pages.

The Twitter conversation is happening and people are trying to help their friends, which is a great idea because the first 8 are definitely getting a lot more exposure than, say, the 100th 8.

Also, there is no filter capability.  It would have been nice perhaps to narrow participants by style, get your hatha people, your Vinyasa flow, Bikram, Power, Hot, Ashtanga.  OK, OK, I get it, maybe there are just as many styles as participants!

From the conversation on twitter (you can search by #yoga #contest) I found out these bits of trivia:

One participant went "negative" as in photography negative

One went sideways and makes me tilt my head

One participant forgot to put clothes on.  He is naked. Oops!

There are some beautiful pictures in the contest and I wish every one that wants to win good luck!

Cannot wait for the September issue!



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The One Way to Get Your Spirit Talking - Uncensored!

Looks like a colorful summer is
brewing in my spirit
Spirit talks directly to me only when it can express itself uncensored and I seduce its dialogue by circumventing the spoken word. Only then, when the naming and calling has been halted does it whisper.  Or, let's say that whispers at first,  because if I keep the urge to "put words into it" at bay, then the connection gets louder and louder, till it is all out. I am happiest when spirit screams.

Nothing works better to get it talking than images, colors, scissors, paints, glitter, glue and a good disposition. Images that "call" us are messages from our souls. The good old art of making a collage.

This way [below] of making a collage works for me, I am sure you have your own little pieces of wisdom and I would love to hear about in the comments. Here is my recipe:

I do not know why I am attracted
to this image and I don't care.
It "speaks" to me
1.- Give yourself an appropriate budget:  I normally think of it in terms of 2 or 3 magazines.  Or you can print your favorite pictures from the Internet. Scissors are usually available in every household, and so is glue, but if you don't have them available, they need to be on the list. Extras that are lovely to have around include: glitter, colored glue, stickers, old paintings you may have done, color glue, etc.

2.- Pick on afternoon where you have a good mental disposition and some free time.  Then go to a store that has lots of magazines.  If they carry foreign ones all the better as things are seen differently in other cultures.

Getting ready for action
3.- Any magazine cover that draws your eye, grab it.  You may end up with a big pile so it is good to find a place to sit down.

4.- Browse quickly through each of the magazines.  Do not worry about details, just see which ones seem to have images that "give you energy".

I want some of that
For example, lately I have been attracted to images that suggest a peaceful space where to write, and so landscapes, pictures of summer cottages, or pitches of watermelon juice with slices of lemon were calling me.
There is no way to do this wrong, just whichever magazine seems to have the most images that nurture your spirit is to be put in a separate pile. The "keeper pile".

5.- Out of the keeper pile magazines select the ones you are most attracted to. You will know just by looking, something calls you, may seem strange to your verbal mind. Don't judge. Just pick the final three.

Stickers, words, even magnets help!
6.- Take everything home.

7.- Get ready and place the magazines on your biggest table. The floor also works well and opens the hips.

8.- With your sharp scissors, cut any image you like, do not worry about the reason why you like it.  I sometimes rip out pages as a preliminary stage and set them aside.
Sometimes you may go back to one of the images and say to yourself: "really?" "that is not me"!  If you did go back to it trust that it is for a reason. Cut it. Put it on the pile.  You do not need to know what the reason is, all you need to know is that you are attracted to it.

Fancy yourself the editor of a
major magazine - You are!
9.- If you ripped pages off at once now do the "fine cutting". Cut all the images your spirit is directing you towards.

10.-Now start playing as if you were the art director of a big magazine and were creating a collage for one of the main pages.  Superpose that rose garden on top of that living room.  Let that teapot cover the clock. Make that huge sunflower cover a border adding some much needed yellow on the upper right corner.  Put that couple kissing in the center.  Add some color with those cupcakes on the left.  You get the idea. You will know what to do.

Old Water Colors add character
11.- Once the collage begins to take form start gluing the pieces together.  Be careful as this requires a surgeon's attention to detail so that you will not put glue in places where it will not be welcome later

12.- Use mix media, if you have some old water colors you painted a while ago use them too! Get them out and "recycle" them. Bring your art into your art.  For example, the collage on the right here uses an old water-color painting as background behind that delicious purple cake.

I usually love the collages so much that I hang them around the house to look at them.  If you happen to do one, I would love to see it!  feel free to post in flickr or twitpic and post a link on the comments.

Have fun!

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Mar 29, 2011

Oops I did Again! - How Coming Back to Primary is Deepening Backbends

In a twisted turn of events, ala Grimmly, "my practice has become my guru" and told me to listen to Sharath.  "To move ahead, focus on perfecting what you already have" he said sometime in February.  And so...back to primary I am.

That is not to say I only do the Chikitsa (yoga jargon for primary series) when at the shala with John. No, When with the teacher I follow the teacher. Besides John knows full and well that my lazy bottom enjoys not going much further than primary because these days, don't tell anyone, primary: "feels easy".  I never thought there would come a day when I would say that, but it has come to that, and John -wise teacher that he is- has more than noticed.  So at the shala, i.e. today, I go all the way to Ustrasana.

I like to say "Ustrassana" (yoga jargon for camel pose), it sounds very Sanskrit, scholarly and respectful. "Uus-Tra!-sana".  I even enjoy adding a bit of a German accent when I say it to add more coolness.

Primary alone at home is so manageable these days that by the time I come to the end I have energy for backbends. Energy! Wise Sharath.

All my focus goes into them, and now I am walking the hands in the third try. It hurts like a bad case of constipation. Can one have spine constipation? Little by little however I am able to stay there longer.

These days after I walk the hands on the third try I can only stay there for the last two breaths, but who knows? by the time I get to practice with Sharath again in April I might be able to walk the hands on third try and stay there the full five.

Wow, I just noticed that April is like, next week!


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Mar 28, 2011

Those Masters that Influenced Us Without Even Visiting

There is an article at Elephant on Yogis that had tremendous influence in the West but never set foot outside of India, or at least never came to the US.

Sivananda and Radha meditating
by the Ganges
I remember devouring the books by Swami Radha. Of particular interest to me was the story on how she was meditating one day in Toronto and got a vision of Sivananda -one of such influences who never left India- calling her.

She left her life behind and traveled to India where he guided her into the spiritual path.  Her fascinating story drew me to the Sivananda tradition, and even led me to visit Radha's ashram in British Columbia., their center in Paris and the one in Quebec.  For a while I even daydreamed of their teacher training program in the Bahamas.

Krishnamacharya makes it into the list as well, of course.  The current object of my fascination and inspiration for the path of yoga.

Phillip Goldberg, the author of the article is actually more interested in the other three:

"Sivananda and Krishnamacharya dispatched ambassadors to the West. More intriguing to me is the huge influence of three gurus who sent no one anywhere to do anything. Two of them passed away more than six decades ago, the other nearly four."

The other three? Ramana MaharshiSri Aurobindo, and  Neem Karoli Baba.


I actually do not know that much about these three.  Wonder why.

Full article here

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Outfits I was Wearing on the Two Happiest Days of my Life

What I was wearing the day he kissed me for the first time and I knew
he was the one
I was nervous and so was He.  We walked through the downtown New York City scenery, the statue of liberty on sight, the ferries filled with tourists.

The first stop was the South Street Seaport, but he did not muster the courage -he later confessed- and so we kept walking in a big semi-cirlce that brought us to the water edge of Battery Park.  Then he (finally!) kissed me.

Months later he would tell to me that the jacket made me look "square and corporate". I never wore it again.

What I was wearing the day of my wedding
I never felt more elegant, happy, blessed

Can you think of an outfit you were wearing on a special day and re-create it with shoes, jacket, bag and all? It does not necessarily have to be a happy ocassion, it can be any relevant event, like: what I was wearing the day I got kapotasana, or the outfit I was wearing when I learned I did not have my job anymore. Share a photo with me if you do.

You can put it in flicker or picassa or tweetpick and copy/paste the link on the comments. Remember to mention what was relevant about the outfit. What happened on that day?

---

RELATED POSTS:
What do you know for sure?
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Inspiration for this post came from an exercise suggested by artist Miranda July

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Mar 27, 2011

THE SUNDAY NEW BLOG TIMES: Best of the Blog-Sphere

Grimmly's gone fishing. "Oh no!", I hear you say. No worries. He will be back in the Fall.

The four steps of Indian Spirituality

Wow! watch this guy take a death defying jump in the Grand Canyon.

Put that leg behind your neck! nice photo montage.

50 Beautiful pictures of the Super Moon from around the world.

Yoga Traffic Lights?

fork that makes music as you eat. Cool!

These tips on writing are so good, they completely changed the game for me.

A man with a manly website wonders if there is a way to stop the back hunching.

And as an extra-treat, check out this guy turning his tinny 300ft apartment in Honk Kong into 24 different rooms by moving walls! Talk about efficiency.





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Mar 25, 2011

How Much Exactly Do We Understand Each Other?

Oriah Mountain Dreamer is a woman whose real name we might never find out.  She is also the author of a book I love. A few days ago she posted on Facebook wall something about a deaf man who criticized Isadora Duncan (a great dancer), it read:

"his deafness meant he could not hear her music so did not "get" her movements..."

Then she posed the question/s:

"Do my/your choices sometimes seem incomprehensible because we're not hearing each other's music/soul song? 

Remembering this, could we broaden/deepen our heart listening, or offer our music in a way that could be more easily heard by other hearts?"

I find the two part question extraordinary. For once, can I open my inner ears and listen to what is actually being discussed?  Can I notice "what is",  by lowering the filter of my own desires and wishes, fears and apprehensions?

And, can I chose my words effectively so that people can clearly understand what I am saying?

The post left me wondering about the two-way street of communication, and I came up with some ideas on how to implement, three simple things to try while navigating each of the two ways of relating with others

To listen better:
  • Can I focus on the person I am talking to with full attention, without an agenda?
  • Can I clear distractions before I speak with someone?
  • Can I clarify what was said to ensure I am not adding my own interpretations to what someone just said?
To respond better:
  • Can I take my time before speaking albeit the fear that a person may think I'm spacing out?
  • Can allow myself to brain-storm first and provide value in what I answer, out-of-the-box ideas, things that might inspire?
  • Can I strive to use intelligence in the way I word my speech, make colors with words, turn conversations into art?
Of course daily conversations are not always critically important, relevant, or even that deep.  But sometimes they are.  



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Why I Dig Gaga's Born This Way - New Release: Country Version

"There is nothing wrong with loving who you are... so hold your head up girl and you'll go far"

I am so glad this song is and will be #1 in charts for a while.

There is a whole debate going on about Yogis asking Yoga Journal to get real, to accept and put in their pages women that are not all skinny.  To include all of us.

"There's nothing wrong with loving who you are"

I also love how the song is simple and short yet touches on people who have disabilities as well, and whom I imagine, sometimes, not always, (see this amazing case) may feel down about it. So what? is the song's attitude, there is something unique and beautiful about each and everyone of us.

I wrote about self love being the beginning of everything in the 32 unusual ways to love ourselves.  
Increased self esteem is brilliant, is the door that can open us up to being what we really are, to forget naysayers and just do what we were born to do, to follow our passion, to express the precise and beautiful person we each are to the world. Hey! not just express but scream it out loud, I am even adding dance moves!

For this reason, I am glad that millions of people will have this resonating in their heads:
I'm beautiful in may way
'Cause God makes no mistakes
I'm on the right track baby
I was born this way
Don't hide yourself in regret
Just love yourself and you're set
I'm on the right track baby
I was born this way

Ooo there ain't no other way
Baby I was born this way
Baby I was born this way
Ooo there ain't no other way
Baby, I was born this way
I'm on the right track baby
I was born this way
[ Lyrics from: http://www.lyricsmode.com/lyrics/l/lady_gaga/born_this_way.html ]



For the fantastic original release of the song (great video!) see here.

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Mar 24, 2011

7 Reads for Thursday: On The Blog Hunt

How right is it for teachers to crack into "stories" and "myths" while in yoga class?

Yogi shows how to tone the muscles of your throat using your tongue

Alexander Graham Bell's first sketch of the telephone. Just how I imagined it.

Decide what you want for dinner and see it in drawing form first. Who knew there were five ways to cook beans?

Jill's comfort set of things that travel with her to Mysore on almost every trip. Sweet

Millionaire men stick to Ashtanga, the women? Nah! they move on to Tracy who can get those bodies ready for the 35 mm lens of Hollywood.  She has now created a DVD program.

10 stupid laws.






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If That Makes me "Shady", Then So Be It!


I'm the Shady Yogi

I have been called "Shady" in the obscure and terrifying world of the financial message boards where personal attacks and low denigrating punches are the order of the day and the worst battlefield image you can bring to mind would look just like child-play. 
It all started because I wrote a review of my husband's book in Amazon, without telling him. But he tells the story better than me, and it is not self promotional at all, if anything, I wonder how he is so self-deprecating and yet manages to crack me up so loudly.----
I AM HAVING THE WORST BOOK REVIEW (EXCEPT FOR ONE)
First off, on twitter, someone named Naomi Klein called my book “Gross”.
I looked her up on wikipedia. Turns out we have a lot in common. She wrote some books (see below picture). She also “spent much of her teenage years in shopping malls.” So did I! And she has a lot more twitter followers than me.

(Naomi Klein, in the glory days, before calling me “Gross”)
I emailed her and asked her if she had actually read the book. She wrote back and was honest. “No,” she said, “but the jacket copy is gross”. Fine. I like that honesty. A lot of people judge books by their covers and then trash it to their 100,000 followers on twitter. At least she’s honest about it. I’m not being bitter. I really do appreciate her honesty in her response. I would’ve ignored me. (Or, you can follow me on twitter)
Then I figured, I might as well use this to my advantage. I tweeted out very loudly “Oh, I see, Naomi Klein judges books by their covers.” I figured a “twitter war” would be sort of like a west coast – east coast rap war. Biggie vs Tupac. Maybe Naomi Klein and I would both end up in drive-by shootings at the end of it all. And my book would sell through the roof afterwards. But she was honest again. “Keep to investing in the apocalypse. I’m not going to get in a tweet war”. Okay, honest again.

(I even look like Tupac a little)
Let’s veer over to Amazon, where the reviews are horrific. Except for one made by a big fan.
One reviewer said:
“Almost as poorly written as his blog…”
That really hurt. I work hard on my blog.
Then he says, “…where he meanders from topic to topic with little apparent rhyme or reason…”
Well…okay. I guess that is true about my blog. How can you go from My New Year’s Resolution in 1995, to 10 Unusual Things I Didn’t Know About Google and not think I’m meandering, with no real clue as to what I’m doing with this blog.
Another reviewer said:
“This book was a great disappointment to me, and I suggest you not waste your money buying it, or your time reading it”
The book is $9. You can buy breakfast with that money instead of buying my book. Food is a necessity. Some people have told me the book has helped them make money during this Japanese crisis. You can sort of see how based on my post, “Was Greece Nuked?” which has some of the ideas of the book in there. But, point taken.

(I’d rather eat this breakfast than buy my book, also)
For the guy who wrote that review, please write me. I will give you two choices: I will send you all my other books for free. Or I will refund your $9. With 5 two dollar bills (I’ll throw in an extra dollar because time is money and I can tell from your review you read the book).
Uh oh, then I got a good review. A really good review. But with a twist.
The review was complimentary throughout. Here’s a taste:
“Altucher is one of those cutting edge authors whom I admire because he is constantly thinking outside of the box, as in: ‘what box’?”
Wow! Thanks!
Only one problem. The reviewer was my wife. Ouch! And I didn’t know she was going to do it. Claudia, at least do it under a fake name! Haven’t I taught you anything?
“I hated seeing all the negative reviews,” she said, embarrassed.
So one of the heroes in the League of Extraordinarily Negative Reviewers did a little google search on “Claudia Azula” and of course found out she was my wife. I have never googled a reviewer before but I guess in the cutthroat field of Amazon reviewing that’s the sort of thing that happens.  Even worse: he noticed the book was dedicated to Claudia. He totally busted her. I say this, because one guy commented on her review: “busted!…LOL!”
Because it’s funny. For those not in the publishing field (not in the “biz” as we say), “LOL” is short for “laughing out loud”. If anyone not in the biz was lurking on that thread he would’ve said “laughing out loud” but he knew that anyone in the dark underbelly of “replied-to comments underneath reviews” would know what “LOL” was.
Someone pointed out that Claudia should’ve disclosed her relationship to the author. This was a very big no-no, Claudia!  My 15 years of reputation building were severely damaged by this action. So Claudia tried to make up for it by posting the returns anyone would’ve made if they followed the advice of my prior book. They were pretty good and she did her research. Again, without telling me she was going to do it.
But you can’t dig yourself out of a grave filled with shit, Claudia! It’s still a grave. As one guy pointed out, “you should just delete this whole thread.” Because to add embarrassment upon embarrassment, I started responding in the thread.
As the joke says, “the teacher said, ‘two wrongs don’t make a right. And two positives don’t make a negative.’ And someone in the back of the class said, ‘yeah, right.’”
Publishing is an ugly, ugly business. I wrote about it here in Why I Write Books Even Though I’ve Lost Money on Every Book I’ve Ever Written. And it’s even uglier now. Bookstores are going bankrupt. Publishers are so locked in internal political battles to save their turf that they don’t even see that the entire ship is sinking. My favorite fiction writers are writing for finance magazines. My favorite finance writers are, well, resorting to blogging.
So we have “Gross”. “Meandering”. “Busted.”  Sometimes I look at these and think I should just close myself in a tiny box and keep the lid closed. I could hide from all of the comments and reviews until the storm passes. But even Claudia said: “What box”?
----
--As per me being "shady"?
I'm on the right track baby, I was born this way!

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I Love Money

Money is good. Even for yogis. This is why I went as far as to write 10 suggestions for the CEO of Yogaworks. Because I want them to make money. I want everyone to have money. I am convinced that money is a powerful energy which when well-directed can bring good to the world.

Developed countries have a better chance at a faster recovery after a natural disaster, and less casualties.


To illustrate my point, here is a road in Japan 6 days ago and then today.


Six days.

Money combined with well-directed energy.

Yogi Style.

Efficiently.

I love money.

Full article via Mail Online.

RELATED POST:
32 Unusual Ways to Attract Abundance into Our Lives

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Mar 23, 2011

Is Ashtanga Yoga Increasing in Popularity? Please Vote! (Poll on the Left)

POLL ON THE UPPER LEFT CORNERplease vote! and leave comments with your thoughts, I will then compile all findings into a post

Bellow is a chart from Goggle Trends on how many times people searched the word "ashtanga" throughout the years. In my own mind, I have my own predictions -charts or not- but I thought I would ask YOU guys first!   I know that yoga is not a popularity contest, but do indulge me with your thoughts.

Do you think Ashtanga Yoga is increasing in popularity? 

.

In case you wonder about the "peak" letters:

A is from 2006, about a teacher about to give a workshop.

B and C have been removed.  Interestingly enough C was the passing of Sri K.Pattabhi Jois.

D is an article from an Indian newspapers who uses the word Diva in the title but does not talk about divas at all, instead, it actually informs me of the price Indians pay at the Ashtanga Yoga Research Institute. Misleading title if there was one.

Finally E, who comes to spike up the trend again is an article about a John Scott workshop from 2010.


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Replacing Knowledge with Revelation. Sutras Easing Doubts

"To hear Dr. Jayashree chant the Yoga Sutras in Sanskrit is to be transported to the time when this great text was transmitted in the oral tradition..." - Thus starts an interview by Integral Yoga Magazine.

I relate. I have been studying the sutras with her I-Pod file and find that in the vibration there is an ancient magic, a reverberation that touches some inexplicable chord. I feel a part of the living tradition.
The article deals with a critical issue: Doubt.

How many times do we wonder:  Is this the right path? Will this really take me to liberation? will I be able to uncover the veils that stop me from seeing the diamond I already am?  Jayashree says:


" ...memorization helps in recalling the appropriate sutra in times of doubt—whether you have a doubt about your own experience or you are down because your Ashtanga practice is not progressing well...will help in getting a flash of real meaning and produce the “Aha” experience" 


When discussing what is so unique about using both Sanskrit  and an maintaining an oral tradition, she says:


"...the ancient seers were not satisfied to have a language that was just a means of daily communication... They created an oral tradition wherein a strictly prescribed way of listening and pronouncing ... enabled the transfer from the teacher to the pupil without distortions."

"The Vedic seers were also interested in chanting as the basic means of modifying the spirit, so they perfected the language, namely Sanskrit."

Here is how she separates three levels on how to learn the Yoga Sutras:

The first is the regular practice of Ashtanga Yoga... for a long time...
Level Two involves the memorization of the Yoga Sutras through chanting, whereby a deeper understanding of the blueprint of the journey to reach liberation, or kaivalya, will occur. 
Thirdly, the repeated chanting done religiously, helps in catalyzing the process of evolution, with knowledge being replaced with revelation...

I missed MA Jayashree for a few days on my last trip to Mysore. She was travelling around India teaching during my visit.

However, if you are in Mysore, or if you plan to go, here is the info on how to study and chant with her, or her senior student James, (Under the Chanting title) as well as many other things to do while in Mysore.

Here is the Full Interview.

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RELATED POSTS:
Mysore Food Pictures
The Mysore Market - Pictures
Guide to Mysore


Pictures in this post link to their source

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Mar 22, 2011

Ashtangi Billionaire Dumped at the Altar, Yet, Happy Yoga Ever After

Via. Paul Tudor Jones, one of three billionaire ashtangis that I know of, was once dumped at the altar.  He was 26 and had met his then fiance in college. He was in love, or rather in" "wanting-to-fit-in-with-the-rest-of-the-pack":

"...since all my friends were getting married, I kind of felt it was time for me to do the same thing. And that was the worst reason in the world to get married"

The article is actually about how failure sometimes seems like it, but in reality is just a clear notification that a change of direction is needed.  That there may be better and bigger plans for us:

"... Instead, I’ve had an incredible marriage for twenty years to a wonderful wife, and we have four kids that I love more than anything on Earth"

The wonderful wife is Sonia, who also practices Ashtanga and is behind the Jois Yoga studios (together with the Jois family).

The article gave me hope and reminded me that it is important to keep at it, keep working on it, keep moving. keep:

"Traveling down my own road and watching the signs as I go" (as goes the song from another Ashtangi). Because: "Quite often that dragon of failure is really chasing you off the wrong road and on to the right one."

I found this story at the Reformed Broker, and you can read the article here.
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And here is Maddonna inspiring me:



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How Yoga Does Not Get the "Thank You Economy"

Zappos (the biggest shoe-seller these days) greets me and talks to me like a friend. They hold a record for the longest phone-conversation with a customer, I think it was over 5 hours. They get it.

YogaWorks in Los Angeles one of their studios in New York (correction as per third comment) has announced they are cutting their Mysore yoga classes. [Some of them, twice a week, again as per comment].

Yoga done in the "Mysore style" is to be followed strictly 6 times a week, so this does not go very well with their "customers". I learned this through a blog I was lucky to discover.

Another YogaWorks' student, Ray, wrote a letter to them praising the ashtanga teacher, explaining the Mysore Style needs for regularity, and saying: 

"If the proposed schedule change takes effect, I predict that we Ashtangis will go elsewhere. I know that I will be disinclined to continue my membership because there are other studios where I can continue to be consistent in my weekly practice..."

The underline is mine. That was not the only letter.  YogaWorks has a big opportunity here.  

If I was YogaWorks I would listen! 
Then I would:
  1. Read both letters again, and if there are more, read those too.
  2. Get on the case, and drop everything else.
  3. Get Informed. Understand what Mysore Yoga style means. Visit the Pattabhi Jois website, read a book or two, talk to a few teachers.
  4. Fulfill their request.  
  5. Forget costs!  think: "word-of-mouth", "Thank you Economy". 
  6. Balance your short-term satisfaction with your brand-building long-term vision and loyalty
  7. Write a letter to these students, in plain English, appreciating their input and reassuring them that it will be rectified immediately.
  8. Thank them for talking to you. In person all the better. (How else would you ever know what your customers are thinking?)
  9. While at it, offer them a nice discount for the next 6 month membership renewal. Win them over.
  10. Advertise what you have just done everywhere, in a sweet way, do not go over the top. Keep it cool and show that you care. Because you do. 
If you have trouble coming up with the right wording for your response here is a perfect letter that the  CEO of Zappos wrote to every employee the day they merged with Amazon. No legal jargon. Just the facts, and human touch.

That book (left) is quite a read too.

Will YogaWorks get it?

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Story via Cocco Yoga

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