Thursday, 29 December 2016

Ask a Yogi: What’s the best piece of advice you’ve received?

You’ve practiced with them on YogaGlo. You’ve followed them on Facebook. You might even take their classes in person once in awhile if they travel to or live in your city. But how well do you know our YogaGlo teachers? Ask a Yogi is back so you can learn more about our teachers by asking questions you’ve always wanted to ask.

From favorite poses and tips for beginners to deeper questions about how their practice has changed their worldview, our teachers will collectively answer a new question each week. If you have a question you’d like to “Ask a Yogi” let us know in the comments and we’ll add your questions to the list.

What’s the best piece of advice you’ve received?

Alex van Frank: Don’t take it all so seriously, forgive easily, don’t judge or assume, be of service without expectation and be curious. Pretty awesome advice that I’ve picked up from Dalai Lama, Bhagavad Gita, and various religious texts and some pretty awesome professors. Really that’s the core of what I try to live and teach.

Amy Ippoliti: Trust a person’s actions far more than their words.

Chris Chapple: We come alone and we go alone, and we live with others.

Claire Missingham: “Pass it on”. This was Seane Corn, my good friend and a mentor, about 12 years ago, after I’d been teaching for 5/6 years already. I met up with her in London and I said to her “thank you for everything” and she just said “Honey, pass it all on,  that’s all this is about”. I took that on board and then started teaching other teachers to do the same.

David Harshada Wagner: Haha. Many years ago, long before YogaGlo, I was in India with my teacher. He told me that I should find a way for my students to meditate with me over the internet. At the time, I didn’t really take his advice too seriously. I thought maybe he was just teasing me or giving me a teaching about my ego. Technology wasn’t really that great then, and I was really enjoying the low-tech aspect of teaching meditation. But a few years later, YogaGlo came out and now I have so many people all over the world that are able to meditate and connect with me via the internet! I could have NEVER imagined. Great advice.

Felicia Tomasko:You always have the option to trade up. If something isn’t working. Trade up. If your attitude is what isn’t working, trade that up too. 

Kia Miller: One of my teachers said to me “when life got in the way of yoga, I made yoga my life.” I followed his inspiration and gave myself permission to fully emabark on a path that has brought so much joy and healing to my life. 

Noah Maze: Yoga is not about creating a certain experience. It’s not about being happy or peaceful. It is about being real. It is an engagement with your own conscience, with nature and with culture. As my teacher’s teacher said, “Yoga is the virtuosity in becoming yourself.”

Sally Kempton: Cultivate inner attention in the heart. By focusing in the heart center, you can experience a steady connection to yourself, to the hearts of others, and to the Presence within all things.

Steven Espinosa: This is a two part answer. The first is, “Don’t Take It So Seriously.” Yoga is supposed to be a fun and joyful experience. Life is serious enough as it is. So when you come to your practice enjoy it to the fullest. As a teacher, the other best advice I ever received was “Teach, Don’t Preach.” Nuff said.

Stephanie Snyder: Keep your sense of humor.

Tara Judelle: Imagine that is it is all conspiring for your awakening.

Taylor Harkness: Stop comparing your beginning or your middle to someone else’s end. The entire process of living is a journey and you’re both the author and the reader. So make your own path and reflect, but understand others have different stories. Stop comparing, Stay the course.

Tiffany Cruikshank: That’s a tough one, it kind of depends on when and what I was struggling with but in general I would say for me being present is key. I’m constantly creating and it’s easy to get caught up in all the projects. Forrest has actually helped me a lot with this through his example. I’ve finally learned how to shut down for moments to really be present with my loved ones.  It’s priceless.

 



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/ask-a-yogi-whats-the-best-piece-of-advice-youve-received/

Wednesday, 28 December 2016

Yoga for the Heart

A few years ago, Medicare started reimbursing for the Dean Ornish heart rehabilitation program, which famously includes yoga. It also of course includes other lifestyle variables like a plant-based diet, exercise, and meditation, but the headlines at the time touted things like “Medicare Covers Yoga for Heart Disease.” And this was generally true – heart patients’ yoga classes that were part of the program were now covered, which was a pretty amazing development in Western medicine. (Since then, some private insurance companies have even started covering yoga not just for people in heart rehab, but for general prevention, too.) So there must be some pretty good evidence behind the effect of yoga on the heart – and indeed there is. Yoga seems to help the heart in a number of different ways, from the physical to mental, both of which are known to have significant effects on heart health.

Here’s some of the research behind it. A meta-analysis in the European Journal of Preventative Cardiology in 2014 looked back over previous studies that pitted yoga against exercise, and together involved 2700 participants. Some participants were assigned to take yoga and some were assigned to engage in various forms of exercise.

The study found that a number of different heart measures had shifted over time, and yoga had about the same effect as other forms of exercise. Systolic blood pressure was reduced by 5 mmHg, and diastolic blood pressure reduced by almost 5 mmHg. Additionally, LDL (bad) cholesterol reduced by 12 mg/dl, and HDL (good) cholesterol increased by just over 3 mg/dl. Total cholesterol was reduced by 18 mg/dl. Heart rate dropped by over 5 beats per minute on average. Body mass index (BMI) and body weight also decreased slightly.

Other studies have arrived at similar results. An earlier study had found that yoga was linked to reduced markers of inflammation (IL-6 and CRP), which is a critical in the development of heart disease, not to mention others. Other research showed that yoga helped improve both cardiac symptoms and psychological symptoms in people with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation.

Of course, some studies haven’t arrived at such clear results, like this one, which found that there was only weak evidence that yoga would help improve heart health in those with various forms of heart disease.

But given the studies that have found that yoga is good for the heart in a number of different ways, it’s probably safe to say that it can help – and it’s definitely not bad for the heart. It’s not totally clear how many of its effects are due to the physical or to the mental elements of yoga, but it’s likely both. The physical aspects of asana, just like any type of physical activity, are easy to correlate with heart health – asana strengthens the body and builds muscle and stamina. And all of this can tweak the metabolism and shift hormone function in ways that are beneficial for the heart.

And yoga can definitely influence our mental and emotional health in sometimes-profound ways, which is important since they are also influencers of heart risk. For instance, a yoga practice helps regulate the autonomic nervous system (the one responsible for the fight-or-flight reaction), and the sheer reduction in stress that this brings about is certainly good for the heart.

So keeping a healthy heart is just one more reason to keep doing yoga. If you’ve had heart problems in the past, yoga may well help your cardiovascular system if it’s part of a cardio rehab program; and if you have a healthy heart, yoga will likely help keep it that way. And on another level, those who do yoga regularly know that it can keep our hearts “open” in more abstract, theoretical way – and that’s something that, for many of us, might be one of the most valuable factors of all.

Alice G. Walton, PhD is a health and science writer, and began practicing (and falling in love with) yoga and meditation five years ago. She is a contributor at Forbes.com, and writes for the University of Chicago, as well as other publications. Of all the areas of health she covers, she’s particularly interested in how yoga and meditation affect the brain and behavior. You can follow her on Twitter @AliceWalton and Facebook at Facebook.com/alicegwalton.



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/yoga-for-the-heart-2/

Tuesday, 27 December 2016

Pose of the Week: Noose Pose

In this week’s Pose of the Week, Darren Rhodes demonstrates Noose Pose or Pashasana. Strengthen, twist and balance in this challenging but accessible posture. Develop deep shoulder mobility while you wrap your arms while holding a deep squat position. Remember, it’s ok to fall!



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/pose-of-the-week-noose-pose/

12 Reasons to Stop Eating Sugar All the Time

Sugar is the devil; Well, not really, but it’s definitely an unhealthy substance that’s pretty hard to avoid these days. Everywhere you turn, there’s sugar. Even in fruit, the one isle of the supermarket we thought we were safe in. There are a lot of issues that can be cause by consuming too much sugar, […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/12-reasons-stop-eating-sugar/

Saturday, 24 December 2016

The 10 Most Inspirational Short Stories I’ve Heard

Short Inspirational stories are powerful reads; The great thing about them is that they’re so easy to digest, and there’s always a moral at the end of the story. Whether they’re true stories or not is another thing, as many of them are legends supposedly hundreds of years old. However, the stories that I’m talking […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/10-most-inspirational-short-stories/

Thursday, 22 December 2016

Ask a Yogi: Who/what inspires you and why?

You’ve practiced with them on YogaGlo. You’ve followed them on Facebook. You might even take their classes in person once in awhile if they travel to or live in your city. But how well do you know our YogaGlo teachers? Ask a Yogi is back so you can learn more about our teachers by asking questions you’ve always wanted to ask.

From favorite poses and tips for beginners to deeper questions about how their practice has changed their worldview, our teachers will collectively answer a new question each week. If you have a question you’d like to “Ask a Yogi” let us know in the comments and we’ll add your questions to the list.

Who/what inspires you and why?

Alex van Frank: My greatest inspiration in yoga comes from students. I really enjoy connecting with them and helping them connect with where yoga can help them with their body, mind or life in general. Because I am an eternal student at heart, I also love the variety of questions and challenges that students come to me with it really gives me the chance to hit the books and ask other professionals.

Amy Ippoliti: Nature is my biggest inspiration because there is so much beauty and diversity in the natural world. It’s richness reminds me how we are all interconnected, we all want very similar things: Happiness, freedom, nourishment, and safety. People also inspire me – it amazes me how different we each are with our individual quirks, talents, flaws, and personalities. I can literally learn something every day just by talking to people.

Chris Chapple: Martin Luther King, Jr., inspires me with his evocation of the mountaintop, his commitment to nonviolence, and the enduring legacy he created.

Claire Missingham: I’m inspired by great writing such as Hanya Yanagihara, nutrition and health advocates such as Amanda Chantal Bacon, my fellow YogaGlo teachers are very inspiring! and my husband and the way he is growing his agency through hard work and dedication is inspiring. Lastly, the main thing that inspires me are my students. Some of them have been coming to my classes for 15 years. I love people and I love creating good relationships with people interested in attaining their highest inner potential.

David Harshada Wagner: Some of my students inspire me with the transformations they make within themselves and the way they express their transformation in their life. I have one student, Hannah, who started working with me in New York. She was single and had bad anxiety, and was broke, and had a dream of being a mom and a successful farmer. It took a lot of work but she used the practices to craft herself and her life the way she wanted and now she’s living her dream. She has a successful farm in Minnesota, is happily married, and just had her first baby. Whenever I think of Hannah first walking into a meditation class, and how she has transformed EVERYTHING, I get super inspired. When people really embrace themselves and their lives, they can do so many wonderful things.

Felicia Tomasko: For 10 years, I taught a weekly Saturday morning class at a gym. One of my students started his yoga practice when he was 70 years old. He came every week. When his grandchildren would visit, he brought them to yoga. After he had knee replacement surgery, he came to yoga to continue to build his strength. I know longer teach that class, but he is still practicing yoga. I admire his willingness to try something new and step into a room at the age of 70, to take on every practice and every challenge, to always have a positive attitude, and to stay dedicated to and consistent with something that improves his health and well-being. He is a testament to me to the power of consistency.

Speaking of people trying something new at the age of 70. My 70-year-old mother is currently a second year student in law school. I admire her for the same reasons. Doing something that other people would question and remaining dedicated no matter the challenges–even though she is decades older than the other students. In this moment, we can always try something new and always dedicate ourselves.

Kia Miller: Anyone who is in search of the truth and who lives with a principle of radical self honesty. If we are to learn to live in peace and harmony with each other, then we must first face the violence and shadow within ourselves. A practice of radical self honesty means that we can no longer point the finger toward other people when things go wrong. In means becoming 100 % responsible for our own life, decisions, words and thoughts. Now that is a practice!

Noah Maze: I am inspired most inspired when I am in a learning process. Whether it is about my body, about my mind, about my heart, about yoga history and philosophy, about culture and human concerns, I want to learn. Then I feel creative and motivated and excited. To that end, so many things inspire me: my practices, my studies, my family, the world. Inspiration doesn’t always mean happiness, sometimes anger and sadness and grief and fear are necessary forces for inspiring action and growth.

Sally Kempton: I am especially inspired by the teachings of Kashmir Shaivism, which point to the absolute unity of all things with the divine, and offers a path in which we start and end with the recognition that one supreme Consciousness has become all that is!

Steven Espinosa: My students always inspire me the most in yoga. I learn just as much from them, as they do from me. And that is the honest truth. To watch them learn and grow and fall in love with yoga is the highest honor and biggest reward for me as a teacher.

Tara Judelle: Pretty much every human I come in contact with inspires me. I am obsessed with humanity and our diversity, where we have come from, and how we have become. But also Beyonce Knowles is pretty cool.

Taylor Harkness: Political pundits and comedians like John Oliver, Chelsea Handler, Bill Maher, Rachel Maddow, and so many others. Their commitment to moving the needle for the better in their own ways inspires me to show up and do the same with my own voice.

Tiffany Cruikshank: Two main things inspire me more than anything. One, is my fascination for the body and our capacity to heal and thrive and respond to our circumstances. In treating patients for over a dozen years and watching how the body responds and what it needs to thrive I know that it’s not always about me and my treatments but that there is so much more to it. To me yoga is an opportunity to shift the internal influences on our health & our mindset. It’s where we get to look and examine what’s there. The study of the mind and the body is enough to fascinate me for a lifetime. The second is my partner, Forrest. He has taught me so much about myself, my teaching and being a good human. I always joke that he’s a yogi and doesn’t even know it because he teaches through his example. His ability to have a clear purpose and strong business sense but more than anything be a kind &  compassionate man in the face of some pretty extreme obstacles. He’s always looking after and taking care of the people around him. He builds startup tech companies and he builds his teams by being someone that people want to work for/with (I’m sure there’s much more to it but this is what I have noticed). He inspires me more than anyone.



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/ask-a-yogi-whowhat-inspires-you-and-why/

Wednesday, 21 December 2016

Energizing Meditation

Excerpted from MEDITATE YOUR WEIGHT: A 21-DAY RETREAT TO OPTIMIZE YOUR METABOLISM AND FEEL GREAT Copyright © 2016 by Tiffany Cruikshank. Published by Harmony Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

Today, for the first minute or two, settle into your breathing and your observer stance.  Notice   your energy level today and how it affects your posture and your mood.

Then,  as you’re noticing the  breath, I want you to visualize taking in energy. Visualize your breath as pure energy coming into the cells, oxygenating the cells; see it as the fuel that drives the cellular process that creates energy in our bodies. Then, on each exhale, visualize letting go of fatigue, dullness, or anything that weighs you down mentally or physically.

Remember: Rather than trying to actually deepen or control the breath, you’re just watching the natural pace of the breath; this isn’t a breathing exercise. As you inhale each time, you’re visualizing energy coming in naturally and just acknowledging that energy comes in through the breath into your body to invigorate you. And then as you exhale, you’re letting go of anything that weighs you down.

Do this for a few minutes, then drop back to just no- ticing and observing the experience  of your  breath in your body. If you enjoy this and lose track of time don’t worry, you can do it for the entire 5 minutes if you like whatever feels comfortable to you. When you reach the end of the meditation, once your timer  goes off, take a moment with your eyes still closed, just to notice the change in your energy level and how your body feels.

Mind Makeover

Today you’ll journal about your energy and vitality.

1.   Write down what you ate yesterday, and note any dips in your energy during the day.

2.  Based  on the past few days’ experience, what have you learned about your habits, and how can they inform today’s eating? Write down a general meal plan for the day.

3.  Decide on a few specific moments today when you will check in with your energy, and write them down.

Today’s mantra: I am energized

Building Awareness

As you go through your day, recall your mantra, noticing any changes in energy as an extension of what and how you eat, so you can start to construct your own food map. Study yourself as if in an experiment. How do you feel when  you eat certain  foods? Does your fatigue limit you? Remember that sometimes cravings  are our bodies telling us they need something nutritionally different. Also recall that by doing simple things, such as chewing  better and slowing down during meals, we can increase absorption  of nutrients and indirectly increase energy and decrease cravings.

Excerpted from MEDITATE YOUR WEIGHT: A 21-Day Retreat To Optimize Your Metabolism And Feel Great Copyright © 2016 by Tiffany Cruikshank. Published by Harmony Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC.

Tiffany Cruikshank is the founder & visionary behind Yoga Medicine, a community of expert yoga teachers focused on fusing the best of anatomy & western medicine with the traditional practice of yoga. Tiffany’s classes have evolved over the past 20 years of teaching yoga to reflect her creativity and passion for using yoga as a form of medicine for the mind, body & spirit. With her medical background in Acupuncture & Sports Medicine, her classes are guided by a strong anatomic focus and her ability to teach a deeper understanding of complex subjects. Recognized more broadly as a health & wellness expert, Tiffany has worked with professional athletes and celebrities from around the world. She has run her own clinics and was the Acupuncturist & Yoga Teacher at the Nike World Headquarters and has been featured as an expert in numerous publications including Yoga Journal, Prevention , Self, Marie Claire, Fitness Magazine, Good Housekeeping, Fox News, Cosmopolitan, Redbook, Mantra, Thrive, More Magazine, OM Yoga, YogaLife and many others. Visit Tiffany’s Website

Photo credit: Jenny Jimenez



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/energizing-meditation/

Tuesday, 20 December 2016

Pose of the Week: Scorpion Pose

In this week’s Pose of the Week, Taylor demonstrates Scorpion Pose or Vrischikasana. A pose that balances strength and flexibility, practice this backbending inversion if you want to take your forarm stand to the next level. Head to the wall if you need some extra support.



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/pose-of-the-week-scorpion-pose/

5 Genuine Reasons to Step Out of Your Comfort Zone

You know what the comfort zone is? It is a disease which kills people’s dreams, limits their lives, and stops them from coming up with innovative breakthroughs. Our societies are filled with people which are extremely “comfy” with their present conditions while displaying no intentions for change; and even if they do want to change, […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/5-genuine-reasons-step-comfort-zone/

Monday, 19 December 2016

Stories You Can’t Miss This Week

This week in wellness news, are you feeling overwhelmed by all the shopping, entertaining and eating frenzy of the holidays? Let meditation ease the pressure of the season and help you to feel calm and balanced.

Read that and these other great stories from around the web. These are the tops Yoga, Health & Wellness stories to bring you up to speed.

  • Stressed by the holidays? Try a 1-minute meditation to calm your mind: A great way to redirect your focus off the holiday stress is to find peace with the help of your own heart beat.
  • Mindfulness May Ease Holiday Habits & Stresses: New research from American University proposes that mindfulness can counteract the adverse impacts of mindless consumption due to automatic thoughts, habits, and unhealthy behavior patterns.
  • How To Practice Mindfulness Into The New Year, Because It All Starts With Reflection: “One day, keep a count of how many times you check your phone. The number might astonish you. Being uber-connected every single day, all the days of your live-long life sounds exhausting and it definitely impacts your mood! Yoga Medicine instructor, Amanda Bonfiglio Cunningham says that’s why taking a big ‘ole break from your phone will improve your mindfulness almost instantly. “Pick a realistic time that suits your schedule and start with just once a week. In our house, we choose Sundays. From when we wake up until after we’ve had breakfast, we have a no phone rule,” she tells Bustle. “Some weeks that means 30 minutes, some longer. I find the more I practice this, the less I crave my digital buddy by my side. Life is happening, are you experiencing it?”


source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/stories-you-cant-miss-this-week/

Act As If You Are Already Thin

“If you want a quality, act as if you already had it.” — William James One of the great secrets of success is to act as if you have already achieved your goal. How would you act if you were already thin, rich, happy, in a great relationship, at peace, relaxed and successful in your career? When […]

source http://unlimitedenergynow.com/act-as-if-you-are-already-thin/

source http://unlimitedenergynow.blogspot.com/2016/12/act-as-if-you-are-already-thin.html

13 Reasons to Stop Drinking Alcohol for Good

Whenever I was travelling, I would drink a lot of alcohol. Although there were a lot of great nights involved, it wasn’t healthy, and I soon noticed that I could have just the same amount of fun without it. Also, travelling on a budget and being a big fan of alcohol doesn’t really bode well […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/13-reasons-stop-drinking-alcohol/

Sunday, 18 December 2016

6 Yoga Classes to Help You Maintain Your Practice During the Holidays

The holiday season is in full effect and amidst the traveling, stress, over-indulgence, hustle & bustle that comes along with this time of year, there are going to be plenty of opportunities to miss our practice. If you feel that your practice might be getting away from you, try to come back to center. Remember to nurture your body and stay connected to your breath and your practice throughout the holidays so you can really get the most out of spending time with family and loved ones.

  • Yoga During the Holidays with Kathryn Budig: Step away from holiday planning and reconnect to your breath and practice. This flow breaks down the elements of lightening our jumps forward, handstand hold, core work and deep twists such as Revolved Half Moon and Side Crow variations.
  • Holiday Binding Practice with Dice Iida-Klein: Holidays got you in a bind? This 30 min. practice embraces the idea of “binds” helping you to release tension and clear your mind for the holiday season at hand. Starting in tadasana (mountain pose), we open the chest, shoulders and arms via gomukhasana arms. We flow through a few mixed sun salutations and end up using bound Warrior 1, 2 and bound side-angle pose. From there we navigate through bound-twisted side-angle pose and into bound ardha matsyendrasana (half lord of the fishes pose). Use your binds to free up your bound life!
  • Antidote Yoga for Holiday Excess with Felicia Tomasko: Antidote for holiday excess? Stimulate healthy digestion and elimination with a gentle sequence of twists alternating with abdominal strengtheners and forward folds. Take a break two hours after or one hour before you eat to enjoy your food even more.
  • Clear Away Holiday Excess with Tiffany Cruikshank: A vigorous class to clear out the excess of the holidays. This class will give your metabolism a boost and balance out all the holiday indulgences.
  • Relieve Holiday Stress with Jo Tatsula: Holiday stress relieving class so that we can really get the most outof spending time with our families and loved ones. According to the Yoga Sutras, ‘Santosha’ or the observance of  contentment is one of the ways we can relieve mental stress. This short and sweet class takes us through a brief talk on ‘santosha’ and how we can practice more gratitude in our daily lives, then asana, pranayama and meditation as a way of balancing the energies of the body which are all ways that support contentment (santosha). We flow through Sun Salutations (Surya Namaskar C & B) to heat the body, forward bend Head-to-knee (Janua Sirsasana) to further calm the nervous system, Bridge and Downward facing Bow (Urdhva Danurasana) to open the physical and energetic heart and hip opener to finally release tension stored in the pelvis. Finish with alternate nostril breathing (Nadi Sodhana Pranayama) and gratitude meditation.
  • Holiday Heat with Kathryn Budig: It’s a holiday fire starter! Breath of fire is weaved into a non-stop flow with fast sun salute variations leading to twists and a cooling pranayama meditation.


source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/5-yoga-classes-to-help-you-maintain-your-practice-during-the-holidays/

Saturday, 17 December 2016

8 Productivity Books You Must Read to Be More Efficient

So many people struggle with productivity. After all, if you were more productive, then you’d be able to really get things done, right? Here’s the truth. The biggest secret to really changing your approach to productivity is to work on your mindset. You’re not going to find some silver bullet thing that’s going to suddenly […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/8-productivity-books-must-read/

Thursday, 15 December 2016

Ask a Yogi: What’s one thing every beginning yogi should know?

You’ve practiced with them on YogaGlo. You’ve followed them on Facebook. You might even take their classes in person once in awhile if they travel to or live in your city. But how well do you know our YogaGlo teachers? Ask a Yogi is back so you can learn more about our teachers by asking questions you’ve always wanted to ask.

From favorite poses and tips for beginners to deeper questions about how their practice has changed their worldview, our teachers will collectively answer a new question each week. If you have a question you’d like to “Ask a Yogi” let us know in the comments and we’ll add your questions to the list.

What’s one thing every beginning yogi should know?

Alex van Frank: You have an amazing body right now. Yoga needs to fit your body not the other way around. You are the expert of your body and I am here to facilitate a mindful movement and appreciation of the body. The beauty of this is that there is so much diversity of body types and shapes that the idea of something being wrong often times has more to do with our limited perception rather than the physical.

Amy Ippoliti: You are worthy to practice yoga! There are no qualifications that you need other than a willingness to be curious about yourself, a desire to live a meaningful life, and a longing to feel free in your body! You don’t have to be flexible, strong, wealthy, or any other limitations you may think you have – you are ready now.

Chris Chapple: The body and breath hold the key to our well being and happiness.  Without our breath we cannot think.  With our breath we learn to regulate the thinking process.

Claire Missingham: Everything is time, patience and practice. Plus, you don’t need to already be flexible to start a yoga practice, flexibility comes from breathing, and breathing also takes time to master: be prepared to enjoy the process as it evolves.

David Harshada Wagner: Every beginning yogi should know that Yoga has many many different expressions and many layers of depth. They should understand that their studio or their teacher or the method they are first exposed to is just one expression of Yoga. They can search around and try different things and find the Yoga that suits them. This is especially true with the “depth” aspect of Yoga. Many contemporary expressions of Yoga mainly focus on the physical exercise dimension of Yoga. Yoga can be a great way to work your body, but it can also be a deeply mystical practice that you can use to transform your consciousness and your experience of life itself.

Claudine Lafond: Always focus on your breath. Everything else will unfold once you are present with your breathing.

Felicia Tomasko: You do not have to be already flexible, strong, or good at yoga to be good at yoga. The most important quality to have in practice is a sense of willingness.

Kia Miller: Keep an open heart and mind to the philosophy and practice. Try different teachers until you find someone with whom you resonate, that you feel has something to teach you.

Noah Maze: Yoga begins when you decide to be more than ordinary. A little bit of effort goes a long way. Jump in. Do it. Don’t delay. You will experience an increase of vitality, joy, strength and flexibility of body/mind/spirit. Burn brightly and shine your light!

Sally Kempton: Recognize that your real nature is limitless awareness and energy, and that the true purpose of yoga is to cultivate the experience of yourself as a sacred being living in a sacred world.

Stephanie Snyder : Have a sense of humor.

Steven Espinosa: Flexibility Is Overrated! One of the first things I hear from students new to yoga say is “I’m not flexible” or “I’m not strong.” I try to remind them that you don’t have to be flexible or strong to do yoga. Flexibility and strength are something that comes over time with patience and practice.

Tara Judelle: The origins of yoga came from a desire to become a liberated embodied being.  It’s a game of awakening.  The poses are gimmicks to see how your mind is doing.  So recognize the physical practice is simply one container to see how your mind is handling stimulus.

Taylor Harkness: Your practice is just that… a practice. Allow the speed bumps, road blocks, and the challenges to become learning moments. So what if you’re tight? So what if you need more shoulder strength? That’s why you practice! If you could do everything perfectly the first time, you’d be bored.

Tiffany Cruikshank: Worry less about what the pose looks like and more about what it feels like. So many people get caught up in looking like a picture or having certain alignment but those are simply there to give you a direction to move toward. The reality is, every body is so different that the poses will look a bit different for everyone and if you’re open to that then you can tune into what’s happening inside. In my experience this is where the effects of the practice really take shape.



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/ask-a-yogi-whats-one-thing-every-beginning-yogi-should-know/

10 Surprising Benefits of Playing Video Games

In previous articles, we haven’t spoken about the positive benefits of playing video games, but more the reasons as to why you should stop playing them. Which might make this article a little contradicting… The truth is, the majority of young people growing up today love video games. And since technology just keeps advancing, the […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/10-benefits-playing-video-games/

Wednesday, 14 December 2016

Opening the Present

By now, the “Power of Now” message of Tolle, the “Be Here Now” message of Ram Dass, and the “The only moment is the present moment” message of the Neo-Buddhists has become ubiquitous. It’s so commonly known and held that it has become a cliche.

“Yesterday is history. Tomorrow is a mystery. Today is a gift. That’s why it’s called the present.”

One of the challenges of being a yoga teacher in this era is endeavoring to offer a contemporary approach to the practices and wisdom-teachings of yoga, so that we’re not stuck in old crusty traditions, and at the same time, be rooted in the real stuff, the deep transformational stuff, the stuff that changes lives. My colleagues and I don’t just want to be “providers”, we try to be a tribe of real deal yogis, and real-deal teachers. So from time to time, it’s good to examine these “meme” teachings and distinguish between the baby and the bathwater. In this case, the bathwater is that “Be in the present” is one of those things you can’t really argue with. It’s like “Do unto others…”

“Do unto others” seems like it is so true that it could be the answer to everything. But clearly it’s not. If you hate yourself and treat yourself in shitty way, or even in a mediocre way, “Do unto others” breaks down. Or, at best, it becomes something that gets us to an even Zero. Not bad, but not great. Another little platitude on the pile of empty teachings. It’s not the teaching, it’s the way we approach it.

“Be in the present” isn’t much better. Be here now. Okay, I’m not in the future, I am not in the past, I am here. But in this moment, it kind of sucks. “Ah, grasshopper!” The teacher tells us, “Yes, sucking is all there is! Now eat your brown rice and get back to your boring meditation!”

No! The spiritual path is not meant to be boring! It is so rich, so life-saving. But sometimes we need to dig a little bit to get that baby of out of that deep bathtub of truisms.

Every moment, every thing, every situation has many levels to it. The ancient yogis describe four:

Four Bodies

According to the Tantric Indian philosophy, any body – that means any thing – has four levels or dimensions: gross, subtle, causal, and supra-causal.

The gross is the physical dimension made of the elements. You can see, touch, smell, taste and hear the gross. In the human being, the gross body is the physical body.

In situations, the gross level is the level that can be experienced with the senses.

The subtle is made of energy. The subtle can only be felt with subtle awareness. In the human experience, the subtle body is the aura, or prana, or energy field. The subtle body in a person also includes the mind and emotions, memories, fantasies, feelings of well-being and illness, as well as moods. As your awareness becomes more subtle, you can begin to perceive it. Even though you cannot see subtle energy with your physical eyes, it is a major part of any picture. It is what animates the living physical body. At the time of physical death, the subtle body dissolves.

In situations, the subtle layer is the energetic level of things. The “vibration” of the moment.

The causal level is the deeper aspect of the subtle dimension, it is the deeper, more permanent energy that drives karma. In the human experience, there is a causal body – a deep core of energy that holds our deepest impressions and really makes us what we are. In the subtle body we have thoughts and feelings, in the causal body we have deep, strong convictions and unconscious tendencies. The Hindus and Buddhists believe that it is the causal body that passes with the soul from one life to the next and how they account for karma being carried through multiple lifetimes. The causal body holds the seeds of your karma.

Situations have a causal level too. The actions on the gross level and the intentions on the subtle level cause a deeper energy in any moment – the karmic energy that will result from whatever is happening. For instance, a corporate kid’s store that looks nice, and even has an artificially-generated “good” feeling, but underneath is actually harming the kids with the marketing, the environment with all of the toxic materials and plastics, and the health of people with the artificial, chemical candies and foods. Every thing tastes good, looks good, people are having a good time, but what’s underneath is not good. Harm is happening. Bad karma. That’s the causal layer.

The supra-causal body is sometimes called the transcendental body, or the soul, or spirit, or atman. This body is pure soul energy, untainted by karma or life circumstances. This dimension is what is experienced in what we call Samadhi, where we perceive through the experience of the other bodies and rest in our deepest nature.

Everything has these layers. This is one of the big ideas behind spiritual training. There is an outer experience, a gross experience that we can experience with our senses, but that is not the whole picture. Like an iceberg with its visible part above the surface of the water, our outer experience is only a small part of the whole. Underlying any gross experience there are subtle layers, layers of energy. And under all this is the Source energy from which everything arises. In spiritual training, you are learning to navigate all of this.

The Heart of the Present

The key to making the whole present moment teaching something actually deep and transformational is having access to a “vertical” dimension in the moment. Getting “here, now” is only the first step. And if we stay only on the gross level, it’s kind of like “so what?”. So we go deeper. Your practice is building in you the ability to penetrate deeper. So you get “here, now” and then tap in. What is the deeper dimension of this moment? On a subtle or causal level, it’s useful because you can better understand the “good vibe” or “bad vibe” of some situation. But what this lesson is about is going to the “heart” of the moment.

Here we’re talking about getting to that supra-causal, essential, sacred, transcendent level. In any given moment, there is everything else, and there is the Heart of the moment. I don’t mean the heart chakra or even the “love muscle” where we feel love. Here, I use the word heart as in the “heart of the artichoke”, or the “heart of the matter”. The innermost. The essential. In your meditation, you are doing this with your own layers. Getting toward your center. In life, you learn to do this by, yes, first getting present, and then going deeper.

Right now, can you touch the heart of this moment?

One way is to go through the layers. On the gross level you’re reading on a computer. On the subtle level there are ideas and feelings and lifeforce moving in you. On the causal level, there is karma here, these words and the time you’re spending with them are causing some effect. What’s deeper? Can you touch it?

The Quick and Dirty Method

The way I have always done it is even simpler. I just ask, “Where’s the Love?” This is another way you can look at the heart of the present moment. Where’s the love? In any moment, there is a potential to be present to love or oblivious to it. Just asking, just doing this inquiry is powerful in-and-of-itself. You have to open a little bit to even do it. Then it has the power to snap you back into wisdom, and also snap you into action. The question becomes, “How can I be loving in this moment?” It almost ALWAYS helps to bridge beyond the mundane.

For spiritual nerds (people who read a lot and do a lot of thinking about non-dualism etc.) this “Where’s the Love?” practice is a better technique than penetrating through the layers and getting to that ESSENTIAL TRUTH of the moment. Sometimes, that can just be a head trip and I know many spiritual people (mostly men) who think they are doing this transcendental shift to the deepest level, but instead they are doing a kind of spiritual bypass.

The heart of the moment is not cold. In fact, it is supremely warm. Every time we meditate, we are practicing shifting in this vertical way, we are practicing going deeper into the here, and now. Into the me and I.

David has been teaching meditation and self-empowerment to people all over the world in all kinds of venues since 1994. Classically trained in the Indian wisdom traditions of Yoga, Bhakti, Vedanta, and Tantric Shaivism, his teachings come from his decades of personal transformation and his experience serving others to find their authentic path to deep happiness.

David serves on the faculties of Kripalu, and Omega Institutes, and travels widely working with people from all walks of life. His teaching style is bold, dynamic, and unique, approachable to students from all walks of life. Most recently, David has taken on the mission of serving the transformational needs of men. He is the author of BACKBONE the Modern Man’s Ultimate Guide to Purpose Passion and Power. David currently splits his time between his home in Ojai, California and New York City.

Feeling inspired? Practice with David Today.



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/opening-the-present/

6 Things that Prevent You From Living a Happier Life

What is happiness? What are the core elements of it? Every one of us has a unique explanation of this term, thinking about different elements of happiness. Although every person wants to be happy, we often do things that prevent us from living a happier life, even without knowing that. Any proof needed? Check out […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/6-things-prevent-happier-life/

Tuesday, 13 December 2016

Pose of the Week: Boat Pose

In this week’s Pose of the Week, Rod Stryker demonstrates Boat Pose or Navasana. Develop abdominal and psoas strength in stages as you learn the basic of this classic core pose. Find what variation is right for you at this stage in your practice.



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/pose-of-the-week-boat-pose/

Monday, 12 December 2016

3 Stories You Can’t Miss This Week

This week in wellness news, a small study suggests the combination of physical activity, breathing, and meditation could help prevent borderline high blood pressure from becoming full-blown hypertension.

Read that and these other great stories from around the web. These are the tops Yoga, Health & Wellness stories to bring you up to speed.

  • Why You Should Do Yoga Every Day If You Have Prehypertension: “If you’ve been warned by your doctor about borderline high blood pressure, you may want to give yoga a try. According to a small new study, people with prehypertension who practiced yoga for an hour a day for three months lowered both their average diastolic and arterial pressure.”
  • Keep It Moving: “People who work out but also sit for long hours — active couch potatoes, you might say — may often share the same elevated risks for disease and early death as their less active peers.”
  • How to Nail a Job Interview with Meditation: “Meditation is taking the corporate world by storm, with most successful companies, including the likes of Google and Apple, fully embracing it in their cultures. Luckily, meditation is available to anyone, and it could form a key part of your interview preparation. Here are some reasons why and some tips on how to start.”


source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/3-stories-you-cant-miss-this-week/

99+ Thought Provoking Questions to Ask & Answer Today

What are thought provoking questions? The meaning of these questions is to get you think deeply about your answers, and the effects they’re having on your life. Thought provoking questions help you to become more self-reflective, and therefore be able to improve your life in multiple areas. It’s probably best to write your answers down, […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/99-thought-provoking-questions/

Sunday, 11 December 2016

7 Yoga Classes for Holiday Travel

We know how stressful and uncomfortable travel can be. Sitting in a car, plane or train for hours or even days on end can take a major toll on the mind and body. The good news is that yoga can help alleviate some of the physical and emotional discomfort that a lot of us feel before and after traveling.

This week’s featured classes will help support you before, during, and after your travels.

  • Take It All in Travel Practice with Elena Brower: When you travel, you become more sensitive to changes in atmosphere and environment. Use this practice to stay aware but fortified and to keep your body vibrant. Move through various forward folds for your hamstrings and your low back, moon salutations to recalibrate and a few cooling seated side stretches. Ease into pigeon before resting in savasana. Use a belt or scarf if you do not have a strap. Props Needed: A strap.
  • Clear the Mind & Unwind After Travel Practice with Stephanie Snyder: This practice will help you unwind after travel. Let go of your journey and let your body and mind know that you have arrived! In this class we begin with savasana and end with a breathing kriya that will clear the mind and leave you ready for whatever awaits whether it be relaxing or a business meeting. Prop: Strap
  • Pre-Travel Practice for a Long Flight with Tiffany Cruikshank: A quick pre travel class to stimulate the circulation, digestion & immune systems to prepare for a long flight. I’ve added a couple poses for the pineal gland as well to help ease jet lag symptoms when you arrive. A perfect medley of poses to prepare you for your fun filled adventures. Prop: Blanket
  • Post-Travel Survival with Jo Tastula: Just landed from a long trip, or a long week cramped into a small space? This class isn’t about technique or performance… it’s about survival! Reclaiming range of motion and circulation is key for the maintenance of health and vitality. We touch the whole body with rhythmic movement and slow gentle transitions. If you have props, use them for the beginning sequence (blocks, bolster and strap). The legs in particular do get some extra love as we stretch into the hamstrings, hips and quads. Welcome home or happy trails!
  • Pre-Flight Yoga with Dice Iida-klein: Traveling soon? Take this tutorial with you and practice near your gate, pre-flight! Done from a seated position, we use wide-legged fold (upavistha konasana), bound-angle pose (baddhakonasana), forward fold (paschimottanasana) and seated twist (marichyasana C) to open our inner groin, hamstrings, hips and low back. Find a space that’s clear – nevermind your fellow travelers. They’re just looking because they wish they could feel as good as you do before the flight.
  • Counteract the Compression of Traveling with Felicia Tomasko: Whether our travels take us across the planet or across the room, travel increases the energy of movement, the quality of the vata dosha, as described by Ayurveda. The antidote is to get grounded. This slow but sweet active practice is focused on grounding, lubricating the joints, counteracting the compression of sitting in a seat for a long time (whether an airplane, car, boat, bus, bicycle, or even a desk chair). We roll through some slow standing grounding poses, sweet half sun salutations and then some lunges paired with twists. Cobra, locust, and even a simple bow pose continue to counteract the compression of traveling. A short savasana helps us reset our connection to our corner of the earth.
  • Establish Your Roots When Traveling with Claire Missingham: In this class, you will experience a super grounding class using the philosophy and asanas for the root chakra. We try out standing balances, arm balances for strength & stability and variations on Upavishta Konasana and toe stand. We close the class with a grounding meditation perfect for establishing your roots, even when you’re on the road.


source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/7-yoga-classes-for-the-holiday-traveler/

Thursday, 8 December 2016

Ask a Yogi: Tips for Establishing a Home Yoga Practice

Ask and you shall receive!

You’ve practiced with them on YogaGlo. You’ve followed them on Facebook. You might even take their classes in person once in awhile if they travel to or live in your city. But how well do you know our YogaGlo teachers? Ask a Yogi is back so you can learn more about our teachers by asking questions you’ve always wanted to ask.

From favorite poses and tips for beginners to deeper questions about how their practice has changed their worldview, our teachers will collectively answer a new question each week. If you have a question you’d like to “Ask a Yogi” let us know in the comments and we’ll add your questions to the list.

What are your tips for establishing a home yoga practice?

Alex van Frank: I’ve found that the best way to establish a home practice is to make it automatic, fun, and sneaky. One of the first things I do in the morning are a few whole body poses before getting out of bed (like wind releasing pose, twists). Fun can come in when you incorporate children and/or pets -just do a few rounds of happy baby pose with them around and it turns into a love fest! (I dare you to try it now). Sneakiness is also very helpful for bringing yoga into a busy life. Every time I have to take my laundry out (of the front loading machine) I take that opportunity to go into half moon pose. I’ve also been known to do tree pose while waiting at stores.

Amy Ippoliti: 1. Find a dedicated space in your home 2. If you have the luxury, leave your mat out so it’s always open and ready for practice 3. Start out using a 10 minute timer and let yourself explore for those 10 minutes until you start craving more.

Chris Chapple: Create a space that you value as your Yoga Space. It need not be used exclusively for Yoga. Begin with breathing. Keep breathing. End with breathing. Manage your expectations. Set small goals and appreciate your accomplishments. Move on.

Claire Missingham: My main tips for establishing a home practice are that you create a schedule for yourself. For instance, I have a board in my yoga room that says: Mondays: Iyengar Standing poses, Tuesdays: Arm Balances and 3rd Series, Weds: 1st Series and hip openers, Thursday: 2nd series and backbends, Friday: Restoratives and Reading, Saturday: Vinyasa Flow and Sunday: Rest

So if you establish a routine, set the alarm and leave your yoga clothes, mat etc ready you are more likely to set up a regular self-practice.

Claudine Lafond: Simply dedicate time every day to be on your mat. Prioritize this just like you would, catching up with a friend or scheduling a meeting. Also don’t be attached to how long or how vigorous your practice will be. Just be diligent and consistent.

David Wagner: The most important thing is to make it really enjoyable.When you’re practicing in a class, the studio or teacher sets the vibe. At home, you have set your own vibe, so make it a delicious one!  This is especially true with a home meditation practice. Create a really cozy beautiful seat for yourself, wear clothes you feel great in, make yourself your favorite tea and drink it from your favorite mug. Practice your favorite techniques. Make your practice so enjoyable you can’t wait to get back to it.

Felicia Tomasko: Do everything you can to make it easy for yourself. Have a mat ready. Turn your phone off during practice (or hide it somewhere). Find an accountability buddy and even if you’re not in the same place, set times to practice. Even text them to let them know that you’ve followed through! My sister and I will text each other and even share what we are practicing or what Yogaglo classes we are utilizing.

Kia Miller: Pick a time of day that you can be consistent with. Pick an amount of time that can be fitted into your schedule. Start with a short practice and slowly build it up if desired. Be consistent, as this is the greatest key to success. Begin with a practice that you love as then you will look forward to it.

Noah Maze: Create a commit to a routine. Regularity helps. Don’t overcommit yourself, but take a month, or a week, and commit to a consistent time and place to practice. If it you only have five or ten minutes per day. At the end of that time, reflect on your experiences and the benefits of consistent yogic practice and consider the next period of time and what you want to commit to. Spend a few minutes in quiet meditation each day. Spend a few minutes practicing asana each day. Build from there.

Sally Kempton:  If possible, have a space where you regularly practice. The more you cultivate a practice space, the easier it is to practice regularly. I suggest creating a simple alter that can be a focal point of your practice space. The alter represents your intention to practice. If your available space is small, or if you’re practicing in your living room or bedroom, consider having a portable alter that you set up and take down just as you do your mat.

  • Find a regular time to practice—even if its just for 15-20 minutes at a time. Then, stick to it. One key to early morning practice is to roll out of bed and right onto the mat!  The less of a gap you leave between getting out of bed and getting onto the mat, the better your chances of avoiding the urge to check your emails.
  • At the beginning, make a decision that you’ll practice daily for 7 days. Extend that to 14, then to 21. Once you’ve practiced for 21 straight days, you’ll have created a habit, and then your body will begin nudging you to practice!
  • Once you’ve found a sequence that you are comfortable with, feel free to experiment. Try alternating asana with meditation, or even a bit of tai chi movement or dance. Experiment with different asanas and even different styles. Practice with different bhavas, or spiritual attitudes. For instance, one day you might focus purely on the sensations in your body. Another day, you might use a visualization or a counted breath, a mantra, or try adding an affirmation (“My body is made of light!”).  In short, be creative with  your practice, so that it stays interesting for yourself.
  • Remember, the perfect is the enemy of the good.  Even a few minutes of  practice will energize you. So don’t hesitate to do just a little if you don’t feel you have time to do a lot.
  • Start your practice with a few minutes of reading from a spiritual teacher who inspires you, a sutra from the Yogasutra or the Bhagavad Gita, the poetry of Rumi, or another inspiring source.
  • Finally, recognize that there will be times when you have to coax or even trick yourself  into getting to the mat. Remember, you can always give yourself just 5 minutes.  Or, offer yourself a reward  for after practice. Play cool music. On a day when you are feeling particularly distracted, you can even give yourself permission to practice in front of the TV.

Stephanie Snyder : Create a space where you can consistently practice. It doesn’t have to be fancy and it can be a pop-up situation. You can either carve out a permanent space in your home or if you are space challenged try to create the same environment overtime. For instance- you lay your mat down and you place the same few sacred things (candle, picture of loved ones, affirmation cards, mala- whatever is special to you) in force of or next to you each time. Its also great to let your hair down and allow the practice to be whatever it needs to be that day. Sometimes restorative, sometimes challenging, sometimes short and other days longer.

Steven Espinosa: Try to create a small, uncluttered space that is dedicated to quiet introspection and is free from everyday distractions. You can even make a small alter where you can place candles, incense or pictures to reflect upon while doing your practice. Oh, and if possible, turn off your cell phone. Easier said than done, I know.

Tara Judelle: Regularity and routine are your friends. Establish a time that works for you to practice.  I like early in the morning, before emails, phone calls, and business happen to help establish the tone of the day. But barring that any time is better than no time.

Establishing a place in your house that is dedicated to practice also helps. Where you have your mat, your props, and that even just looking at it helps. Don’t be afraid to make your routine yours.  Most classes follow a specific routine, but most people stay away from home practice because they think they don’t know what to do.  Give yourself a time- like even 20 minutes, and then see what you can recall.  If you aren’t specifically using a yogaglo class, perhaps start with Sun salutations.  Or think of a pose and see what can help you get to that pose. This way you start to develop a different part of your brain then the one that simply receives instructions, and begin to emancipate yourself from outside teachers and become your own teacher. You can work from books, magazines, or your own intuition.

Taylor Harkness: Make the practice a part of your day, a part of your routine. Maybe you practice for 15-20 minutes before you shower in the morning, or perhaps for 10 calming minutes before bedtime. Either way, make a consistent routine that you look forward to. And don’t be afraid to clear some space and invite a friend over for an online class, like on YogaGlo.com. Having a fellow cheerleader to laugh and sweat with can make all the difference.

Tiffany Cruikshank: Consistency is key!  Don’t worry about how long the practice is, just make sure you get on your mat consistently.  This is one of the many reasons I love Yogaglo, because you can find a bunch of great well rounded short classes to fit into your day.

 

 



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/ask-a-yogi-tips-for-establishing-a-home-yoga-practice/

6 Everyday Tips on How to Stay Happy No Matter What

We are used to thinking our happiness depends on external circumstances. We are waiting for something magical to come into our lives and make it bright. Some of us are waiting for real love. Others — for a great job. The list of our wishes is huge. And it is amazing that we have dreams, […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/6-everyday-tips-stay-happy/

Wednesday, 7 December 2016

Are Your Ears Burning?

In my recent book Yoga of the Subtle Body, I devote a chapter to the wonder of the ear, the ear that is delicate, semi divine and is a portal that connects us to the vital prana. I like to imagine that the ears are high fidelity stethoscopes, attuned to any slight change in the nuance of the breath.

Here’s a good practice. Spend 20 minutes listening to nothing. Typically we listen for something or to something. But listening to silence is rarely done; yet for yogis it is the gateway to the subtle body. However, nothing is hard to hear. Our brains are so accustomed to making sense of what we hear, interpreting, filing away, comparing. Even if you listen to nothingness for 30 seconds….or 10 seconds…or 3 seconds….it allows your brain to hit the refresh button.

I have been a Talking Heads fan since their debut in the 70’s. I feel sorry for the millennial that missed David Byrne and the curious, questioning edge of his music. But the song Stop Making Sense, says it all. At least for a time, seated on the meditation cushion, we have to stop making sense and we do this by opening our ears wide. Listen so fine, so delicately, so intimately that “your ears burn”. Do you know this expression, “my ears are burning”? When listening becomes finely tuned there is simultaneously inward absorption and outward expansion of consciousness.
Like listening to a fine piece of music, this leads to a sense of delight that travels through every nerve and fiber of our being.

I remember as a seven year old the times when I would wake in the middle of a summertime night. At times I simply felt intimidated and fearful of the darkness and surrounding vastness. But I can distinctly recall other times when I would listen, my ear to the open window, far far into the night. I listened to the Big Nothingness, over the neighborhood houses, beyond the railway track and into the blackness of the distant hills. When sitting still, our ears should bloom. Bloom like water born flowers, for the inner ear is suspended in fluid. This bloom opens us to boundless space and boundless time.

Yoga is all really a training of the inner ear. Every time you do half moon pose or crow, you are balancing your inner ear. When you make the sound of Ujjayi breath, you commune with the flow of breath. The tiny bones and miniscule hairs of the ear provide us with a sense of exquisite internal equilibrium.

TIAS LITTLE’s unique and skillful approach enables students to find greater depth of understanding and awareness in their practice, both on and off the mat. His approach to the practice is inter-disciplinary, passionate, intelligent, innovative and full of insight. Tias synthesizes years of study in classical yoga, Sanskrit, Buddhist studies, anatomy, massage and trauma healing. Tias began studying the work of B.K.S Iyengar in 1984 and lived in Mysore, India in 1989 studying Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga with Pattabhi Jois. Thus his teaching brings together precision of alignment, anatomical detail and a profound meditative experience. 

Tias is a licensed massage therapist and his somatic studies include in-depth training in cranial-sacral therapy. His practice and teaching is influenced by the work of Ida Rolf, Moshe Feldenkrais and Thomas Hanna. Tias is a long time student of the meditative arts and Buddhist studies beginning with Vipassana and continuing in Tibetan Buddhism and Zen. His teaching style is unique in being able to weave together poetic metaphor with clear instruction filled with compassion and humor. Tias earned a Master’s degree in Eastern Philosophy from St. John’s College Santa Fe in 1998. Tias is the author of three books, The Thread of Breath, Meditations on a Dewdrop and Yoga of the Subtle Body.



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/are-your-ears-burning/

7 Ways To Rebuild Your Immune System Naturally

You can boost your immune system naturally this cold and flu season and keep yourself healthy no matter by taking advantage of these natural healing remedies: Get the mold out. Environment is the most powerful factor in determining your health. If the humidity level is over 50 percent, your home is prone to mold, which will […]

source http://unlimitedenergynow.com/7-ways-to-rebuild-your-immune-system-naturally/

source http://unlimitedenergynow.blogspot.com/2016/12/7-ways-to-rebuild-your-immune-system.html

Tuesday, 6 December 2016

Pose of the Week: Triangle

In this week’s Pose of the Week, Marla Apt demonstrates Triangle or Trikonasa. Build strength in your legs, length in your spine and a release in your hips and neck with this popular pose. Through an Iyengar lense, move safetly into and out the pose, feeling for subtle alignment and of course, lots of breath!



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/12/pose-of-the-week-triangle/

Friday, 2 December 2016

Whirl on Both Sides in Fixed Stance, Qi Gong Exercise 5

One of the best ways to keep your energy level up during the day is to practice qi gong. By taking even 7 minutes to take a qi gong break, you can maintain excellent personal chi and get more down in your life with less stress. Here’s how you practice Whirl on Both Sides in […]

source http://unlimitedenergynow.com/whirl-on-both-sides-in-fixed-stance-qi-gong-exercise-5/

source http://unlimitedenergynow.blogspot.com/2016/12/whirl-on-both-sides-in-fixed-stance-qi.html

Thursday, 1 December 2016

21 Top Influencers Share How to Achieve Your Goals In 2017

It’s that time of the year again; Everybody’s setting new years resolutions, and only a handful of people are actually going to stick to them. Guess what percentage of people achieve their resolutions? 8%. Only 8% of people who set resolutions for the new year end up achieving them. It’s estimated that 24% of people never […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/21-influencers-advice-achieving-goals/

Wednesday, 30 November 2016

Meditation Myths

Hundreds of medical studies have shown the spectacular health benefits of meditation. Now Tiffany Cruikshank, founder of Yoga Medicine, puts that scientific research to good, practical use by incorporating easy-to-use, targeted meditations into a 21 day program. This program optimizes metabolism as well as body image by tapping into the hidden strength of the mind. We learn a whole new way to lose weight; and it takes just a few minutes a day.

Each day of the plan in Meditate Your Weight helps you explore and release what’s weighing you down physically, emotionally, and mentally—the mental blocks, thoughts, habits, and behaviors that stand in your way—to make it easier to think more clearly, make better choices, and maximize metabolism. As you lighten up on the inside, you’ll lighten up on the outside.

Excerpted from MEDITATE YOUR WEIGHT: A 21-Day Retreat To Optimize Your Metabolism And Feel Great Copyright © 2016 by Tiffany Cruikshank. Published by Harmony Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC.

SOME MY THS ABOUT MEDITATION—AND THE TRUTH

Though  meditating  is simpler  to do than  many  be- lieve, it is also a mysterious  process—how  does  it work, exactly? Even scientists  are not  exactly sure, but they’re getting closer. That mystery sometimes causes a bit of a PR problem  for meditation,  but I’d love to clear up a few of those misunderstandings.

Myth:

“MEDITATION  IS A SPIRITUAL PRACTICE .”

Truth:

MEDITATION IS, FIRST AND FOREMOST, A MENTAL PRACTICE .

Meditation  is not voodoo. Meditation  is not New Age or mystical. Yes, meditation has been used in many forms in religious traditions and cultures throughout history  and  throughout the  world—but the act of meditating  isn’t inherently spiritual.

At its core, meditation is a means of training your mind. It has direct physiological effects on the brain and nervous system that can be studied in the lab, tracked by sophisticated  fMRI brain scanners, or ana- lyzed with a blood test, stethoscope, or heart rate mon- itor. In fact, over the last twenty-five years, more than three thousand  studies on meditators  have been con- ducted at some of the most respected research institu- tions in the world, including Harvard, Yale, Stanford, and  the  universities  of California,  North  Carolina, and Wisconsin, among many others. The data from these  studies  is very clear: Meditation  helps  people lead healthier, happier, and more fulfilling lives.

Myth:

“MEDITATION JUST DOESN’T WORK FOR ME .” OR: “I CAN’T MEDITATE .”

Truth:

MEDITATION WORKS FOR EVERYONE , AND EVERYONE CAN DO IT.

I hear it all the time: “I can’t meditate—it  just doesn’t work for me.”

Imagine  if a baby who was just learning  how to walk tried to take a step and fell down, then turned around  and said, “Sorry, Mom and Dad—this  walk- ing thing just doesn’t work for me.”

Silly, right?  But meditation is like walking—it’s an activity we learn to do in very short spurts,  then continue to practice and improve upon for the rest of our lives.

Once you’ve mastered  the basics of walking, you can go in any direction  you’d like—you can run the fifty-yard dash in gym class, you can train  for a 5k, you can become a marathoner. Or, like many people, you might just stick with basic walking to get you through  your days. But the core mechanics  involved in each of these activities is exactly the same: You put one foot in front of the other, and you move forward.

Meditation  is just  like that.  You might  just  do three  minutes  a day; you might  work up to twenty. You might fall in love with it and decide to dig deep and do a retreat. But at an elemental level, no matter where you find yourself currently,  you are a medita- tor. From the very first moment you sit, take a breath, and  notice  that  your  mind  is wandering,  you’re  al- ready doing it—you’re meditating.

Myth:

“THE REAL TYPE OF MEDITATION  IS [X]—AND IF YOU DON’T DO [X], YOU’RE NOT REALLY MEDITATING .”

Truth:

ANY TYPE OF MEDITATION  IS “REAL”;

NO ONE TYPE IS BETTER THAN ANOTHER.

When  we start  meditating,  a common  trap  is to get caught  in thinking  we have to follow a specific type of meditation.  When  I first got into meditation back in the early nineties, people were very specific about it. I heard all kinds of dictums:

•   You can’t be sitting  on a chair—you  have to sit on a cushion.

•   Your legs need to be in this position.

•   You have to have your right thumb  on top and your left thumb  on the bottom.

•   Your right heel must be in front.

•   Your spine has to be right over your pelvis.

•   You have to chant this or think about that.

All  of  these   might  be  helpful   suggestions   to you—or not. To use meditation to reach your health goals, there are truly no absolutes of this kind. What works for you is what works for you. It doesn’t matter if you do a visualization, or count your breaths, or sim- ply take a moment to close your eyes and be still while riding on the bus—all of these are just tools, and all of them  are forms of meditation.  Anytime you take a moment  to just sit there—voilà, you’re meditating.

And that’s the ultimate  goal of meditation: that, with  practice,  you will get to a level of comfort  in which you can just tip back into that same relaxed, focused mental space on the drop of a dime, anytime you notice that you’re getting stressed. By developing your meditation skills, you become able to step out of the stress loop and remain  cool, calm, and collected as often as you’d like.

If you’re drawn  to one specific method  of medi- tation,  that’s  great—stick  with  what  works for you.

Find the tool that you need and use it. But from a scientific perspective,  and for the results  we’re look- ing for in the mind and body, please know there are many “right” ways to do it.

Tiffany Cruikshank is the founder & visionary behind Yoga Medicine, a community of expert yoga teachers focused on fusing the best of anatomy & western medicine with the traditional practice of yoga. Tiffany’s classes have evolved over the past 20 years of teaching yoga to reflect her creativity and passion for using yoga as a form of medicine for the mind, body & spirit. With her medical background in Acupuncture & Sports Medicine, her classes are guided by a strong anatomic focus and her ability to teach a deeper understanding of complex subjects. Recognized more broadly as a health & wellness expert, Tiffany has worked with professional athletes and celebrities from around the world. She has run her own clinics and was the Acupuncturist & Yoga Teacher at the Nike World Headquarters and has been featured as an expert in numerous publications including Yoga Journal, Prevention , Self, Marie Claire, Fitness Magazine, Good Housekeeping, Fox News, Cosmopolitan, Redbook, Mantra, Thrive, More Magazine, OM Yoga, YogaLife and many others. Visit Tiffany’s Website

Photo credit: Jenny Jimenez



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/11/meditation-myths/

7 Ways Socially Unskilled People Can Quickly Become Better Listeners

I love watching successful interviewers, talk show hosts, and skilled orators give advice. I spend hours every month watching videos about this online. This to me was a way to improve my social skills, make more friends (which I lacked), and develop marketable skills in the workforce. One day, I observed a strange pattern. Many of […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/socially-unskilled-people-better-listeners/

Tuesday, 29 November 2016

Pose of the Week: Gatekeeper

In this week’s Pose of the Week, Claire Missingham demonstrates Gatekeeper pose or Parighasana. Find a glorious stretch through your side body and hips as you move through a few stages of gatekeeper pose. A great intermediate pose that packs a lot of flexibility into your entire body.



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/11/pose-of-the-week-gatekeeper/

Monday, 28 November 2016

6 Yoga Classes to Remain Calm

Feeling frazzled or unsettled lately? Not to worry. Yoga to the rescue! When we calm our breath, we calm our mind settling our central nervous system, allowing us to be more at peace within our own heart.

This week’s featured classes will help settle a stressed out mind and will bring more peace and calm to our lives.

  • Strong, Calm & Steady with Kia Miller: Practice this powerful kriya and meditation designed to release stress and create the strength, resilience and grace needed to thrive in these times. Sequencing includes warm up surya namaskars and engaging mulabandha and bahir kumbhaka (hold at end of exhale). Charge the magnetic energy of your body with this strengthening, rejuvenating practice. When your nerves are strong you are resilient, calm and capable, having the capacity to turn challenge into opportunity. Props Suggested: A blanket.
  • Breath Calm Down with Marla Apt: Take a moment to find your breath again with this exhalation focused practice done from a relaxed supine position. Calm your nervous tension with a few good smooth breaths. When you are plagued with worries, your breath and body respond and you can feel trapped in the physical and mental loop of anxiety. When you can catch a smooth breath, your perspective can shift completely. Props Needed: Three blankets and eye cover.
  • Precisely Peaceful with Chelsey Korus: Drawing your attention inward towards your center makes poses like vrksasana (tree pose) satisfying and peaceful for your mind. As you know life is not predictable or stationary and you are asked to find your stability within the flow. Practice this as you transition from standing straddle to tree. Catch your drishti, commit and calm your mind. Keep that same peace as you explore leg variations in tripod headstand before a nice savasana. Props Needed: A bolster.
  • Slow Breath, Calm Mind with Rod Stryker: Experience first hand how your breath is the key to shaping your mind. The poses will be simple but the focus on breath will be constant throughout. Use asana to improve breath and your breath to improve mental focus. Emphasize the calming and grounding power of lengthening exhale with forward bends and twists. Close with pranayama to leave you feeling balanced and stable.
  • Calm Your Mind for Sweet Dreams with Kathryn Budig: Ever find yourself exhausted, lying in bed at the end of the day and unable to calm your mind? This class is for you. A sweet 10 minute restorative sequence to wring out your body and mind so you can rest peacefully and drift off into sweet dreams. Props Needed: A bolster, block and strap.
  • Reset Your Mind: Calm with Tara Judelle: In this short practice to reset your nervous system for calm and ease we use pranayama, forward bends and an inversion to prepare you to meet the rest of your day with clarity. Props Needed: Bolster and Strap


source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/11/5-yoga-classes-to-remain-calm/

7 Ways Intuition Dramatically Transformed My Life

If you told me two years ago that I have the sensitivity to physically feel the pain of someone’s heartache, the inner wisdom to write endless magical parables out of the air and the intuition to lead workshops without planning any content, I would tell you that you are crazy. But that is me and […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/7-ways-intuition-transformed-life/

Friday, 25 November 2016

78 Classic New Years Resolution Ideas for 2017

The new year is quickly approaching and this is around about the time when we’ll all start thinking of our new years resolutions and how we can better ourselves in the new year. This article is all about new years resolution ideas for 2017, but still keeping it related to the areas we write about […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/classic-new-years-resolution-ideas-for-2015/

Wednesday, 23 November 2016

Pose of the Week: Downward Facing Dog

In this week’s Pose of the Week, Annie Carpenter demonstrates Downward Facing Dog or Adho Mukha Svanasana. Access your hamstring length, arm strength and shoulder rotation as you review the foundations of this pose. Reach your hips high and you create both power and ease in your body and mind.



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/11/pose-of-the-week-downward-facing-dog/

26 Reasons to Finally Stop Eating Junk Food

I was recently watching a documentary featuring the ‘Subway guy’, where he went to various events across the country as the spokesman for Subway. I forget his name, and I’m pretty sure he’s in prison now. Anyway… there was an 18 year old girl on the show who was speaking with the spokesman. She was […]

source http://wealthygorilla.com/26-reasons-stop-eating-junk-food/

Tuesday, 22 November 2016

Kathryn Budig’s Butternut Squash Mac ’n’ Cheese

MAKES 6 TO 8 SERVINGS

I grew up on a steady diet of boxed macaroni and cheese (it was my dad’s specialty: open box, boil water, and stir in mix). As I grew older, I still craved it, but the excessive dairy always made me ill. I’ve tried tons of vegan versions, and it wasn’t until I played with butternut squash that I found success. This dish is ridiculous. My girlfriends are constantly asking me to whip it up. It’s the ultimate comfort food without the payday that follows. Dig in!

1 butternut squash, peeled, cleaned, and cubed

2 tablespoons extravirgin olive oil, plus more for drizzling

2 teaspoons smoked sea salt

2 teaspoons Cajun seasoning

16 ounces brown rice penne

2 to 3 shallots, chopped

2 to 3 garlic cloves, chopped

½ cup white wine

2 teaspoons mustard powder or Dijon mustard

1 cup unsweetened almond milk

1 teaspoon chipotle powder

3 tablespoons nutritional yeast

2 teaspoons paprika

2 teaspoons sea salt, plus more to taste

½ cup gluten-free bread crumbs

½ cup grated Parmesan (optional)

1. Preheat the oven to 425˚F. Toss the butternut squash with 1 tablespoon of the olive oil, the smoked sea salt, and the Cajun seasoning. Roast for 30 to 40 minutes, or until soft. Leave the oven on.

2. Meanwhile, cook the pasta to al dente, following the package directions. Drain and set aside.

3. Sauté the shallots in 1 tablespoon of the olive oil for 3 minutes. Add garlic and cook for another minute. Deglaze the pan with white wine, cooking for 2 minutes and stirring to scrape any browned bits into the sauce; stir in the mustard powder.

4. Combine the roasted squash, almond milk, shallot mixture, chipotle powder, nutritional yeast, paprika, and 2 teaspoons salt in a high-speed blender. Puree until smooth.

5. Grease a 4-quart casserole pan with olive oil or coconut oil spray. Add the cooked pasta and pour the butternut squash mixture on top. Mix well. Top with the bread crumbs, Parmesan, if desired, a quick drizzle of olive oil, and a light shower of sea salt. Bake the casserole for 10 to 15 minutes, or until the top is light gold.

From Aim True by Kathryn Budig. Copyright © 2016 by Kathryn Budig. Reprinted by permission of William Morow Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/11/kathryn-budigs-butternut-squash-mac-n-cheese/

Monday, 21 November 2016

7 Yoga Classes to Cultivate Gratitude this Thanksgiving

The holidays are officially here! While we know that this is a wonderful time filled with lots of  joy, family and friends, we also know that it can be a very stressful time. Not to worry though — yoga to the rescue!  Yoga can alleviate stress due to travel, family and can even help aid in digestion after that big turkey meal.

This week’s featured classes will help reduce stress, prep for a big meal, will help aid in digestion and will help you find a way to give thanks during it all – even after a long flight.

  • A Thanksgiving Story with Steven Espinosa: With gratitude for the breath, move mindfully, consciously, and with awareness, flowing through a series of standing poses. Warm up your body with sun salutations, then balance in ardha chandrasana (half moon), vashistasana (side plank) and warrior poses. Then come down to the mat to open your hips and quads.
  • Roley Poley Flow with Kathryn Budig: Let’s face it, the last thing you want to do after a massive Thanksgiving meal is workout. In fact, a nap sounds about right, but instead, how about doing a bit more? This easy, steady paced flow is perfect for when you want to move, burn off some excess holiday goodness, but not punish yourself. Practice a simple sequence with gentle twists and soothing hip openers and fill up on self-gratitude.
  • Thanksgiving Yoga on the Ground with Alex: Thanksgiving Yoga on the Ground – Feeling sluggish? The holidays can bring a lot of abundance to which your yoga practice can adjust. Practice supporting the changing needs of our digestion with gentle twists and back strengthening poses. Using props, move through a sequence of supported postures on the floor that will assist you in bringing a sense of ease and openness. Conclude with a brief meditation on abundance, gratitude and community. Give thanks and enjoy your body! Props Needed: A blanket and a bolster.
  • Yoga Before Big Meals with Jo Tatsula: This is a great pre-holiday class, perfect to take before eating any big meals!! Before we start the flow, take a moment to allow the atmospheres around you and within you to mix and merge. Becoming one with your space. Then it’s a nice steady flowy flow that builds into a dancing warrior sequence using warrior 1 & 2, reverse warrior &  extended side angle pose (Virabhadrasana 1 & 2, Utthita  Parsvakonasana). We work the actions of side plank (vasistasana) and build to side plank tree (vasistasana vrksasana). Use the heat of the flow to open the chest, lungs and heart with these tasty backbends ~ locust pose, bow & bridge (Salabhasana, Danurasana & Setu Bandha….Urdhva Danurasana is optional!) Finish with pose of your choice ~ hip opener or inversion. Happy Holidays!
  • Personal Post-Travel Practice with Darren Rhodes: Darren Rhodes shares his personal post travel practice featuring forward folds, twist, and hip openers. After this practice you will be ready, set, go!
  • Post Turkey Flow with Dice Iida-Klein: An all-around flow that geared towards burning off the bird, post turkey day! We begin on our backs to wring out the laziness and make our way into a modified Surya Namaskar A. From there we continue through quite a few standing postures and incorporate our tripod headstand into the flow. We breakdown tripod headstand and a few of the transitions in and out of it. Using danurasana for backbends, we finish with janu sirsasana and paschimottanasana. Down with tryptophan my fellow yogis!!!!
  • Antidote for Holiday Excess with Felicia Tomakso: Antidote for holiday excess? Stimulate healthy digestion and elimination with a gentle sequence of twists alternating with abdominal strengtheners and forward folds. Take a break two hours after or one hour before you eat to enjoy your food even more.


source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/11/cultivate-gratitude-this-thanksgiving/

Thursday, 17 November 2016

Yoga for Depression

A startling number of people you ask, if they’re being really honest, will admit they’ve dealt with depression at some point in their lives. Not only is depression one of the most common mental health issues around, but it’s also the leading cause of disability across the globe. Though we’re getting a little more comfortable with talking about it openly, it’s still oddly hard to treat: Antidepressants don’t work for everyone, and even talk therapy can be hit or miss. Interestingly, some research has suggested that yoga can help treat depression. It may not be a panacea, but it can certainly make a difference in people’s mental health, especially if you’re doing other things to help yourself as well.

One recent review study found that yoga could be an effective treatment for certain mental health disorders, including depression. The team, based at Duke University, carried out a meta-analysis, looking back over several previous studies on yoga and a number mental health issues like depression, schizophrenia, ADHD, sleep problems, cognitive problems, and eating disorders. For depression, they found that four studies were rigorous enough be included in the review, and the studies did yield positive effects of yoga for people with clinical depression. One of the studies even found that the cortisol levels of the participants, who were young adults with depression, had decreased significantly by the end of the five-week study period. Cortisol, a stress hormone, is often higher in people with depression.

“The search for improved treatments, including non-drug based, to meet the holistic needs of patients is of paramount importance and we call for more research into yoga as a global priority,” said study author P. Murali Doraiswamy at the time of the study. “If the promise of yoga on mental health was found in a drug, it would be the best selling medication world-wide.”

There’s a number of ways in which yoga is thought to work physiologically. One is by reducing activity in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which governs our stress response, and by increasing levels of the neurotransmitter GABA, which are known to be lower in people with depression.

And other studies have suggested that yoga may work by increasing bone-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), which is a measure of the brain’s plasticity, or malleability. A study from in the Indian Journal of Psychiatry found that people who were depressed and who took yoga with or without antidepressants for three months had higher levels of BDNF after the treatments. There wasn’t any difference in levels of BDNF between the groups – but in the yoga-only group, there was a connection between how much depression symptoms were reduced and how much BDNF levels rose. This suggests that yoga may have a similar effect on brain plasticity as antidepressants do.

Yoga also teaches us to regulate our breath, both on and off the mat, which is well known to help dial down the stress response and to dial up the relaxation response. “Yoga helps to modulate our responses to stress by decreasing our overall physiological arousal (i.e., reduced heart rate and blood pressure),” says psychologist Ben Michaelis, “and somewhat ironically by increasing the variability of our heart rate which allows us to respond more adaptively to stress.” He adds that the community aspects of yoga – being part of a group of people who are all in it for a similar goal – may also help with the more isolating elements of depression. Research has definitely found that social contact is a key part of psychological well-being.

And finally, just having a practice to go back to regularly can be a huge help when we’re dealing with depression. It’s not only the physical exercise, but it’s really the mental benefits of any routine that you come back to – this, in and of itself, helps people deal with the more intellectual and existential issues that come with depression.

“The breathing and calming aspects of yoga help improve attention and concentration, which are often disturbed during depression,” says Michaelis. “But the spiritual aspects of having a practice help with the existential aspects of depression – focusing on a larger purpose. And finally, taking time out of your busy day just for yourself is an inherently self-valuing activity and would have a reparative function for people who are in the midst of a depressive episode, and who often struggle with low self-esteem.”

So there are a lot of routes through which yoga may work for depression. Meditation itself has also been shown to have a big impact – a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that meditation is as effective as antidepressants in helping treat depression. But asana, too, seems to have its own very real set of benefits. It may not always be enough – for some, antidepressants and/or therapy may always be necessary – but it can certainly be an important ingredient in managing depression.

Alice G. Walton, PhD is a health and science writer, and began practicing (and falling in love with) yoga and meditation five years ago. She is a contributor at Forbes.com, and writes for the University of Chicago, as well as other publications. Of all the areas of health she covers, she’s particularly interested in how yoga and meditation affect the brain and behavior. You can follow her on Twitter @AliceWalton and Facebook at Facebook.com/alicegwalton.



source https://blog.yogaglo.com/2016/11/yoga-for-depression/