Posts belonging to Category 'Surya Namaskar'

Strength yoga

Question:

Tommy asked <<What’s the minimum routine necessary to *strengthen* all the major muscle groups? **  Surya Namaskar – one exercise, 12 poses, myriad variations. Done to its fullest, Surya Namaskar is an intence strengthing series.  Each asan can be taken to its fullest level for an intence workout.   In my classes we do a 20-minute version of Surya Namaskar. Om Shanti … Yogini Sakti Lalla Hamsa Yoga Fellowship

Response:

Hi, In several yoga books, I’ve read that there are between 10 and 12 poses which (if you do them all) will flex and stretch every joint and muscle in the body. Yogic exercise, though, isn’t just about flexibility; it’s also about strength. Suppose I want to spend odd days working on flexibility and even days working on strength. What routine would require the least number of poses which will work and strengthen every major muscle in the body? A few poses seem obvious–handstand for triceps, hero for thighs and hamstrings. But what about calves? Lats? And particularly, what about biceps? As I age (51), I’m not so much concerned about looking strong as I am about being strong. So the basic question is: What’s the minimum routine necessary to *strengthen* all the major muscle groups? Thanks for your thoughts, Tommy

Response:

Opening blocked nasal passage

Question:

My apologies for not describing this more clearly. The hand position/mudra for alternate nostril breathing places the index and middle finger at the base of the thumb. When the thumb is closing off one nostril one can use the ring finger to gently press the cheek fold on the other side away from your nose, I’m referring to the area just next to the nostril. Switch sides when you switch nostrils. Presto. Open airway. If not right away then after a few minutes practice. Be gentle with the breath, and with your face as you practice. peace, sandra

Response:

Dear Sandra, Thank you so much!  This is a Godsend!  I tried it as soon as I read it, and it worked!  I wish I had known about this technique years ago!  So simple, but so effective!  Wish we could let every yoga student know about it! My apologies for not describing this more clearly. The hand position/mudra for alternate nostril breathing places the index and middle finger at the base of the thumb. When the thumb is closing off one nostril one can use the ring finger to gently press the cheek fold on the other side away from your nose, I’m referring to the area just next to the nostril. Switch sides when you switch nostrils. Presto. Open airway. If not right away then after a few minutes practice. Be gentle with the breath, and with your face as you practice. peace, sandra

Response:

: doesn’t happen this fluid stays in the nasal passages. Generally results of : this are neutral, but sometimes the fluid will become host to an infection, : making the whole difficulty worse. I’ve had some problems with irritation in my nose for the few last days. I’m allergic and yet have to deal with old dusty books and I guess my nose got angry and started running (I hope that is English, I think at least the allergic ones know what I’m talking about :-) in a reaction for about everything. First I tried to keep on doing Neti, but it seemed just to be another irritant, so finally I decided to take a short break with it. : Cleansings can be very helpful and wonderful. It is my view that our bodies : are basically internally self-cleaning and these practices have most : benefit used sparingly. I agree. One has to learn to listen to one’s body. Ny nose has calmed down by now and I’ll try neti again when I feel like it, but I’ll take notice if it some day doesn’t feel good. Tapani T.

Response:

– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Gnarly Dude! Um, I mean, _nauli_! [CORRECTION! I mean neti!]

Response:

While taking shower, snort water up each nostril!  Take it easy at first, a little bit at a time, (closing one nostril) then snort it out.  It’ll burn a little but no big deal.  Do it several times, and each time you’ll get more mucus out.

Thanks, Joe.  This is one of the regular practices of Islam.  The ablution done before prayer five times a day includes nauli as you described it.  Islamic prayer is also a form of yoga. "Esse qua esse bonum est (being, as being, is good)."–St. Augustine

Response:

I was wondering if anyone might suggest any exercise (breathing and/or asana) that would help open a mostly blocked nasal passage. I can only inhale about 20% thru the left passage as opposed to the right. It seems to be some sort of "block", in that I know of no physical obstruction to the air flow. Occasionally, during intense exercise, it will start to "leak", but I can never clear it. Only sometimes while stretching, when I stumble upon and ride a muscle release wave, does it open up completely, to my great relief. I don’t notice it for the most part, but it does hamper my attempts at full-energy breathing and exercise. Any suggestions would be gratefully accepted… Thanx – doof

To reply in the true confusing tradition of Usenet, I would like to muddy the water by advising you against Neti. All the Yoga masters I’ve read have cautioned against Neti while suffering from congestion. I did try it myself once when I was suffering from a prolonged & acute sinus infection. It only aggravated it severely. I would also caution against sniffing tap water- it is full of chlorine. Just do headstands in a swimming pool then. One thing I’d like to recommend- mind you it only provides temporary relief- is a specific asana. I’m sorry that I cannot remember the name: but it is one-legged standing. Stand on the foot which belongs on the same side as your blockage (Or is it the opposite side? It’s been so long, I can’t remember. Anyway, try it in both sides.)Stretch the other foot out in front of you & hold with both hands, then bring it out to the side & hold w/ one hand as high as you can keep straight. Then tuck it into the groin & stand, breathing easily for a short minute. Does it work? I usually try this series of asanas on late autumn mornings, as my body adjusts to the seasonal change. If I wake up blocked, this always gets the phlegm flowing. After the blockage subsides (a couple of weeks,) I might get into a vigorous Sun Salutation. After a few rounds, I’m blowing snot all over my sticky mat!

Response:

I was wondering if anyone might suggest any exercise (breathing and/or asana) that would help open a mostly blocked nasal passage. I can only inhale about 20% thru the left passage as opposed to the right. It seems to be some sort of "block", in that I know of no physical obstruction to the air flow. Occasionally, during intense exercise, it will start to "leak", but I can never clear it. Only sometimes while stretching, when I stumble upon and ride a muscle release wave, does it open up completely, to my great relief. I don’t notice it for the most part, but it does hamper my attempts at full-energy breathing and exercise. Any suggestions would be gratefully accepted… Thanx – doof

Response:

You could try neti: rinsing your nasal passages with saltwater. You’ll need a neti-pot. I’m presently trying to master using a form of neti-pot called SinuCleanse. It’s just that the damned water keeps finding it’s way from ny nose to my throat, even though it should just rinse from one nostril to another :-) . You can get infromation about SinuCleanse from http://www.sinucleanse.com/ Tapani T.

Response:

Your vital energy is imbalanced.  Yoga teaches that at any moment the breath if flowing more through one nostril than the other, and it’s got to alternate sides on a regular basis; some say the breath should switch nostrils every 50 minutes or so.  This keeps the complementary energies of the Ida and Pingala nadis balanced. I have often found that my nostrils are hardly open at all when I start yoga, and breathing through my nose can be really a chore, making me weary with the effort rather than energizing my prana!  You know how I deal with that?  I don’t try to do anything about it! (Wu-wei: accomplishing by not doing).  In other words, I just concentrate all my attention on the asanas: first relaxation in Savasana, deeply breathing through the nose to draw in prana while consciously relaxing every part of my body & mind using autosuggestion.  Then, when I begin with a few warmups and Surya Namaskar, by the time I even remember to think about it, my nostrils are unblocked!  You may wonder: how do I breathe from the beginning if my nostrils are blocked?  The answer is, I just don’t worry about it!  I just go ahead with the relaxation and asanas, and it takes care of itself!  As long as my attention is meditatively immersed in the yoga, the "FLOW" of the practice clears the blockage.  Do you get what I mean?  I think you understand because you found out on your own: "Only sometimes while stretching, when I stumble upon and ride a muscle release wave, does it open up completely, to my great relief."  Gotta love that FLOW.

Also one thing that I’ve found really helps to clear up the breathing before beginning yoga is to sniff the aromatherapy oils from Maharishi Ayur-Ved. I was wondering if anyone might suggest any exercise (breathing and/or asana) that would help open a mostly blocked nasal passage. I can only inhale about 20% thru the left passage as opposed to the right. It seems to be some sort of "block", in that I know of no physical obstruction to the air flow. Occasionally, during intense exercise, it will start to "leak", but I can never clear it. Only sometimes while stretching, when I stumble upon and ride a muscle release wave, does it open up completely, to my great relief. I don’t notice it for the most part, but it does hamper my attempts at full-energy breathing and exercise. Any suggestions would be gratefully accepted… Thanx – doof

Response:

In neti the liguid passes through and out of the system. Using a sinus spray of saline this doesn’t happen. The saline solution can penetrate and help to open the passage, then is is dependant on our blowing or sneezing it out. If that doesn’t happen this fluid stays in the nasal passages. Generally results of this are neutral, but sometimes the fluid will become host to an infection, making the whole difficulty worse. In both neti and nasal saline sprays some moderate kapalabati/breath of fire is useful. Practice this after the cleansing being careful to respect the delicate tissues of the nose. Cleansings can be very helpful and wonderful. It is my view that our bodies are basically internally self-cleaning and these practices have most benefit used sparingly. peace, sandra  

Response:

- Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – This is so simple they’ve made it into a product and sell it in drugstores. I’m referring to those little strips that fit over the bridge of the nose. Hello, This will be my second post here.  I was wondering if the sterile, saline solution nasal spray also sold in drugstores would be acceptable here.  As a long-time allergy sufferer, I was glad to find something that is drug-free to open up those blocked passages. It might be better than snorting tap water in the shower – just a suggestion. I use it thusly.  Blow the nose gently, squirt the solution in each nostril, go lie sideways across my bed on my back with my head hanging off the edge. I only stay there a few minutes – seems to help. Cynthia ==—–

Forum Tried to respond to "Joe" via email after his original suggestion to snort water in the shower, but the missive was returned marked "mailbox full" – so I’ll do it here…. Thanks for the suggestion! I’ve been snortin’ that water about 10 minutes a day since my original post, and it seems to be working somewhat. The passage opens more during the day, and it FEELS more open. Still a ways to go, but I’ll keep at it. Also, I’m glad I’m in the shower when I do this, cuz I’m blowing snot all over the place! Feels strange initially to draw water thru your nose, but it definitely has a cleansing effect, traditional-neti or not…  - doof

Response:

: The SinuCleanse pot looks very similar to my synthetic neti pot. But why : would anyone want to buy saline solution from them. All you need is one : teaspoon of salt per pint of lukewarm water! I think this will be a lot : cheaper. Well, you can mix the saline solution for SinuCleanse yourself from salt, certain other very inexpensive household item (which might not be so terribly necessary but won’t do any harm either) and ordinaty tap water. (They claimed to me in a drugstore that I should buy distilled water but couldn’t fool me :-) ). You can of course buy readymixed saline solution powder for SinuCleanse if you don’t want to spend about ten minutes every other month (or something like that) by doing the mixing yourself. Any kind of neti pot will do. I chose SinuCleanse since you can only buy ceramic neti pots in Finland and (being a clumsy idiot) I feared I’d drop and break it one morning :-) . Any kind of inbreakable neti pot (plastic, metal etc.) is just fine. A word of warning though: neti is a bit messy at least at the start :-) . Tapani T.

Response:

: This will be my second post here.  I was wondering if the sterile, saline : solution nasal spray also sold in drugstores would be acceptable here.  As a : long-time allergy sufferer, I was glad to find something that is drug-free to : open up those blocked passages. I’m allergic as well and occasionally used saline spray. But at least for me it never helped for long. However (as I’ve already written in this thread) I’ve been playing with my modified neti pot (SinuCleanse) some weeks by now and think that I’m finally starting to learn how to use it. It opens all blocked passages rather efficiently. Also, being a miser I prefer mixing my rinsing liquid myself from inexpensive raw matherials. But of course if you are happy with a saline solution nasal spray, then good for you. Tapani T.

Response:

This is so simple they’ve made it into a product and sell it in drugstores. I’m referring to those little strips that fit over the bridge of the nose.

Hello, This will be my second post here.  I was wondering if the sterile, saline solution nasal spray also sold in drugstores would be acceptable here.  As a long-time allergy sufferer, I was glad to find something that is drug-free to open up those blocked passages. It might be better than snorting tap water in the shower – just a suggestion. I use it thusly.  Blow the nose gently, squirt the solution in each nostril, go lie sideways across my bed on my back with my head hanging off the edge. I only stay there a few minutes – seems to help. Cynthia

Response:

This is so simple they’ve made it into a product and sell it in drugstores. I’m referring to those little strips that fit over the bridge of the nose. In pranayama practice I learned to use the outer fingers to hold the sinus in a more open position. If one does this while actually practicing to airway opens, and usually the sinus clears too. Alternating rounds of kapalabati/fire breath, and nodi shodana/alternate nostril breathing work for me. That it happens is just another example to me of my natural lack of symetry. I’m not perfect, darn. when I started yoga I think I thought I could perfect myself, but through the years what I’ve learned is accptance. peace, sandra

Response:

: To reply in the true confusing tradition of Usenet, I would like to : muddy the water by advising you against Neti. All the Yoga masters I’ve : read have cautioned against Neti while suffering from congestion. I did : try it myself once when I was suffering from a prolonged & acute sinus : infection. It only aggravated it severely. Well, I’ve understood that (at least in theory :-) ) if you start doing Neti while not suffering from any serious congestion and keep doing it regularly, you won’t get so easely infected. I finally managed to do Neti right with my left nostril this morning. I wasn’t so successful with the right one though… :-) : I would also caution against sniffing tap water- it is full of chlorine. : Just do headstands in a swimming pool then. Well, at least here in Europe that depends on the area you are living in. For example in tap water of my hometown there is no chlorine present. There at least used to be some other towns in where the tap water tasted really terrible though :-) . Tapani T.

Response:

I have often found that my nostrils are hardly open at all when I start yoga, and breathing through my nose can be really a chore, making me weary with the effort rather than energizing my prana!  You know how I deal with that?  I don’t try to do anything about it! (Wu-wei: accomplishing by not doing). In other words, I just concentrate all my attention on the asanas: first relaxation in Savasana, deeply breathing through the nose to draw in prana while consciously relaxing every part of my body & mind using

autosuggestion.     My thoughts exactly.  The more immersed I become in yoga, the more it all just comes together.

Response:

– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -I was wondering if anyone might suggest any exercise (breathing and/or asana) that would help open a mostly blocked nasal passage. I can only inhale about 20% thru the left passage as opposed to the right. It seems to be some sort of "block", in that I know of no physical obstruction to the air flow. Occasionally, during intense exercise, it will start to "leak", but I can never clear it. Only sometimes while stretching, when I stumble upon and ride a muscle release wave, does it open up completely, to my great relief. I don’t notice it for the most part, but it does hamper my attempts at full-energy breathing and exercise. Any suggestions would be gratefully accepted… Thanx – doof

Gnarly Dude! Um, I mean, _nauli_! Check it out in the yoga books and magazines (Yoga International did a really good article on it). Or just follow the quick and easy way: While taking shower, snort water up each nostril!  Take it easy at first, a little bit at a time, (closing one nostril) then snort it out.  It’ll burn a little but no big deal.  Do it several times, and each time you’ll get more mucus out. There’s also a way to do nauli by taking water in the mouth, then forcing it out the nose.  This is a bit more difficult.  It helps to remember some Rodney Dangerfield jokes to help the process along. Doing this in the shower has its benefits, which will become obvious to anyone that experiments with this method. Gets to be like brushing your teeth: if you don’t do it every morning, you’ll feel "dirty" all day.

Response:

Question on Asanas when warming up

Question:

Yahya M wrote <<I am being taught the classical yoga of the Sivananda lineage, and << Yoga is essentially a spiritual discipline. <<The profane modern world tries to externalize everything, but traditional yoga takes us inward, to the innermost center of our being. Namaste!  You do honor to Swamiji’s name.   Om Shanti, Shanti, Shanti Yogini Lalasa

Response:

Namaste!  You do honor to Swamiji’s name.  

Swami Sivananda ki jai! – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -Om Shanti, Shanti, Shanti Yogini Lalasa

Response:

All you describe is good, perhaps though consider a few stops on the way from your first book, Hittleman’s to Birch’s. Personally I suggest some Iyengar study, I think there is a book called Yoga the Iyengar way. peace, sandra

Response:

Jumping back requires faith in ones body and gravity. We are so used to keeping our weight on the feet that we miss the need to tranfer it to our hands for a jump. Once you change this you are well on your way to smooth jumping. For both forward and back jumps, bring your weight onto the arms and hands, bend the knees and accept that you can bring your lower body easily off the mat, it will return to earth in a nano-second in the desired position. Soon this will be so much fun, you will giggle and jump whenever you can. I could use some hints on bringing the legs all the way through the arms for seated poses. I suspect my arms, or my faith isn’t strong enough. I get tangled up about 1/2 way through. peace, sandra

Response:

says… I could use some hints on bringing the legs all the way through the arms for seated poses. I suspect my arms, or my faith isn’t strong enough. I get tangled up about 1/2 way through.

IMO this is a very advanced move — to do correctly, anyway. I’ve closely studied Richard Freeman’s jumpthrough on video to see just how the heck he does it so gracefully.  For one thing, he’s extremely flexible in the forward bend.  Essentially what he does is jump into a "jackknifed handstand" — his upper body is totally vertical, and his lower body is too, but pointed in the opposite direction.  In order for this to work, one has to be completely open at the hips, or else the feet are going to hit the mat.  That is, if one does it like Freeman with the legs completely straight all the way through the jump. I’ve seen others do the jumpthrough with straight legs, but with a bit of "cheating" — they raise up with the fingers through the entire jump.  Though I’ve done this myself, I don’t recommend it, and I stopped doing it a long time ago.  There’s a definite danger to the hands doing this; one gets tired and the fingers start buckling, bending the wrong way.  Danny Paradise mentioned this once in a class — he’s seen people break their fingers with this kind of cheating.  I’ve come close to doing this myself. The next option is to jumpthrough, hands flat on the mat — but with bent legs. In order to do this under control, one should be well established in doing handstands.  Also, one should be able to lift the legs (lolasana?) and bring them through the arms into catvari.  This takes considerable practice and strength in the arms and abs! In other words, the jumpthrough can be done this way:  look up and bend the knees, jump up into a handstand (upper body vertical) but bend at the waist bring the knees toward the chest, the legs crossing, and pull through the arms into seated position. Or, as a modification of that (what I’m doing presently):  bend the knees and jump up, but jump floating up to the hands with crossed legs.  I land sitting crosslegged between my hands.  Then I simply lean back and stretch my legs out straight. "Crashing through," what most beginner’s to Astanga try to do with the jumpthrough, is not too yogic IMO.  Again, to really do the jumpthough properly takes considerable flexiblity, strength and coordination.  Guys like Freeman only make it _look_ ridiculously easy.

Response:

The Surya Namaskar (Sun Salutation) is a great way to begin a daily session of asanas (having prepared for it by first breathing and relaxing in the Corpse pose, and then some cat stretches & leg lifts).  Even if your tendons and spine are a bit uptight when you begin, after you’ve run through the Surya Namaskar a few times, you will be quite warmed up and loosened up.  I always find that when I begin, the first time my palms go down to the floor, I can’t quite straighten my knees out — but by the time I start on the second or third round of it, my palms are all the way flat on the floor with my knees straightened out.  After that, all the other asanas go much easier. The way I’ve learned Surya Namaskar is very fluid, motile, and continuous, not static, and one single inbreath or outbreath goes with each shift in position. When practicing alone, I keep it moving and breathing, as each breath drives the rhythm, and I like to keep it even.  It’s only in class when the teacher has to coach the beginners how to get into each position, that we get hung up in a position for a while and have to take several breaths while waiting for the beginners to "get it."  To me this is a disruption of the normal fluid even rhythm, but in class it’s all right, ’cause we were all first-timers once.  The Surya Namaskar, being essentially a warmup, is the only really motile practice; the regular asanas have to be held stationary for extended periods of time. I am being taught the classical yoga of the Sivananda lineage, and I am not attracted at all by these modernized, Americanized adaptations that go by the name of "Power Yoga," "Pump Yoga," or whatever.  I believe the traditional way is best.  Yoga is essentially a spiritual discipline.  Hatha yoga trains the body, not to be a buffed hardbody for the "Baywatch" culture, not to pump to the mindless heavy beat of loud amplified rock ‘n’ roll, but to learn tranquility (santosha), so that ultimately one can transcend body consciousness and attain spiritual consciousness.  The profane modern world tries to externalize everything, but traditional yoga takes us inward, to the innermost center of our being.   For me the best and most beautiful part of yoga is when all the asanas are done and I sit still in Padmasana, focus on the Ajna cakra, and meditate on the transcendent spiritual Self.  Blissful peace. Om shanti shanti shantih "Esse qua esse bonum est (being, as being, is good)."–St. Augustine

Response:

   I too am using Beryl Birch’s Power Yoga.  I just started it a week ago and am taking it slowly.  I know exactly what you mean about not being able to do Sun Sal. A without "warming up" first.  Here’s what I found helpful:  if I do the salutation first thing in the morning I find that I am very inflexible.  So, I do some asanas to stretch myself (Like you, I have followed Hittleman’s 28 day plan religiously!Try warming up with some asanas from his book. ) Then do salutation A.

Talya, I thought about this, I just did not know if this would have an impact on the Sun Salutations. However, I tried this as you suggest and it feels great. The Hittleman’s 28 day plan excercises always feel great. About the breathing.  [snip] . Then you can focus on your breath. Here’s a helpful hint: in the Face Down Dog posture when you do the 5 breaths take your time with each one and really listen to it.

This sounds excellent. I will try this… Now I’ve got a question:  have you mastered the "jump back" ?

For me this position was not too bad. Once, I was not "afraid" to jump, it got easier. Also, I practice on a mat, so the jump back works well. It does take some strengh to hold the "push up" position. The part that I found difficult was the position after the "downward dog", where I had to walk my feet and then jump my feet to my hands. After about a week, this became easier. As another aside, what I would love is another book after "The Hittleman’s 28 day plan"  to take me to the next level. That is why I chose the "Power Yoga" book. It uses strength much more than the "Hittleman’s 28 day plan ". I am unsure this book is good, because I am still in the early chapters. However, the long introduction, had me anxious for the "exercises to begun. See, what really got me hooked into yoga was "Hittleman’s" book, I felt wonderful before, during and after the workout. Always felt great. I recommended his book to 6 other people and they all loved his book. It’s just that I want to go to another level. I hope the "Power Yoga" will get me there. Lawrence M. Seldin, CMC, CPC Author of POWER TIPS FOR THE APPLE NEWTON and INTRODUCTION TO CSP http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/seldin

Response:

Now I’ve got a question:  have you mastered the "jump back" ? I’ve tried to do it gracefully but it doesn’t feel right. Any hints?   Once you’ve completed a forward bend, then you bring your head up . . . your hands stay right by your feet, or perhaps a few inches in front of your feet. Then (this is important!) bend your knees ALL THE WAY DOWN, make sure your hands are flat on the floor.  In the beginning, rest here for a moment to get set for the move — then, think of your tail going STRAIGHT UPWARDS (not backwards!) while you thrust with your legs while maintaining balance with your hands.

This technique looks much more fluid than kicking back your  feet. I will try this myself. Looks very nice from the way you describe it. Lawrence M. Seldin, CMC, CPC Author of POWER TIPS FOR THE APPLE NEWTON and INTRODUCTION TO CSP http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/seldin

Response:

Surya namaskara A & B _ARE_ a warm-up!  Take them as slowly and as easily as you need to!

So your suggestion is to  don’t do any other warm-ups and just keep doing the Salutation A until I am flexible? So I can stay on an individual position and get comfortable with it before going on to another position? My first few of the day are _always_ done very carefully, and with all the modifications of posture that I think are necessary, depending on how cold or tight I might be at the moment.  I bend my knees if I feel I need to, a walk my feet up without jumping, etc.

Is each position taken slowly with extra breathing on each position. Otherwise you can’t stay long enough on each position? The purpose of A & B is to warm the body up, increase circulation and establish ujayi breathing.  The purpose of A & B is not perfection of the postures!

I understand. One of the problems with learning yoga from a book is the lack of feedback, and the misconceptions that can occur.  POWER YOGA, imo, isn’t the best resource for learning yoga anyway!  If you can get a good video, such as Richard Freeman’s on Astanga Yoga, you’ll learn a _lot_ more.  But better still is finding a teacher "in the flesh."

Thanks for the thought. Lawrence M. Seldin, CMC, CPC Author of POWER TIPS FOR THE APPLE NEWTON and INTRODUCTION TO CSP http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/seldin

Response:

says… Now I’ve got a question:  have you mastered the "jump back" ? I’ve tried to do it gracefully but it doesn’t feel right. Any hints?  

Once you’ve completed a forward bend, then you bring your head up . . . your hands stay right by your feet, or perhaps a few inches in front of your feet. Then (this is important!) bend your knees ALL THE WAY DOWN, make sure your hands are flat on the floor.  In the beginning, rest here for a moment to get set for the move — then, think of your tail going STRAIGHT UPWARDS (not backwards!) while you thrust with your legs while maintaining balance with your hands. So while it’s called a "jump back," the action is more of a jump upwards of your hips. The center of gravity stays over the hands, the elbows stay in rather than flaring out,and the legs and tail will kind of float upwards while you softly (even soundlessly) descend into chatuari (4th or plank position). This is the graceful way of doing it, rather than kicking your feet backwards like some karate move!  It also is helpful for strengthening the arms.

Response:

Hi Lawrence,     I too am using Beryl Birch’s Power Yoga.  I just started it a week ago and am taking it slowly.  I know exactly what you mean about not being able to do Sun Sal. A without "warming up" first.  Here’s what I found helpful:  if I do the salutation first thing in the morning I find that I am very inflexible.  So, I do some asanas to stretch myself (Like you, I have followed Hittleman’s 28 day plan religiously!Try warming up with some asanas from his book. ) Then do salutation A.  Or try practicing in the evening a couple of hours before bedtime.  I find that I am much more flexible in the evening and the salutations are easier.. About the breathing.  There is plenty of time to breathe if you make the time.  Make sure you inhale and exhale deeply through your nose.  Don’t worry too much about the breathing until you’ve got the alignment down perfectly. Then you can focus on your breath. Here’s a helpful hint: in the Face Down Dog posture when you do the 5 breaths take your time with each one and really listen to it.  For me, it grounds me and really improves my concentration.  Now I’ve got a question:  have you mastered the "jump back" ? I’ve tried to do it gracefully but it doesn’t feel right. Any hints?  Ok, hope all this helps. Let me know how it’s going! Thanks!!

Response:

I have recently started to follow the book "Power Yoga"by Beryl Birch . It contains the Sun Salutations A and Sun Salutations B. My question is on warm up. If I do not "stretch" or "warm up" before doing the "Salutations", I am very tight and am unable to touch my head to my knees or palms to the floor.

Surya namaskara A & B _ARE_ a warm-up!  Take them as slowly and as easily as you need to! My first few of the day are _always_ done very carefully, and with all the modifications of posture that I think are necessary, depending on how cold or tight I might be at the moment.  I bend my knees if I feel I need to, a walk my feet up without jumping, etc. The purpose of A & B is to warm the body up, increase circulation and establish ujayi breathing.  The purpose of A & B is not perfection of the postures! The main thing for me is if I just follow my breath, then the body naturally opens up more and more, and I’m "told" when I can proceed further and faster safely. The book seems to state to do the Salutations and these "warm-ups" will create enough heat to warm up. I just feel so tight when I start the "Salutations". I "feel" more comfortable by concentrating on each position before I try the Salutation so that I am flexible enought to do the Salutations.

Important point:  don’t try to fit the body to "yoga"; let yoga fit the body naturally into where it’s supposed to be.  It’s tough sometimes because of my need to be as flexible "as I should be," and so some frustration arises.  This is expecially so in the mornings, comparing my flexibility with what I have in the afternoon. One of the problems with learning yoga from a book is the lack of feedback, and the misconceptions that can occur.  POWER YOGA, imo, isn’t the best resource for learning yoga anyway!  If you can get a good video, such as Richard Freeman’s on Astanga Yoga, you’ll learn a _lot_ more.  But better still is finding a teacher "in the flesh." Also, it seems to me that it is difficult to breath only "in" or "out" during each position. For example on "Salutation A" I reach for the sky and then bend my head towards my knees in a standing position. Then I touch my palms to the floor. Seems like not enough time to breath before trying a new position

SN A should be going like this: INHALE — arms up EXHALE — forward bend INHALE — head up EXHALE — jump or step back (plank position) INHALE — upward dog EXHALE — downward dog, for 5 to 10 breaths. INHALE — look up, bend knees EXHALE — jump or walk feet up to top of mat INHALE — look up EXHALE — forward bend INHALE — arms up, gaze at thumbs EXHALE — arms down.

Response:

I have recently started to follow the book "Power Yoga"by Beryl Birch . It contains the Sun Salutations A and Sun Salutations B. My question is on warm up. If I do not "stretch" or "warm up" before doing the "Salutations", I am very tight and am unable to touch my head to my knees or palms to the floor. The book seems to state to do the Salutations and these "warm-ups" will create enough heat to warm up. I just feel so tight when I start the "Salutations". I "feel" more comfortable by concentrating on each position before I try the Salutation so that I am flexible enought to do the Salutations. Also, it seems to me that it is difficult to breath only "in" or "out" during each position. For example on "Salutation A" I reach for the sky and then bend my head towards my knees in a standing position. Then I touch my palms to the floor. Seems like not enough time to breath before trying a new position Please give me your thoughts. PS. I have been doing Yoga on my own for a little less than a year, with Richard Hittleman’s Yoga: 28 day exercise plan. I love the book and figured I can go further, so I am trying the book "Power Yoga". TIA, Lawrence M. Seldin, CMC, CPC Author of POWER TIPS FOR THE APPLE NEWTON and INTRODUCTION TO CSP http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/seldin

Response:

Working out my own routine

Question:

I recently took a yoga class and loved it. It lasted 6 weeks and we did somewhat the same routine every time, with slight variations each time, maybe with the introduction of one or two new poses each night. Now the class is over and I’d like to continue. I have rented some tapes and they all vary quite a lot. I am wondering how one comes up with a personal routine. Do I do something like flexibility moves Monday, stretching Tuesday, etc.  or do I try to do a little of everything every night? And since there are so many poses and so little time, and since some poses obviously take quite a bit of practice, how do I decide which ones to use? One must be able to do familiar poses, or else they’d be forever trying to look at the book and do the moves at the same time, which is a distraction. Advice for you folks will be well appreciated. **Note – I posted once a month or so ago about tight hamstrings. The advice given here was very helpful. The key was and is breating, patience, persistence, and "enjoying the journey". Thank you all very much. Nancy

Response:

Now the class is over and I’d like to continue. I have rented some tapes and they all vary quite a lot. I am wondering how one comes up with a personal routine. Do I do something like flexibility moves Monday, stretching Tuesday, etc.  or do I try to do a little of everything every night? And since there are so many poses and so little time, and since some poses obviously take quite a bit of practice, how do I decide which ones to use? One must be able to do familiar poses, or else they’d be forever trying to look at the book and do the moves at the same time, which is a distraction.

What I find works best for me is following a basic structure such as sun salutations, standing postures, balance, back bending, seated forward bending, supine, savasana. Within in each category I try to listen to what my body wants that day. I may enter the practice with the intention of opening up the hips, for example, but I may change emphasis during the practice. What has helped me a lot is having a variety of teachers, watching many tapes and reading many books. Learn the basic postures and variations on those postures, then chose the variation appropriate for the moment. My personal practice does tend toward the power yoga style or, more recently, White Lotus Foundation’s Fow Series (where I got certified to teach). More than anything I would suggest making sure you set aside the time three to six days a week and practice. I hope this helps. John Rickey

Response:

Do I do something like flexibility moves Monday, stretching Tuesday, etc.  or do I try to do a little of everything every night? And since there are so many poses and so little time, and since some poses obviously take quite a bit of practice, how do I decide which ones to use? One must be able to do familiar poses, or else they’d be forever trying to look at the book and do the moves at the same time, which is a distraction.

Well, imho, I think it is better to make equilibrated series. For instance, some basic stretchings then some surya namaskar, trikonasana, some sitted bendings, inversed postures, then some contra-postures (bhujangasana, dhanurasana,…) and also some back twisting. Always do a deep relaxation at the end. E. Robert

Response:

i would suggest doing the same poses five days a week for three months.  that  way your body gets used to the poses and you get to KNOW them.  then you can  pick some new poses and do the same thing.

Response:

A good number of books have sets of sequences that you can use in your own practice, and which can be varied according to what your body lets you do. Two helpful sources are BKS Iyengar’s "Light on Yoga", the bible of the asanas, or "Yoga the Iyengar Way" by the Mehta’s. Both have poses arranged into ‘courses’ which begin with the very easiest, and end with natarajasana and other "calendar poses".  I found the second book especially helpful and very accessible. There are also sequences for relieving various ailments in both books. In general, a basic balanced sequence begins with a centering pose, an active pose like dog pose, an inversion (headstand first), some forward or back bends, twists, shoulderstand, and savasana.  Or you could spread this out throughout a week, working one one kind of pose or groups of related poses at a time. -Isabella

Response: