Thursday 12 March 2015

Yoga to manage exam stress - April 2015


For anyone wanting to get into good mental and physical shape for exams this summer

2 x 75 min classes of yoga and mindfulness techniques.  This taster introduction will show you the potential of techniques already used by city firms, such as Goldman Sachs.

Dates to be confirmed – £10.00 for the two classes -  please contact Sue asap if interested.
 
Dr Susan Jeffery, BWY qualified teacher
www.dsjyoga.com         
 
 

 

Tuesday 10 March 2015

Returning to philosophy


Many thanks to Cora and Lina for a fascinating day on yoga and philosophy on Sunday 8th Feb. 2015 at Canterbury Yoga Studio.  We had the chance to revisit some yoga philosophy and explore it through discussion and through asanas (yoga postures).  The day helped to kick-start my return to a focus on philosophy in my teaching.

Over the years I’ve studied the Upanishads twice formally and since January, I have been re-reading them, with a view to integrating them into some of my yoga classes.  The word “Upanishad” means “sitting down near”, referring back to how students of yoga would spend time (years!) sitting down near a teacher in the forest, with a view to absorbing that learning into their lives.  The Upanishads mark a shift away from relying on ritual knowledge and the authority of ritual specialists (as in the writings of the Vedas) to an interest in exploring the self and human experience. 

The Mundaka Upanishad jumped out at me with its interest in “ways of knowing” – through thinking, through the senses, through the heart, through meditation – and with the concerns it shares with contemporary mindfulness.[1]

I’ve started a 3 week block of classes drawing on the Mundaka Upanishad.  The first class last Thursday (5th March 2015) began to explore “knowing through the senses” and “knowing through thinking” in our awareness of working in a yoga posture such as the extended side angle stretch (utthita parsvakonasana).  We reflected on how you can “over-think” a posture by emphasising the precise form and trying to reach the perfect form (although principles of alignment remain important).  We need to remember also to seek softness and comfort in the pose – using awareness from our senses – in order to “be” fully in the pose.  This helps the yoga practice involve the whole person more.

A 3 minute meditation on the senses to start the practice and towards the end a meditation on sounds, followed by a bodyscan meditation – all these combine to activate knowing through the senses in a way that gives the mind a rest from knowing through thinking.

In the next two classes, we continue to explore these two ways of knowing, whilst also considering the Mundaka’s view that they are both “lower” ways of knowing, compared with knowing through the heart and knowing through the mind stilled with meditation. 

If you are interested, please email me, Sue, to register for the class or phone reception at Fitness Connection Gym, High Street, Sandwich,CT13 9EB tel. 01304 614000

See also www.dsjyoga.com

 




[1] Easwaran, E., 2007, “The Mundaka Upanishad” in The Upanishads, Nilgiri Press, Canada