Photo of Russell Brand and David Lynch by Evan Sung for The New York Times
We love it when meditation–such a solitary pursuit–gets some public recognition.
That’s what happened in an article
March 21st, 2011
wynona
Photo of Russell Brand and David Lynch by Evan Sung for The New York Times
We love it when meditation–such a solitary pursuit–gets some public recognition.
That’s what happened in an article
Posted in Personal Stories, Relaxation Techniques, health benefits, yoga poses
Tags: article, benefits, blood-pressure, david-lynch, meditates-twice, news, over-the-past, personal, professional, recovery, susan-sarandon, transcendental
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February 21st, 2011
kate It used to be that a big part of succeeding in the business world meant schmoozing with higher-ups on the golf course or after work at the bar. But according to writer Dana Schuster in The New York Post, yoga is the post-modern, post-golf way to get ahead with your bosses and climb the corporate ladder. At least in Manhattan.
Explains corporate consultant Amy Hedin in the article:
Posted in Personal Stories
Tags: article, bikram, bosses, business, corporate, executive-might, existing-client, golf, hedin, jamie-schutz, news, the-post-modern
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January 26th, 2011
levis25 I love tracking the ongoing debate about who is teaching the “right” kind of yoga–and who isn’t. And that’s exactly what I found when I opened the weekend The New York Times and read the article “Rebel Yoga” about Tara Stiles, a celebrity yoga teacher, author of the how-to book, Slim Calm Sexy Yoga, and Manhattan studio owner.

After setting up the idea that she focuses on the physical practice of yoga, the article then talks to her supporters and her critics:
Supporter: Deepak Chopra
We are both nonconformists who have incurred the wrath of traditional yogis. A lot of the criticism is resentment of her rapid success. I have been doing yoga for 30 years. I have had teachers of all kinds. Taking lessons from her has been more useful to me than taking yoga from anyone else.
Critic: YogaDork
Don’t even try to sell me on the ‘yoga for the masses’ excuse; it’s pathetic, and, frankly, she should be ashamed for allowing herself to be talked into shilling for this trash. That is, if any convincing was really necessary–somehow I doubt it. But if asked about it, I am sure we would hear the typical higher-lighter-brighter-peace-love-dove-I’m-just-bringing-yoga-to-the-people” talk.
And then we hear from Stiles herself:
I feel like I’m standing up for yoga. People need yoga, not another religious leader. Quite often in New York, they want to be religious leaders, and it’s not useful. Here, people want to sit and talk about yoga; it’s very heady. It’s very stuck, very serious. I was never invited to the party anyway–so I started my own party.
We want to know: Will yoga move past a place where people have to take sides on this kind of issue? And where do you stand?
Read the whole story on:http://blogs.yogajournal.com/yogabuzz/
Posted in Personal Stories, health benefits
Tags: article, celebrity-yoga, criticism, deepak-chopra, her-supporters, love-tracking, news, ongoing, party, physical, rebel-yoga, religious, supporters, the-criticism, weekend
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June 30th, 2010
kate
In the midst of wedding season, it seems like a good time to think about what we are committing to when we gaze longingly at our mat or wish we had more time for Namaskar-ing at sunset.
In chapter five of the Bhagavad Gita:
“The resolute in yoga surrender and gain perfect peace; the irresolute, attached to results, are bound by everything they do.”
So, we’ve got to resolutely let go? Sounds tricky. Even if we can conceptualize this, how is it applied and how do we live this truth on and off the mat?
Susan Piver at the Huffington Post seems to have hit it right on the yoga toes. Not sure if she does asana on a mat, but she certainly sounds like a yogi in this reflective blog written on her twelfth wedding anniversary.
“It’s just now, 12 years later, that I’m finding out what, apparently,
I said yes to.
I said yes to the unfolding, impenetrable arc of uncertainty. I guess
I thought that finding love was an endpoint, that some kind of search
was over and I would find home. We would leap over the threshold
together into whatever we imagined our ideal cottage to be. But really
we stepped through a crazy looking glass.
It seems that I committed to a lifetime of delight and sadness,
inseparable from each other. Every time I look into my dear one’s eyes
and feel how deeply we’re connected, the moment disappears before I can
actually hold it–and I have to watch that happen. It’s excruciating.
It’s much easier to do this with your thoughts when you’re meditating
than with the feeling you get from his breath on your shoulder as you
fall asleep. But now I get that I have to repeat this until the end of
my life, and that somehow this is love’s road.
I didn’t really understand that love does not arise, abide, or
dissolve in connection with any particular feeling. It has almost
nothing to do with feeling. (Nor does it seem to be a gesture, a
commitment to stay, becoming best friends, or anything else I might have
thought.) Love has become a container in which we live.
Through time,
riding mysterious waves of passion, aggression, and ignorance (and
boredom), I think we began to live within love itself. At least I did.
Each time I have opened up, extended myself, accepted what was being
offered to me, stepped beyond my comfort zone to embrace him, the
structure has been reinforced. I no longer have any idea if I love my
husband or not. I can’t imagine what the feelings I have for him could
be called. I’ve even given up trying to love him. Our relationship is
what gives us love, not the other way around. This is how it is.
And if you’re looking for a
crucible in which to heat compassion, this is a really good one. Someone
once told me that compassion is the ability to hold love and pain
together in the same moment. So at least we’re learning something, which
is what I tell myself.
When you
find your true love, there is something inside that simply and
inexplicably says hello to him. Yes to him. Of course to him. Certainly.
Obviously it’s you. There is no choice. I do.”
Are you ready to commit or re-commit to your practice?
Posted in Personal Stories, health benefits
Tags: article, bhagavad-gita, editor, editor-at-yoga, extended-myself, husband-or-not, irresolute, life, mood, reflective, thoughts, unfolding, yoga
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March 15th, 2010
levis25
Everyone’s favorite supermodel, Brazilian beauty Gisele Bundchen, practices Anusara Yoga. She talks about how yoga kept her fit during her pregnancy in the April issue of Vogue. You can read part of the article here. In it, you’ll learn that her son Benjamin Rein Brady was delivered at home in a water birth, her new line of natural skincare Sejaa (“seja” means “to be” in Portugese) is launching today, and that Gisele really does seem to have her heart in the right place when it comes to her humanitarian and environmental ideals. Go Gisele!
Read the whole story on:http://blogs.yogajournal.com/yogabuzz/
Posted in Personal Stories, health benefits, pregnancy, yoga poses
Tags: article, benjamin-rein, brazilian, gisele-bundchen, her-pregnancy, portugese, really-does, water-birth
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