Posts Tagged ‘article’

Is Yoga Fashion Only for Teeny Yoginis?

closet.jpgWhen it comes to the fashion industry as a whole, it’s no secret that designers tailor their clothing to thinner, smaller bodies. Considering the inclusive nature of yoga, however, you might expect things are different in the yoga fashion industry. But a recent article in the Vancouver Sun suggests that yoga-inspired clothing company Lululemon isn’t doing all that it can to keep its stores stocked with larger-sized clothing (12 and 14? Isn’t that average for American women?). Lululemon does carry sizes 12 and 14 in their core items, a spokesperson told The Sun.

Regardless of Lululemon’s practices, the article brings up some important questions: Have plus-size yogia students been excluded from the trendy world of yoga fashion? If you’re an average- or plus-size yogini with curves, do you have a hard time finding comfortable, stylish yoga clothes?

Which companies do you think do the best job of creating clothes for all different shapes and sizes?

Read the whole story on:http://blogs.yogajournal.com/yogabuzz/

Is Yoga Fashion Only for Teeny Yoginis?

closet.jpgWhen it comes to the fashion industry as a whole, it’s no secret that designers tailor their clothing to thinner, smaller bodies. Considering the inclusive nature of yoga, however, you might expect things are different in the yoga fashion industry. But a recent article in the Vancouver Sun suggests that yoga-inspired clothing company Lululemon isn’t doing all that it can to keep its stores stocked with larger-sized clothing (12 and 14? Isn’t that average for American women?). Lululemon does carry sizes 12 and 14 in their core items, a spokesperson told The Sun.

Regardless of Lululemon’s practices, the article brings up some important questions: Have plus-size yogia students been excluded from the trendy world of yoga fashion? If you’re an average- or plus-size yogini with curves, do you have a hard time finding comfortable, stylish yoga clothes?

Which companies do you think do the best job of creating clothes for all different shapes and sizes?

Read the whole story on:http://blogs.yogajournal.com/yogabuzz/

5 Things You Should Know about Yoga

Despite its popularity, there are many misconceptions about yoga floating around in the media. The two that I think might be most prevalent are that all yoga students are crazy flexible and that yoga classes are mostly easy, gentle stretching. Those misconceptions really bother me, not because people don’t really understand what yoga is, but because it might keep people might really benefit from yoga from ever trying it. Like athletes, for example.

So I enjoyed an article and video on Messenger Post Newspapers (in suburban Rochester, NY) about the Baptiste Power Yoga and how it’s different from the kind of yoga you most often see
on TV.

In a nutshell, here are the five things yoga teacher Mary Eggers pointed out in the article:

1. There are many styles of yoga. (Yes, some are gentle stretching, but some are so hard they with kick your butt–even if you’re in amazing shape.)
2. Yoga is great for athletes.
3. It’s not all about how flexible you are . . .Really.
4. It’s a workout. (See point 1).
5. It’s not just for women. It’s for everybody.

I couldn’t agree more!

Isle of Yoga

Two followers of Baba Ramdev have bought
the Scottish island of Little Cumbrae with plans to establish an “international yoga camp” there, reported the Guardian.co.uk. The island will be renamed Peace Island. According to this article in the Daily Record, there will be an opening ceremony on September 27.

Do you like the idea of having a whole island devoted to yoga? Or is it a little much?

Saltwater Buddha

saltwaterbuddha.jpg

I recently caught with YJ contributor Jaimal Yogis to discuss his memoir about his experiences with surfing and Buddhism, Saltwater Yoga: A Surfers Quets to Find Zen on the Sea. A long-time yoga practitioner, Yogis (his real name–you’ll have to read the book for details) offers a candid glimpse into his adventures as a surfer and spiritual seeker. Below, he talks about how it all relates to his yoga practice.

YJ:What inspired you to write your memoir?

Jaimal: My Zen practice, yoga, and surfing have always blended together for me. All three are tools that make me feel happy and whole. I’d never thought about writing a book about them, but one day during graduate school in New York I was having a terrible day–lots of stress–and I decided to sneak a meditation sit in between classes. It wasn’t going well. I felt like I was drowning in negative waves, negative thoughts: “you’re not going to get you deadlines in”, “you should quit now”, those kinds of things. I was able to pop out of the funk by pretending I was out surfing on a really bad day. My thoughts were just these ugly grizzly waves and none of them were really ridable so I had to let them pass. In other words, I decided I didn’t want to ride (or identify with) these weird thoughts anymore. It worked. I wrote a short article about the experience for Shambhala Sun Magazine and before I knew it, tons of people were contacting me about the article. Wisdom Publications was one of those people and we worked out a book deal where I could just tell my spiritual surfing adventures, which was really fun. It just sort of happened on its own, which is how a Zen book should happen I suppose.

YJ: How does your book relate to yoga? Why do you think it would appeal to yoga practitioners?

Jaimal: On a fundamental level, I’ve never been one to separate yoga and Zen. As you know, Yoga means union. Zen is Japanese for “Dhyana”–a word often used in Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras–which you could say is the type of concentration in which the mind is united with its object of concentration in such a way that union is all there is. So I don’t think there’s much division. I used the words “Zen” and “Buddha” because I was writing for a Buddhist publisher and I like those words a lot, but yoga (in sense of asana and more yogic styles of meditation) has been an equally huge part of my life–I’ve studied under just as many traditional yogis as traditional Buddhists–and the book could just as easily be called Saltwater Yogi: A Surfer’s Quest to find Bliss on the Sea. These are just terms we use, but the essence of the search is the same. All paths return to the source, as many yogis have said. The Buddha was a yogi … Anyway, you get the point. Surfing didn’t exist in India at the time of the Buddha and Patanjali (the waves there aren’t so great) but I think if it did, it might have been a style of yoga, a spiritual practice like it was for the ancient Hawaiians. A lot of yogis are starting to surf and vice-versa and they many of them seem to realize instantly that the two are very harmonious.

YJ: Are you planning to write more books in the future? Do you know what your next topic will be?

Jaimal: Funny, I just started my new book two days ago. It’s a little secretive right now, but it’s basically a book that poses the question: “What would life be like if you tossed out fear, threw caution to the wind, and just followed your deepest dreams?” Essentially, some musician, surfer, and yogi friends of mine are hopping in a van and traveling the globe, trying to live out the dreams we had when we were kids, the ones we’d discarded as too silly or unattainable. We just want to see what happens. I’m narrating the journey. I’m so excited about it I can hardly contain myself but that’s all I can really say about it right now.

Read the whole story on:http://blogs.yogajournal.com/yogabuzz/