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Yoga Connections, LLC is your link to begin learning a safe and enduring yoga practice that will increase flexibility, strength, and clarity of mind. Whether you're looking for a private lesson, group event, or a corporate wellness program, you've come to the right place. We specialize in introducing students to an alignment-based yoga practice and connecting people to an Iyengar Yoga Studio to further their personal practice. 

 

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SEEKING THE STILL LIFE OF A YOGI

Filtering by Category: BKS Iyengar

Mental Health and Iyengar Yoga

Yoga Connections

The alchemy of Iyengar Yoga comes about through the tenacious work of B.K.S. Iyengar and his unremitting efforts to transmit the eight-limbed path or Astanga Yoga in a way that resonates with all people from the periphery to the core of our being.

In a recent celebration, which honors teachers like BKS Iyengar, his granddaughter, Abhijata brought up the question of mental health and Iyengar Yoga to her Uncle and BKS Iyengar’s son, Prashant, who related mental health to our relationship to our cells —the over 28 trillion cells (28-37 trillion) that make up the human body and what we refer to as “I” or “Me.”

It is this writer’s understanding that Prashant associated mental health to learning to connecting to the wonderland of trillions of cells within us, and building solid positive relationships with the parts of the body the cells create via our mind, body, breath, and senses. In his book Alpha & Omega of Trikonasana, Prashant uses a single asana trikonasana or triangle pose to delineate “learning, doing, studying, practicing” into student processes of “activity, sensitivity, perceptivity, pensivity, and reflexivity” within the dynamics of mind, body, breath, and senses (p. 30). It is part of yoga practice that when applied creates an ever-growing awareness that lights the way to connections and healthy relationship to all the parts of our being and helps us identify and reflect on the impact each part has on the others.

Prashant used an example of when he and Abhijata are together in a room to express the interactivity involved with different parts. If someone else walks into the room, this changes the dynamic—like say Abhijata’s husband or child. Attention and behaviors shift and adapt to the changing environment, and alters the dynamic of the relationship in that moment. Such is the way with the parts of our being.

Consider how lifting your sternum frees your ability to breath; however, if your shoulders begin to droop, it caves your chest, which impacts your sternums ability to lift and constricts the breath. Low oxygen negatively impacts mind, body, and senses. However, when you have a solid relationship between your sternum, shoulders, and breath, you know how to work together to ensure maximum oxygen intake.

When we can identify the parts. Know the role each part plays in relation to other parts, it cultivates connections, and builds relationships that enhances our ability to align with the trillions of cells within us and positively impact our mental, emotional, and physical health.

Iyengar yoga teachers are trained to deepen their knowledge and understanding of the eight-limbed path by constantly delineating learning, doing, studying, practicing with activity, sensitivity, perceptivity, pensivity, and reflexivity within the dynamics of mind, body, breath, and senses with master teachers and yogic texts so they can hone their ability to transmit this alchemical process to their students who become empowered to support their own mental, emotional, and physical wellbeing.

What happens on the mat can also help us understand what happens off the mat as well. We can identify the vast number of parts outside of us and how to cultivate better connections and relationships in our social environment such as family, friends, neighbors, community, and broader society. Many mental health theories and interventions have some basis in the ancient art, science, and philosophy of yoga.

Please take a moment to honor the World’s greatest yoga instructor, BKS Iyengar, his daughter, Gheeta Iyengar, and the legacy that lives on and grows with his son, Prashant and granddaughter, Abhijata, and the many other Iyengar instructors who continue to increase the depth of their understanding and enhance our lives and wellbeing.

A week of Sankalpa with Abhijata Iyengar

Yoga Connections

Sankalpa is an intention formed by the heart and mind—a solemn vow, determination, or will.” ~ IYNAUS Convention, 2023 - Sankalpa: A Yogic Life of Intent

As an online participant at the 2023 IYNAUS Convention held in San Diego, watching the instruction of students by 39-year-old Abhijata Iyengar, it is hard to miss the lessons on Sankalpa emphasizing the heart is at the core of authentic intent. Abhijata is a dedicated Iyengar practitioner who has studied extensively with her grandfather, BKS Iyengar, aunt, Dr. Geeta Iyengar, and uncle, Prashant Iyengar at the Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute in Pune, India, She teaches from the heart, not the organ of the same name but the energetic field close to it that is cultivated with ongoing abhyasa and vairagya (practice and detachment).

Abhjata teaches so the beauty of yoga can unfolds naturally within each of her students. Prashant Iyengar was interviewed for the convention’s magazine and also taught via satellite during the week-long event to impart his wisdom on the concept of sankalpa from his years of practice under the tutelage of his father, BKS Iyengar, extensive self-study or svadyaya, and extensive research into the ancient texts.

Abhijata’s heart-centered teaching provided deep insights with disarming authenticity. She began her classes by recognizing the systematic and synchronized process of yoga. Explaining how BKS Iyengar associated the 8-limbs of Astanga yoga to “petals of a flower.” There is of course the idea of systematic steps or petals, “Character first, Yama, Niyama, then Asana, and Pranayama […],” etc. However, she explained that what some practitioners may not understand is that BKS also meant that “within each petal is the essence of the whole flower.” If we teach and learn from a list of techniques or “to do’s,” we lose resonance with the needs of the whole student in front of us or within us. Instruction of yoga requires more organic stages of instruction, lending more value to human instruction and interaction over a computerized form.

Asana practiced with the intent of vairagya or detachment, not comparison or competition with a neighbor, enables a holistic cultivation of mind, body, and spirit. Negative self-talk only yields resistance. Abhijata used her graceful sense of humor and explained if she constantly told you what you were doing wrong or complained about you, you wouldn’t want to be around her. The body responds the same way to our negative self-talk. “There are only two things in the universe, Prakriti and Purusha. Prakriti means nature, and Purusha means that sentient being which causes life.” We are both matter and life. Our body will never cooperate if we apply anger. We need to bring about “togetherness,” “helpfulness,” and “kindness” so the animation of every energetic petal of life, which is constantly seeking homeostasis, can blossom.

Abhijata explained, “What yoga does is that it is spreading the intelligence…permeating the intelligence through the body, so what we think is just in one area is all over, but we live in one area.” When the intelligence only resides in one area, it can cause stress or fear; however, the practice of asana helps us spread the intelligence all over, so the focus isn’t concentrated in, say, the knee to solve its pain or tension alone. Every cell in the body is alerted, so the load on the area is dispersed, creating a calmer approach where the entire system works together to ease the stress and reach stability within the configuration of the asana. Pranayama also serves to calm by “irrigating and generating that energy from within.”

Yoga teaches us to “sharpen the nervous system” to shorten the “lag time” between action and response. It teaches us to seamlessly and swiftly act and reflect. Imagine the reduction in regret from when we act without reflecting properly on the consequences of our actions.

Throughout the week, linking categories of asana such as twists to forward bends, Abhijata demonstrated their interconnections. We gained a sentient experience of how intelligence brought to one area of the body expands and enhances range of motion in another. Waking complimentary bone, muscle, tendons, and joints to their ability to serve in what Dr. Geeta Iyengar referred to as the “mobility and stability” in a particular asana.

As with all aspects of yoga the lessons apply on the mat and off it. Expanding our intelligence so we can recognize the interconnectedness of all things in life. Science continues to uncover the interrelationships within the solar system such as the Moon impact on tides and the Sun’s solar flares on the functioning of electrical systems on earth. Of course, there’s also connections between our social systems, economic systems, and political systems to how well countries, cities, communities, neighborhoods, organizations like IYNAUS, families, and individuals are able to survive, thrive, and evolve.

Iyengar Yoga offers somatic and visceral experiences to deepen our understanding of how the sankalpa of one part of an interconnected system can impact the essence of the whole system. Much heartfelt gratitude goes out to Prashant and Abhijata Iyengar for their invaluable contributions to this event and to their tireless work to spread of the art, science, and philosophy of yoga. Many thanks also go out to Gloria Goldberg, President of IYNAUS, Kathleen Quinn, the Convention Chair, and the many volunteers who gave up their participation in classes to make sure other participants online and in-person got their needs addressed on a moment-by-moment basis to facilitate real learning for more students regardless of their level of practice or infirmity. That’s the beauty of Iyengar Yoga. Namaste.

Introducing Yoga Students to the Profundity of Prashant Iyengar

Yoga Connections

Any attempt to express the enumerable gifts Prashant Iyengar's instruction can offer students seems futile. Still, it is one I will venture to begin because his teachings speak to the depths of my being, even if my mind and body feel far behind. His instruction works on a plane of existence that most people don't feel they have access to in the mundane sense. Those more grounded in his teaching are encouraged to add or correct information in the comments to bring more clarity. Any expression of perceived knowledge here comes from where I am in my practice and classes with Prashant. My only hope is that my simple attempts to introduce his work can touch those who are in a place to receive it and want to learn more about it.

"Everything that lives is in flux. Everything that lives emits sound. But we only perceive a part of it. We do not hear the circulation of the blood, the growth and decay of our bodily tissue, the sound of our chemical processes. But our delicate organic cells, the fibres of brain and nerves and skin are impregnated with these inaudible sounds. They vibrate in response to their environment. This is the foundation of the power of music.” ~Franz Kafka

From Gustav Janouch, “The Music in Silence”)

We could say that Prashant Iyengar began his yoga career as a violinist. If we consider every activity in life as a yoga posture, he might say having his arms draped around a violin is as much a posture as you standing to brush your teeth. We can't get away from postures. The son of the world-renowned yoga instructor, BKS Iyengar, Prashant’s experience with yoga is so vast and coupled with his attunement to music enables profound insights that the nascent observer might resist. Still, I encourage you to try to open to them and explore his online instructions (7, 8…) and books.  (3,4,5,6…).

 His father, BKS Iyengar discovered from his robust and tenacious practice that to move from the mundane of a posture requires a systematic approach. He developed a global curriculum and a rigorous teacher training. He provided the world with a method of teaching yoga in a sequence of asana that could begin to bring awareness to what Prashant might express as the will of the mind, body, and breath. In the early stages of yoga education with a Certified Iyengar Yoga Instructor (CIYI), students cultivate and connect the mind, body, and sense organs (e.g., ears and eyes) through mirroring, correction, reflection, repetition, and further instruction on a progressive sequence of asana. 

 The assumption is that yoga mastery requires will, power, and strength. While the three must be present, there are later stages of yoga, which Prashant instructs, the foundations for yog or yogasana. I will attempt to loosely defined it as a practice involving an evolutionary stage of the mind, body, and senses through profound awareness of the breath system's ability to integrate with the other systems and create a "collective will.”

One of my favorite sayings (if recollection serves) that BKS Iyengar quotes in his book, Tree of Life, says something like, "Let the yoga do the yoga." As I continue my journey, my understanding of this saying deepens as the schema of tapas (disciplined practice), svadhyaya (self-study), Isvara pranidhana (unyielding faith) begins to naturally foster Yog.

The flesh is the surface of the unknown. ~ Victor Hugo

 Prashant highlights how Yog (a divine union or collective will) organically or naturally, emerges within and without us. However, our "personal gravities" tend to block this from happening. Gravities include things like our human biological tendencies (procure/consume food, sleep, sex, fear), and our ego, and "cultural strata" such as tamasic (heavy, slow) or rajasic (fiery, fast), to name a few (8). Prashant helps us tap into our "[…]100 trillion cells of 100 trillion different types”. (1). He brings awareness to their participation as a "collective" in yogasana using interdependent kriyas or actions (chakra kriya, prana kriya, etc.). 

He uses the imagery of "confinements" such as the brain, chest, and pelvis; along with geometric shapes to encourage cyclic, rotary, and triangulated use of the breath. He also invokes a series of silent vocalizations that offer different vibratory sensations. The most widely known example is “Om.” Together, his instruction can turn the standing posture tadasana, or mountain pose, into a profoundly different evolutionary experience with every change of confinement, shape, or sound. Aligning and attuning our body, mind, and breath to the infinite wisdom within us.

 Years of preparation are required. Studying with an Iyengar yoga instructor is synchronized to wake the body, mind, and spirit from the gravities of its tendencies. With consistent Iyengar yoga practice we begin to develop regulation naturally: such as Ahimsa (non-violence to the self and others), Satya (truthfulness), Asteya (non-stealing/covetousness), Bramhacharya (control over sex drive), Aparigraha (non-hoarding, non-coveting). Patience increases. The breath becomes more regulated. Cultivation is a word often used by Prashant to express the readiness to begin to explore the deeper levels of yogasana that can be experienced. 

Yogasana creates an internal awakening to the unexplored and unknown whelms inside us and its interconnectedness to the external. So as above so, below is a quote credited to the ancient Hermetics which describes this connection. In an interview with Lee Sverkerson and Kristin Chirhart, Prashant talked about how the planet Jupiter may have prevented the comet Schumacher from crashing into Earth in the 90s (5).

 The discussion seemed to emphasize our interdependence and interconnectedness to the solar system. He expressed how much we may assume and yet how little we know —about any "other’s" purpose. It brings to mind how quick we are to assume people are good or bad, how we dismiss things we don't understand (planets over 400 million miles away can’t possibly impact us at all) or cut them out altogether (who needs a gallbladder?). 

However, yogasana brings an innate understanding of the need for egoic regulation and patience in assessing purpose, internally and externally. Prashant’s students learn to stay in an asana and wait for the nature of things to reveal itself to us without our ego’s constant need to judge, act, and control situations that block the reception process.

 Listening to Prashant's instruction and practicing his techniques has increased my awareness of the intelligence of my cells and the endless depths available to explore within myself. He has shown me a heart-centered path to wake to a wonderland of experiences inside and outside the vessel of the body. It’s brought about a sense of honor and trust in our interconnectedness and the ability to wait for nature to reveal its purpose internally and externally with more grace and gratitude.

 Thank you, Prashant.

 Namaste.

 

 

1Iyengar, B. K. S., & Iyengar, G. S. (2003). Basic Guidelines for Teacher of Yoga (2nd ed.). Yog.

2Iyengar, B. K. S. (2002). The Tree of Life (1st ed.). Shambala Classics.

3 Iyengar, P. S. (2011). Chittavijnana of Yogasanas (Second). Yog & Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute

4 Iyengar, P. S. (2011). Discourses on Yog. Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute.

5 Iyengar, P.S. (n.d.) Parampara, The Importance of Family and Tradition to a Yoga Practitioner, and Why the Lyricised Sutras from an interview by Lee Sverkerson and Kristin Chirhart

6 Iyengar, P. S. (2012). Yogasana - The 18 Maha Kriyas. Yog.

7 Sri Prashant Iyengar, Lesson 1: Online Education in yoga

8 Sri Prashant Iyengar, Lesson 26: Online Education in yoga (09:17-Tendencies)

Arranging The Structure: Raya Uma Datta - Bahiranga Sadhana Workshop - Day 3

Yoga Connections

BKS Iyengar examined all parts of asana to understand the structure

BKS Iyengar examined all parts of asana to understand the structure

Raya ended the first of his three consecutive workshops on the tenth of January. If this workshop is any indication of the next two, I highly recommend them. The first workshop proved to be a beautiful tribute to the extraordinary work of B.K.S. Iyengar.

Mr. Iyengar made it his life’s work to give us the best possible directions for our external quest, Bahiranga Sadhana. He and his daughter, Dr. Geeta Iyengar worked tirelessly to provide a beginner’s guide, an intermediate guide, a woman’s guide, a teacher’s guide, along with ongoing hands-on workshops around the world—and for those with over eight years of continuous study, month-long lessons at the Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute (RIMYI) to inform our body, mind, and spirit to better understand the principles outlined in his book Light on Yoga. In turn, this can inform our ability to practice the next level of the eight-limbed path of Astanga Yoga outlined by the Sage Patañjali and then the next level after that.

Prashant Iyengar mentioned in his Fall workshop how understanding the vast magnificence of what this path has to teach can take lifetimes. Synthesizing the incredible lessons BKS Iyengar taught us requires dedication, practice, and repetition. It takes analyzing sequences and constantly asking your mind, body, and spirit questions. What is overworking? What is underworking? Then, connecting our brain to the area in our body that is weak. “This is your problem child,” is an often-quoted statement of Mr. Iyengar. Raya emphasized how Guruji gave us lessons that take us far beyond what general asana practice can teach us. The use of props and supports help us identify what is working and what is not. Raya explained the “The brain is the map of the body,” but we must make those connections happen. BKS Iyengar’s critical analysis of each part of our body from the gross to the subtle helps students of Iyengar Yoga move from the raw shape of a pose to the sculpted grace of wholeness asana is meant to offer. To get even the tiniest glimpse of this experience is what keeps Iyengar Yoga students coming back to learn more.

Equilibrium is a word that Raya wanted us to understand as "a balance of forces." We focused on the upper thigh, which has many parts: anatomy withholding, inner and outer, and back to front, along with the many sections in between to be analyzed. As a whole, the upper thigh is not as awake as other parts of the leg such as the knee or calf. Raya increased our proprioception into the upper thigh with a series of asana that inform us about our work in this area. Asana such as Adho Mukha SvanasanaUrdhva Mukha Prasarita Eka PadasanaVirabhadrasana IIIParvritta Ardha Chandrasana, returning to Urdhva Mukha Prasarita Eka Padasana with the leg up the wall. Raya used the idea of "six degrees of separation" to explain how to get to a more complex asana, we must look at what came before it to inform us of the body/mind connections that must be made before we can begin to practice it. We used a weighted sandbag on the calf, Urdhva Mukha Prasarita Eka Padasana, to redirect our efforts into the upper thigh because we tend to lift from the calf, not the thigh, but it is the intelligence of the upper thigh that is the gateway to more complex asana such as an inverted elbow or head balances. By the time Raya took us to these places, attempting to split our legs and sustain our balance in the inverted elbow and head balances, we knew, in no uncertain terms, the value of the work of the upper thigh. The day gave us a glimpse into the unfathomable depths of detail that BKS Iyengar explored to facilitate our Bahiranga Sadhana and open pathways to experience the necessity of Yama and Niyama.

Raya did a spectacular job sharing the experience of how every arm position, every minute instruction BKS Iyengar has offered us creates more "intimacy" in the conversation between all the parts of the body until they all know their particular role and the "force" they must wield in that role to create a structure that will last. Equilibrium brings balance, and balance is something we can sustain indefinitely. Raya explained the stress we feel in the world is a result of imbalance. Iyengar Yoga teaches us how to arrange our structure to achieve balance. With that knowledge and wisdom, we can better structure our world to make it more balanced and sustainable.What a gift.

Thank you, Raya, for your special and specific insights, Iyengar Yoga of Greater New York for hosting, my mentor, Kquvien DeWeese, and The Iyengar Family, whose guidance has made it all possible.

For those with over three years of continuous Iyengar study, Raya will be offering two more workshops Antaranga Sadhana, Engaging in the Intra-Structure in February and Antaratma Sadhana, Surrendering into the Meta-Structure in March.

Namaste

Arranging The Structure: Raya Uma Datta - Bahiranga Sadhana Workshop - Day 2

Yoga Connections

How do we begin?  What is the balance of force?

How do we begin? What is the balance of force?

Day 2 of Raya's workshop, Arranging The Structure, began by confirming our understanding of the previous day. As my glimpses here in no way attempt to articulate Raya's lessons entirely, his emphasis demonstrates the importance of clarification. I will do my best to do that. Iyengar Yoga uses asana as the point of entry into the Astanga or 8-limbed path of yoga outlined by the Sage Patañjali in 196 sutra's or threads. The sutra after 11:30 outlining the five Yama or universal precepts:

Sutra 11.31 jāti-deśa-kāla-samaya-anavacchinnāḥ sārvabhaumā-mahāvratam

BKS Iyengar transcribed in Light on the Sutras of Patanjali as “Yamas are the great, mighty, universal vows, unconditioned by place, time, and class.” He explains his reasoning for stressing their universality regardless of region, culture, or origin by saying: “They form the framework of rules on which society is based,” (LOYSP, p136). The five Yama or self-restraints are Ahimsa (non-violence), Satya (truthfulness), Asteya (non-stealing), Brahmacarya (continence), and Aparigraha (non-greed). It is my understanding that Iyengar Yoga begins with asana because there is a universality to the human body for most part so it is a place we can all unite to begin to learn the art, science, and philosophy of yoga. Through asana we can better understand why the precepts are so meaningful. While the five Yama aid in the proper functioning of society, coupled with the five personal precepts or Niyama: Sauca (cleanliness) Santosa (contentment) Tapah (burning desire) svadhyaya (self study) Isvara prandnidhanani (surrender to God) they can also help arrange the structure of our body, mind, and breath in any given asana.

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Raya asked where do we begin arrangingVirasana, heroes pose? The most obvious is the hips: hip to knees and hips to trunk. What is the condition of our starting asana? Is it to prepare for Paryankasana, couch or Bhekasana, frog as is the order in Light on Yoga? This virasana is to prepare for the Invocation. Therefore, while the arrangement of the structure stayed the same, the “force” and concentration were very different. Raya suggested support to keep the lower back engaged, which intelligized the spine and had a domino effect on the frontal body, chest, groins, hips. It also softened any mental and physical force to aid our moving inward to a place of calm and receptivity. He asked us to draw the eyes inward —recognizing the increased screen time and eye fatigue that results. He spent time here to relax and release then asked us to release any grips, such as in the big toe. He conditioned our inner awareness and alertness of the body. Are we being aggressive, assertive or affirmative. What is needed?

It is with this kind of acute awareness and attention, Iyengar Yoga asks us to bring to our asana practice. The Yama and Niyama can help us balance the opposite forces of doing and not doing to suit the condition of the asana. Keeping in mind the condition can be situational, mental, physical, or emotional.

Raya pointed out how Guruji identified when the front leg and the back leg are doing different things such as Parsvottanasana, intense side stretch, the starting points change for each leg. Raya asked us to connect the length from the right ankle to the right shoulder and then the left. Imagining arrows drawn to each set, he wanted us to notice how the starting point of each arrow and the length of the arrows are different.

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Raya brought up the idea of the domino effect and how when the balance of force is not appropriate to the given condition of the structure how it affects everything else. He emphasized why learning all of the ways to arrange the structure of any given asana is all the more integral to our evolution as practitioners. Uncovering the wisdom that Uttanasana, intense forward bend can provide to Pashimottanasana, intense stretch of the western side of the body and Ubaya Padangustasana, seated holding both big toes, as well as Urdhva Mukha Paschimottanasana, upward facing intense stretch of western body —and how each of these poses can inform each other is what it is to be an Iyengar practitioner. He brought our attention to why BKS Iyengar provided different arm positions in Paschimottanasana and encouraged us to experience how it improves our understanding of the pose — noticing how they inform specific parts of the body with information we can apply to other asana.

Raya recognized that teachers must instruct in a specific krama or order, but teachers are also students. He said one of his favorite quotes from Mr. Iyengar:

Discipline comes from within ~ BKS Iyengar

As students, we must rigorously explore all Iyengar Yoga offers us. It is up to us to discover, uncover, and most of all practice, so we can embody why BKS Iyengar arranged the structure Light on Yoga the way he did.

Thank you once again, Raya for sharing your insights, Iyengar Yoga of Greater New York for hosting, my mentor, Kquvien DeWeese, and The Iyengar Family for making it all possible. I look forward to tomorrow.

Namaste

Arranging The Structure: Raya Uma Datta - Bahiranga Sadhana Workshop - Day 1

Yoga Connections

Look at your body like you are looking at a map. Where are you going?

Look at your body like you are looking at a map. Where are you going?

Raya Uma Datta offers a unique perspective with his incredible perception into Iyengar Yoga, having begun his training at the Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute (RIMYI) at the young age of 10 years old. What a gift to be able to learn the vast subject of Iyengar Yoga from the source at such a formative age.

Raya continued his Iyengar Yoga quest and by age 20 began teaching at RIMYI. After demonstrating for BKS Iyengar’s 80th Birthday, he formally became BKS Iyengar’s student. He traveled to Russia and China with Guruji (a name given to BKS Iyengar, meaning one who brings light). He later accompanied Guruji’s daughter, Dr. Geeta Iyengar, for an Australian and South African Convention. Since 2002, he has taught general classes at RIMYI.

Having had the opportunity to study with Raya at RIMYI, I know him to be a well-respected and dynamic teacher. He instructs from the heart and is dedicated to understanding and sharing the wealth of knowledge BKS Iyengar and the Iyengar Family have offered us. Below is a glimpse into the workshop’s first day from my level of understanding.

The workshop, hosted by Iyengar Yoga of Greater New York is titled, Bahiranga Sadhana which Guruji describes in Light on Yoga (p.21) as an external quest. Raya explained the external quest includes the ten moral/personal disciplines of Yama and Niyama and the physical disciplines of Asana and Pranayama. Raya added that it’s important to understand that asana is the quintessential medium that Iyengar Yoga works with and from to explore the 8-limbed path of the Astanga Yoga of Patañjali.  Iyengar Yoga explores asana using the ten precepts which are prescribed in Sutras 11.30-11.34 (conversely, you could say, the precepts can be explored through asana). The precepts are further described in subsequent Sutras that all have the definitive Sanskrit word Pratisthayam associated with it. While the word is transcribed to mean “firmly established”, Raya alluded to subtle meanings that enrich its place in these descriptions. The precepts have a “do” and “not do” rhythm to them, which we learn to apply to our efforts in asana until we are more grounded in them and they become part of our practice.

On the grosser level, there is structure and arrangement to asana. There is also a particular way to describe asana. The Sutras of Patañjali offer a definitive description that BKS Iyengar transcribes in his book, Light on the Sutras of Patanjali: “Asana is perfect firmness of body, steadiness of intelligence and benevolence of spirit.”

11:46 Sthira sukham asana

Raya sited other Sutras to demonstrate the many descriptions, prescriptions, and characteristics that describe asana. He used a map as metaphor with its True North and then explained the broad lattitudes of what is still considered north to the east and west of that until it shifts into something else like northeast or northwest.

“When one moves from the grossest to the subtlest neither the beginning is seen nor the end.” ~ BKS Iyengar

Raya quoted Guruji and guided us to explore the concept of structure by devising a map of our body through a masterful arrangement of asana. Where do we begin an asana? Words communicate and guide us, he continued, but it is imperative to know what actions those words initiate. Rotating the foot versus rotating from the hip create different experiences. He used the idiom "crack the code" to encourage our quest to understand our asana's arrangement and structure. He challenged us to be ever-present to study and explore limb by limb, inch by inch, word by word, sinew by sinew, breath by breath, standing, seated, inverted and prone, beginning to end, end to beginning from the grossest to subtlest, and the infinite degrees between them both.

Thank you, Raya for sharing your insights, Iyengar Yoga of Greater New York for hosting, my mentor, Kquvien DeWeese, and The Iyengar Family for making it all possible. I look forward to tomorrow.

Namaste

New Years Day Celebration With David Meloni

Yoga Connections

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On New Years Day, David Meloni, an Advanced Senior Level II Iyengar Yoga instructor —the highest instructor level offered in the Iyengar system chose to share his knowledge of Iyengar Yoga. He is from Florence, Italy, and began his studies in 1996. By 2003, he started training regularly at the Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute (RIMY) in Pune, India.

Randy Just of Iyengar Yoga Dallas hosted the event, and it didn't disappoint. David's incredible ability to grasp the details of BKS Iyengar's teachings was noticeable right away. Perhaps due to his previous training in the strict discipline of karate. His ability to use krama or order from the gross to the subtle that BKS Iyengar so prodigiously offers students able to understand it became abundantly clear. Meloni's words flowed as smoothly as his body did with sculpted precision.

Systematically and synchronistically, he guided us through a series of asana to ensures we experienced the intricacies involved in the development of Dwi Pada Viparita Dandasana, two-legged inverted staff (pictured above). BKS Iyengar's son, Prashant, might explain Meloni's series as yoga asana versus mere postures. My understanding of how Prashant distinguishes yogasana is its complete embodiment of body, mind, and breath, which Meloni seemed to demonstrate with aplomb.

A distinction of Advanced Senior II instructors is their clarity and simplicity. Students of any subject know the difference between understanding a lesson for yourself and quite another to make it understandable to students of varying levels of experience. Meloni's teaching is direct, clear, and straightforward.

He effortlessly managed the various levels of students addressing necessary changes. He anticipated tendency, limitation, and emotional blocks offering alternatives while maintaining the concentration on the featured actions.

His instruction offered the benefits of repetition and extended stays in the asana. BKS Iyengar emphasized the importance of repetition and repose. Meloni explained each repetition stage by stage, completely imprinting each action into our being: mind, body, and breath. After the final repetition, you were more prepared to sustain, explore, and refine the position to find repose.

BKS Iyengar transformed yoga instruction into an art form, adding uncanny precision that even with his passing continues to speak to his students’ soul. With the advent of online classes due to the pandemic, while opening opportunities to learn from his most senior students, it limits instructors' ability to provide personal hands-on corrections. The positive part of this limitation is that it makes it the students' responsibility to cultivate their ears, eyes, and heart to strive to embody the instructions so Iyengar Yoga transformations can occur.

Meloni is an inspiration. He demonstrated his continued cultivation as a student of the Iyengar's; he also showed his cultivation as an instructor who has taught classes, workshops, and teacher training programs throughout Europe, Asia, U.S.A., and South America. I look forward to learning more from him.

Thank you, David Meloni, for sharing your New Years Day with us, Randy Just for hosting the event, and the Iyengars for making it all possible.

Namaste.

Patricia Walden's Asana for Upliftment: Aging & Backbends

Yoga Connections

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Patricia’s iconic backbends

As the only North American with a Senior Advanced certification in the Iyengar Method, Patricia Walden shares her years of experience learning and studying with BKS Iyengar and the Iyengar Family through her classes, workshops, books and instructional videos. Many yoga students know her voice from the Audible version of BKS Iyengar’s Light on Life. I listen to it often, picking up new jewels as I am better able to merge my intelligence with its message. It is this ability that Iyengar Yoga seeks to cultivate and it set the foundation for Patricia’s December backbending workshop hosted by Marla Apt, and Iyengar Therapeutics

Patricia refers to Mr. Iyengar, as Guruji (from the root Guru or bringer of light). Anyone touched by Iyengar Yoga has experienced some of that light. It is a result of the refined instruction BKS Iyengar’s phenomenal life’s work has given certified instructors of the Iyengar Method of teaching the 8-limbed path or Astanga Yoga.

Patricia explained that one of the definitions Guruji gives for yoga is “When the intelligence of the brain merges with spiritual heart.” She recalled that his daughter, Dr. Geeta Iyengar often referenced the Sutra III:35 of Sage Patañjali:

hrdaye cittasamvit

Guruji transcribed this in his book Light On The Sutras of Patañjali  as "By samyama on the region of the heart, the yogi acquires a thorough knowledge of the contents and tendencies of consciousness." Samyama is the intergration of Dhāraṇā (concentration), Dhyāna (meditation) and Samādhi (union).

Patricia began the workshop by bringing our focus onto the sternum, a physical place that serves as the doorway to the spiritual heart, a vast space. Coaching us inward with reverence for the Sage Patañjali and BKS Iyengar, we honored them with an invocation. The deep gratitude and reverence, humbles us to receive the boundless lessons of Iyengar Yoga.

Wisdom is a positive consequence of age, Patricia explained. While we may have challenges with different parts of our body, we have gained wisdom, which is more critical than the backbends. "As our bodies change, our mind changes too; wisdom comes," she continued. She proceeded to take us through a series of standing, seated, and forward bend poses followed by prone backbends concentrating on the areas that get dull as we age while still focusing on the sternum and spiritual heart. Guruji distinguished horizontal actions from vertical actions. The extension vertically is from the intelligence or mind, and the extension horizontally is from the spiritual heart, where wisdom comes.

Patricia began going to Pune, India to attend the Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute, RIMYI, in 1976. For many years, she had the good fortune to watch wisdom at work, witnessing BKS Iyengar evolve his back bending practice as he aged. She recalled him saying about his asana practice, “I used to play, but now I stay.” She noticed how he used more prop support to stay longer in asana like Dwi Pada Viparita Dandasana, two-legged inverted bow, Urdhva Dhanurasana, upward bow, and Natarajasana, an asana named after Siva, Lord of the Dance. Patricia reminisced about practicing with Guruji. She recalled how if she started to practice beside him, she had to commit to stay, she couldn’t stop. She giggled explaining that while he appeared to be still in whatever pose he was in, it was extremely rigorous and challenging.

During the workshop, Patricia took us through a Krama or ordered sequence. She distinguished each sequence as "family of poses" that prepare our bodies and minds for backbends. Now in her 70s, Patricia continues her backbending practice, but prepares her body more than she used to. She addressed the fact that as we age the light we worked so hard to bring into places like the roots of the thighs and groins, our armpits, thoracic spine, and knees dull with age. It doesn't mean it goes out - it means we have to spend a little more time to shift the dimness to make it brighter and sharper. In this way, we assure a safe and healing backbend practice as we age.

As an example with Adho Mukha Svanasana, or downward dog, she gave several detailed instructions such as spreading the skin of the palms and backs of our knees, rotating the triceps inward (alerting the armpits), pressing the roots of the thighs, and tops our knees back while extending our heels down by lifting the lower shin up and back. She brought our attention to all the parts of the spine, the thoracic spine, the lumbar spine, and the lower spine —asking us to lengthen and "intelligize" the entire spine, and proceeded with more detailed instruction.

These instructions are just a taste of what a Senior Advanced Certified Iyengar instructor brings to students. From standing, kneeling, seated, and prone asana, Patricia’s instruction sometimes adds elemental cues like earth, water, fire, and ether. It goes deeper and deeper into back bending actions through every koshas or sheath of the body. Students who have cultivated their ability to hear and follow without resistance are taken to a place that alters their perspective of what they are capable of.

It is but a millisecond glimpse into the probable 31,557,60 seconds BKS Iyengar explored his own body and those of his students every year for seven decades. Through his expedition, he developed the precise words to instruct from gross to subtle actions that enable transformation in mental, physical, and emotional mobility and freedom.

The instruction Patricia provided early in the workshop applied to the asana that followed. She sequentially and systematically woke our spine, and the spots that dull with age. She increased our ability to extend vertically and horizontally from the outer skin to the inner body. All of which created the space we needed to come into a full back bend from the floor: Urdhva Dhanurasana, upward bow. Whether with various setups of prop support or flat from the floor, her entire class enable us to experience the back bend with more receptivity, space, and freedom. With all of the necessary actions of the body intelligized, our mind could merge completely with the heart. We could experience the true upliftment an Iyengar Yoga back bend provides regardless of age.

Thank you, Patricia; what an excellent way to end a very challenging year!

Namaste




Iyengar National Association of the United States Iyengar Tribute

Yoga Connections

Celebrating the life of BKS Iyengar and his daughter, Dr. Geeta Iyengar

Celebrating the life of BKS Iyengar and his daughter, Dr. Geeta Iyengar

The Iyengar National Association of the United States or IYNAUS held a five-hour tribute to celebrate the 102nd Birthday of BKS Iyengar and his daughter, Dr. Geeta Iyengar. IYNAUS President Randy Just began with a montage of Dr. Geeta Iyengar under her father's tutelage, BKS Iyengar. He followed with footage of Dr. Geeta Iyengar teaching a rigorous children's class. Anyone who has observed the children's classes at Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute, RIMYI in Pune, India, would not be surprised by the rigor. Exploring advanced poses demonstrates how creating the shapes of poses set a solid foundation for preparing the body and mind for more profound work.

The tribute continued with footage of BKS Iyengar’s classes with the adults in the early years. Classes were smaller, and we witnessed the exquisite refinements he addressed in the alignment of the feet, ankles, calves, knees, and thighs up to the palms of the hand, shoulder blades, neck, and head. The detail of instruction would be lost on students with limited training. In the early years, many of the students attending only three-week intensives admitted not fully grasping everything. It is one reason why an 8-year Iyengar training requirement is attached to the prerequisite for RIMYI training. Even then, it is difficult to fully digest and hold the wealth of knowledge imparted by Mr. Iyengar and his legacy.

Later in the event, Amita Bhagat, IYNAUS public relations and social media chair, shared interviews she conducted with many Senior teachers and others who had the opportunity to spend significant time with BKS and Dr. Geeta Iyengar. The stories serve as a rich and fulfilling resource for new students and old. They brought the character and personality of these great teachers to life. BKS Iyengar understood the power of experience and sharing that experience. The stories can serve to touch students at specific points in their life that might mirror those of more senior teachers and learn from them.

Some of the students Amita interviewed went to the Iyengar’s for healing. Anyone who has had the opportunity to observe or participate in the Iyengar Yoga Therapeutics knows what a great act of service and healing this class is for so many who felt their cases were hopeless. David Ufur, a student of some of the original students of BKS Iyengar (such as Mary Palmer, Priscilla Neel, and Susie Vidrih) began his practice in 1974. The help he received on his leg injury kept him on the learning path to this day, which he shares with his Ann Arbor students. Joan White is another long time student. She experienced a severe back injury after a horseback riding incident. The tragedy had the positive effect of pulling BKS Iyengar back to the states after a long hiatus and giving us a glimpse at his dedication to healing and service through yoga. It is what put Joan White on the path of yoga and a commitment to teaching Iyengar Yoga. John Abbott, the former publisher of Yoga Journal, had a knee injury and avoided major surgery due to his work with Mr. Iyengar. He later convinced Mr. Iyengar to be the featured teacher at the Estes Park Yoga Journal Conference. Patricia Walden suffered from depression. Her healing experience kept her returning to Pune so often, she is now the most advanced Iyengar instructor in the United States, with a wealth of learning to share with her students. Laurel Thomas has scoliosis. She is another student whose healing put her on the path to teaching. She sold everything, packed up, and move to Pune to study how to help others with scoliosis experience the healing effects of Iyengar Yoga. Bobby Clennell committed to the path and specialized in supporting women’s issues through Iyengar Yoga, publishing several books adding her illustration skills. After earning her Ph.D., Lois Steinberg left academia to focus on helping people all over the world through Iyengar Yoga Therapeutics.

From their stories and the many others interviewed, we learned how playfulness danced seamlessly with sometimes harsh wisdom and knowledge delivery. However, in every case, the manner of delivery had the distinct purpose of penetrating deeply through the frequently tamasic layers of our being to leave an indelible impression that stays imprinted on the heart of those lucky enough to receive it. Chris Saudek and Anna Delury spoke to how meaningful his strictness and discipline was for their practice, as well as his uncanny knowledge of where students were physically, mentally, and psychologically at any given time. After Mr. Iyengar's passing, it dawned on Anna the importance of her early training and the responsibility she felt to study more to share her experiences with those who never had the opportunity to work with Mr. Iyengar in person.

Patricia shared how the krama or order of teaching asana progressed with the timing of his integration of the Sutras of Patañjali . It highlights the idea of change in general and our resistance to it, which is a lesson in itself. BKS Iyengar, Dr. Geeta Iyengar, Prashant, or Abhijata never seem to resist change. None of the changes I know of that they've endured were easy, but they understood something most of us find very hard to digest. Nothing stays the same.

BKS Iyengar honored the universality of change and developed the krama sequence to educate us on being attuned to it within ourselves. His proprioception was second to none. It penetrated through all of the koshas or sheaths of his body. His total emersion into the minute details of specific parts of his body is what gave him the words to share with us about our tendencies. BKS Iyengar brought light to our oneness, the universal tendencies inherent in human beings. Working and studying by his side, Dr. Geeta Iyengar was able to bring to light the specific tendencies in women that only as a woman could she penetrate and experience. With his musical heart, Prashant continues to explore the universal rhythms of breath and the effects of its subtle shifts and masterful compositions. Their work doesn't change the gifts of BKS Iyengar's work, they enhance it, and Abhijata is bringing her insights, having had all of her relatives as her teachers. She can also offer perspective as a parent and can speak to younger generations of students inundated with diversions, data, and information.

BKS Iyengar went on a human expedition into his own body with the kind of tenacity and vigor that is unfathomable to most of us. It seems appropriate to question, not just to be told what to do, but to embody why BKS Iyengar experienced it and explained it the way he did. To ask ourselves why Dr. Geeta Iyengar developed a practice specific to the cycles of a woman's life and why Prashant has written volumes to encourage a deeper understanding of the power of our breath. To question our understanding of their lessons is our way of exploring the path that BKS Iyengar continues to shine a bright light on for us.

Embodying and respecting the changes within and around us with grace and gratitude is a big yoga lesson. It's not an easy one by any means, but we have so many great examples of how to do it with the Iyengar's and the many great instructors who share Iyengar Yoga to all parts of the world with dedication and service.

Scott HobbsMary Obendorfer & Eddy Marks shared some great insights and stories about the process of learning to teach Iyengar Yoga. Scott spoke about the early years of Mr. Iyengar assessing and formulating the RIMYI, and arguably the most rigorous teaching curriculum for yoga instructors. Eddie encouraged students to exhaust the numerous resources now available. He said Guruji (what his students call him nowadays, from the root Guru or giver of light) became more transparent and natural in his experience of him. "The process of spirituality is not a process of addition, it is a process of subtraction," Eddie explained. Mary added that it is about removing layers and getting to the essence of who we are. She recalled something Guruji said that "yoga is an emotional subject." While Iyengar Yoga is very precise and the details can seem unending, coupled with how accessible he's made yoga with all the therapeutics, etc., what it all comes down to is, "the practice of yoga opens you to yourself." She summed it up by saying, "At heart, it's about the heart."

Namaste.

Thank you, IYNAUS, for sharing your tribute with us all, and Amita and all of the interviewees, thank you for sharing your beautiful stories. Special thanks to BKS Iyengar and the entire Iyengar Family —and extended family. 

The Belle of Bellur: Four Days of Gratitude with Abhijata Iyengar - Day 4

Yoga Connections

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Celebrating BKS Iyengar’s birthday From the soil of his birth and in Bellur, India, and supporting his dream through the Bellur Trust  is a gesture. His granddaughter, Abhijata Sridha Iyengar expressed the emotions of love, respect, and reverence, all of those who have been touched by his work felt. We wanted to honor his birthday whether we ever got a chance to meet him in person or not. His energy is still very present. His life’s work continues to make it possible for people from all walks of life to experience the transformation of yoga.

Many refer to him as Guruji. It is from the word guru or bringer of light. It is very fitting for someone who put yoga into a language the modern world could understand —regardless of country, class, race, gender, age, or physical abilities or limitation. “Access” is a term we hear a lot relevant these days, and Guruji sought to find ways to offering any willing students access to the transformation of yoga.

Since its origins somewhere between the fifth and third centuries BCE, yoga has evolved and been packaged in innumerable ways. Diving into its depths is a daunting task, which is why BKS Iyengar’s work is such a gift. Anyone who has had the opportunity to observe or assist in the Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute (RIMYI) therapy classes located in Pune, Maharashtra, has witnessed the healing powers of his work. It is why he has students from all over the globe. It’s not that he thought himself god-like as so many with his kind of influence tend to think of themselves. He worked, played, lived, and breathed yoga with the highest integrity any man can have. He gave us a learning method that aligns and connects us, mind, and body, because he knew once that happens, the yoga can do the yoga.

Tamas - inert, dull

Tamas - inert, dull

Rajas - fire, dynamic

Rajas - fire, dynamic

Sattvic - luminosity

Sattvic - luminosity

There are three qualities of nature or Gunas: Tamas, solidity, Rajas, dynamism, Sattva, luminosity. They are ever-present and changing throughout nature and life. Abhijata brought awareness of the Gunas and the transformative power of yoga in her final class. She began and ended with a Savasana or corpse pose. She pointed out the vast difference of experience between the two asana. For some of us, it was very early morning; for some, after lunch, others, it was evening. Time, place, weather, level of study all affect the experience. Abhijata highlighted the Sutra of Sage Patanjali, which BKS Iyengar transcribes as “Perfection in an asana is achieved when the effort to perform it becomes effortless and the infinite being within is reached.”

II.47 prayatna shaithilya ananta samapattibhyam

Beginners may experience a generalized dullness, which is why Iyengar Yoga emphasizes standing poses in early training. They wake up the body. In Utthita Hasta Padasana, extended hands and legs pose, Abhijata taught with instructions such as lift the kneecaps and thighs and extend the arms from the sternum: the right sternum out to the fingertips and left sternum to the fingertips. Clear actions required the body and mind to engage progressively from the outer skin inwards to our muscles, bones, and nerves. The tamasic dullness moved into a more rajasic active state. Asana in an Iyengar class require intense focus and effort. Repetition allows that focus and effort to evolve. When we can better align and connect the mind and body, we move into another stage, a more rhythmic flow of effort, and a less effortful luminous state. These qualities of dullness, activity, and luminosity cycle within and around us day-to-day, moment-by-moment, class to class, asana to asana. With continuous practice, we can mindfully utilize these qualities of nature. When we need rajas, we can call upon it. When we are angry or agitated and we need to pause, we can call upon tamas. The harmony or balance of the two is sattva, so it is the more luminous state. We can learn to calibrate ourselves to adjust to inward changes or help us deal with outward changes in our environment.

In class, Abhijata generated rajas after the first few asana. She paused less between the asana, the rigor and intensity forced focused effort and then we experienced asana from the beginning of class again, now the effort was less effortful, the rigor and repetition transformed the body and mind, so by the time we got to Savasana, corpse pose for the second time, we were now acutely present with our legs, feet, ankles, thighs, hips, abdomen, chest, arms, neck, head, ears, eyes, mouth, nose and breath. We could actively surrender to earth from which we came and with it perhaps more conscious gratitude towards the man who helped us get there.

Iyengar Yoga is an experience not to be missed.

Thank you, Abhijata, for your willingness, your time, effort, and insight; Kishore for all of your patience and support; all of the panelists for demonstrating the poses and the many prop alternatives in the Iyengar repertory to address specific issues. I am grateful to you all. None of this could be possible without the birth of BKS Iyengar. Our continued experience, learning, and sharing of Iyengar Yoga can give him many happy returns.

Namaste.