New Years Day Celebration With David Meloni
Yoga Connections
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.