Om Shanti: A Yoga Blog


Digital Asana Project: Core Strength Workout
June 25, 2007, 8:08 pm
Filed under: Digital Asana Project, Yoga Poses

A curious thing about the traditional asana practice is that it tends not to develop great core strength, even though so many of the poses require you to use core strength. With the exception of Navasana (Boat Pose), there aren’t that many asanas that focus specifically on the core muscles. Some poses, like Trikonasana (Triangle) and Parsvakonasana (Extended Side-Angle), do give your obliques a nice workout, but very few poses help to develop strength and conditioning in the main abdominal muscles.

In this video, I demonstrate a basic core strengthening sequence. (I’ve sped things up in the demo in order to preserve a smaller file size, but you should get the idea.) It goes as follows:

1) 5 breaths in Navasana.

2) 5 breaths in Ardha-Navasana (Low Boat Pose — Heels and legs off the floor, shoulders and upper back lifting up, fingertips extending towards the feet; to protect the neck, I sometimes do this pose with my hands behind the head).

3) From Ardha-Navasana, press the palms together and split the legs wide. (Heels stay 2 inches off the floor.)

4) Crisscross the legs, alternating each time which leg crosses over the top. Repeat 20 times, moving with the breath.

5) From Ardha-Navasana, extend the right leg towards the ceiling, while keeping the left leg hovering 2 inches off the floor. Hold for 5 breaths.

6) Lower the right leg, letting it hover 2 inches off the floor. Extend the left leg towards the ceiling. Hold for 5 breaths.

7) On the inhales and exhales, alternate the legs. Repeat 20 times (10 times on each side).

8 ) From Ardha-Navasana to Navasana.

9) From Navasana into a simple cross-legged sitting position, and then lift up, holding here (feet/ankles off the floor if possible) for 5 breaths.

10) Release and fold forward.

Even though we shouldn’t be focused on getting a six-pack or anything like that, it is useful, I think, to incorporate core exercises into the flow, which will in turn improve one’s overall practice. As you build up core strength, you’ll notice improvements in everything from Half Moon Pose to Chair Pose to Side Plank, not to mention all your arm balances and inversions.

Many thanks to Raghu and Brock for inspiring this sequence.

Disclaimer: I am not a certified yoga instructor, and the ideas and opinions expressed here are not intended to be formal instruction on yoga poses. If you plan to start up a yoga practice, or if you have one and plan to do any of the yoga poses described in this blog, please seek out an experienced, living, breathing yoga teacher to guide you with hands-on instruction.



Going Back to Cali
June 15, 2007, 11:00 pm
Filed under: Yoga Bloomington, Yoga Los Angeles

After weeks, maybe months, of agonizing over this, I’ve finally decided to move back to California in order to take some teacher training programs and to get some experience teaching yoga in a larger market. My plan right now is to leave Indiana sometime mid to late August. I will continue running all of my Bloomington Power Yoga classes throughout the summer, and I have two excellent yogis lined up to take over my teaching when I leave. Any pre-paid class packages will carry over and will be valid with these teachers.

It was certainly not easy for me to make this decision to go back to California, especially since I’ve had such a wonderful time teaching here in Bloomington. I’ll miss my students here tremendously, and I hope to give them a good show for these last few months together. I’m still leaving the door open to come back — my PhD program here at IU expects me back in a year — but I can’t make any predictions about the future since, as far as I can tell, fortune-telling is not one of the skills that I’ve developed as a yogi. One thing I can say with great certainty, however, is that my time here in Bloomington has changed me in significant ways as a person and as a yogi, and the many great people I’ve met here deserve much of the credit for that. It will be really sad for me to say goodbye to the yoga community here, but I’m also looking forward to being reunited with my LA yoga friends, whom I’ve been missing very much for this past year.



Yoga for Depression and Anxiety
June 10, 2007, 8:37 am
Filed under: Yoga News

A recent study confirms (yet again) what a lot of us yogis have already known for years.



Fasting
June 9, 2007, 10:27 am
Filed under: Health and Nutrition, Yoga Musings, Yoga Philosophy

I know a lot of yogis these days are into different kinds of fasts, such as juice fasts, three-day weekend fasts, Emergen-C fasts, etc. Today, I’d like to briefly ponder some of the reasons why people fast, and whether or not these reasons are genuine, honest, and truly conducive to well-being. It seems to me that people fast for one of at least three reasons (or some combination of these three reasons): (1) bodily health, (2) spiritual health, (3) losing fat. (more…)



Summertime Yoga
June 3, 2007, 9:29 pm
Filed under: Yoga Bloomington, Yoga Musings

Somehow, this year the Midwest missed spring and we moved straight from winter into summer. For the past few weeks, it’s been in the high 80s to low 90s everyday, with humidity from 60-90%. Hot and muggy. Before we even start yoga class, half of us are sweating, and by the time we get through Surya B, all of us are soaked. By the 45-minute mark, half the students are sliding off the mats, crashing, etc. The other half are on their knees panting. A few students have asked me to turn on the A/C, but I’ve been reluctant so far to comply. (more…)