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Great Expectations with Natasha Rizopoulos

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Natasha Rizopoulos at home

 

Natasha Rizopoulos at home

Natasha Rizopoulos Photographed at her home in Brookline, Massachusetes by Tricia Gahagan. Natasha is wearing top by Hard Tail and pants by Jala Clothing

 

From Beachwood Canyon to Brookline, Massachusetts

In 1996, while hiking the northern section of the Hollywood Hills, Natasha Rizopoulos had a “moment.” In that reflection, in the balm of Beachwood Canyon, she experienced a bit of a homecoming. After years of professional roaming, the moment was a bow to the ever-present voice that had been long dimmed by the “shoulds” that can mute a life.

In chapter nine of the classic Great Expectations, Pip counsels, “Pause you who read this, and think for a moment of the long chain of iron or gold, of thorns or flowers, that would never have bound you, but for the formation of the first link on one memorable day.” You might say, in her flash Ms. Rizopoulos was channeling some Dickens. Inquiring in, staring down the truth of the matter and hushing, “Ahhh… yoga.” In that brush with clarity, there was a merger of her inner and outer selves.

Natasha Rizopoulos is beloved by students on both coasts for her strong command of asana and dedication to proper alignment; she is a respected educator of thousands of yoga instructors, former Director of Content of the YogaWorks teacher training curriculum, Yoga Journal cover model and contributor, star of Yoga Journal’s Yoga Step-by-Step video series, creator of the Align Your Flow™ system, Yoga U presenter, and more … The earnest maestro sports a resume with which many in the yoga world are well versed.

Yet there is a story to the origins of these great expectations Natasha Rizopoulos holds of herself and her students. Just how does an East Coast bred, Ivy League educated daughter of two academics with years of training as a ballet dancer wind up with a 2X6 mat as her office?

Yoga was not necessarily in her early plan. “With Natasha, since she was a little girl, it’s been, ‘I’m here. I’m going to do my best. I’m going to get myself organized, and I expect everyone else to do their best too’,” recalls her mother Diana de Vegh. Growing up among books (many books) in New Haven, Connecticut and New York City, Rizopoulos’ strong will and seriousness of purpose surfaced early on in her childhood.

These “all in” characteristics spilled over to many of her youthful pursuits from paper dolls and make believe to her intense study of ballet. In dance and movement she found an early vessel for self-expression, a vessel in which she abided well into her high school years. Although dance’s punitive nature eventually quelled a bit of her spirit for it, it was an early link nonetheless.

After four years in Cambridge, graduating Magna Cum Laude from Harvard, she returned to her beloved Gotham City to work first as a civil servant in city government, then to enroll in a graduate program at Columbia (a Master’s Degree in Social Work and Public Policy). In her first year, she worked as a counselor in a hospital in the South Bronx, then partway through her second year of study, she realized that her passion was in a different path so she parted ways with the program to follow a long-simmering ambition to pursue a life on-stage as an actress.

An unwavering determination and the sense of purpose that came with self-expression led to her accepting a number of smaller stage roles as well as a coveted invitation to summer with Shakespeare and Company. “In some ways, the acting was wonderful in that it filled that void for self expression that was left when I gave up dance. I also loved the community – being part of a production was so seductive for me. So thrilling.”

The logical next stop for an emerging actress in the prime of her life would be Hollywood. Once there she worked both in front of and behind the camera, juggling odd jobs and odd hours and growing increasingly disenchanted with both. Along the way she began to dabble in yoga and adopted a regular (Ashtanga slanted) practice.

In this chapter, and by chance, she found herself in class with Saul David Raye as he was serving as a substitute for the scheduled instructor. She was struck by his knowledge and teaching style that soared above and beyond the simple recitation of poses; through him she found her way to YogaWorks where she continued to be drawn in by the practice’s physical aspects and the experience of being completely present in her actions on the mat.

“I had a brain that was going all of the time. There was for me just something so absorbing with the physical practice.” Then there is that Beachwood Canyon pause in which she takes stock and recalls a dance experience during a role in the Shakespeare and Company production, that sheer joy of expressing herself through her body and the happiness in her work. She says, “The memory of that time made me realize that I could do this with yoga – to be in the world and take this practice I was falling in love with and do something useful with it.”

Natasha Rizopolous in Yoga pose

Natasha Rizopoulos photographed by Tricia Gahagan. Clothing by Hard Tail. Yoga Mat by Manduka

“Finding yoga was the big shift for me. On the surface I always seemed to have it together, but all the while I was truly quaking inside – perfectionism, a certain self-consciousness… When I started teaching yoga I had found my voice. And finally, it was an authentic voice.” The following week she committed fully and enrolled in a teacher training program at YogaWorks – a leap from which she has never looked back. “Ahhh… yoga.”

Invoking a young King Arthur and the building wisdom he earned through wearing varied hats in the story The Sword in the Stone, de Vegh, a therapist in private practice in New York, summarized her daughter’s professional trajectory, “With Natasha, the things that she learned as an actor and as a dancer are very apropos for yoga. She learned how to work with herself. How to work with her breath. How to use breath to sustain her. How to use breath to give her energy and when to preserve it. She learned how to work with her body – when is the time to stretch and push and when is the time to cherish and protect. She learned about listening to the music and getting that internal beat, and of course as an actor listening to other actors. Her training in these areas fed into her work as a yoga teacher, and I think her natural generosity and kindness probably helps a bit as a yoga instructor as well.”

Rizopoulos brought to her (Iyengar and Ashtanga) yogic studies a complete attention and that signature strong constitution. Beginning in 1996, she completed two successive 200 hour teacher training programs under the tutelage of Lisa Walford and Maty Ezraty, the first as an avid civilian and the second just as she was added to their teaching roster. As soon as YogaWorks’ Advanced Teacher Training program was developed, she completed that as well.

With a wealth of training under her belt and hesitating less, she launched herself fiercely into her teaching, from the start teasing out the promise of the willing. “I was fortunate to have begun teaching so quickly because that accelerated path just ramped up my desire to know more and more. I did not want to just be teaching gymnastics.”

Ms. Rizopoulos educates in lyrics all her own—a fact to which anyone who has spent time in her company can attest. “Spinning inner thighs”, “pinning elbows”, and “rebounding the spine” are just a swatch of the currency she trades in her precise guidance.

Natasha Rizpoloulos in Upward facing dog pose

Clothing by Hard Tail. Photo by Tricia Gahagan

In the practice of asana she sees a window with dual opportunities: to reveal vulnerabilities and also to correct them. A big part of seizing these opportunities involves listening—a dying art for which she displays ongoing mastery. “If you are really looking at your students, you can see the piece that isn’t working. Whether it’s a part of the body that is weak, dull, tight, whether it is a quality of mind that is not allowing the person to be present – skillful teaching is about helping the person turn into the skid which is often an area that they’re trying to avoid… but doing it gently and mindfully and with support.”

It bears mentioning that her mother, Ms. de Vegh, was for years a teacher in Reevaluation Counseling (RC). This process of uninterrupted, attentive listening is said to naturally facilitate best conclusions from within. These teachings drifted into the family home for a time impressing Rizopoulos deeply. Perhaps in homage to this concept of listening fully, she has little use for the sensory overload which has become so accepted in contemporary yoga. “I want people to be listening to my instructions or their own breath. Why do we need something else?”

After a storied career in the Southern California YogaWorks family, Rizopoulos was tasked with the export of the program’s teacher trainings to Boston when her personal life spurred a cross-country relocation. She continued to share that curriculum, one which she had personally refined over time, in her role as a senior teacher at Down Under Yoga (Newton and Brookline) until 2015 when she elected to devote her full attention to creating and sharing her own teacher training programs in collaboration with Down Under.

A trusted mentor to many, these days in addition to her concurrent 200 and 300 hour teacher training programs, she also leads four public classes each week in the Boston area as well a number of Align Your Flow™ master classes in and around the city. Although the teaching commitments do at times compete with her own personal time on the mat, it is on these smaller stages that she sees her tomorrows. She does not rule out a writing project at some point, but resisting impulse she insists that such a venture must be predicated by her uncovering something distinct to relay.

Brookline, Massachusetts sits some 3,000 miles east of Los Angeles. A hamlet just outside of Boston, the town is home to stellar public schools as well as choice shopping and dining. Founded in 1705, Brookline is perhaps best known for its proximity to Fenway Park and also its discerning inhabitants. Rizopoulos traded 15 years of Southern California perpetual sunshine to be here.

Tucked gently in among towering pines, an accent of white checkering the grounds… her home and its setting are enchanting. I arrive for tea in the early afternoon on a chilly Friday. More than just a dwelling, it’s a refuge she has peacefully occupied for the past four years with her husband, the Emmy Award-winning documentary filmmaker Michael Kirk. Dressed casually, she and her “lassies,” rescue dogs who answer to Alice and Zucchini, welcome me with a steadied cheer. As in the studio, her voice breezes seamlessly with conviction from one topic to the next, her volume perpetually dialed to about 3.5, obliging the listener to lean in.

Natasha Rizopoulos and her rescue dog Zucchini

Natasha and Zucchini. Natasha is wearing clothing by Hard Tail. Yoga Mat by Manduka.

In just a few hours she will kick-off a 300 hour teacher training program, a program in its third sell-out year. Yet her manner is so at ease. It is perhaps under this roof that she hears best; her free time is spent reading fiction, wandering out in nature, following her tennis hero Roger Federer, and meditating in her home studio. When we approach the topic of her husband, she gushes sweetly beaming gratitude for their union. She and Kirk met in 2003 while filming Yoga Journal’s Yoga Step-by-Step video series. From their working relationship, in time, a deeper partnership unfolded eventually prompting her shift in coasts.

Their life together is intentionally quiet, and although in June 2016, Rizopoulos presented at Yoga Journal’s San Diego conference, she goes to great lengths to preserve that order, cutting back on her travel and making any other necessary edits to suit their life together. These include embracing a smaller, more local career and being at much peace with that decision. Despite her resistance to the siren calls of social media and things viral, she has found in her practice channel with Yoga U a means of skillfully bending technology to honor her preferences yet remain connected remotely with her swelling audiences. In this expanding series of online classes sporting titles such as “The Art of Building Core Stability” and “Harnessing the Transformative Power of Inversions”, students find Rizopoulos continuing to disrupt myths, herald key actions, and highlight the use of oppositional actions in poses such as salamba sarvangasana (supported shoulderstand). Regardless of your viewing zip code, expect to be tasked with her signature homework poses or “daily vitamin regimens” at the finish of each class.

Grateful to be back to a pretty well-rounded practice herself after navigating some injuries and the limits of a hyper-mobile body in its late forties, Rizopoulos feels strongly that “teachers have teachers.” Still curious and forever foraging for novel content to share with her students, Patrica Walden, whom she views as a significant mentor, continues to guide her as she deepens her personal Iyengar studies. “Natasha is a teacher committed to growing, not that she needs to. Yet she sets the bar very high for herself. As a result she has so much to contribute to her students,” shared Walden. “When she teaches asana, it is not just physical. With great humility Natasha also honors pranayama and shares yoga’s rich philosophy. And, I would underline humility.”

Natasha Rizopoulos at home

Natasha is wearing tank by Hard Tail. Pants by Jala Clothing. Photo by Tricia Gahagan

Thirty-five of us have just wrapped up a master class which plumbed the depths of the all-important backbend. Over the course of two hours the tenor swirling around Ms. Rizopoulos morphs rather organically from all business to the charm of a doctor in the house. Under her careful guidance in breath and motion, collectively we’ve journeyed from an unpacking of tadasana (mountain pose) straight through to three variations on urdhva dhanurasana (upward facing bow), our peak pose for the morning. At the finish of our travel there is a genuine experience of having covered terrain, physical and intellectual, with many small epiphanies along the way. Despite the fatigue, I’m struck by the audience (mostly comprised of yoga instructors) lingering, continuing to hang on the instructor’s every word as she elaborates whole-heartedly on “pairing actions to find your neutral, your zero” in these poses.

Longtime Natasha student, teaching assistant and Boston area studio owner Kristin Olson summed up her personal experience in Natasha’s company, “Natasha’s intelligence pervades her teaching. She creates a more cerebral asana experience and through her choice of words and sequencing she forces students to not only stay present but to also notice their own personality through the practice. Every single pose and every single cue is thoughtfully chosen to create a profound and enriching asana. She has an extraordinary ability to translate asana and yoga philosophy so that they resonate with people in a way that we can actually live by the ideals of yoga.”

In her company, as I witness her extending time and rich imagery to advance excellence among her students, I get the sense that there is no place else that she needs to be. There is no rush. The movement is ever deliberate. The scholar, the dancer, the actor, the Virgo and yes the teacher… all serve in the stewardship of her beloved yoga. Long ago she made peace with the swerves and in doing so she has arrived at her precise place of shelter.

“The universe does take care of us… You do end up where you are supposed to end up… eventually. I was meant to teach yoga. I know that I was.”

For more information on Natasha, visit: natasharizopoulos.com

For more information on YogaWorks, visit: yogaworks.com

For more information on Down Under Yoga, visit: downunderyoga.com

Photo shoot assistants: Tamara Hickey and Siobhan Beasley (siobhanbeasleyphotography.com)
Hair and Makeup by Erica Morales of ENNIS Inc

Clothing by Hard Tail Forever (hardtailforever.com) and Jala Yoga (jalaclothing.com)

Yoga Mat by Manduka: manduka.com

The post Great Expectations with Natasha Rizopoulos appeared first on LA Yoga Magazine - Ayurveda & Health.


Living Loudly and Proudly – Rocking Gratefulness with NYC’s Wise Woman of Fitness Halle Becker

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I applaud all of these teachers.  You know the more people we can enlighten and help find a more peaceful way to walk on the earth.  I say power to you.  There’s just something really gorgeous to all this.

halle_becker_2_boston_yoga

Halle (Homegirl) Becker does not pull punches.  She wants the truth to “lead the way”, and has absolutely no qualms about passionately spreading that dharma.  She’s 54, lives “loudly and proudly” neither denying the process of aging nor necessarily embracing it but rather extracting its very essence and bringing that ripening forward into the light.  A bright light she has emitted for nearly twenty years holding court as one of New York City’s most beloved yoga and spin instructors.  Known for her Sweat and Surrender signature classes, don’t expect to sit quietly for her sermons.  Halle Becker teaches in layers – seamless layers of music, grit, kicks and perhaps most thundering…  heart. Never, ever scripted, either on mat or bike.  The only thing you can expect in a Halle class is to be swept up on a fantastic voyage over which the mind has only a remote chance of getting in the way.  When it’s all said and done, you are left stretched. Stretched in ways that you never saw coming.  A common refrain from her band of followers, “I don’t do spinning.  I do Halle.”

So just what is it about this gal?  A sort of grounding agent is she.  A little bit Maria (Von Trapp).  A little bit Keith (Richards).  Then toss in a hint of Patti (Smith).  In the Pali Canon, Adhitthana (one of the ten perfections) is loosely defined as determination or resolution.  Author and Co-founding Teacher of Spirit Rock Meditation Center James Baraz translates the term as “an unwavering persistence”, or “summoning our courage to meet anything”.  It’s a concept at the root of every overture Halle Becker serves up.  Be it on a yoga mat, spin bike or on retreat, nothing less than completely showing up will suffice.  Her demand comes not from a place of grandstanding or any desired guru status, but rather it bleeds from the tracks of her own personal sweat (and tears).  “She’s just an amazing woman filled with so much love.  She just has this instinct to kind of know and then she zooms in on it.  I am just amazed at how much better my emotional state feels after her classes. I just think of her as this motherland of love.” This from Debbie a longtime spin and yoga student.

Becker senses that along with her parents humor genes, she arrived on this planet armed with an innate sensibility for calling the shots.  Born in Cleveland in 1962 the daughter of an actress/costume designer and a high-powered attorney, Halle is pretty certain that her first words (at about two weeks) were, “This place is not hip enough, we need to move.”  Move she did to the storybook suburb of Wellesley, Massachusetts where she and her younger sister Barrie enjoyed all of the trappings of the bucolic suburb just west of Boston.  With a roof over her head, fine clothes and a pony outwardly she appeared to want for nothing.  Despite the privileged childhood, she confesses to always feeling as though something was missing.  Consumed by their careers, Halle is very candid about the parental detachment she experienced while sharing a roof with her mother and father.  She also refers to her parents’ animated personas as possessing the air of the sad/happy clown.  A Leave it to Beaver type home Becker’s was not.

With her parents divorcing in her pre-teen years she found herself grappling with mounting feelings of inadequacy…  Are You There God?  It’s me Margaret, by Judy Blume serving as an early Halle bible.  Her big personality and natural gift as a storyteller enabled her to mask these inner doubts and kept her sallying forth in her signature pluck.  She jokes that public speaking may have been in fact the only subject to which she excelled in high school.  That verve propelled her onwards through what she refers to as a “really long run including drug addiction”, “feelings of not being in the right body”, and eventually “a marriage in shambles”.  Her only real solace during these years came through her deep spiritual connection to animals (horses in particular).  She attributes the sudden (fatal) heart attack of her father (in her sophomore year at American University in Washington DC) as the curve which sent her swiftly tumbling along an arduous slope – a battle with which she would wrestle into her late thirties and early forties.  Throughout this extended period of numbing out she continued to fall back on her winning personality seeking out the comfort zone of what she refers to as “the big stage”.  This secret weapon fueled her as she somehow managed a successful stint in the corporate world as the CEO of Halle’s Comet a production company she founded which staged large scale events for the corporate world.  Riding high in a huge industry with clients such as Oprah Winfrey, Becker found herself featured in the Washington Business Journal and indulging in the many spoils of success yet still plagued with that looming shadow side.  Luckily for her during this chapter the practice of yoga was quietly rearing its head.

In a roundabout fashion, Halle’s passion for yoga was sparked by discovering Jane Fonda’s Workout video and book late in high school.  While she had always been physically active, something in the sequencing and teachings of these media pieces found her curiosities heightened.  With little rehearsal the early 1980s found Becker sporting leg warmers and teaching aerobics out of the back of a hair salon on Newbury Street in Boston with nothing more than these materials as her guide.  She swiftly parlayed that gig into a stint during her college years spreading the gospel of aerobics at a DC area fitness center.  All the while she could not even touch her toes.  A fellow yoga instructor at the fitness center, Jane Fryer, happened to notice, and began gently pitching her on the eight-limbed practice’s many merits.  Halle would have none of it.  “I hated it.  It was so boring.  Fast forward a couple of years and I’m in New York City where I take my very athletic yoga class at Equinox with no rigid rules and cool music taught by Michael Leconsczak.  I was like WOW!”  From there she never looked back eventually completing her 200 RYT training with Sondra Loring (of Sadhana Yoga in New York’s Hudson Valley) and leaving the corporate world to teach yoga full time.

Along with life in New York City came the truth.  The truth Becker finally needed to tackle.  Adopting a baby and on the verge of parenthood at 42, that ray of new life forced her to confront her demons and do the work to combat her addictions for good.  In doing so, she said farewell to an unhealthy marriage – a decision she and her ex-husband made together for the sake of the “beautiful being” (a daughter Maya) who had come into their lives.  With great conviction she credits yoga for the clarity it brought to her and the subsequent transformation to get clean once and for all.  “I had to find that quiet mind in order to get it done.  I had to dig deep, battle some serious shit.  Just take it on.  Yoga helped me with this and gave me the confidence to start to tell my story through teaching.  Let me be clear that I am extremely lucky to be here today, because the way I was going with my lifestyle, it was anybody’s guess whether or not I was going to make it.”  And with ongoing resolve, make it she has.

With her own battle scars ever present she arrived as an instructor on the New York yoga scene with a burst, boldly charging her students with “showing up” and trying to find the highest versions of themselves.  Speaking a language all her own and spouting pet names like “unicorn” and “sis” from her perch, folks quickly began responding to her no nonsense neighborhood banter.  From the get go her approach has always been to simply deliver to students a dose of humor, some rock and roll and that sacred space in which everyone moves on a level playing field. For Halle, It was never about being someone’s guru.  “Think of my classes as the Cheers Bar of yoga.  I want to welcome people to come in and find their seat.  Yoga will always have something to teach us.”

Despite no formal religious background, there is an undeniable preacher coursing through her veins.  She credits the likes of MC Yogi, Shiva Rhea, Raghunath and her longtime teacher Sondra Loring for keeping he inspired.  It’s a brand undeniably all her own and one that continues to engage the willing.  Beyond her longstanding tribes at New York City’s Earth Yoga and Pure Yoga East and her very own Home Girl studio, recent years have found Becker headlining at events like Wanderlust in Stratton, Vermont and also presenting at the 2013 Lulu Lemon World Conference in Vancouver.  The larger scale the setting, the better for her to connect in widening circles and share her own personal story.

It’s that Halle vibe that prompted Soul Cycle founders Julie Rice and Elizabeth Cutler to come calling in 2013 and take a chance on a female yoga instructor in her 50s.  Rallying the troops at that 83rd street location with its particular clientele is no small challenge to be tasked with, and she bears tremendous respect for the owners’ gamble in passing her the baton.  Even though she claims it took her six months to figure out how to clip into her pedals, this latest gig has for Becker proven to be a perfect extension of her yoga teaching.  In the saddle with the house lights dimmed and the music loud she again assumes the mantle of storyteller.  Those versed in both yoga and spinning can attest to the shared subtractive qualities.  On the bike, on the mat…  you are tasked with removing your “self” and diving deep inward to the present.  Adhitthana.  In salute of that inner work and as with her yoga teachings, Becker builds her message from her all important playlists.  A great deal of intention goes into crafting soundtracks which both sonically and lyrically reflect her expected audience – clans for which she she is eternally rocking gratitude.

I could write a chapter book of Halle escapades and antics, but your really must experience her in person to get the big picture.  When I signed on to meet Ms. Becker for my inaugural Soul Cycle class I relinquished all expectations and resigned myself to simply dive in to the mystery.  Well in advance of her arrival, the bikes have all been spoken for and street shoes have been swapped out for the ones that clip.  Devices are being stowed and other necessary adjustments made before the doors to studio B swing open.  And then Halle marches in with abandon and at once all is rendered electric.  Vivid and vibrant and sporting a hint of swagger.  The seas part as she begins her lobby greetings.  “Who is setting me up this morning?” she wants to know.  To that proposition a team of bright eyed crew members fall in swift synch and a Macbook is produced – a conduit for the almighty play list which will dictate the current.  Lights are dimmed just so and off to see the wizard we pedal… “Inhale, let’s.  Exhale, GO!”  Blasting off on a 45 minute odyssey – that signature mashup of drive, dharma, team and of course sweat.

From her in your face opening straight on through to the big exhale finish, among the rush and the push there’s an undeniable comfort of being held.  Over Simon and Garfunkel’s Cecilia, to PitBull, then Guns and Roses Sweet Child of Mine downshifting to Bruce Springsteen’s My Hometown (yes, My Hometown), we have collectively in under an hour broken on through to some other side.  Everyone pedaling, well-versed in some foreign vocabulary, launching themselves on the wave that is Halle.  Strangers for an instant all one, digging deep for some greater good.  As the climb progresses, Halle speaks of setting the tone for the rest of one’s week.  She speaks of the class, the 45 minute “rocket to the wilderness”, as representing opportunity – an exceptional opportunity to “show up”.  Our Monday, perhaps our week, has been forever altered with Halle’s imprint.  A continuous stretch of “ah-ha” teachings.  The gospel according to Halle.  As the class wraps I’m curious to see how quickly she’s engulfed in a swarm of pumped up disciples soaked and jockeying about for just another spot of “Halle” time…  She leaves me with one for the road trumpeting over the fray…  “Susan, hey we were always friends, we just hadn’t met yet.”

My retreat is not about acrobatics.  And I’m not going to shove spirituality down your throat.  But you are going to leave a different person.  We’re going to sweat, lie in clay, play some volleyball, maybe have a glass of wine if that’s your thing.

One of her favorite places to meet new friends these days is in beautiful Tulum Mexico where each February she leads a band of pilgrims in her annual Soar and Restore retreat at the famed Amansala resort.  It’s a retreat she has been leading for years with Loren Bassett and this season Dana Slamp and an experience of which she is particularly proud. Here among the Riviera Maya she and her teaching crew turn strangers into friends.  “My retreat is not about acrobatics.  And I’m not going to shove spirituality down your throat.  But you are going to leave a different person.  We’re going to sweat, lie in clay, play some volleyball, maybe have a glass of wine if that’s your thing.  It’s for people who want to step out and step back in (to their lives) a little differently.”  2017 marked the retreat’s sixth year – all of which have sold out.

And, from where does the “Homegirl” handle originate?  Again, it all comes back to telling stories.  In 2008 she created the brand as a moniker for the weekly drop-in yoga classes she teaches out of her home on the upper east side.  On any given Tuesday or Thursday morning her kitchen is pulsing with a blend of “super high rollers”, upper east side moms fresh from dropping their kids at school and a handful of students from Hunter College.  Before any mats have been unrolled, there is venting, sipping of fruit infused water, yakking about menopause and more.  Nothing is off limits.  And, that’s precisely why she built Homegirl, a kula of sorts.  In opening up her home she wanted to again create that colloquial experience around a common passion…  yoga.  Sacred space where things are kept real and stories can be swapped, safely.  Now in its eighth year, she remains very intentional in setting the tone for Homegirl.  Despite the swanky zip code, as common in all of her classes, status is of little interest.

As she saunters leisurely through her fifth decade it’s her thirteen year old daughter Maya, who she refers to as “a magical unicorn”, to whom she gives top billing.  Together they share a love of dogs and horses, and by her daughter’s side she is tutored daily in patience, kindness and whimsy.  As Becker says, “She shows me everything about myself that I need to work on.”  She is filled with gratitude for this second chance she has been given, and she and her ex-husband (with whom she is peacefully raising her daughter) make certain to tailor their professional commitments around her evolving needs.  The 50s in many ways find Halle “returning” as she likes to say.  Returning to the sorted life experiences which have ripened her and also tapping into a building level of confidence that she earned in the school of hard knocks.  In the truth that is her legend she now finds an overflowing natural resource.  And to her contemporaries still at it sharing their good words on the mat she sports nothing but respect.  “We may not be able to still do the advanced poses that the younger ‘kids’ can do, but we’ve got the stories and the truth and the years and the wise tales we’re willing so share.”  But in true Halle fashion, she continues to cheer for everyone. “I applaud all of these teachers.  You know the more people we can enlighten and help find a more peaceful way to walk on the earth.  I say power to you.  There’s just something really gorgeous to all this.”  She leaves me with a favorite line from Ram Dass which rather perfectly embodies (Homegirl) Halle, “Sis.  We’re all just walking each other home…”

Don’t miss Halle at (MIND, BODY) & SOUL CAMP this September in Stowe, VT.  A weekend exhale, with benefits.

Halle Becker: http://www.homegirlyoga.com

Spirit Rock Meditation Center: http://www.spiritrock.org

Jane Fryer: http://www.janefryer.com

Sadhana Center for Yoga and Meditation: http://sadhanayogahudson.com

Soul Cycle: https://www.soul-cycle.com

Wanderlust: http://wanderlust.com

Earth Yoga: http://earthyoganyc.com

Pure Yoga: http://pureyoga.com

Michael Leconsczak: http://www.intelligentyoga.com

Amansala: https://www.amansala.com

Loren Bassett: http://lorenbassett.com

Dana Slamp: http://danaslamp.com

The post Living Loudly and Proudly – Rocking Gratefulness with NYC’s Wise Woman of Fitness Halle Becker appeared first on LA Yoga Magazine - Ayurveda & Health.

Normandie Keith; Lit From Within

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Normandie Keith Yoga Teacher

Normandie Keith Yoga Teacher

Normandie Keith photographed at her home by Cheryl Fox. Clothing by Lavaloka

There are some people who remind you that there’s magic in this world. Beings who shine so bright they can sometimes blind. Normandie Keith, with her long blond braids and thousand-watt smile is one of these people. She has the ability to be as opened-hearted and present with the homeless gentleman leaning against the bus stop, as the A-listers with whom she shares 30-year friendships.

Normandie is a formidable Kundalini Yoga teacher who leaves behind a little trail of glitter (and evil eye necklaces) everywhere she goes. Students, friends, colleagues, social critics, former fans, and other football moms may think that she effortlessly has it all figured out. What they don’t realize is that it’s often pressure that makes diamonds.

Normandie Keith and Bright Beginnings

As a young model spending time in the Bahamas, Normandie Keith could not stop staring at a local shopkeeper. Sixty-five years old and well over two hundred and fifty pounds, the woman contained an energy that was unfamiliar to the aristocratic East Coaster. Normandie recalls, “She was just the most beautiful woman to me, her eyes, her face, and I just kept saying to her, ‘You’re so beautiful, where did this come from?’ She said, ‘It comes from the spirit. The spirit is inside you, and you have it too!’ She made me feel and know that beauty was on the inside. So, I was always looking for that spirit.”

Idyllic Aristocracy

A few years and several print campaigns later, London’s Tatler Magazine, put model Normandie Keith and gal pal Tara Palmer-Tomkinson on the cover. Big, bold lettering labeled them “It Girls” inciting an international phenomenon. The duo were part of a pack of twenty-something socialites, who traveled by private planes to private shores, where paparazzi used long lenses to get shots of them with Prince Andrew, Simon Le Bon, and Posh Spice. Processed negatives were printed next to pics of Princess Di on every tabloid cover in London-town. Normandie Keith married The Honorable Lucas White, becoming part of the English aristocracy herself.

Normandie Keith

Normandie Keith photographed by Cheryl Fox. Tunic by Raj Wear. Necklace by Darshan Sacred Jewelry

Normandie Keith White with her high cheekbones, perfect nose, and porcelain skin, became a muse to icons of fashion. In Valentino, Vera Wang, and Diane Von Furstenberg, she graced the pages and some covers of magazines including French Vogue, Harpers & Queen (now Harper’s Bazaar), Hello!, OK, and more. Polo matches, Dom Perignon, party favors. “It was Balenciaga’s at dawn,” she laughs. “It was a time of amazing opulence, but it was also a very high pressure time. A time when I felt like I had to compete and wear the season’s couture and carry the most current handbag, I had the outfit together on the surface, yet I wasn’t complete in myself. So

[I wondered] how can I arm myself, and put on enough of a shield, a costume, so that nobody knows that I’m really afraid?”

The Golden Thread

Normandie read books on Buddhism, studied Kabbalah in a tiny room in Regent’s Park, and attended the Landmark Forum. She even enrolled in a Kundalini Yoga course, but at the time that didn’t click. She reflects, “I obviously wasn’t ready for it then.” While at home one day working on her beauty column in You Magazine, Normandie saw Cindy Crawford on TV. The American model had written the forward to a yoga book. Normandie remembers, “I saw a quick flash of this woman in Los Angeles with a turban, and I thought, well that’s interesting.”

The Whites welcomed son Finn to the family, and the new mother made a resolve. “Because my parents were older, I was pretty much raised by a nanny. I wanted to ensure that I didn’t do that.” Thus, the trio traded life in London’s fast lane for the spaciousness and privacy of LA. Upon arrival, Normandie realized that the fast lane had followed her. “There were a lot of industry parties, and a lot of parties at my house. I saw that this was going to be the same as in London.” She became reclusive, Uneasy, feeling that, “Something was wrong. Deep in my intuition, in my soul, something wasn’t jiving right.”

Normandie Keith

Normandie Keith photographed by Cheryl Fox.

Breaking the Mask

After a Tatler Magazine shoot at The Beverly Hills Hotel, Normandie returned home in full hair, make-up, and wardrobe. As she reached her gate, “I tripped!” she squeaks. “Because my hands were full, I couldn’t put them down. So, I fell into a big metal drainpipe. I broke my nose and eye sockets. At that moment, my mask was broken. The mask of illusion. My face, which is what I had traded on, which had been my sense of self with this external life – the beacon of that was my face. And my face was gone. I remember feeling the blood coming out of my eyes, and what was my nose. That earth-shattering sound when I heard my face break, it was like everything inside of me broke. It was done.”

The confidante she most counted on couldn’t handle the gushing blood, and her husband was unreachable. So, Normandie made her way to Cedars-Sinai… alone…. for the first time in years. New to the country and without insurance, the ER intake nurse was reticent to tend to her. Normandie screamed, “Please help me! I’m somebody’s daughter! I’m somebody’s mother!” But the bureaucratic medical staff bellowed, “Nope. Back of the line!” She asserts, “Everything that could go wrong, did. I didn’t have a bridge in my nose, they didn’t get me a plastic surgeon. They ended up gluing the gravel from the fall into my nose, which then got infected.”

The pretty porcelain façade of Normandie Keith White crumbled, and with it her marriage, modeling career, and financial footing. Some members of the jetset that she called “friends” faded out. Her toddler son was so scared of her stitches and bruises that he asked her to wear a costume Ironman mask.

From Darkness

Normandie’s soul-sister Sadie Turner came to live in her guesthouse atop La Brea in the Hollywood Hills. At 3:30 am Sadie would scurry down the driveway. Normandie recalls, “I thought that maybe she was going partying so I waddled over in my Ironman mask to ask if she was ok.” Sadie responded, “Am I ok? Are YOU ok?!” Then she explained, “I’m going to Morning Sadhana. It’s Kundalini Yoga. Do you want to come?” Normandie exclaimed, “I tried that in London. You mean I can be there in the dark and nobody is going to see me?! Yyyeeeeaaa I want to come.”

The next morning, just before 4 am, the two entered Golden Bridge Yoga in Hollywood. Normandie recounts, “I remember walking in the door for the first time and it was so dark. And it was so still. The feeling that was in the building, seeing vividly the energy that was in the air, and the colors that surrounded it.

Normandie Keith Meditation

Normandie Keith photographed by Cheryl Fox. Clothing by Lavaloka

As the dawn rose, we were chanting. I knew every mantra of the Aquarian Sadhana. Everything was in me. I felt that I had always been there. Aside from having my son, it was the most beautiful experience in my life. This feeling of complete wholeness, that this is what I needed to do, and this is what I needed to be. I remember looking up on the stage, and seeing the man who was leading the sadhana. And I said to myself, ‘I will lead this. I know this; I know this in every part of my being.’”

Sadhana ended at 7 am. Normandie stayed for the next class, and the class after that, until the doors closed that evening, and back at dawn the next day. She signed up for Tej Kaur Khalsa’s teacher training that began the following week. She laughs, “Finn was being dragged to Golden Bridge every three seconds.”

When the Student is Ready

Grateful for the refuge, the well-mannered, former model wanted to send a “thank you” note to the studio owner. She discovered that it was Gurmukh Kaur Khalsa, the woman in the turban who had flashed on her TV screen with Cindy Crawford four years before. The wise crone was away in Rishikesh, India, for many months. Then one day while in Golden Bridge, Normandie chokes back tears, “I was walking up the stairs, and Gurmukh was walking down and she said, ‘You’re Normandie!’

I knew her. I mean I knew her deeply. It was like coming home to your mother. There’s something so magical about her. She’s a fairy, or a pixie, or an elf, and then she’s the biggest queen and goddess and saint. And then she’s a human, in this tiny body. Like the genie in the bottle. There was so much that radiated from her. Her aura, her energetic being, spoke to the deepest parts of me that hadn’t been nurtured properly, that hadn’t been called home. I know I am far from the first person who has been transformed by her without saying a word, but when you’re in the presence of grace, this happens.”

Over the course of nearly a decade, the two developed the type of relationship that can only be described as dharmic. “I have been so incredibly blessed by her!” Normandie weeps, “I’ve taught with her, and I have had the most fun with her, the hardest times, and the most transformative teachings. She’s been not only my teacher, but my incredible friend.”

For many years, Gurmukh and her husband, Gurushabd Singh lived in Normandie’s guest house, atop La Brea. It was the same one Sadie stayed when she first brought Normandie to sadhana that dark morning. Normandie revels in sincere reverence for her surrogate family saying, “Gurushabd has been protective and kind, and always a solid voice for me. And their daughter Wah is like my sister. She is someone that I value so deeply for her counsel and her friendship.”

Thousands of practitioners from all over the world considered Golden Bridge to be a sacred site of pilgrimage, transformation, learning, service, and community. When it closed its’ doors in 2015, it devastated the hundreds who oriented their daily lives around it. “We were like rudderless ships,” Normandie reflects, “It’s been tough, but it’s given me the lesson that you carry your temple with you. Your sanctuary is within yourself, and you bring yourself back home, by your thoughts, by your breath, by your actions. You can’t depend on a physical roof.”

Normandie Keith

Normandie Keith photographed by Cheryl Fox

The Student becomes a Teacher

Alhough Normandie had been teaching and leading sadhana for many years, the studio closing kicked her out of the metaphysical nest. She expanded her teaching beyond those walls with an active private clientele, retreats and workshops, classes at Wanderlust Hollywood, Soho House Malibu, Unplug Meditation and Yoga West, and her dedication to service work at Blessed Sacrament Jesuit Parish in Hollywood with people who are homeless. She also has two online programs on Yogaglo: Kundalini 101 and Morning Ritual: Wake Up to Create Your Day.

These programs and initiatives create a safe space for students to remove their own “masks of illusion” (without the severity of falling in a drain pipe). Through her teachings, Normandie inspires others to reveal their own true selves.

Normandie Keith

Normandie Keith photographed by Cheryl Fox. Tunic by Raj Wear. Necklace by Darshan Sacred Jewelry.

The Lighthouse

One of Ms. Keith’s favorite parables of Yogi Bhajan’s is that of a lighthouse. She teaches, “What the lighthouse is, is a beacon. A lighthouse doesn’t leave its post and go out and rescue one ship. In doing that, all of the other ships would get lost. A lighthouse, it stays rock steady, it stays firmly rooted, and it beckons everyone home. It leads by example.”

During her birthday week last year, Normandie was as spastic as any single mother driving around town in legendary LA traffic. Privates, studio classes, her son’s football games and studies, service with people who are homeless, and her own sadhana. She didn’t feel very lighthouse-like. “Ugh! Ack! I have GOT to get myself to a yoga class!”

After the daily hustle, Normandie dragged herself into her house, where the Star Wars theme song blasted. She saw lit candles everywhere and two yoga mats perfectly aligned. “Uh, what is going on…?!” Her now 12-year-old son Finn jumped into frame announcing, “I know that you don’t have time to go to yoga, so I want to teach YOU a yoga class. This is my birthday present to you. I found a good mantra.” She laughs, “And ‘good mantra’ was Star Wars, but I was like,‘Ok, Yoda’s in the house! We got this!’” Like any proud mom, she cried through the entire practice. Her little candle burned bright.

Normandie Keith

Normandie Keith photographed by Cheryl Fox. Clothing by Lavaloka

Later in the year, a radiant, wise, and generous teacher led Kundalini Yoga classes at Coachella. New students asked about the Aquarian Sadhana and her spiritual name. Normandie Keith, calm, quiet, compassionate and still, responded humbly, “Dharam Prakash – it means one who travels the path of righteousness fearlessly and is lit from within.”

What the shopkeeper in the Bahamas had tried to tell her all those lifetimes ago.

More Information

Normandie Keith and her teaching schedule can be found at: normandiekeith.com

Cheryl Fox is a professional photographer and yoga practitioner based in LA: cherylfoxportfolio.com

Hair and Makeup by Kumiko Ando (IG @kumikohairmakeup)

Styling by Designer Venius Adams: venius.net

Clothing

Martina Sports Bra ($49) by Lavaloka (lavaloka.com)

Brooklyn Mesh Legging ($94) by Lavaloka (lavaloka.com)

White Tunic: Aphrodite by Raj Wear (patriciasill@me.com)

Select Jewelry by Darshan Sacred Jewelry (darshansacredjewelry.com)

 

 

The post Normandie Keith; Lit From Within appeared first on LA Yoga Magazine - Ayurveda & Health.

Remembering Lesley Fightmaster

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Lesley Fightmaster in Yoga Pose

Lesley Fightmaster in Yoga Pose

Tribute to Teacher Lesley Fightmaster

There are some people in this world who shine so brightly that when they are gone, the world feels a little dimmer. Lesley Fightmaster was one of those people.

Lesley could light up a room even when she was not physically in it. Life felt sweeter simply by seeing her smile on a computer screen, which is how she taught to most of her students. She was a mother, a wife, a dedicated yogini and yoga teacher, and an incredible friend.

Lesley took her first teacher training at YogaWorks in 2006. She was drawn to teaching because she loved yoga and was seeking community, having just moved to Orange County from San Francisco. It was in that training where she met some of her closest girlfriends – “the posse”, as they call themselves. Kim Haegele, who was one of her first yoga teachers in Orange County and later became a dear friend, says this of “Les” (as her friends call her), “Les had a huge, beautiful heart that held her family, friends and students in its embrace, and we all felt it. Her passion for yoga was evident in her teaching; she shined her bright light and enthusiasm onto her students and was, in turn, beloved by them.”

And beloved she was. Lesley’s rise to success was meteoric, but she remained humble along the journey. Shortly after her teacher training, she was hired by YogaWorks to teach on the schedule and led classes there for a number of years, including teaching their world-renowned teacher trainings. She even held a brief position on the sales and marketing side of teacher trainings, but it was her unexpected success with YouTube that led her to become an online yoga sensation.

Lesley did not set out to become a YouTube star. Her fame happened mostly through happenstance. In 2012, she and her husband, Duke, shot their first yoga video as an experiment. Duke had bought a new camera to film a screenplay and wanted to shoot Lesley teaching a yoga class to practice using his new equipment. As Lesley explained to LA Yoga Magazine in a previous interview, they uploaded it to YouTube “and promptly forgot all about it.” Her words perfectly capturing her humility and humor. Nine months later they were surprised to see that the video had received quite a bit of views and in 2013 they began to upload videos more regularly.

Lesley Fightmaster through a Camera

Since that first video posted, Lesley’s YouTube channel, now has over 600k subscribers. Her top video has garnered over 1 million views. Ever modest, Lesley chocked her success up to timing, but anyone that has taken Lesley’s class or knows her personally, knows that she was pre-destined for greatness, whether it would be through yoga, or not. Randy Allard, a member of “the posse” and former teacher manager for YogaWorks, Orange County told LA Yoga, “what I will hold on to is her warmth and smile. My heart is broken; truly broken.  Losing my best girl is just unbearable. She was a star. No question.”

At the beginning of 2019, Lesley started her own membership site called MyYogaPal. There she offers a variety of 90-day premium programs from beginner to advanced levels. Lesley was proudest of the community feature, “Gratitude Corner”, where people can practice actively expressing gratitude.

Though she has achieved much in her career, her greatest accomplishment is her children. Her two sons, Stone and Indy (Indiana).

Lesley Fightmaster Reverse Warrior

So, while yes, things may feel a little duller right now as the yoga community processes the news of her sudden passing, she is actually not gone at all. Her light shines on through her family and friends and through that beautiful smile that continues to beam for so many people online.

At the end of her introduction video on the Fightmaster Yoga YouTube channel, Lesley tells us that our yoga practice can create, “a loving, positive energy that will spread throughout (our) world” and that the greatest benefit of our practice is the community and friendships we form. She continues, “when you make positive changes, they affect everyone around you, making the world better because of you.”

Les, thank you for sharing your love and positive energy. The world is better because of you.

***

We would like to share Lesley’s final words from our previous interview, “Duke & I are very grateful for each yogi who practices our Fightmaster Yoga YouTube videos. We’re beyond grateful for every member of MyYogaPal. It is an absolute honor to be a part of each yogi’s journey – especially during this difficult time.”

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The Mindful Yoga Journey of Dr. Ingrid Yang

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Dr Ingrid Yang in a Yoga Pose
Dr Ingrid Yang in a Yoga Pose

Dr Ingrid Yang Photo by Bhadri Kubendran

Sharing a Mindful Yoga Journey as a Mindful Life Journey

The path to a meaningful life is far from straight and narrow. My professional career began as a stressed-out prelaw student-then-attorney, before I made the career leap to yoga teacher/studio owner in my mindful yoga journey.

While stepping away from law was a difficult decision, I realized that practicing medicine was my true calling, and the place where I could contribute most to the world. Even before I entered medical school, I knew in my heart that incorporating yoga could, and would be, beneficial and integral to how I would practice medicine.

Today, in my practice, I meld the wisdom and therapeutics of yoga with rigorous scientific investigation, creating the space for deeper healing and wellness.

Now, I am a physician and yoga therapist and two-time author. I use my skills as a former attorney to advocate for my patients. I am also an advisor for the tech wellness company obVus Solutions, where I design the breathing exercises featured in the award-winning minder® posture corrector + breathing coach app, lead health coaching, and host continuing education webinars for health professionals. It is an honor and a thrill to contribute to the world in such a unique and exciting way. And I have to say, gratefully, that I love my life. But a mindful yoga journey, or any journey, was not an easy path… It never is, is it?

Dr Ingrid Yang with Yoga Mat

Dr Ingrid Yang Photo by Bhadri Kubendran

The Path to Living my Purpose

Having participated in a few different careers, I feel I am truly living my purpose as a physician, advising and educating people on their health. I started practicing yoga because I needed it on a very personal level. Along this path, I had to ask myself really hard questions at times when the “right” answer seemed impossible to find.

In college, I was a type-A go-getter in New York City, full of ambition and energy. Yet, the stress and pressure I put on myself felt suffocating. I was anxious and rigid, both physically and spiritually. Luckily, a friend recommended yoga to help ease my emotional inflexibility. Yoga taught me that I could just breathe in each moment: I did not have to prove or accomplish anything. I could just breathe and exist. I had never felt so relieved.

In my medical practice, I have found that a blend of ancient and modern healing methods have proven to be highly effective as the Covid-19 pandemic crisis unfolded in 2020. As a frontline healthcare professional, my patients benefit from a unique blend of mindfulness, breathwork (pranayama), and yoga asana in ways that counter their unique challenges. I find that these techniques greatly benefit those who are suffering and recovering from the alarming effects of the virus and help create a deeper sense of calm, which facilitates healing.

A Mindful Yoga Journey Includes Breathwork

I believe that all my patients benefit from the inclusion of mindfulness and breathwork, and have observed that people generally experience more ease in recovery, both during their hospital stay and after they are discharged home. My hope is to see more of this type of awareness introduced to the general public, which is why I’ve taken on the role of advising tech-wellness company obVus Solutions on the breathing exercises featured on the minder app. It brings awareness to the general public on the importance of better posture and breathing, two components which are crucial to helping improve overall health. My mission is mindfulness, not just in fields of medicine and yoga, but for the wellbeing of our entire population.

My path as a physician and yoga therapist has allowed me to witness how a dedicated yoga practice, when made accessible to everybody, can truly change one’s path to wellness. My latest book, Adaptive Yoga, highlights a variety of physical and physiological conditions in populations who have historically felt that their disabilities precluded them from practicing physical yoga. The book illustrates variations and adaptations to poses, which provide therapeutic comfort and increased confidence to all yogis.

To that end, I teach weekend-long trainings on Adaptive Yoga, including at Prana Yoga Center in La Jolla, for both yoga and medical professionals. A highlight of the training is that it outlines the biomechanics of altered anatomy and physiology of numerous conditions and shows how best to adapt poses for these populations. The training also provides trauma informed mind-body principles and practices, which have been shown to help those with students lead healthier, fuller lives.  I am also presenting at the Global Yoga Therapy Conference, virtually, in August.

Dr Ingrid Yang in an Inversion

Dr Ingrid Yang Photo by Bhadri Kubendran

Cultivating Work/Life Balance

Despite all my responsibilities, I hold a healthy home/work balance high on my wellness checklist. As a yoga therapist, I understand first-hand how important a personal yoga practice is in helping to maintain this sometimes precarious balance. I like to get away to the LA retreat staple, Terranea, to practice yoga on the beach, commune with nature, and get away for quiet meditation while listening to the ocean waves. In my free time, I also turn to surfing, where I find solace in the mindfulness and presence of riding the waves.

Dr Ingrid Yang and her Mindful Yoga Journey with a Surfboard on the Beach

Dr Ingrid Yang Photo by Bhadri Kubendran

“Surfing is simply another form of yoga practice, and the uncertainties and challenges of wave-riding mimic those experienced in everyday life; we breathe and flow in each moment, and as life presents itself to us and we allow ourselves the time and space to be aware, we can see that we flow in sync with nature’s intentions.”

In all of my years working with people on yoga mats and in hospital beds, I have seen firsthand that burnout and exhaustion are one of the major causes of physical illness and disease. I believe in the restorative power of stepping away from the chaos of our daily lives and the power of mindfully setting the intention of self-care; on a physical, mental and spiritual level.

Retreats with Dr Ingrid Yang

Over the past few years, I’ve led yoga and meditation retreats in various destinations, incorporating wellness and healthy living practices on all levels. I hope LA Yoga readers will join me for either or both of two upcoming destination retreats currently scheduled: One in Portugal, September 2021, and one in April 2022 located in beautiful Playa del Carmen, Mexico.

If there is one thing that makes us feel more alive, it is travel. I find travel takes me out of my comfort zone and helps me connect with nature, as well as old and new friends. I love to experience different cultures, which is why I lead yoga retreats in different countries around the world.

The post The Mindful Yoga Journey of Dr. Ingrid Yang appeared first on LA Yoga Magazine - Ayurveda & Health.

Mindfulness Coach Donny Starkins

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Mindfulness coach Donny Starkins

 

 

Mindfulness coach Donny Starkins

CEOs Need Mindfulness Daily

The idea of mindfulness – practicing being aware of each moment, decision and action and how it relates to a healthier and more fulfilling life, has gained significant traction over recent years. More and more people are understanding the lifestyle benefits correlated to mindfulness.   And as Americans get back into their routine, there’s an emergence of adoption for the practice among an unlikely demographic – high-performing male CEOs, athletes and executive performers.

With a cultural perspective shift that has resulted from the pandemic, the power of living life intentionally is more evident than ever. Many wellness coaches are seeing an uptick in enrollment from executives, professional athletes and other high-profile career fields to learn more about mindfulness and find ways to incorporate the practice into their routines.

Donny Starkins: Passionate about Sharing Mindfulness

One such Los Angeles-based wellness coach meeting the needs of an expanded clientele is Donny Starkins. The former Division 1 athlete (baseball) made his own career building on the principles of his journey with wellness and sobriety. He has built a network of clients through his signature approach to personal development and mindfulness coaching. Starkins is seeing an increased interest from existing and new clients on the philosophies of yoga and mindfulness.

“There is still a core misunderstanding that mindfulness only applies to certain situations and this couldn’t be farther from the truth. I’m passionate about sharing the benefits of mindfulness and working with clients to identify the areas they can invest in their overall wellness – no matter their background.”

Cultural Conversations around Mental Health and Mindfulness Coaching

Starkins finds that there isn’t a one-size fits all approach to mindfulness. Many clients begin with his signature program “The Shift,” and then layer in additional practices, meditations and thought-processes to address the needs of each top performer. Starkins finds that the biggest challenge is having male clients initiate the need for coaching. This is happening more and more often due to increased conversations about mental health stigmas. “Society is redefining self-care – and it’s encouraging to see that men are now being encouraged to participate in these conversations. To be honest about what they need and be vulnerable enough to seek the life they desire through the hard work of self-discovery. Mindfulness isn’t solely about the destination but the journey and I love seeing my clients fully,” said Starkins.

Mindfulness: Popular Because it Works!

Mindfulness is not a new concept to the health and wellness industry, but it is one that has gained popularity due to its sincerity and overall benefits to those that practice. Whether it’s through dedicated meditation time, yoga, reflection or prayer, when you approach your life with a mindful attitude, you realize the interconnection of the universe and how everything fits in place. As that understanding grows, you feel a deeper connection and understanding for where you are in this moment.

Mindfulness coaching is created through calm, focused instruction which shares a lot of similarities with yoga. By highlighting peaceful energy that makes even the most difficult scenarios possible to work through, mindfulness practice creates an overall connected, grounded and inspired experience for all areas of personal development.

“The principles of yoga are proven to benefit the mind, body and soul. And I’m unable to be my best self on any day in which I’m not mindfully observing and sharing these principles that guide my life. I firmly believe my mission is to share this collective wisdom throughout the communities that I am a part of – everyone, no matter what their age, location or socioeconomic status – can benefit from learning about yoga,” said Starkins.

As the adoption of mindfulness continues to increase, there will be no shortage of opportunities to connect and share with those that are on their wellness journey. We’d love to hear about your experience with mindfulness and how it has positively impacted your life. To learn more about Donny Starkins Visit www.DonnyStarkins.com.

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The Teacher’s Teacher: An Interview with Sri Dharma Mittra

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teacher's teacher yoga 908 poster by Sri Dharma Mittra

teacher's teacher yoga 908 poster by Sri Dharma Mittra

A Teacher’s Journey: Sri Dharma Mittra

When we consider the story of how noted yoga teacher Sri Dharma Mittra became known as the teacher’s teacher, we would do well to begin at the beginning. Sri Dharma Mittra was born in the remote village of Pirapora, Brazil in 1939. One of five children, he and his brother Satya became enamored with yogic studies via books.

At 19, Sri Dharma Mittra enlisted in the Brazilian National Airforce where he served for six years. During that time he practiced bodybuilding, wrestling and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. In 1962 he won a national bodybuilding contest, and placed second in power-lifting. This same year, Sattya traveled to New York City to meet
Sri Swami Kailashananda (also known as Yogi Gupta).

Two years after arriving in NYC, in 1964, Sri Dharma Mittra met Yogi Gupta in person, and dedicated his life to the practice of yoga. He took every possible class with the Swami and his disciples. Three years later, Sri Dharma Mittra himself became a Sannyasi (one who renounces the world in order to realize God).

During the 1960s and 1970s Sri Dharma Mittra offered yoga asana lessons in the hotel ballrooms and public places where Yogi Gupta was giving discourse. With his teacher’s blessing, Sri Dharma Mittra opened “Dharma Yoga Center” in New York City in 1974.

For more than 50 years, the center has served as an international hub for classes, teacher trainings, and devotional study. Known as “The Teacher’s Teacher,” Sri Dharma Mittra has affected the lives of hundreds of thousands of yogis in America (and beyond).

When asking one of those students what they most loved about their time studying under the master, the student responded, “He would start every class reminding everyone to make every pose an offering to God.”

Sri Dharma Mittra the teacher's teacher

Sri Dharma Mittra photo by Joy Santos

A Conversation with The Teacher’s Teacher

What is yoga? Or what does yoga mean to you?

Sri Dharma Mittra: Yoga is the settling of the mind into silence. That’s what Patanjali tells us in the opening of the first Pada [book] of The Yoga Sutras. We have all of these beautiful techniques that we have received to help us in this process: the ethical rules, the Yogic practices, the physical exercises, the breathing exercises, meditation, Bhakti Yoga, Karma Yoga, et cetera Patanjali outlines the main ones and, if you have the karma to have a nice yoga teacher, they will instruct you in the practice. The secret though is constant practice. Practice, keep acquiring Self-Knowledge and keep trying to become firmly established in compassion. This will help to settle the mind into silence and put you on the path to Self-Realization.

How did you come to the practice?

Sri Dharma Mittra: When I was a teenager, my brother gave me a copy of a book he found called Days of Peace that described the state of Samadhi. It was exactly what I had been searching for all of my life up until then. Where I was then in Brazil, there were no yoga teachers available, so I had to be patient.

Eventually, my brother went to New York City and met there an Indian Guru named Swami Kailashananda — the American students called him Yogi Gupta, because that was his family name and it was easier for them to pronounce and remember.

My brother wrote me a letter and said I’ve met the person we’ve been searching for. Come here as soon as you can! I asked my mother’s permission, sold my business, left the [Brazilian] Air Force, and bought a one-way ticket to New York. The day I arrived, I met the guru. For me, it was like meeting G-d. I knew I had found what I had been searching for all of my life up until then. I committed myself to his teachings and the practice, and for me, that was it.

How did you become a teacher?

Sri Dharma Mittra: I met my guru in 1964. I then took every class every day with him and his swamis. In 1967, I was asked to begin offering classes at the Yogi Gupta New York Ashram both to the residents and to the students that visited for classes. I taught classes concerning the third and fourth steps of yoga: Asana and Pranayama. In 1974, I asked the guru’s permission to leave the ashram and start my own school. With his blessing, I opened the Yoga Asana Center in New York City in 1975 that eventually became the Dharma Yoga Center. I have been sharing the full practice ever since.

Sharing Inspiration with Students

You’ve been teaching yoga asana since 1967. When students come through the doors, what do you hope to pass down to them, inspire in them, invite them to ripen into, to become?

Sri Dharma Mittra: Even if the students only arrive wanting to learn a little bit about how to make the physical body healthy, strong and more flexible, I try to make sure they leave having always learned some other things as well.

For many people, Asana is what gets them through the door and often keeps them interested, but so much of what we need to understand is that we are more than this physical body — this pile of bones, flesh and blood, that is born, lives for a while, and then dies.

Asana is wonderful for helping us to cultivate a radiant state of health, but Asana is only one eighth of yoga. If our practice begins and ends with Asana, then we are not really practicing yoga.

What is most important is that the students can come to see themselves in all living creatures. That they can come to understand there is something behind all life that allows us to experience everything, but come to know that we are so much more than the body and the mind.

Sri Dharma Mittra on Teaching

In all of those years do you have a favorite memory of teaching, or a moment when you really saw the impact your teachings have had on the world?

Sri Dharma Mittra: What gives me the most pleasure is to see people of the world behaving better and better — to see the compassion steadily increasing.

I told a story to the students online just this morning how a couple of years ago, I pretended to have my dentures fall out of my mouth while I was teaching (I dropped a set of plastic novelty teeth on the ground). While most of the students were disgusted, one of them leaped forward to grab what they thought were my false teeth to hand them to me.

This person had developed wonderful compassion and reverence for the teacher — good qualities for the student of yoga.

Please tell us the story of your famous 908 yoga postures poster.(Technology and the rate something could spread were a lot different when you first made it) Were you surprised it traveled as far and wide as it has?

Sri Dharma Mittra: I had an idea in the early 80s to do something to honor my teacher and to try and provide a tool that would help people to make progress in Asana; where they could see all the main poses and many variations all in one place.

I bought a video camera, a monitor and a regular camera with a squeeze bulb trigger. I would assume the pose, check the position in the video monitor, think of G-d, squeeze the bulb sometimes in my mouth, spit it out, and five seconds later, the camera would take the picture.

I eventually had over 1,300 pictures. I cut them all out so they were just the image of me without the background and over time began to arrange them on vertical wires I had hung for that purpose with clothespins.

Eventually when I had 908 of them arranged in the way that seemed right, I went to a special shop that could print large images and spent most of my money having copies made. Most of the original copies, I gave away or plastered on bus stops to promote my classes. Whenever I went back to check on them, they were gone! People kept taking them because I think they liked them. We keep printing them ever since and people keep buying them, so that’s good.

How has yoga changed in America, and in the world, since you first started teaching?

Sri Dharma Mittra: With technology, everything is constantly improving — getting better and better. In the beginning, if I wanted a certain book, I had to write to an ashram in India for permission, then send the money and sometimes it was months before I could finally hold it in my hands. Today, every yoga book is for sale on the internet and it can be delivered the next day. The main ones, you can read for free online anytime.

In the 1960s, there weren’t too many people who knew much about yoga even in New York City. Today, there is a yoga studio on every corner and if you don’t find the teacher you like there, you can go online and find thousands more everywhere.

If you have a question today about anything, you ask Swami Google-ananda. Before you even finish entering in the question, he already gives you many choices for answers.

We have yoga mats today — all these things to make the practice comfortable. I can’t wait to come back next lifetime and practice yoga in a space station!

If you could impart upon young aspirants one word of advice, or one thing you would hope they would learn, what would it be?

Sri Dharma Mittra: The action of compassion is to place yourself in others. I would tell them to learn to see themselves in others — that’s a master key to everything.

This is a question I ask everyone, so thank you for your thoughtfulness in answering. Where do you think dharma meets free will? How much is predetermined, how much is in our hands?

Sri Dharma Mittra: Dharma is the Divine Plan. If you accept and believe in the Laws of Karma, then you see that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction; that everything we are currently passing through is a result of our deeds from the past. If you accept this way of seeing things, then free will is not part of the equation. We are here making decisions, taking actions, experiencing emotions, but we are doing this according to the Divine Plan. “Not even a single blade of grass moves without the will of the L-rd.”

If you believe this to be true, then every action you take is according to your Parabda Karma — the karma of this lifetime, and everything there is set, so the decisions we make, even the thoughts we think and emotional states we pass through, it’s all part of the larger process of purifying the heart and mind so we can eventually achieve Self-Realization, the goal of all life.

Is there anything else you would like to add?

Sri Dharma Mittra: Without Yama and Niyama, there is no yoga. It’s like spaghetti without the sauce. I have been saying this for many years and people usually laugh when they hear it the first time, but it’s true.

There are people in Cirque du Soleil who can do Asana better than any Yogi and there are pearl divers who can hold the breath longer. There are even people who can learn to concentrate the mind on one point without wavering to make great breakthroughs in science.

What transforms these actions into spiritual practice is a firm foundation of Yama and Niyama. Find a nice yoga teacher who can teach you these, who knows also about the main poses and breathing exercises and who can teach you how to sustain the concentration so it becomes meditation.

If we add the compassion full force to all of this, keep the diet, we are practicing yoga, and this will have the effect of transforming the way we experience life. Be kind to your guests and your pets. That is yoga.

Thank you for all you have done! I’m honored to interview you. Pranams.

Sri Dharma Mittra: Thank you for this great opportunity to share a little bit about the yoga!

The post The Teacher’s Teacher: An Interview with Sri Dharma Mittra appeared first on LA Yoga Magazine - Ayurveda & Health.

Sharon Gannon; Everyday Ahimsa

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When the global pandemic halted the whirling pace of the modern world, the populace turned its focus to the sanctity of life, the importance of health, and connectedness of all beings. These are ideals that Sharon Gannon has been living and teaching for four decades.

Gannon and partner David Life are students of Shri Brahmananda Saraswati, Swami Nirmalananda, and Sri K. Pattabhi Jois. They met in 1983, and co-created Jivamukti Yoga School in New York City’s East Village in 1984. The Lafayette Street location was not too far from early 80s Wall Street, the punk scene of St Mark’s Place, the fashionistas of Soho, and the crack-fueled crime that proliferated the era.

In the midst of the chaos, Sharon and David opened most classes by chanting “Om”, reading from the Bhagavad Gita and giving a short dharma talk before leading students through yoga asana series. Their hands-on adjustments, and soothing savanasas sent aspirants into other astral states. Sharon and David made yoga “cool” among the iconoclasts and struggling creatives who have always been drawn to downtown.

Some of the famous names included Donna Karan, Christy Turlington, Russell Simmons, Sting and Trudy Styler, and students who would go on to build their own yoga empires like Ana Forrest, Rodney Yee and Colleen Saidman, Dana Flynn, and countless more.

As the popularity of the studio grew, so did its locations. Jivamukti expanded across New York City, and into Luxembourg, Spain, Switzerland, France, Germany, Norway, Russia, Mexico and more, with a wildlife sanctuary and ashram in upstate Woodstock, New York.

The hub of this international movement became its flagship studio in NYC’s Union Square. The famed and fabled space was home to classes, teacher trainings, and kirtan events. (In fact, it was at a Jivamukti that kirtan wallah, Krishna Das began chanting publicly at their Monday night satsang!). Next to the check-in desk was a boutique that led to the Jivamukti-Café; a magic portal where those were meant to meet “randomly” did. Best friends, business partners, writers and publishers, actors and agents, husbands and wives, lovers, and more all laid eyes on each other for the first time (this lifetime) over chakra smoothies and macrobiotic bowls. The resulting miracles are too infinite to quantify.

The vegan cuisine, and meet-cute kismet were combined with literature about animal activism, and ways each of us can do our part. Sharon and David have long worked with (and been honored by) PETA, the Humane Society of New York City, Farm Sanctuary and more. And now, as a new generation is waking up to these truths, I’m honored to talk to the revolutionary Sharon Gannon about the foundational principles she has been living and teaching for most of her life.

Amy: What is a Jivanmukti, and how does one live the life of one?

Sharon Gannon: The Sanskrit term, jivanmukta means one who is living liberated. Jiva means individual soul and mukti means liberation. The most direct means to living liberated is to do all you can to contribute to the liberation of others.
You could say that a jivanmukta is an abolitionist —one who does not condone slavery in any way or form. They are free.

Amy: Why do you believe that a vegan diet is the responsible, kind, courageous choice at this time?

Sharon Gannon: The most responsible, kind and courageous thing any human being can do at this time is to dare to care about the happiness of others—all others. This would naturally lead to a vegan diet. A vegan diet is the simplest recipe for joy, for yourself, the animals and the world. In fact, to dare to care about the happiness of others in the broadest sense would not only apply to other humans and other animals but also trees, soil, mountains, rocks, rivers, lakes, oceans, air. All of the manifested world would help us human beings come closer to realizing who we really are. It would help us achieve the goal of life—enlightenment and liberation from samsara.

This expansive view would help us become enlightened by healing the disconnection we feel with the rest of life. We would come to realize how truly connected we are with all of life and understand that what we do to someone else we do to ourselves. When we poison the water we poison ourselves. When we treat other animals as slaves and exploit them we keep ourselves in bondage. All of life is interdependent. We humans are not the crown of creation. The Earth does not belong to us, we belong to the Earth.

Covid—the global pandemic is a zoonotic disease, caused by a viral pathogen that has crossed the species barrier. Such a mutation has occurred due to our violent mistreatment and eating of animals. There is so much violence in the world
today and most of it seems to be out of our control, but what we choose to eat is within our control. A vegan diet hugely reduces the violence in the world and the repercussions of that violence.

Amy: You’ve said, “”When people ask me why I don’t eat meat or dairy products, I often reply, ‘I just can’t afford it’. The expression on their faces is always one of incredulousness. “Oh come on—I don’t believe that” they say, to which I reply, “Well it’s true karmically.”

Can you tell me what you mean by that…?

Sharon Gannon: An explanation of karma and how karma works is presented as one of the important foundational philosophical teachings of classical Yoga. Karma means action. Every action, no matter if it is a physical or subtle action affects the reality in which we live. Everything we do will come back to us, eventually but inevitably. The person who understands this will be careful about the things they do, say and think. Karma works like this, for every action there will be a reaction.

Albert Einstein reminded us of this law of karma when he pointed out that space is curved. Whatever is thrown “out there” will find its way back to its origin. Personally I have a lot of unresolved negative karmas I am trying to deal with in this lifetime, so I can’t afford to load on any more problems if I can help it.

I’m already carrying a heavy load and trying to minimize my future suffering. I am thrilled that Patanjali, in his self-help manual, The Yoga Sutra, gives many ways to do that. For example, if you don’t want to be hurt, don’t hurt others, if you don’t want to be lied to, don’t lie to others, if you want wealth, don’t steal. And he goes on. Put in simple words, it’s the same golden rule that Jesus as well as many other enlightened teachers have suggested: “Treat others as you would like to be treated.”

Amy: In your book, Yoga and Veganism; Diet to Enlightenment, you give readers the steps to the aforementioned freedom, and a path towards becoming a jivanmukti via the yamas. Can you give our readers a run down of what the yamas are and how we can ascribe to them?

Sharon Gannon: Patanjali gives five directives called yamas for how to behave toward others, if we ourselves want to become an enlightened being (a yogi). Yama means restriction. The yamas refer to ways that a wanna-be yogi should restrict their behavior towards others in order to reach the goal of yoga. He defines each yama as well as provides us with incentives to encourage us to adopt the yamas as a practice. He does this by describing what happens to a person who takes these practices seriously. In my book I take it a step further, specifically describing how each yama relates to following a vegan diet. I will give some brief examples.

The Yamas and Niyamas and Yoga and Veganism

a) Ahimsa.

Means not to harm. Patanjali says that if you refrain from harming others, others will not harm you. What does this have to do with a vegan diet? When you eat animals you harm them, the environment, as well as your own health.

b) Satya.

Means not to lie. Patanjali says that if you tell the truth, then others will listen to you and the words you say will come true. You will be able to say what you mean and mean what you say. What does this have to do with a vegan diet? Deceit is used by the animal user industries to advertise and promote the sale of meat and dairy products.

We lie to ourselves. Even though some may acknowledge that to kill an animal causes the animal pain and it isn’t a nice thing to do, many justify it as a “necessary evil.” But when is evil ever really necessary? The truth is that we do not need to eat animals or products like milk or eggs. Biologically we as a species do better on a plant-based diet. Eating animals is not hard-wired in us. It is a learned behavior and that’s good news because what is learned can be unlearned.

c) Asteya.

Means not to steal. Patanjali says that if you do not steal from others you will be wealthy. When we eat a meat and dairy based diet it involves stealing. We steal the animal’s lives from them. We steal their babies. We take everything away from them. They have no rights, are given no freedom of choice. The very things that we value so highly for ourselves: freedom, liberation, respect, and the right to choose we deny others, other animals. The law of karma says, what we do will be done to us.

d) Brahmacharya.

Means not to abuse others sexually. Patanjali says that if you do not abuse others sexually you will enjoy good health. All animals that are enslaved and bred (raised) for food are sexually abused. Farming and herding animals used to be referred to as animal husbandry; these days it is called animal agri-business. Any way you look at it, rape is business as usual in this industry. Sexual perversion, child molestation and countless acts of cruelty can be found behind the closed doors of farms, breeding facilities, slaughterhouses and meat packing plants.

The mass majority of the public has no idea that this sexual abuse is going on and that the meat, milk, and eggs they are eating have come from sexually abused animals. Perhaps if they saw these hideous places of sex abuse, degradation, violence, blood, and gore inflicted upon defenseless animals, many of which are babies, they might become vegan. No wonder that in the US it is now a federal offence to take a camera and film inside one of these facilities.

e) Aparigraha.

Means greedlessness. Patanjali says that if you do not take more than you need, if you do not hoard so as to cause others to be impoverished then your destiny will be revealed to you. You will know your purpose in life, what you were born to do. Wow! Who doesn’t want to know that?

Our insecurity and greed has caused the devastation of the planet, extinction of many species of life due to starvation and disease as well as the displacement and impoverishment of other human beings.

For a human being on planet Earth today, eating meat and dairy products is greedy. Greed stems from insecurity and fear. When a person is afraid of the future they tend to hoard. This takes one out of the experience of the present moment and puts them into a chronic state of worry about the future. Only if you can drop into the reality of the present will you be able to glimpse the purpose of your life.

A vegan diet is a kinder choice for all involved and leads to a stress-free life rooted fearlessly in the present.

Amy: You have led such an extraordinary life, of lasting impact. This is a question, I ask everyone; where do you think dharma meets free will?

Sharon Gannon: The Sanskrit word, dharma, as I understand it, means to “fix in place.” Seen in that context, our past actions fix in place our future .

The law of karma tells us that our past determines our future. We cannot change what we have done in our past, but we can change what we do now…to a certain extent.
This is where free will comes into play.

Every action that we do, every thought, word or deed, plants a karmic seed, which under the right conditions will sprout, grow and bear fruit. The law of karma says that you reap what you sow. If you have hurt others in your past you are destined to be hurt in your future. But there are loopholes that are spoken about in the yogic scriptures that allow a person to free themselves from such predetermined results.

The trick is to find a way not to water (or fertilize) negative karmic seeds, so that they will dry up and never be allowed to sprout, grow and bear fruit in your future.

Two of those that I know of:

1. From Patanjali: Love, Bhakti, love for God, Complete surrender to God, As Patanjali says, Ishwara Pranidhanad va- PYS 1.23.

2. He also says later on in chapter four: that the karmas of a normal person are black, white or mixed, but the karmas of a yogi, one who has realized their connection to the Divine are clear. Karma-ashukla-akrsnam yoginas tri-vidham itaresam PYS 4.7

God frees His devotees from having to suffer their past karmic miss-deeds.

2. From the Bhagavad Gita: When you find yourself in a situation that triggers a negative response like despondency, anger, jealousy, revenge, or sadness, instead you decide with your free will not to indulge those negative emotions and instead, embrace the situation with calm discernment. In other words, you don’t react with negativity.

It was Arjuna’s predisposition to fight. He was born a Kshatriya, a warrior. But when faced with the idea of killing his own relatives and friends he became depressed and despondent and wanted to change his career and become a yogi.

But because he was in a “bad place” emotionally, Krishna tells him that he is not in the right frame of mind to be able to make such a decision that would alter the direction of his karma. So he must go through with it and fight. The outcome of the battle of Kurukshetra might have been different if Arjuna had approached his situation with vairagya, calm yogic discernment and really was evolved enough at that time to walk away and into the forest to live a life of a yogi. But he wasn’t.

The message for us all is to do our best to be free from negative emotions, not allowing them to determine our actions. We can start by not resorting to blaming and complaining and seeing ourselves as a victim of others or of circumstances and instead embrace each moment with love. Being able to love what is, allows us to truly exercise free will and move towards our enlightenment.

Amy: Thank You Sharon-Ji, Jai Sri Krsna

Sharon Gannon: Jai Shree Krishna.

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Yoga Teacher Ashley Shubert and Her Inspiration

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Ashley Shubert in a warrior pose variation

Ashley Shubert photographed by David Young-Wolff. Clothing by K-Deer

Yoga Teacher Ashley Shubert shares her inspiration and a motivational playlist.

Why did you attend your first yoga class?

My mom was really connecting in her yoga practice and wanted to share it with me. At the time, I was 12 and didn’t really understand the concept nor could I keep my mind or body still enough to finish a full class but I definitely wanted to make her happy. Boy, was I in for a ride!

Who are some of your mentors? 

Kumi Yogini was a huge inspiration into developing my practice and I was lucky enough to have her guide my first 200 hour teacher training. She has so much knowledge and is an incredible leader in the Krshna Community.

Govind Das of Bhakti Yoga Shala was a great mentor of mine. He is always very calm and collected and has such a divine grace about him. He comes from pure light, pure heart in a way that leaves you always wanting to learn more about yourself and your devotion to this practice.
Who or what are some of your influences when teaching?

I am huge on energy. I believe that I can feel the tone when I walk into the room and as a teacher I think it’s essential to gauge what is in front of me. For years, I walked in with a plan and sometimes it’s better to open my eyes and just serve my students.

I honor traditional practices, language, and technique of the ancient teachings, and I focus on making it modern and applicable to what is affecting people here and now. I try to bring timeless pieces of wisdom into the space in a way that makes sense with our current states, psyches, trials, and tribulations.

Will you share a playlist that inspires you?

Yearning – DJ Drez
Kabir 2 – Trevor Hall
Painting Greys – Emmit Fenn
Swarm – Boogrov
Lonely Lullabies – Kweku Collins
tbh ily – Chet Porter
Blue Willow Beats
Realla – Tokimonsta
Fall Underneath – Snakadaktal
Closer – Majik
You – Kyson
Any Other Name – Thomas Newman

Yoga Teacher Ashley Shubert

Ashley Shubert Photographed by David Young-Wolff wearing clothing by K-Deer.

What keeps you interested in teaching yoga?

It fills me up. I never know what I’m going to walk into when teaching a class, it’s the most rewarding experience time and time again. Yes, sometimes it can be challenging, but there is often just that one person in the room that I am showing up for.

What is your current go-to practice? 

Although I have many different places I go, CorePower Yoga has been my love since I began a disciplined practice. The combination of the heat and the environment has always brought me back home.

Ashley Shubert is wearing clothing by K-Deer. Photographs by David Young-Wolff.

Ashley teaches at Equinox Westwood Tue/Thu 6am, CorePower Yoga Brentwood Mon 6am, Mon/Tue 7:15pm, Sun 9am, Playlist West Hollywood Wed/Fri 6am and 7:15am, and at Kinetic Body in Brentwood Tue/Thu 7:30am. View her schedule online and learn more at: ashleyshubert.com.

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Mindfulness, Food, and Massage with Yoga Teacher Josie Kramer

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Yoga Teacher Josie Kramer Practicing at Tongva Park in Santa Monica

Josie Kramer is wearing tee by Tee Bra and Va Va Leggings by Revolucion. Photo by David Young-Wolff

Yoga Teacher Josie Kramer MA is also a meditation teacher, holistic health coach, mindfulness-based counselor, and massage therapist. She is the author of a guided meditation CD Body Love, Soul Purpose and the DVD The Yoga of Food: A Whole Person Approach to Eating. Josie teaches at Yogis Anonymous, LYFE Yoga Center, The Bay Club, and Life Lab: josieyoga.com

 

What does mindfulness mean to you?

To me, mindfulness means being fully engaged in the present moment with awareness, kindness, and non-judgment. It was extremely helpful for me to learn mindfulness from my own yoga and meditation practices and now I try to apply the skill to all aspects of my life!

How do you practice mindful eating in your own life?

In my own life, mindful eating is about slowing down and savoring the food I eat, honoring my body’s natural hunger cues, eating fresh foods that are nourishing for my body, and being conscious of the source of my food and it’s environmental impact.

What advice do you give people seeking to adjust their own eating habits?

I’ve found that people’s eating struggles are many and the root causes are complex and varied. For the most part, everyone knows to eat more vegetables and to eat less processed foods. The challenge is HOW to do this! Step by step, I help my clients become aware of and transcend the patterns that aren’t serving them. I teach them to listen to their bodies and to understand how their cravings, stress, and emotions impact their eating habits. Through meditation techniques, compassionate support, and intention setting, my clients move from an unconscious approach to eating to a more mindful, healthy, and balanced lifestyle.

What books or authors inspire you?

Pema Chodron is a constant source of inspiration for me. I just finished reading Eastern Body, Western Mind by Anodea Judith and can’t recommend it enough!

When did you know that you wanted to teach yoga?

I knew that I wanted to teach yoga only six months into my practice. The feeling was SO strong! The best way I can describe it is that I felt it in my bones…I just knew! I originally moved to LA to become an actress but found my true calling with teaching.

Where do you go in LA when you need to recharge?

I go to the beach, take a yoga class, or treat myself to a massage.

Where are some places that you practice?

I love practicing at the studios where I teach and I also love floating around, trying new studios and teachers. LA has so much to offer in terms of yoga! We are truly blessed! My favorite class right now is with Shelley Williams at YogaWorks.

What did you find meaningful about your first yoga class?

My first yoga class was the hardest thing I’d ever done physically. Honestly, I remember not liking it! It actually took going to many classes and trying different styles and teachers before I was hooked! What was most meaningful from the beginning though, was that yoga kept me coming back!

At the time, I was searching for deep healing in my life. I intuitively sensed that if I stuck with it, yoga would be a catalyst for positive change. What I didn’t know was just how positive that change would be! With continued practice, yoga became my medicine, my refuge, and my sanctuary. I experienced such a profound transformation in my body, mind, and spirit, that I felt genuinely called to share the magic of yoga with others.

Where did you study to become a yoga teacher?

I did my first 200 hour teacher training at Center for Yoga in Larchmont Village, which is now YogaWorks. I later completed a 1,000 hour teacher training at Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado.

Tell us where you teach now.

I teach at Yogis Anonymous, LYFE Yoga Center, Life Lab, and The Bay Club (Redondo Beach, South Bay, Howard Hughes).

For more information about Yoga Teacher Josie Kramer, visit her website at JosieYoga.

Yoga Teacher Josie Kramer is wearing jewelry by Laugh Live Love Jewelry (laughlivelovejewelry.com) top by Tee Bra (tee-bra.com) and VaVa Leggings by revolucion (revolucionla.com).
Photo at Tongva Park Santa Monica by David Young-Wolff: davidyoung-wolff.com

The post Mindfulness, Food, and Massage with Yoga Teacher Josie Kramer appeared first on LA Yoga Magazine - Ayurveda & Health.

Hala Khouri: Trauma-Informed Yoga Teacher offers Permission to Play and Be Present

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Hala Khouri Trauma Informed Teacer

Hala Khouri photographed by Sarit Rogers

 

Every time Hala Khouri leads her online or in-person trauma-informed trainings designed to inform and empower yoga teachers and clinicians to recognize the various ways in which trauma appear in the body, she assures her students, “The wound is the gift. And the gift is the wound.” The more time I spend practicing and training with Hala, the more meaning I uncover in this phrase, so much so that I’ve begun hearing myself say it to my own students. This phrase is the answer to our panicked SOS about emotional and physical pain, letting us know that the wounds that cause our suffering are the very things that can provide us with profound gifts we are able to share with others. For example, the “gift” of hyper-vigilance can also be a hyper-awareness of the suffering of others, an ability to attune and be empathetic. The path to this process involves looking inward, dancing with the shadow, and softening the edges so our wounds can begin to heal.

As a teacher, Hala skillfully creates a safe container for people to begin this process of healing. The phrases she uses can shift a practice. They include, “Bring a little tone to the low belly and let your lower back know, ‘Hey, I got you!’” or in savasana, “Bring your awareness to the parts of your body touching the ground, notice what’s got your back.” Hala provides her students with invitations to investigate a shape, or choose the version of a pose that is available to them. This method of teaching is liberating. Suddenly, students are given the sense of “I can” instead of “I’m not as good as…”

I first met Hala Khouri in 2013 when I was a student in the Awakened Heart, Embodied Mind teacher training she leads annually with Julian Walker and Jay Fields. Even before we met in person, I was inspired by the way she dedicates her voice for social justice along with her passion for facilitating positive change by educating others through workshops, teacher trainings, and public classes.

Hala Khouri Trauma Informed Teacher Next to Buddha Mural

Photo of Hala Khouri by Sarit Rogers

The roots of her passion for this work are seen in her own journey. As she says, “We begin by admitting that we do this work because we want to heal ourselves.” Hala was born in Beirut, Lebanon, where her father was a physician in a local hospital. Every day he was picked up by tanks and driven up a hill visible from Hala’s home. The family would watch, wondering if the next explosion would be his tank. Yet Hala felt protected by her family and her mother’s clever storytelling that shielded her from some of the terrors of war. The family got out of Beirut in 1976, shortly after the war broke out—Hala was three years old at the time. Although Hala says that the effects of living in a war zone has shaped her, she doesn’t feel she has sustained trauma from the experience because of how protected she was.

Hala’s family was able to obtain their paperwork and leave Beirut and her father soon landed a job in the US, a fact Hala recognizes was indicative of their economic, class, and educational privilege. Her awareness of social injustice, inequity, and inequality are integral to her work. Everything she does, be it direct activism or through her entertainment, is informed by this consciousness of injustice in the world.

In her late twenties, as Hala was finishing her Master’s degree in counseling psychology at Pacifica Graduate Institute, she was working with a therapist who was a Somatic Experiencing™ Practitioner (SEP). During her post-graduate traineeship, she realized the importance of including the body in therapy, and this led her to train with the Somatic Experiencing™ Trauma Institute (SETI), founded by Peter Levine. Hala has been a Somatic Experiencing™ Practitioner for 15 years; SE® provides her with the distinctive trauma training and tools she needs to train others. In addition to what she does through teacher training and her public classes, her work with people with PTSD and underserved youth gives her an ability to see and address the various ways in which trauma shows up in the body. Hala’s present-time awareness of her state of mind and body, as well as her ability to track her own physiology, allows her to be grounded and present. I think of her as a trauma ninja with the puzzle-solving skills of Sherlock Holmes.

Hala Khouri Trauma Informed Teacher Portrait

Hala Khouri photographed by Sarit Rogers

When Hala trains people to work in the realms of releasing trauma and promoting justice, she also encourages people to play. She reminds us that it doesn’t serve anyone if we stay in the red (stress zone) if we don’t have to, because there are enough people who don’t have the privilege to take a break from trauma or stress. In order to do this work sustainably, we have to nourish ourselves. Hala notes that all of her mentors have creative hobbies. Her go-to is to dance! She loves sharing this playfulness with others; even in her drop-in classes, there is often a random dance party.

Hala Khouri recognizes that doing yoga doesn’t mean you’re in a constant state of bliss. She sees how it can be used to bypass pain and discomfort under the guise of being spiritual. Hala shares that she used to to do this a lot using magical thinking to visualize her problems away. When she sees others doing this, she has compassion. Eventually she realized, “There is suffering in life. Yoga and meditation can help us cope with suffering, but we can’t avoid it. When we avoid suffering we also avoid the joy that comes from being present in life.” Though it was a tough awakening, it came with a sense of relief coupled with the recognition that all the ways she was avoiding suffering were the things that were ultimately imprisoning her. The bridge Hala creates is in an invitation for her students to be curious about their sensations and emotions, to notice what’s arising and passing and to meet it with awareness and presence.

Like many of us, Hala found yoga because it was good exercise and it made her feel better physically. She taught her first yoga class in 1999 as a sub for her teacher in New York after 10 years as a fitness instructor. Teaching yoga felt “… like being home…” so she subsequently pursued formal yoga teacher training. Hala learned a great deal from her mentors, and when they started practicing yoga, she also shifted away from aggressive exercise practices to more mindful ones like yoga.

Hala Khouri Trauma Informed Teacher

Hala Khouri Photographed by Sarit Rogers

Hala says, “Yoga is a tool for self-regulation.” This is connected to the work to release trauma that she and I are both learning. She also says, “Yoga teaches us to tolerate discomfort. It teaches us to get curious and not run away from our experiences. If I can inspire people to understand that, then I feel like I’ve done my work in the world because I know that running away is often what causes suffering, even more than the things we’re running away from.”

One of the ways Hala is committed to her work in the world is through the nonprofit organization Off the Mat, Into the World, which she co-founded with Seane Corn and Suzanne Sterling 10 years ago. They are in a process of constant collaboration, practicing both within the organization as co-facilitators and in their work with activists in training as well as communities they serve. When I took an Off the Mat Intensive, I was struck by how involved the three of them are as they continually explore and investigate their relationships with themselves. I can relate to their commitment to doing the work of releasing trauma and promoting social justice with intention and without the sound and fury. The goal is the same, no matter what “side” we are on – to be liberated from suffering.

When thinking about Hala, I am reminded of something I recently heard Rabbi Moshe Bryski say, “Unity doesn’t mean we become one, it means that each of us in our uniqueness come together to create peace.” Hala’s work is connected to compassion and justice for all, yet without the need for everyone to be the same; the inclusion of all bodies, races, abilities, ethnicities, sexual identities and genders in her work speaks to her dedication. We are unique and autonomous, but our goals are similar. We desire to suffer less, to be seen and heard and cared for, to have access to resources, to thrive, and to be supported and loved. Walking into a class that Hala is teaching is like coming home to a place where everyone shows up just as they are: it’s welcoming, it’s accepting, and it’s accessible for every body.

Hala Khouri can be found at Santa Monica Yoga on Mondays (all levels) and Fridays (Yoga for All Bodies) at Santa Monica Yoga. Hala’s website is: halakhouri.com

 

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Teacher profile Nicole Sciacca — Perseverance and Play

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Nicole Sciacca

Photo of Nicole Sciacca Wearing Uintah Collection by Jeff Skeirik

The arc of a life is not a perpetual upward trajectory. As director Baz Luhrmann said, “The real troubles in your life are apt to be things that never crossed your worried mind. The kind that blindside you at 4 PM on some idle Tuesday.” Listening to Nicole Sciacca, Chief Yoga Officer of Playlist Yoga, unfurl her tale from the professional dance world to injury, divorce, and starting over, I witnessed a woman honestly narrate what it means to be human. Her story is one of struggle, gumption, and the grit propelling her to get back up again. Her wisdom sees the troubles that blindside us can teach us, and Nicole is living testament to lessons well earned.

In 2003, at the age of 24, Nicole was in living in Los Angeles immersed in a thriving professional dance career. During an 11pm rehearsal, she herniated three discs in her back, putting her on a month-long bedrest. “I couldn’t walk. I didn’t have family here. I was alone in an apartment in Santa Monica trying to crawl from my bedroom to the kitchen.” For a professional artist who requires a strong, healthy body for both passion and paycheck, an injury can upend identity and unsettle mental and emotional stability.

Around this time is when she found yoga. Nicole says that her first yoga class was simply a sweat and a workout while she was looking for a way to move again after the injury. It was a two hour level 2/3 music flow class at Harmony Yoga in Redondo Beach with Chappell (Chappy) Foote. Nicole says, “I had no clue what I was doing and I left with completely pruned fingers. I loved it because it felt familiar in a way that reminded me of dancing but foreign because I really had no understanding of the language, postures, or breath. One of my dancer girlfriends liked to go ‘for the workout and challenge’ and I figured if I can dance through bloody feet and missing toenails, how hard can yoga be?” She found out.

Eventually, Nicole’s back injury healed and she returned to her life and livelihood dancing in feature films, commercials, TV shows, and on stage in live performances. Some of her noteworthy credits include Glee, How I Met your Mother, Austin Powers in Goldmember, Rent, The Haunted Mansion, Walk Hard, Get Him to the Greek, and campaigns with the likes of Nike, Harley Davidson, Pepsi, and Nationwide Insurance with MC Hammer. Over time, her professional dance career intersected with fitness and yoga instruction. (Nicole still dances professionally, including a recent appearance on the Netflix show Disjointed). She got married and had a child (Beau) and then got divorced. She opened and then closed a business (Hustle & Flow Fitness on Abbot Kinney). She suffered injury again. “I was doing deadlifts and I did basically the same thing as before. I was on bedrest again for over a week. I don’t know where I went mentally but it was unhealthy.” Nicole relived some of the same fears, sense of isolation, and disappointment that she experienced in 2003, yet this time, her circumstances were different. “I am a single mom with a four-year-old. I can’t lie in bed for a week and cry to myself and watch Netflix. That wasn’t an option.” Years of making her practice a priority helped her see what is temporary and to walk toward the light at the end of the tunnel.

Nicole Sciacca

Nicole Sciacca Wearing Uintah Collection. Photo by Jeff Skeirik

Throughout her challenges, Nicole asks herself, “What’s the lesson?” Her practice has taught her to sit in the unknown with curiosity rather than fear and she has discovered meaning in a quote she found that says, “Every obstacle introduces a person to themselves.” Nicole says, “As a dancer I spent a lot of time avoiding obstacles, trying to be perfect and being a people pleaser. You don’t learn without obstacles. You don’t learn without failure. My adult life has been a testament to that because I’ve failed at a lot of things but I’ve learned and made better choices the second go-around. I spent my young adult life trying not to fail, and then it was series of failure after failure.” According to Nicole, this particular tunnel led her to gratitude.

In reference to the first yoga class she took after her most recent injury, Nicole remarked, “I was in such a place of gratitude for coming around the injury. My sense of gratitude for my body and for the practice is overwhelming. I’m just thrilled to be here, to do a forward fold.” Injuries and failures stalling her forward momentum have become her most patient teachers. She’s been willing to look directly at the road closures and has rerouted destinations as a route to personal development, bolstered by the depth and wisdom honed through humility and practice.

Nicole Sciacca

Nicole Sciacca wearing Uintah Collection. Photo by Jeff Skeirik

Nicole’s formal yoga training emphasized discipline; she studied with luminaries such as James Brown, Alexandra Crow, Maria Villella, and Maty Ezraty. “James was my first yoga teacher; I completed his Yoga Poser teacher training at Equinox. In one two-hour practice, we only did down dog and child’s pose. All of our arms were shaking. He laid the foundation for me for hard work and authentic understanding of the practice. I fell in love with it and attribute that to his diligence. I understood the responsibility of what this was.”

As Chief Yoga Officer at Playlist, Nicole appreciates her teacher James’ words, “We have a responsibility to take care of the people that walk into our room and inform them, to give them space.” She’s doing this in the context of group vinyasa classes in a studio with concert-style sound systems blaring Tupac and Beyonce. “Music is so powerful. I’ve gone back and forth on what I like best [music and silence] and at this point I appreciate the value in both options. Breath becomes a soundtrack all its own and really helps settle and streamline the busy mind, however, I probably wouldn’t have been drawn to yoga without the ‘gateway’ of a music-based flow. As a dancer, that made sense to me. Now I specifically curate my playlists to create an arc, a musical ride that accompanies the movement.”

Playlist is “A doorway for folks who may have never stepped onto a yoga mat.” Nicole says, “There is value in what we are doing, and people are changed for the better. I try to be as responsible with their bodies and the yoga as I can be.”

Nicole Sciacca

Nicole Sciacca wearing Uintah Collection. Photographed at Playlist Yoga by Jeff Skeirik. Hair and Makeup by JJ Jeffries.

For a woman who says her personal hashtag is “surrender in progress,” Nicole Sciacca embodies bravery, honesty, and compassion. She sees the lessons in all things and finds gratitude in the simplicity of moments like a soft savasana. “I feel so grateful to be able to make choices with a clearer vision and a more honest heart. I think all the things that got me to Playlist and that help me navigate being a single mom were all lessons that I needed. I’m a stubborn girl. Sometimes, it takes many, many times for me to hear the truth.”

Nicole’s arc might not look like perpetual upward trajectory but a life honestly narrated and boldly told seldom does. Her honesty is testimony to a practitioner living and breathing the journey. The light at the end of the tunnel is not the end of Nicole’s journey. She is in progress, under construction, and in transit, and for Nicole, her moment has just begun.

 

Nicole Sciacca can be found at: nicolesciaccayoga.com
She teaches at Playlist Yoga in West Hollywood: playlistyoga.com

Photos by Jeff Skeirik/Rawtographer: rawtographer.com
Hair and makeup by JJ Jeffries
All clothing by Uintah Collection: uintahcollection.com

The post Teacher profile Nicole Sciacca — Perseverance and Play appeared first on LA Yoga Magazine - Ayurveda & Health.

Living Loudly and Proudly – Rocking Gratefulness with NYC’s Wise Woman of Fitness Halle Becker

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I applaud all of these teachers.  You know the more people we can enlighten and help find a more peaceful way to walk on the earth.  I say power to you.  There’s just something really gorgeous to all this.

halle_becker_2_boston_yoga

Halle (Homegirl) Becker does not pull punches.  She wants the truth to “lead the way”, and has absolutely no qualms about passionately spreading that dharma.  She’s 54, lives “loudly and proudly” neither denying the process of aging nor necessarily embracing it but rather extracting its very essence and bringing that ripening forward into the light.  A bright light she has emitted for nearly twenty years holding court as one of New York City’s most beloved yoga and spin instructors.  Known for her Sweat and Surrender signature classes, don’t expect to sit quietly for her sermons.  Halle Becker teaches in layers – seamless layers of music, grit, kicks and perhaps most thundering…  heart. Never, ever scripted, either on mat or bike.  The only thing you can expect in a Halle class is to be swept up on a fantastic voyage over which the mind has only a remote chance of getting in the way.  When it’s all said and done, you are left stretched. Stretched in ways that you never saw coming.  A common refrain from her band of followers, “I don’t do spinning.  I do Halle.”

So just what is it about this gal?  A sort of grounding agent is she.  A little bit Maria (Von Trapp).  A little bit Keith (Richards).  Then toss in a hint of Patti (Smith).  In the Pali Canon, Adhitthana (one of the ten perfections) is loosely defined as determination or resolution.  Author and Co-founding Teacher of Spirit Rock Meditation Center James Baraz translates the term as “an unwavering persistence”, or “summoning our courage to meet anything”.  It’s a concept at the root of every overture Halle Becker serves up.  Be it on a yoga mat, spin bike or on retreat, nothing less than completely showing up will suffice.  Her demand comes not from a place of grandstanding or any desired guru status, but rather it bleeds from the tracks of her own personal sweat (and tears).  “She’s just an amazing woman filled with so much love.  She just has this instinct to kind of know and then she zooms in on it.  I am just amazed at how much better my emotional state feels after her classes. I just think of her as this motherland of love.” This from Debbie a longtime spin and yoga student.

Becker senses that along with her parents humor genes, she arrived on this planet armed with an innate sensibility for calling the shots.  Born in Cleveland in 1962 the daughter of an actress/costume designer and a high-powered attorney, Halle is pretty certain that her first words (at about two weeks) were, “This place is not hip enough, we need to move.”  Move she did to the storybook suburb of Wellesley, Massachusetts where she and her younger sister Barrie enjoyed all of the trappings of the bucolic suburb just west of Boston.  With a roof over her head, fine clothes and a pony outwardly she appeared to want for nothing.  Despite the privileged childhood, she confesses to always feeling as though something was missing.  Consumed by their careers, Halle is very candid about the parental detachment she experienced while sharing a roof with her mother and father.  She also refers to her parents’ animated personas as possessing the air of the sad/happy clown.  A Leave it to Beaver type home Becker’s was not.

With her parents divorcing in her pre-teen years she found herself grappling with mounting feelings of inadequacy…  Are You There God?  It’s me Margaret, by Judy Blume serving as an early Halle bible.  Her big personality and natural gift as a storyteller enabled her to mask these inner doubts and kept her sallying forth in her signature pluck.  She jokes that public speaking may have been in fact the only subject to which she excelled in high school.  That verve propelled her onwards through what she refers to as a “really long run including drug addiction”, “feelings of not being in the right body”, and eventually “a marriage in shambles”.  Her only real solace during these years came through her deep spiritual connection to animals (horses in particular).  She attributes the sudden (fatal) heart attack of her father (in her sophomore year at American University in Washington DC) as the curve which sent her swiftly tumbling along an arduous slope – a battle with which she would wrestle into her late thirties and early forties.  Throughout this extended period of numbing out she continued to fall back on her winning personality seeking out the comfort zone of what she refers to as “the big stage”.  This secret weapon fueled her as she somehow managed a successful stint in the corporate world as the CEO of Halle’s Comet a production company she founded which staged large scale events for the corporate world.  Riding high in a huge industry with clients such as Oprah Winfrey, Becker found herself featured in the Washington Business Journal and indulging in the many spoils of success yet still plagued with that looming shadow side.  Luckily for her during this chapter the practice of yoga was quietly rearing its head.

In a roundabout fashion, Halle’s passion for yoga was sparked by discovering Jane Fonda’s Workout video and book late in high school.  While she had always been physically active, something in the sequencing and teachings of these media pieces found her curiosities heightened.  With little rehearsal the early 1980s found Becker sporting leg warmers and teaching aerobics out of the back of a hair salon on Newbury Street in Boston with nothing more than these materials as her guide.  She swiftly parlayed that gig into a stint during her college years spreading the gospel of aerobics at a DC area fitness center.  All the while she could not even touch her toes.  A fellow yoga instructor at the fitness center, Jane Fryer, happened to notice, and began gently pitching her on the eight-limbed practice’s many merits.  Halle would have none of it.  “I hated it.  It was so boring.  Fast forward a couple of years and I’m in New York City where I take my very athletic yoga class at Equinox with no rigid rules and cool music taught by Michael Leconsczak.  I was like WOW!”  From there she never looked back eventually completing her 200 RYT training with Sondra Loring (of Sadhana Yoga in New York’s Hudson Valley) and leaving the corporate world to teach yoga full time.

Along with life in New York City came the truth.  The truth Becker finally needed to tackle.  Adopting a baby and on the verge of parenthood at 42, that ray of new life forced her to confront her demons and do the work to combat her addictions for good.  In doing so, she said farewell to an unhealthy marriage – a decision she and her ex-husband made together for the sake of the “beautiful being” (a daughter Maya) who had come into their lives.  With great conviction she credits yoga for the clarity it brought to her and the subsequent transformation to get clean once and for all.  “I had to find that quiet mind in order to get it done.  I had to dig deep, battle some serious shit.  Just take it on.  Yoga helped me with this and gave me the confidence to start to tell my story through teaching.  Let me be clear that I am extremely lucky to be here today, because the way I was going with my lifestyle, it was anybody’s guess whether or not I was going to make it.”  And with ongoing resolve, make it she has.

With her own battle scars ever present she arrived as an instructor on the New York yoga scene with a burst, boldly charging her students with “showing up” and trying to find the highest versions of themselves.  Speaking a language all her own and spouting pet names like “unicorn” and “sis” from her perch, folks quickly began responding to her no nonsense neighborhood banter.  From the get go her approach has always been to simply deliver to students a dose of humor, some rock and roll and that sacred space in which everyone moves on a level playing field. For Halle, It was never about being someone’s guru.  “Think of my classes as the Cheers Bar of yoga.  I want to welcome people to come in and find their seat.  Yoga will always have something to teach us.”

Despite no formal religious background, there is an undeniable preacher coursing through her veins.  She credits the likes of MC Yogi, Shiva Rhea, Raghunath and her longtime teacher Sondra Loring for keeping he inspired.  It’s a brand undeniably all her own and one that continues to engage the willing.  Beyond her longstanding tribes at New York City’s Earth Yoga and Pure Yoga East and her very own Home Girl studio, recent years have found Becker headlining at events like Wanderlust in Stratton, Vermont and also presenting at the 2013 Lulu Lemon World Conference in Vancouver.  The larger scale the setting, the better for her to connect in widening circles and share her own personal story.

It’s that Halle vibe that prompted Soul Cycle founders Julie Rice and Elizabeth Cutler to come calling in 2013 and take a chance on a female yoga instructor in her 50s.  Rallying the troops at that 83rd street location with its particular clientele is no small challenge to be tasked with, and she bears tremendous respect for the owners’ gamble in passing her the baton.  Even though she claims it took her six months to figure out how to clip into her pedals, this latest gig has for Becker proven to be a perfect extension of her yoga teaching.  In the saddle with the house lights dimmed and the music loud she again assumes the mantle of storyteller.  Those versed in both yoga and spinning can attest to the shared subtractive qualities.  On the bike, on the mat…  you are tasked with removing your “self” and diving deep inward to the present.  Adhitthana.  In salute of that inner work and as with her yoga teachings, Becker builds her message from her all important playlists.  A great deal of intention goes into crafting soundtracks which both sonically and lyrically reflect her expected audience – clans for which she she is eternally rocking gratitude.

I could write a chapter book of Halle escapades and antics, but your really must experience her in person to get the big picture.  When I signed on to meet Ms. Becker for my inaugural Soul Cycle class I relinquished all expectations and resigned myself to simply dive in to the mystery.  Well in advance of her arrival, the bikes have all been spoken for and street shoes have been swapped out for the ones that clip.  Devices are being stowed and other necessary adjustments made before the doors to studio B swing open.  And then Halle marches in with abandon and at once all is rendered electric.  Vivid and vibrant and sporting a hint of swagger.  The seas part as she begins her lobby greetings.  “Who is setting me up this morning?” she wants to know.  To that proposition a team of bright eyed crew members fall in swift synch and a Macbook is produced – a conduit for the almighty play list which will dictate the current.  Lights are dimmed just so and off to see the wizard we pedal… “Inhale, let’s.  Exhale, GO!”  Blasting off on a 45 minute odyssey – that signature mashup of drive, dharma, team and of course sweat.

From her in your face opening straight on through to the big exhale finish, among the rush and the push there’s an undeniable comfort of being held.  Over Simon and Garfunkel’s Cecilia, to PitBull, then Guns and Roses Sweet Child of Mine downshifting to Bruce Springsteen’s My Hometown (yes, My Hometown), we have collectively in under an hour broken on through to some other side.  Everyone pedaling, well-versed in some foreign vocabulary, launching themselves on the wave that is Halle.  Strangers for an instant all one, digging deep for some greater good.  As the climb progresses, Halle speaks of setting the tone for the rest of one’s week.  She speaks of the class, the 45 minute “rocket to the wilderness”, as representing opportunity – an exceptional opportunity to “show up”.  Our Monday, perhaps our week, has been forever altered with Halle’s imprint.  A continuous stretch of “ah-ha” teachings.  The gospel according to Halle.  As the class wraps I’m curious to see how quickly she’s engulfed in a swarm of pumped up disciples soaked and jockeying about for just another spot of “Halle” time…  She leaves me with one for the road trumpeting over the fray…  “Susan, hey we were always friends, we just hadn’t met yet.”

My retreat is not about acrobatics.  And I’m not going to shove spirituality down your throat.  But you are going to leave a different person.  We’re going to sweat, lie in clay, play some volleyball, maybe have a glass of wine if that’s your thing.

One of her favorite places to meet new friends these days is in beautiful Tulum Mexico where each February she leads a band of pilgrims in her annual Soar and Restore retreat at the famed Amansala resort.  It’s a retreat she has been leading for years with Loren Bassett and this season Dana Slamp and an experience of which she is particularly proud. Here among the Riviera Maya she and her teaching crew turn strangers into friends.  “My retreat is not about acrobatics.  And I’m not going to shove spirituality down your throat.  But you are going to leave a different person.  We’re going to sweat, lie in clay, play some volleyball, maybe have a glass of wine if that’s your thing.  It’s for people who want to step out and step back in (to their lives) a little differently.”  2017 marked the retreat’s sixth year – all of which have sold out.

And, from where does the “Homegirl” handle originate?  Again, it all comes back to telling stories.  In 2008 she created the brand as a moniker for the weekly drop-in yoga classes she teaches out of her home on the upper east side.  On any given Tuesday or Thursday morning her kitchen is pulsing with a blend of “super high rollers”, upper east side moms fresh from dropping their kids at school and a handful of students from Hunter College.  Before any mats have been unrolled, there is venting, sipping of fruit infused water, yakking about menopause and more.  Nothing is off limits.  And, that’s precisely why she built Homegirl, a kula of sorts.  In opening up her home she wanted to again create that colloquial experience around a common passion…  yoga.  Sacred space where things are kept real and stories can be swapped, safely.  Now in its eighth year, she remains very intentional in setting the tone for Homegirl.  Despite the swanky zip code, as common in all of her classes, status is of little interest.

As she saunters leisurely through her fifth decade it’s her thirteen year old daughter Maya, who she refers to as “a magical unicorn”, to whom she gives top billing.  Together they share a love of dogs and horses, and by her daughter’s side she is tutored daily in patience, kindness and whimsy.  As Becker says, “She shows me everything about myself that I need to work on.”  She is filled with gratitude for this second chance she has been given, and she and her ex-husband (with whom she is peacefully raising her daughter) make certain to tailor their professional commitments around her evolving needs.  The 50s in many ways find Halle “returning” as she likes to say.  Returning to the sorted life experiences which have ripened her and also tapping into a building level of confidence that she earned in the school of hard knocks.  In the truth that is her legend she now finds an overflowing natural resource.  And to her contemporaries still at it sharing their good words on the mat she sports nothing but respect.  “We may not be able to still do the advanced poses that the younger ‘kids’ can do, but we’ve got the stories and the truth and the years and the wise tales we’re willing so share.”  But in true Halle fashion, she continues to cheer for everyone. “I applaud all of these teachers.  You know the more people we can enlighten and help find a more peaceful way to walk on the earth.  I say power to you.  There’s just something really gorgeous to all this.”  She leaves me with a favorite line from Ram Dass which rather perfectly embodies (Homegirl) Halle, “Sis.  We’re all just walking each other home…”

Don’t miss Halle at (MIND, BODY) & SOUL CAMP this September in Stowe, VT.  A weekend exhale, with benefits.

Halle Becker: http://www.homegirlyoga.com

Spirit Rock Meditation Center: http://www.spiritrock.org

Jane Fryer: http://www.janefryer.com

Sadhana Center for Yoga and Meditation: http://sadhanayogahudson.com

Soul Cycle: https://www.soul-cycle.com

Wanderlust: http://wanderlust.com

Earth Yoga: http://earthyoganyc.com

Pure Yoga: http://pureyoga.com

Michael Leconsczak: http://www.intelligentyoga.com

Amansala: https://www.amansala.com

Loren Bassett: http://lorenbassett.com

Dana Slamp: http://danaslamp.com

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Yoga Teacher Thea Pueschel

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Thea Pueschel

Photo of Thea Pueschel by David Young-Wolff

 

We had the chance to connect with Yoga Teacher and Hypnotherapist Thea Pueschel about her practice. After shooting some photos at the Shakespeare Bridge in Los Feliz, we learned something about what keeps her inspired and on the mat.

 

What inspired you to take your first yoga class?

Confession: The first time I took a class, I did so out of curiosity and hated it (LOL). However, a few years later my health took a nose dive, and I needed something. Yoga was that something and it aided me on my healing journey. I was at a point where I could barely get out of bed just to get to work, and making it through my day was a struggle. During yoga class, the relief seemed almost immediate, and it gave me with great tools to cope. The first class that I took after I became ill is what lit my inner fire and inspired me to take yoga teacher training.

What motivated you to start teaching yoga?

When I took teacher training, I did it on the down-low. People kept telling me that if someone like me taught, they would go to those classes because they would feel like yoga is accessible and possible for even an average American body. The funny thing was that those people didn’t know I was actually taking teacher training at the time. I started teaching because there was a need for more diversity in body types and shapes as well as safe spaces to practice. People want to see people who are like them practicing.

What keeps you inspired to teach now?

My passion for learning keeps me inspired. The fact that there is always something new to learn about functional anatomy and how different bodies move inspires me.

Seeing the passion in other people’s eyes light up—for yoga or for life—also keeps the fire of my own inspiration lit.

Thea Pueschel

Photo of Thea Pueschel at the Shakespeare Bridge in Los Feliz by David Young-Wolff

Where do you go in Southern California when you need to recharge?

First and foremost: My backyard; it’s sacred and it is my own private Zen garden. The second place I reboot my prana is the Hsai Li Temple (in Hacienda Heights). Just sitting in the temple quiets my soul.

Is there a soundtrack you turn to for your own practice?

I prefer to flow to the sound of my breath, but if I am going to flow to music, my current go-to is music by Radiohead.

Do you have a go-to daily practice?

I teach a lot, so my personal asana practice varies according to what I am teaching. If I am teaching a lot of Vinyasa, then I am personally practicing more Yin. If I am teaching more Yin and Restorative, then I practice more Vinyasa. I find a balance keeps me on point and more engaged and inspired as a teacher.

What are some of the things that keep you practicing?

Practice helps diminish the discomfort and pain from chronic conditions that I have. It also makes me a better person in general. I am more pleasant to interact with and be around; it chills me out. I’m hyper, so I need that balance. Also, the more in my body and connected that I am, the more I can help my students understand their own bodies.

How do you build community as a teacher?

My classes are like old friends getting together. We are a community, even if it’s just for one hour, even if it is just once in this lifetime. I know my students because they know me: we are living breathing beings connected through our flawed human existence and our yoga practice. I also address all my students by name. I say their name at least once—if not more—before class starts, or during class or as they leave. This spirit of familiarity creates a greater sense of community and a sense that everyone belongs and we all know each other.

What three books are on your nightstand now and why?

None, I don’t read in my bedroom because I sleep in there. However, that wasn’t the question!  I do read books elsewhere in my house, and I am currently partaking of two: Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice and Roots of Yoga because the nerdiness is strong with this one.

What are a few movies that have been meaningful for you?

Cinema Paradiso because the light turning on in the little boy’s eyes when the theater opens is pure magic. I welcome that type of magic into my life. The mystery, the wonder, the gratitude.

Recently: Wonder Woman. It was uplifting to see a woman in an action role without being objectified by the male gaze. Gal Gadot is a beautiful woman, and the character is supposed to have unearthly beauty, but the story isn’t about that. It isn’t sexy; it’s  a classic hero’s journey. It is about a woman with a purpose.

For more information about Thea Pueschel, visit her website at: www.theapueschel.com

 

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Yoga Teacher Leigh Simran Brown

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Leigh Simran Brown Yoga Teacher in a Pose at the Lotus Garden

Photo of Leigh Simran Brown by David Young-Wolff. Clothing by Yashel Athletic

 

 
Yoga Teacher Leigh Simran Brown teaches at Yoga at The Raven and is a licensed spiritual therapist at Agape International Spiritual Center . She is also the Executive Director of Office of Reverend Michael Bernard Beckwith.

What inspired you to take your first yoga class?

In high school, I had a calling to practice yoga so I searched high and low for a yoga studio in DC in the 1980s. Literally the only yoga studio I found was a Kundalini Yoga ashram. I took classes (priced at a $4 donation) for an independent study in P.E.  I landed at home in my own heart!

Who do you see as your mentors?

I am grateful to have had so many wonderful mentors; primarily Michael Bernard Beckwith, Tony Guiliano, Noah Maze, Ravi Singh, and Gurmukh.

What keeps you coming back to your mat?

The joy and freedom of living in greater and greater inner alignment for a more radiant outward expression of me and of my unique gifts and talents.

Where do you go in Southern California when you need to restore and recharge?

Joshua Tree and the high desert as well as to the Lucerne Valley to meditation retreats led by Michael Beckwith.

What’s been a favorite recent getaway you’ve taken?

Rythmia Life Advancement Center in magnificent Costa Rica. Raw, pure beauty, alignment in nature, great teachings, healthy clean, organic, food, Dead Sea cleanse, yoga, and bike rides to the beach for a swim. Heaven!

How do you start your day?

I start my day with hydration and a flush. I drink 4-6 glasses of water and take empty stomach supplements. Maybe a tea and sit in meditation. Then I have a smoothie or hot cacao drink.

What is an example of your power breakfast?

One is a Smoothie:
Almond milk with a large splash or two of coconut water
Pure Synergy (the original superfood) green powder
Dandelion greens
Blueberries
1-2 Dates
1 heaping Tablespoons maca
Sun Warrior pea protein or Gematria protein powder
Avocado
Apple

Another is a Cacao Drink:

1/2 almond/cashew/or macadamia nut milk
1/2 rooibos tea
maca
vanilla
cinnamon
pinch sea salt
dates or honey

Leigh Simran Brown demonstrating Lotus Mudra at the Lotus Gardens.

Photo of Leigh Simran Brown by David Young-Wolff

Do you have a go-to daily practice?

Yes, I always start the day with a 31 minute meditation and prayer time. Depending on the time in the morning, I practice yoga based on what my body needs on a particular day. I teach yoga onTuesday, Thursday, and Saturday mornings.  I take classes the other days except on Sunday when I’m at Agape Spiritual Center.

What are some of the books you find inspirational?

Spiritual Liberation by Michael Beckwith
Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramhansa Yogananda
The Kin of Ata Are Waiting For You by Dorothy Bryant

Are there some movies you have seen that have shifted your thinking?

Some movies which resonate with my thinking include The Matrix, Collateral Beauty, and Food, Inc.

Do you have a personal soundtrack of practice or house cleaning songs?

YES!!

Journey Into Satchitananda – Alice Coltrane
Yuapunga – East Forest
Morning Yearning – Ben Harper
That’s The Way of The World – Earth Wind & Fire
Kiss of Life – Sade
Visions – Stevie Wonder
Rise Up – Andra Day
What’s Going On – Marvin Gaye
Heaven Is 10 Zillion Light Years Away – Stevie Wonder
Lifetime – Maxwell
Truth – Kumasi Washington
Infinite Mind – Sheila Nichols
Way Back Home – Prince
One Day in Heaven – Michael Beckwith
Summer – Lupe Fiasco
Enter One – Sol Seppy

Leigh is wearing YW bra and active shorts by clothing by Yashel Athletic Wear. Photo at the Lotus Garden at Echo Park Lake by David Young-Wolff.

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Jesse Schein: From Rock Star Yoga Teacher to Reality TV Star

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jesse-schein-la-yoga
 
I met yoga teacher Jesse Schein while on the set of a docu-series—the reality television show Yoga Girls (which airs Sundays at 8 p.m. ET on health-entertainment cable network Z Living). We were doing a photo shoot in the blazing late afternoon sun. Our jokes about feeling a bit out of place and our laughter helped create a lighthearted environment.
 
I was taken by Jesse’s infectious sense of humor and no-bullshit attitude. Jesse Schein is hilarious, honest, straightforward, witty, intelligent, and deeply passionate about yoga. And when she says ‘yoga,’ she’s talking about the complete practice—not just the asana.
 
Hailing out of New York from a “nice Jewish family,” Jesse has a degree in history and political philosophy. Throughout her education, she pushed herself to perfection, viewing failure as something that can’t and won’t happen to her.
 

How Jesse Schein Deals with Anxiety

Jesse will be the first to tell you that she deals head-on with anxiety. At the age of 25, she found herself in a state of “existential malaise,” as she puts it, facing anxiety, depression, and managing tons of health problems.
 
Jesse felt like she was in perpetual crisis. One of the things she pursued was acting classes at the Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute. “It soothed my anxiety to get out of my head and into a different character.” At the time, she wasn’t able to articulate what it really meant, but from today’s perspective she recognizes that the work with the Method, the breath, and being in the present moment were like yoga.
 

Jesse Moves to California and Moves Beyond Asana

She moved to California, the land of “daytime and not nighttime” where she dabbled in acting but ended up leaving that world because it felt fake to her. Then, while in her late 20s, she was chain smoking, anxious, and unemployed. Her roommate suggested she try yoga.
 
So Jesse, in low spirits, made her way into Seane Corn’s class at YogaWorks. She remembers thinking, “Here comes this gorgeous, strong, confident, blonde woman from Jersey who said it like it was, telling at me to do things with my body in a no-nonsense kind of way. I thought, ‘I could do this’!”
 
Six months later, Jesse had an ‘ah-ha’ moment while weeping on her mat. She fell completely in love with yoga, recognizing the deeper layers. Jesse dug in and practiced diligently for two years with Seane Corn and Vinnie Marino. She eventually signed up for her first yoga teacher training with Maty Ezraty.
 
Jesse describes herself as a “hot mess” and a “kiss-ass,” sitting in the front row, asking tons of questions, and embracing her type-A personality. She signed up for the next training as soon as the first was finished and then took three 200-hour trainings back-to-back until Ezraty told her to stop.
 
For the first year of her teaching career, Jesse apprenticed with Annie Carpenter, Laura Miles, Seane Corn, and Maty Ezraty. Ezraty groomed Jesse, providing her with a solid foundation and some sage advice: “For your first two years, you teach, you don’t sub out, you don’t travel, you show up, you build trust, and you create safety.”
 
Jesse continues to teach and practice with this foundation. She confides that as a teacher she prefers smaller classes where she can pay more attention to her students, and has recently chosen to give up prime time slots to accommodate this preference. Jesse says, “No one gets hurt on my watch. Period. What you say and how you say it affects students.”
 
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Jesse Schein on Yoga Girls

Considering this, I asked Jesse, “How did you find yourself on a reality TV show?” Simply put, she says, “I love television. It’s entertaining. I love making people laugh. I love reality television — it’s hysterical!”
 
According to Jesse, being on Yoga Girls feels like an opportunity to be herself in a social experiment, and she has been able to find humor in the experience. She said, “On the show I am extremely outspoken and I don’t hold back my opinions!”
 
The network lets her be herself. Jesse is 43 and has a family that includes her husband, son, and pup. She’s been practicing asana for 18 years and feels frustrated seeing teachers using yoga as click bait or as a charge point—it defies the “Do no harm” policy that guides her teaching. Jesse adds, “There’s a difference between what a quality teacher is and what the other crap is. I want the world to see the bullshit and know what it is.”
 
Yoga Girls has already caused a stir in the yoga community; many see it as a bastardization of yoga. Jesse is lighthearted about it all. Perhaps it’s her love of reality television or the simple fact that she doesn’t take herself that seriously. Regardless, it’s refreshing to meet someone who is able to laugh at herself with grounded grace.
 
Perhaps that perspective comes from her attitude, “I’m going to be a student for life. The beginner’s mind is what needs to be cultivated. I’m inspired to be in the present moment – the experience of ‘now-ness,’ to try to ease the suffering of being human. Some days it works and some days I have to take a Valium, but I have better coping skills now in my 40s.”
 
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How Jesse Schein Continues Her Practice

This is the work of the practice: it changes shape and form, it expands and contracts. It shifts constantly; it’s the perfection of imperfection. Jesse’s desire and willingness to cultivate this beginner’s mind is part of what makes Jesse, Jesse. She isn’t interested in knowing everything, she’s interested in being connected. Throughout her time on the mat, she has awareness about the evolution of her practice, the need for her body to slow down, and the ability to move to an internal teacher.
 
That said, Jesse knows it’s easy for her to get into a lot of “crazy” poses because of her body type and hyper-mobility. This came up when she was put on stage during her first teacher training and as she says, she was used “as an example of every single thing that was misaligned and wrong with my body.” She was mortified.
 
Jesse was told that the experience was going to make her an outstanding teacher, a teacher who can see every body in front of her and know what to do. Mortified or not, this provides some insight into the way Jesse teaches. Through her experience, she knows how to encourage stability in hyper-mobile students and how to coax more mobility for those who are less flexible.
 
This awareness also influences her ambivalence around aspects of the social media yoga scene which often highlights fantastical and out-of-reach asanas. She’s found her own way to navigate this territory. Jesse’s Instagram is hilarious; she riffs on herself and life in general.
 
Coming back to our first meeting — Jesse as reality TV show character, me as photographer — I reflected on our interaction and the shift that occurred during the shoot. When I asked her about it, she told me she stopped trying to guess what I wanted and instead moved into feeling her direct experience.
 
Jesse reminded me of something I said, “I’m here to celebrate you. Just be you and do your practice. I’m merely an observer to capture moments in time, not an illusion of perfection. It’s about what you feel in your body.”
 
When she recognized this, Jesse began to move like no one was there, not me, not the TV cameras. She said, “I started going inside to let go of the exterior and go into the interior.” It was Jesse, her breath, the air against her skin, the warmth of the sun, and her internal experience expressed outwardly through grace and presence.
 
This interior focus informs her go-to practices of meditation and the cultivation of stillness. It’s no surprise that Jesse’s personal practice has shifted from her busy pre-family days. She used to practice every day, sometimes twice a day—the “double dip” as she calls it. Now her practice might be a class a month, or asana practice once or twice a week.
 
Jesse said, “What I need to do changes; sometimes a bike ride is an asana practice.” Her mentor, Maty Ezraty, suggested that after 18 years of dedication to asana, it was time to focus on another limb of yoga. Jesse recognizes that meditation and stillness are more in line with what she needs these days.
 
In this moment, Jesse speaks with excitement about her passion for and dedication to yoga. She’s figuring out the path to be in a place of integrity with her values and what she loves about the practicing and teaching in the modern world. “Teaching inspires me,” she says.
 
Her clarity comes from her continued work with her mentors, such as Ezraty, as well as taking the time to be in stillness and meditate, including a week-long meditation retreat. She’s influenced by some of the advice she received there: “Remove what’s causing you to suffer,” and “Keep looking at what you love.” Jesse’s reality is hopeful and as a teacher, she’s looking at what she loves.
 

Follow Jesse Schein

Jesse Schein teaches public classes at YogaWorks, online at MyYogaWorks, and privately. In 2018, she’ll be at the helm of a YogaWorks 200-hour teacher training program, leading retreats, and facilitating a post-500-hour mentorship program. Follow her on IG at @jessescheinyoga.
 
 
Credits

This photo shoot was filmed as part of the the Docu-Series Yoga Girls, airing on health-entertainment cable network Z Living Sundays at 8pm ET.

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Yoga Teacher Dana Kraft Combines Passions for Education and Practice

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Yoga Teacher Dana Kraft in Warrior Pose

Yoga teacher Dana Kraft is wearing Kali sports bra—print ($49) and Jennifer legging—print ($69) by Will Lane (will-lane.com). Photo at Astronomers Monument at Griffith Observatory at Griffith Park by David Young-Wolff (davidyoung-wolff.com).

 

Yoga Teacher Dana Kraft

Yoga teacher Dana Kraft brings the experience of joy to everything she does—especially every class she teaches. Whether she’s teaching pro athletes, first-time yogis, or aspiring teachers, she combines her life-long commitment to being an educator with her love of yoga.

Tell us about the first yoga class you took?

The first yoga class I took was in Costa Rica with my teacher Marco Rojas from New York City. I had never practiced before, but my friend convinced me to go on a yoga retreat with him to figure out what I wanted to do with my life. I scrounged up all the money I had made the month before and went on the retreat. After this experience, I ended up changing my career from teaching high school to teaching yoga!

What inspired you to become a yoga teacher?

My passion for the practice and what it can do for me and my students as well as my love of teaching.

I have a Masters Degree in Education from NYU in English Education and Educational Theatre, so teaching comes very naturally to me. Before studying education, I earned a B.F.A. in Musical Theatre from the University of Michigan! (Go Blue!)

It made sense to me to take my love of yoga to the next level. I haven’t looked back since I became a yoga teacher.

What keeps you on the mat?

I remind myself that when I step on the mat, I will feel grateful after I practice. This keeps me going even on the days when I may not feel motivated to practice.

Yoga helps me to achieve inner peace, perspective, gratitude, and mindfulness. These are things I want in my life, and my time on my mat will always help me to cultivate them.

Yoga Teacher Dana Kraft in Tree Pose

Photo of Dana Kraft wearing Will Lane by David Young-Wolff

Where do you go to class?

I don’t practice at just one studio since I like to hop around for the teacher. I would say that I make it a point to most often go to Vinnie Marino, Rebecca Benenati, and Maud Nadler (YogaWorks), Schuyler Grant, Matt Phippen, and Cat Acquaviva (Wanderlust Hollywood). Noelle Beaugureau, at Liberation Yoga is excellent as well! My teacher training partner Jennifer Smith teaches an amazing restorative class that I go to every Friday evening. There are too many inspiring teachers out here in LA to name all of them.

Do you have a go-to daily practice?

I make it a point to meditate everyday, even for five minutes using a mantra and my mala beads. Most of the time I favor Vinyasa and Ashtanga, but as I’ve gotten older I make it a point to add more Iyengar, Yin, and Restorative at least once a week.

What’s your power breakfast?

Beaming’s Superfood Low-Glycemic Vanilla with Spinach Smoothie.

You work with professional athletes. What is something that you have learned from teaching athletes?

I learned to apply all my anatomy education into my physical teaching. Working with athletes can be intense and demanding. When I started working with professional sports teams I thought we were going to be in a quiet yoga room. That was not the case at all. I was teaching yoga on the basketball court during practice. It was loud and there were many distractions.

A lot of players I have worked with have had injuries when they came to me. When working in the sports industry as a yoga teacher, the stakes are very high. Although the players are all great people, they are also extremely expensive assets to the team they play for, so your anatomy, alignment, and sequencing has to be appropriate and tailored for their needs. If you are teaching athletes, make sure you have a really strong grasp of yogic anatomy and how to sequence for each player and any injuries they may have.

Read more about Yoga teacher Dana Kraft’s work with athletes including the Golden State Warriors.

What’s on your current playlist that lifts you up and lights you up?

“I Should Live in Salt” – (The National Cover) by Asgeir
“Into the Ether” by Leif Vollebekk
“Ultralight Beam” by Local Natives

Are there any books on your nightstand that inspire or motivate you?

The Yamas & Niyamas: Exploring Yoga’s Ethical Practice by Deborah Adele
Yoga Sutras
Pocket Pema Chodron

Yoga Teacher Dana Kraft in Twisting Chair Pose

Photo of Dana Kraft wearing Will Lane by David Young-Wolff

Where do you go when you want to rejuvenate and restore?

My new backyard; my husband and I renovated a home together and we have a beautiful oasis with a pool, Jacuzzi, and our own yoga studio! Also, Joshua Tree! I’m leading a retreat there in late February.

Do you have favorite hidden treasures in LA?

Frankie’s on Melrose. Best old school Italian food!

Learn More About Dana Kraft

 

Learn more about Yoga Teacher Dana Kraft at: www.danakraftyoga.com

She is wearing Kali sports bra—print ($49) and Jennifer legging—print ($69) by Will Lane (will-lane.com). Photo at Astronomers Monument at Griffith Observatory at Griffith Park by David Young-Wolff (davidyoung-wolff.com).

The post Yoga Teacher Dana Kraft Combines Passions for Education and Practice appeared first on LA Yoga Magazine - Ayurveda & Health.

Jivana Heyman Speaks about Accessible Yoga

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Jivana Heyman teaches Accessible Yoga

Jivana Heyman and students at the Santa Barbara Yoga Center. Photo by Sarit Rogers

When I met Accessible Yoga Founder Jivana Heyman, I was struck by how much he lives the values of Accessible Yoga. He is an example of these values in every way. His attitude, demeanor, and approach to teaching are all—dare I say—accessible.

In addition to his grassroots mission to advocate for the growth of yoga beyond the typical class experience, Jivana is the co-owner of the Santa Barbara Yoga Center and an Integral Yoga Minister. Jivana created the first Accessible Yoga training program in 2007 and in the years since, the movement has grown worldwide.

Attend an online Accessible Yoga Training

You can attend an online Accessible Yoga Training June 15-19, 2020.

What inspired your commitment to Accessible Yoga?

In the late 80s and early 90s I was an AIDS activist. I feel like Accessible Yoga is a continuation of my disability awareness work.

As I continued to teach yoga for people with AIDS and other disabilities, I saw the incredible healing and growth that people were experiencing through yoga. It wasn’t always a physical healing, but a healing of the mind and a connection with their inner self that was a privilege to witness.

Yoga has been my sanctuary for 30 years, and I feel like I owe a debt of gratitude which I’m paying through my dedicated service. Everyone is equally deserving of these incredible, life-changing tools.

Have you had an experience in one of your classes where you were able to work with someone for whom yoga was previously inaccessible?

Way too many to describe! Through Accessible Yoga, I have seen so many people find yoga who would never otherwise step into a yoga studio or take a yoga class.

I remember one woman who was in her thirties and had rheumatoid arthritis. It mostly effected her hands, which she couldn’t use, but otherwise she was relatively fit and flexible. She told me she couldn’t practice yoga. So I taught her some chair yoga, and how to transfer to the floor using the support of a chair, and she was so excited to practice.

I’ve also taught people with quadriplegia, who have no mobility. Those students get directly to the essence of the practice, which is to become friends with your own mind!

How has your work with Accessible Yoga changed your personal practice?

I no longer beat myself up for not “progressing” in poses and I’ve let go of expectations. At this point, I’m content with what my body needs to do on any given day. I use my asana practice to get relaxed and help me find comfort in a seated position for meditation. As I said, yoga is my sanctuary, not a place for competition or comparison. Don’t we all need a place where we can go to relax and take care of ourselves?

Has your work with Accessible Yoga changed how you teach every class?

I’ve let go of the idea of advanced versus beginner in yoga classes. To me the advanced yogi is the one who is at peace with themselves and offering service to the world. With this understanding, my teaching is based on giving tools to my students to explore their bodies and minds.

Do you have a success story about training teachers in Accessible Yoga?

Accessible Yoga formally began 10 years ago when I created a 200-hour basic yoga teacher training for people with disabilities so they could become yoga teachers.

My success stories include all of the people with disabilities or challenges who go out and serve others. Its so easy for me to feel sorry for myself when I’m not feeling well or when I have a problem in my life, but I have met countless people who overcome adversity on a daily basis in order to serve. I know a teacher with MS who has extreme fatigue. The only time she would leave her house each week was so teach one yoga class. Now that’s dedication!

What are some of the a-ha moments that happen in an Accessible Yoga event or training?

I think the biggest a-ha of Accessible Yoga is that yoga is not about the body! Yoga is a spiritual practice that connects us to our inner essence, our true self. This is the part of us that has always been there and never changes. The body and mind are constantly changing, but there is a part of us that has been the same since we were five years old, or 21, or 50, or 80. The essence of who we are is love. That same love is in all beings, regardless of our physical appearance or ability.

Yoga is designed to remind us of that unchanging essence. Yoga also allows us to release whatever is in the way of that experience. With this understanding, the path of yoga becomes more clear. We have insights and gain awareness of how to practice and teach in alignment with the essential teachings of yoga.

What advice would you give to teachers to help them make their classes more accessible to anyone who walks in the room?

Well, I lead entire trainings on that subject—but I would say there are a few essential points.

  • See all your students as equals, regardless of their physical ability. Each students deserves your respect and attention, and be sure that you are focused on what is best for them.
  • Approach each practice with a feeling of exploration and creativity.
  • See the students as your partners in this exploration, and guide them to find their own way.
  • Teaching yoga is like giving someone driving directions. You can explain where to go, but they have to do the driving without you. You never know what kind of potholes or detours they’ll find on the way.
  • If a student can’t do a pose the way you are teaching it, then that is a challenge for you, not for them. You are the teacher, and you need to have a deep enough understanding of the practice to offer an array of options for each practice. For example, you can do a cobra pose sitting in a chair, standing at the wall, standing in the middle of the room, kneeling, or even in bed.

The next Accessible Yoga training in the Midwest is at Yoga Buzz in St Louis, Missouri November 9-12.

The next Accessible Yoga training in Southern California is January 12-15, 2018 in Santa Barbara at the Santa Barbara Yoga Center.

What happens at an Accessible Yoga training or conference that is unique?

We focus on collaboration and community building. Accessible Yoga Conferences are not commercial yoga events. Instead, we are all gathering together to learn, explore and grow. Our presenters are people who inspire us. The participants are people who are out there on their own finding ways of serving people who may not usually have access to yoga. These include people with disabilities, chronic invisible illnesses, seniors, vets, or people who are homeless, just to name a few examples.

When we come together as a yoga community, without competition, we can accomplish so much. I’ve seen incredible things happen through Accessible Yoga. I’m so grateful for all of our Ambassadors and volunteers around the world who are building a new model of yoga based on accessibility, inclusion and loving service. It sounds crazy, but I think yoga can save the world!

Learn more about the Accessible Yoga Movement at: www.accessibleyoga.org.

The post Jivana Heyman Speaks about Accessible Yoga appeared first on LA Yoga Magazine - Ayurveda & Health.

Yoga Teacher Maeve McCaffrey

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Yoga Teacher Maeve McCaffrey

Photo of Maeve McCaffrey by David Young-Wolff. Clothing by Spirit Activewear.

As a Yoga teacher, Maeve McCaffrey is both generous and kind. She greets students with a smile when she teaches challenging yet clearly-instructed and well-paced classes. Maeve teaches at YogaWorks and Equinox.

What inspired you to begin teaching yoga?

I was exposed to yoga by my mother, as young as I can remember. But that wasn’t what inspired me to begin teaching, it merely made it familiar. Like most teachers, my desire to teach was born from how it made me feel. I was teaching a lot of intense group fitness classes — think step aerobics and kickboxing — during my final two years of college and my body was wrecked. I started a regular yoga practice to help my aches.

Of course my body felt better, but my mind was truly the beneficiary of my practice. I had an eating disorder at that time, like so many women in college, and in fitness for that matter. The clarity, self-love, and confidence that yoga provided for me was the tool that helped me move forward. This was very profound for me.

During this time, one of the studios where I was teaching offered a yoga teacher training. I love education, so I decided to jump in, not sure of my intention. Then I took another. I still wasn’t teaching yoga, but I was an enthusiast! I was teaching fitness classes at the Federal Reserve corporate fitness center in Boston and the director asked me if I wanted to introduce yoga to my students. That was my first regular yoga class. We all learned together in a way.

I tell new teachers to teach anywhere they can, to anyone they can. It prepares you for more advanced students and it’s infinitely rewarding to pass on knowledge.

How is yoga part of your overall mind-body-spirit fitness regimen?

There are clear physical benefits I attribute to my yoga practice: Finally holding a handstand, becoming stronger in a pose, or for me, gaining more control over loose joints. I used to be very flexible with very little control. I still hyperextend in nearly every joint and I’ve conceded some flexibility in my muscles but I am substantially safer in my body thanks to asana practice.

With that said, I do not approach my practice as my physical workout, even though it can include that. I do fitness workouts most days of the week and in that there are elements of yoga and the end result can feel similar (yoga is everywhere!), but for me they are unique. Yoga is my safe house. The breath. The slow down. The mental playground that happily stills. Quieting to stillness to be more in myself and love that person there.

What keeps you motivated in your classes?

The student-teacher relationship. Without the students, I wouldn’t be a teacher or have classes! What a gift that people show up and want to learn from you. In striving to create a safe space for them to develop and explore, you earn the trust to teach them new poses and concepts and witness a new level of love and self confidence.

I truly love teaching and I show up with an openness for something magical to happen at any moment. Whether it’s being the teacher in someone’s very first yoga class, guiding them through a change in their body (injury, pregnancy) or seeing them bring their friends or family with them to practice together, it is a truly special place to be. Flipping that, I love to be a student and hearing how a teacher explains a pose. How they sequence a class can send me skipping into my next class.

Who or what are some of your inspirations?

There is inspiration everywhere. I love animals. When I say this, I’m aware that I may I sound like a five-year-old and I don’t care. I love watching animals’ capacity for play, love, forgiveness, self care, their general beauty.

In people, I’m inspired by selfless acts, honest speech and kindness. I’ve had some amazing teachers whose love and passion for their subject matter swept me up in their momentum.

What are some of the songs on your current playlist for your own practice?

OM by Hippie Sabotage, Together by Phaeleh, Corners of the Earth by ODESZA, Immrama by Stellamara, Surrender by Purl, Take Off Your Cool by Outkast, Didn’t Cha Know by Erykah Badu, Deathless by Ibeyi.

What is your go-to practice that you do even when you don’t have time for anything else?

Pranayama. I love breathing. I practice everywhere. Dentist, in traffic, seated in private or on a plane. No props needed.

How do you start your day?

My day starts early and it is timed down to the minute. I sneak out of my bedroom by the flashlight on my phone so I don’t wake up my boyfriend, while one of my cats leads the charge to the kitchen and the other one is weaving between my feet as I try to make it down the stairs with my life. I feed them and then make myself tea, eat a small bite. Then I head back upstairs for general self-tidying to get out the door in 30 minutes or less. There is nothing superfluous in my morning routine. I sometimes engage the dream of decadently slow mornings. Someday perhaps, but for now it’s early morning classes and private clients.

What are some of your go-to places in LA when you want to recharge?

Cliche LA answer: The beach. I’ve been in LA nearly 15 years, and the our beaches simply never get old. I also really appreciate being home. After jumping around between classes and clients, I love being in my space with my cats and my man. It feels like a really gratifying exhale.

Where do you go to practice now?

I’m currently five months pregnant and for whatever reason, whether it be desire or schedule, I’ve primarily been practicing solo. When I get to class, it’s usually at YogaWorks.

What is your meditation practice like?

It is daily, even if it’s for five minutes. Sometimes themed like on gratitude or love or simply mindfulness. Other times I use an app or a recording of Yoga Nidra. Heaven.

What advice do you give to beginners?

Practice with lots of teachers and try different styles. You will find a teacher (or a few) and a style (or a few) that resonate with you. Stay open. Listen. Learn. Allow yourself to be a student. Have fun.

Where do you teach?

YogaWorks and Equinox.

More information on Maeve McCaffrey

For more information on Maeve McCaffrey, visit her website: http://www.maevemccaffrey.com

Photo Credits for Maeve McCaffrey

Photo by David Young-Wolff on the Santa Monica Stairs.

Clothing by Spirit Activewear.

The post Yoga Teacher Maeve McCaffrey appeared first on LA Yoga Magazine - Ayurveda & Health.

Yoga Teacher Ahmed Elaasar

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Yoga Teacher Ahmed Eleaasar

Photo of Yoga Teacher Ahmed Elaasar by David Young-Wolff

 

Yoga Teacher Ahmed Elaasar is dedicated to his practice and his passion for sharing the teachings of yoga with others. He has a perspective on yoga that comes from traveling the world. After traveling the globe, he decided that LA is the place he most wants to be. It’s a place where yoga flourishes and where we find community. Ahmed shares some of this process, his practice, and his favorite spots in LA.

Why did you walk into your first yoga class?

I was on a reconnecting with my roots trip in Cairo, Egypt and I needed an escape from the hectic hustle and bustle of city living. I didn’t have access to any of my go to sports: basketball, tennis and flag football. As fate would have it, there was a yoga studio just a short walk from my apartment so I decided to give it a shot! While in Cairo, I discovered that yoga gave me much more than the physical workout that my body craved. Yoga helped calm my mind and heal my injured body. I was hooked!

What inspired you to become a yoga teacher?

The desire to share the practice that had such a profound impact on me led me to become a yoga instructor and I’m thankful to be able to share it on a daily basis. I realize that many people are hesitant to try yoga because they think it’s not physically demanding, meaning not a good enough workout or they say they’re not flexible enough to practice yoga. My goal is to help dispel those myths and remove any misconceptions so that more people step on to the mat and make yoga a part of their weekly routine.

What keeps you motivated in your personal practice now?

Learning and growing keep me motivated in my personal practice. Each time I step on my yoga mat, my transformation continues.

Where do you go when you want to go to class?

The Yoga Collective in Venice is my go-to studio. They’ve built a community of dedicated yogis with wonderful instructors and I can walk there!

When I’m up for a drive, Modo Yoga LA on La Brea is my favorite studio in LA. It will always have a special place in my heart as their signature style “Moksha and Moksha Flow” classes are the classes that first got me into yoga all those years ago in Cairo.

Tell us about some places in LA you like to go to recharge?

That’s an easy one for me, the beach! One of the things that drew me to LA is year-round access to the beach. There is something so cleansing, calming and refreshing about the raw power of the Pacific Ocean. When I go to the beach, I get into the water, ride some waves and leave feeling like a new man. You can also find me, and my lovable Australian Labradoodle, Zizou, hiking the trails of Mandeville Canyon as a mini escape from the city.

Ahmed Elaasar with labradoodle

Do you have a favorite hidden secret spot in LA? Wait, you may not want to tell us!

Haha, yes! Although I don’t think it’s much of a secret. When I’m not doing yoga or teaching yoga I’m thinking about my next meal, so naturally I thought of food first! I love Gracias Madre in West Hollywood for delicious Mexican Food.

Yoga Teacher Ahmed Elaasar

Photo of Ahmed Elaasar by David Young-Wolff.

You’ve traveled quite a bit around the world. Are there  some places or experiences that made a significant impact on you?

The trip that made the greatest impact on my life was when I was 16 years old. My Uncle Farouk, invited me, my Mom and my sister to join his family in the Puerto Banus, Spain, for one month during our summer break. It was an eye-opening experience. Having grown up in a fairly conservative family in North Carolina, I was blown away by the joy with which people lived their lives.

From that point forward I knew I wanted to travel the world and experience different cultures, to see how people lived their lives, to experience their cuisine and to hear their stories. I pursued that passion and traveled the globe for 10 years doing international business. If you’re passionate about travel, I’d love to hear about your favorite places.

Does your dog ever try to join in when you practice at home?

Absolutely, his favorite is restorative yoga. I have to be careful when I do inversions because he gets super excited and thinks we’re playing a game.

Ahmed Elaasar labradoodle

Do you have a morning ritual to get you going to start the day?

Honestly, my morning ritual is still a work in progress. I try and take some quiet time in meditation to set the tone for the day and when my schedule allows, I prefer practicing yoga in the morning.The most consistent part of my morning ritual is a walk along the beach with my dog after breakfast.

What’s your go-to practice when you don’t have time for anything else?

When time is short, I love to get the blood flowing and body moving with a some half sun salutations. And when I’m feeling overwhelmed or exhausted I cherish time spent supported by props doing restorative yoga.

Is there anything on your nightstand that you are reading now?

I’m re-reading Trevor Blake’s Three Simple Steps. It’s a wonderful reminder about the power of quiet time, the power of thinking about what you do want (as opposed to what you don’t want), and the importance of setting intentions for your life. Give it a read and let me know what you think!

What’s a book that you would give to someone else for inspiration?

Minimalism: Live a Meaningful Life by Joshua Fields Millburn and Ryan Nicodemus. This book is a wonderful complement to my yoga practice. It has helped me identify the things in my life that are truly important so I can focus on them and remove things that are no longer adding value to my life.

To me, this ties in well to something I like to remind my students in class; when we show up on out mat we remove all the external distractions of our daily lives and we reestablish the mind body connection, we tune-in to our intuition which allows us to see our truth.

What advice do you give to people who might be intimidated by yoga?

I suggest they set aside any preconceived notions of yoga, I let them know they can always take breaks when they need to and I remind them that yoga is not a competitive sport so they don’t have to look like anyone else in the room; there is no perfect shape to achieve.

Another important tip for people who are new to yoga is to take the time to try different styles of yoga and different yoga instructors. It’s important to find a teacher and studio that matches your personality. Take the time to read the instructor’s bio and it should provide you some insight into what you can expect in their class.

Yoga Teacher Ahmed Elaasar: Find his Classes

Yoga Teacher Ahmed Elaasar teaches public classes at
TruYoga in Santa Monica, Tuesday and Thursday 7:15pm Yin Yoga

Ahmed is available by appointment for Private, Corporate and Team Yoga Sessions.
Learn more about Ahmed Elaasar on his website.

The post Yoga Teacher Ahmed Elaasar appeared first on LA Yoga Magazine - Ayurveda & Health.

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