What we happened upon was nothing like any of the videos I have watched online, where the sessions seemed focused on physical repetitions of movement conjoined with laughter, fake and real intermixing and ebbing about. This was like an acting class. A bad acting class. A bad acting class where the teacher told the students to walk through the space and speak to one another in gibberish. Now, I don't know about you, but this really seems like getting off to a bad start. If the purpose of this get together is to release the tension we so predominately hold in our bellies, then why would you start off with the most forced cliches which involve speaking? I know it's gibberish, but this still activates the brain in a way that's completely different than making cow faces or shaking your hands to imitate the force of a deep laugh. It requires some degree of thought, especially when you lead up to "now go around and yell at someone in gibberish" and "now go apologize to that person in gibberish while singing a country western song!" I feel that leading a group in such a manner ventures away from some base laughter concept, and into the disastreous world of insincerity and hey-world-look-at-me-i'm-gonna-be-a-star mentality so excessively overflowing in LA. The last time I felt so uncomfortable I was at the gyn's being told to "scoot on down." My friend and I found ourselves by the door during the gibberish sequence where we were trying to quickly decide whether we should tough it out and stay. Then someone next to us in the tiny room farted. We left.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
this is no laughing matter
What we happened upon was nothing like any of the videos I have watched online, where the sessions seemed focused on physical repetitions of movement conjoined with laughter, fake and real intermixing and ebbing about. This was like an acting class. A bad acting class. A bad acting class where the teacher told the students to walk through the space and speak to one another in gibberish. Now, I don't know about you, but this really seems like getting off to a bad start. If the purpose of this get together is to release the tension we so predominately hold in our bellies, then why would you start off with the most forced cliches which involve speaking? I know it's gibberish, but this still activates the brain in a way that's completely different than making cow faces or shaking your hands to imitate the force of a deep laugh. It requires some degree of thought, especially when you lead up to "now go around and yell at someone in gibberish" and "now go apologize to that person in gibberish while singing a country western song!" I feel that leading a group in such a manner ventures away from some base laughter concept, and into the disastreous world of insincerity and hey-world-look-at-me-i'm-gonna-be-a-star mentality so excessively overflowing in LA. The last time I felt so uncomfortable I was at the gyn's being told to "scoot on down." My friend and I found ourselves by the door during the gibberish sequence where we were trying to quickly decide whether we should tough it out and stay. Then someone next to us in the tiny room farted. We left.
Meditate on This...
Monday, February 22, 2010
Thursday, February 18, 2010
the biz of yoga...
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
if music saved my life, then yoga saved my soul...
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Sound Bathing....
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Yoga: cheaper than therapy + added benefits of tight butt
Congrats on your growing ability to do more floating and less thrashing as you cascade down the stream of consciousness. I think you're finally understanding that a little bit of chaos isn't a sign that everything's falling apart forever omigod the entire planet's crashing and evil is in ascension . . . but rather that a healthy amount of bewildering unpredictability keeps things fresh and clean. My advice is to learn to relax even more as you glide with serene amusement through the bubbling and churning waters of life.Courtesy of Rob Brezsny
Today I woke up sore. Still. Mega sore. My ass and thighs have made it difficult to walk at times the past couple of days. So, of course, I automatically skip my am yoga. Then as the day went on, I started to make all sorts of excuses to myself about not going to yoga at all today. "I hurt." "I have a flight tonight, I should really pack and get ready." "I'd rather watch a movie on netflix and waste an hour (two) on Facebook."
I go to class. I head to a mixed level 4:00 to a teacher whom I've never been to before. I recognize her and about halfway through the class I realize from where. A couple of years ago I went to an Immersion Week Workshop with Noah Mazé and this woman was next to me in class and really helped me out with my headstands. Super nice lady. Anyways, her class was awesome, and I got super deep work in with my urdhva dhanurasana. Nothing beats the high of opening your heart the world!
I feel wonderful now, and I knew that if I just got on the mat - I would. Yoga makes me so happy I'ma gonna cry.
Side note, I registered for an Inversion Workshop coming up soon with Noah. Check it out.