Positive Thinking for all

January 13, 2009

Building Strength

Whether you are dancing, skiing, skating, surfing, or doing yoga, you need concentration, strength, and skill to move successfully from standing with both feet firmly planted on the ground, as in Virabhadrasana I,   to floating freely, balanced on one leg, as in Virabhadrasana III.  Eventually, this movement will become an effortless flow, but it can be easier to learn if you pause halfway between the two postures to gather your strength and focus.  At first, you may also want to use a wall to help you balance.  By helping you stabilize, a wall can make it easier to focus on building the strength yo began cultivating in Salabhasana, and on developing an awareness of the position of your hips and shoulders.

 

Once you have practiced Virabhadrasana I on both sides, move to a wall.  Stand just far enough away from it so that when you bend forward 90 degrees at the hips and stretch your arms overhead, you can place your palms flat on the wall at the same height as your hips.  Check to see that your hips are directly over your ankle, so your legs are exactly perpendicular to the ground.  Then return to standing upright.

 

Leaving your right foot where it is, step you left foot back into position for Virabhadrasana I, exhale as you bend at the hip-s to bring your torso towards your right thigh, squaring and leveling your hips.  Keep your legs stable, bending forward until your lower ribs are almost resting on your thigh and your arms are at about a 45 degree angle to the floor.  Make sure your breath is full and even and that the bandhas are fully engaged.  Hold this position for five to breaths, building strength and stability.

January 9, 2009

Power Yoga for Every Body – 1

Good morning friends.  Some don’t believe that Yoga is a good power for our body.  They said that yoga is hard to perform.  Maybe at first you will you will have a hard time to follow, but as you continue practicing it, you will see the big difference in your life.  It helps a lot.  Like me I’m practicing yoga for a long time.  And it helps me a lot.  I will share you something about “power yoga” and I know you will like it.

 

The phrase “Power Yoga” generally signifies two schools of yoga.  Originally, it was coined as a synonym for Pattabhi Jois’s Ashtanga Yoga, to make it sound more appealing to an American audience.  But over the past few years, it’s also come to be applied to a fairly an amorphous, physically challenging style that consists of a flowing sequence of asanas (although unlike in Asthanga, the poses are done in no particular order).

 

This particular brand of Power Yoga, from Boston teacher Barbara Benagh, is closer to the latter school but actually doesn’t fit there very well.  The typical Power Yoga video isn’t terribly concerned with the finer points of the asanas: it’s primary goal is to keep things hopping sweatily along to build strength and endurance.

 

Ref: yogajournal

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