Field Ledger Archive

13,337 entries across the years, 2003–2026.

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September 2011

Yoga Sutras by Patanjali,

translation by Barbra Miller

2.2-2.3- Its [yoga] purpose is to cultivate pure contemplation and attenuate the forces of corruption. The forces of corruption are ignorance, egoism, passion, hatred, and the will to live.

2.7-2.8: Passion follows from attachment to pleasure, hatred follows from attachment to suffering.

On Joy and Sorrow
by Kahlil Gibran

Your joy is your sorrow unmasked.
And the selfsame well from which your laughter rises was oftentimes filled with your tears.
And how else can it be?
The deeper that sorrow carves into your being, the more joy you can contain.
Is not the cup that holds your wine the very cup that was burned in the potter’s oven?
And is not the lute that soothes your spirit, the very wood that was hollowed with knives?
When you are joyous, look deep into your heart and you shall find it is only that which has given you sorrow that is giving you joy.
When you are sorrowful look again in your heart, and you shall see that in truth you are weeping for that which has been your delight.

Some of you say, “Joy is greater thar sorrow,” and others say, “Nay, sorrow is the greater.”
But I say unto you, they are inseparable.
Together they come, and when one sits, alone with you at your board, remember that the other is asleep upon your bed.

Verily you are suspended like scales between your sorrow and your joy.
Only when you are empty are you at standstill and balanced.
When the treasure-keeper lifts you to weigh his gold and his silver, needs must your joy or your sorrow rise or fall.

Friday, September 23, 2011 · 8:00 am
March 2011

Good Ideas, Bad Ideas


Looking to put a cap on the week?

Want to start the weekend off right?

Need to be good before you can go be bad?


Happy Hour Yoga!

Turn Friday’s afternoon toil into weekend bliss in the company of your friends, peers, colleagues, and fellow practitioners!

How does a 3,000sqft roofdeck sound? Consider yourself invited to the place that’s been home to my practice for years: Balance Gym.

Get ready for 90 minutes of prana-pulsing blissed out vinyasa with strong influences from the Ashtanga and Iyengar traditions.

Mid City Yoga was started with the idea that yoga can be done anywhere– boardroom, bedroom, shala, or studio (be it yoga or crossfit). For many folks, the gym setting can be the most unconventional space of all.

Balance is the gym at which I discovered my love for yoga. It’s the place that provided haven and encouragement for me to come to my mat more than once a week. This is the place that gave me my first teaching gig. I love it here, and you will, too!

Okay, enough shmaltz. If my love for the place doesn’t sell you on it, the roofdeck at dusk sure will. The minute it heats up, thats where we’ll be. And in the mean time (or in cases of inclement weather), we have an awesome (indoor) studio at our disposal.

The fine print:

What: Happy Hour Yoga–a vinyasa steeped heavily in Ashtanga with cues and carry-overs from Iyengar

When: Fridays, 5:30-7p– all Spring & Summer Long

Where:

View Larger Map

Balance Gym Thomas Circle
1111 14th Street NW
Washington, DC 20005

Phone: (202) 216-9000

Closest Metro: McPherson Square

Price: $20 drop in, $59 monthly (includes gym access and all weekly yoga and non yoga classes)

Thursday, March 31, 2011 · 8:00 am

Bakasana on the Water

Ashtanga Inspired Vinyasa

When: March 13th & 20th
Time: 3:30

Ashtanga Yoga Center
4000 Ablemarle Street
Washington, DC, 20016

Join me for a special two week series of ashtanga vinyasa inspired practice. This will be a modified ashtanga sequence for both standing and seated postures with playful exuberance and challenging twists that are at times incredibly familiar and oft-times turned on their head [har har]. Not for first-time students. Standing postures focus on leg strengthening, hip opening and balancing. Students are also introduced to inversions like handstands and forearm stands for the first time.

Ashtanga Yoga Center mission:
One of our goals is to give the student, whether a beginner or advanced a home to practice Ashtanga. It is our intention to keep the teaching of Ashtanga as close to the way we have been taught.

To Access AYC: Type *7777 into black box, and proceed downstairs

Parking
Street
Public transport
Tenleytown-AU
Website
http://ashtangayogadc.com/

Saturday, March 12, 2011 · 7:00 am
February 2011

Dar Williams has a voice that most surely was crafted with elfin magic and a golden harp. Lest I lose my street cred, I won’t tell you how often this song moves me to tears.

Throw this song on when you’re doing pigeon, and you’ll see what I mean.

I dare you.

Sunday, February 6, 2011 · 7:00 am

Want to know a secret?

I start out every single one of my yoga classes with a dynamic warmup, just like how we start a CrossFit class at Balance Gym.

Around my parts, we call the warmup “sun salutations,” and there are as many different varieties of sun salutations from tradition to tradition as there are accents from location to location.

A ”dynamic warmup” implies that the warmup changes based on neccesity. It would seem to me that this is why you find different salutations– making sure that everything is primed that’ll be used, and not wasting time on what won’t.

Ask any lifter who has trouble opening up their chest what its like to do an overhead press, cold: not so easy/safe. How about getting a yogi to place their forehead on their shins, immediately after starting practice? Oft-times, not likely. This is why we heat the body up and acquaint ourselves with correlated movements. I mean, c’mon! It’s called a WARM UP!

One of the most common sequences that you see in salutations also happen to be two of the more common movements you see at the start of a CrossFit class: Urdhva Mukha Svanasana and Adho Mukha Svanasana. You probably know them as upward facing dog and downward facing dog, respectively.

Why so popular? These two little movements work to create a flexible, strong back, improves posture, firms the buttocks, stimulates your abdominal organs, improves sciatica, and can be therapeutic for asthma. Getting movement back into your chest, shoulders, improving grip/wrist strength, aaaaaaaand improved breathing? That’s a lot of bang for your buck.

Knowing how to come into and to exit this posture, though, is important to receive maximum benefits. So how do we do this warmup effectively?

Lets start with Updog:

Step 1:

Start out lying on the floor, flat on your belly. Walk the legs back, making them as long as possible). The feet should be hips distance wide, lining up the center of the foot with the frontal hip bones. Place the hands on the floor next to your chest, keeping the middle fingers pointing straight ahead, in line with the deltoids.

Step 2:

-With an inhalation press the tops of the feet and the palms into the floor. Raise the head and chest.

Step 3:

-Straighten the arms and lift the waist, hips, and knees a few inches above the floor. Pull the trunk and legs forward.

-Turn the arms out, widening the collarbones, and curve the trunk back between them. Bring the coccyx, sacrum, and lumbar forward.

-Avoid firmly contracting the glutes– instead, firm the quads and lift the kneecaps. Stretch the front of the body from the pubis, feeling as though your frontal hip bones were reaching for the backs of your wrists. Raise the sternum and top ribs. Take the shoulders back and press the shoulder blades (and the muscles around them) in.

-Take the head back, without constricting the neck or straining the throat. Gaze back to intensify the curve of the trunk.

What else should I know?

First and foremost: keep your low belly drawing in and up. This will help keep you safe!

Sometimes, there’s a tendency in this pose to “hang” on the shoulders, which lifts them up toward the ears and “turtles” the neck. Actively draw the shoulders away from the ears by lengthening down along the back armpits, pulling the shoulder blades toward the tailbone, and puffing the side ribs forward.

Your legs should do the work, not your back. To increase the strength and lightness of this pose, push from the backs of your knees along thecalves and out through the heels. The tops of your feet will press more firmly against the floor; as they do, lift the top sternum up and forward.

Be aware here: Keep the elbows and knees locked.

It is also important to allow the abs to relax during any backward bending pose. The back muscles are what flex here and a relaxed forward side of the body helps allow for this backbend to happen.

So– what now?

To transiton into “downdog“:

-first engage the legs, then the tailbone, then the sacrum. Try to feel as though you were moving from the pelvis. Let your thighs pull back and your hips reach up, rolling over five or ten toes at a go.
-Pull in the head and neck last. The gaze is at the belly button, and the ribs tuck. This is the way to synch the postures without putting stress on your neck and shoulders.

Try it. Legs first, then tailbone, then sacrum, then the relaxed, dangling neck and head.

Need more help?

Hands and Feet:

A high plank hold, an upward facing dog, and a downward facing dog all have the same hand and foot placement. Keep the hands in line with each other and the feet hip distance wide. You needn’t fidget.

The Transition:

As you move from updog, tuck the toes under (either by rolling over the toes or by flipping each foot), raise the head and trunk; bend the legs to raise the hips. Straighten the arms.

Finding Down Dog:

-Press the palm heels into the floor, stretch the fingers and clutch at the earth as though it were a globe. Wrap the back of your armpits down towards the mat as you roll the inner arm up. The inner armpit should feel hollow.

-Lift the pelvis nice and high. Keep the coccyx and the bottom of the pubis pointing up, pulling the pubis between the legs.

-Without losing the height of the hips, stretch the heels down. Move the thighs and shins back to bring the weight onto the backs of the legs and the heels. You’ll really want to feel the thigh bone pressing into the back of the leg. Spread the toes.

-Continue moving the trunk towards the legs. Keep the ribs anchored in, and let the collarbones widen. Relax the head and neck. If possible, rest the head on the floor (with active, unbent arms).

For Further Reading:

Yoga Anatomy, Leslie Kaminoff

Yoga: The Iyengar Way, Silvia, Mira, & Shyam Mehta

Yoga Journal, Updog

Yoga Journal, Downdog

Friday, February 4, 2011 · 7:00 am