Tagged with anusara yoga

Finding perfect pitch and harmony in yoga

This month the mythical goddess ‘Saraswati’ has been an inspiration in my practice and teaching. ONE of the aspects of Saraswati is that she is the goddess of music and in one of her many arms she holds a lute.

I often listen to music in my self practice, but this week I am attempting to rather listen to an internal ‘music’ in my body – it’s much more subtle but by tuning into it your yoga experience heightens and can become so full it creates an internal soaring symphony from the inside out.

Our mind or consciousness is the musician and our body the instrument it plays.  That way we find harmony between body and mind capturing that feeling of soaring freedom that listening to an exquisite piece of music can bring.

"In music, harmony is the use of simultaneous pitches" 1
"Harmonia - to fit together, to join" 2 (Greek)

Harmony is the combining of two or more pitches to create a union and new fuller sound.  A skilful musician has to learn to listen deeply to respond in accordance to fellow musicians and notes, finding that perfect pitch. Yoga is often interpreted as ‘union’ or ‘yoking’. A skilful yogi has to truly listen to his body to respond in his practice mindfully, finding that union of yoga.

How often do we block out the shrieking hamstrings just so we can ‘push through’ and impress our teacher or fellow students?  (Who doesn’t give a damn really). By deeply listening to our body we learn to practice with integrity. Knowing how to respond, takes learning. And that is why we are always learning.

And after learning to listen then comes the discipline. So we develop skill as a yogi or musician – refining our practice and building knowledge until it can flow in perfect harmony.

Every string on Saraswati’s lute is perfectly pitched – finding that right balance between taut and slack so that it can vibrate with resonance in tune with all the other strings.  So every fibre of being, every muscle, bone and organ has potential to find that perfect pitch & alignment  – a balance of engagement (‘muscular energy’) and stretch (‘organic energy’) . So we fine-tune the body with integrity whilst experiencing and being aware of our inner harmony.

1 - William P. Malm Music Cultures of the Pacific, the Near East, & Asia.
2 -Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, "A Greek-English Lexicon"
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26 November workshop

THE INNER FIRE – with Bridget & Sarah

Instead of going into complete hibernation and turning into grumbling bears this Winter, come out to play! Embrace the season by doing some fiery heart-melting, hip-opening, resolve-strengthening yoga, with Bridget and Sarah.

Yoga Place, Bethnal Green, £30

Contact info@yogaplace.co.uk for info and to book.

Kindling the fire in the hips and hamstrings
Sat., 26 November 2011, 2.30pm – 5pm

Draw in and thaw out with some flowing, heat-building vinyasa, followed by hip openers and forward bends.
Accept where you are in space, time and place. Embrace it by drawing inwards to kindle your projects, ideas and dreams.  This flowing yoga workshop has a meditative focus, working the dense and tense area of the hips, hamstrings and lower body – using asana, breath-work and meditation to find and fuel yourself over the wintry months.

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Take a breather

Sweeping through our landscape

This last week I attempted to simultaneously spring clean my flat and detox my liver. Both ended up getting a little messy. Something is missing in this equation: perhaps a little hard on myself and a few deep breaths might help…?

I grew up in the windy city of Cape Town, dominated by the notorious South Easter. A lot of Capetonians hate this wind but I always loved it. Not only was its power exciting and enigmatic, it also swept up all the smog and pollution in the city.

In a way, we can think of the breath as our own South Easter.

John Friend (founder of Anusara Yoga) describes the breath as prana: “Prana is the energy that sustains the manifestation of the universe. It is a finite energetic form of the Goddess Chittishakti, who is the infinite supreme creative power that pervades the entire universe. One of her forms is air, which surrounds us and fills our lungs as we breathe. The air contains prana and is distributed throughout the whole body by the act of breathing. Thus, prana fills us and surrounds us.”

We don’t need to spend a lot of money to cleanse our systems. We have our own South Easter to clean up the gunk – we can just open our proverbial windows and breathe the healing prana/air in deeply.

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The Heart of the Matter

In yoga people often refer to the heart – opening it, melting it, connecting with it – as if it were a lump of clay. I only began to really understand what that all meant when I did a workshop last Summer with John Friend in Paris.
The heart chakra is situated in the centre of the chest. The heart literally is our life force as well as the Scotland Yard of our somatic and emotional intelligence. When we align our head with our heart we find the triple ‘union’ that yoga strives for – mind, body and soul. Why do we want that? It makes you feel aligned, which feels, well, blissful.

Happy Heart

Your heart speaks to you. Sometimes it yells – like when you are really sad or elated. Most of the time it’s more of a whisper. So you need to actively send your head to your heart – think with and to your heart – the heart can intuit how you feel about a situation – giving another very personal opinion other than (sometimes irrational) brain rationale. Your heart knows you inside out.

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