Traveling Yogi

I spent the first two weeks of December teaching at Pranayama Yoga Studio (www.yogarockford.com), pictured at left. This great Iyengar Yoga studio is owned by my dear friend Jennie Williford. I met Jennie years ago in Ann Arbor at one of Laurie Blakeney’s teacher trainings (www.annarborschoolofyoga.com). We traveled to Pune together to study at the Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute (RIMYI) back in the fall of 2008. Jennie was again in Pune this fall and asked me to fill in for some of her classes while she was away. This was a super opportunity for me since I had just recently moved to Cincinnati and don’t have much teaching lined up here yet.  In the two weeks I was there I taught 18 classes and 2 workshops (and midway through the trip I traveled to Indianapolis to teach my monthly workshop). With the traveling to and from Rockford, to and from Indianapolis, and all the teaching in between, I was pretty tired after the two weeks were up. When Jennie returned from India she asked me if I was glad I had agreed to come teach at her studio and I said “most definitely”.

All the students at PYS were very welcoming and helpful. I went out to dinners and coffees after class. And many people gave me tips about plays to see and restaurants to try. They were a fun bunch that were clearly dedicated to Jennie, the studio, and Iyengar Yoga. I told many of them how lucky they were to have an Iyengar Yoga studio in such a small town. I live in a city which is probably ten times as big as Rockford and there is hardly any Iyengar Yoga here, let alone and entire studio dedicated to it.

I have never had a regular teaching gig at a studio which exclusively offers Iyengar Yoga. In DC, while working on my certification, I taught at various mixed method studios, community centers, apartment buildings, offices, schools, etc, etc. Then after moving to Bloomington, Indiana I mostly taught through the Parks and Recreation program at a community center.   I have been wanting to open a yoga studio, an Iyengar Yoga studio, for some time now. It didn’t make any sense to do that in DC, because Unity Woods (www.unitywoods.com) is there. And it didn’t make any sense to do it in Bloomington because our move there was temporary.

The minute my feet touched down on Cincinnati soil last July it occurred to me that since our move here is (probably) permanent my studio idea could actually happen.  I was immediately excited by this prospect but then quickly realized this is not possible. It’s not possible yet because I don’t have enough students (YET!) to support a studio. I will teach for however long it takes, 3-5 years maybe, until I have the students. This is the plan.

I have to work the plan the way I am told to work in my yoga practice. To put in the work and then let go of the outcome. I can make a list of poses I’d like to achieve, work on them, but let go of the desire to completely master the pose today. In Light on the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, BKS Iyengar says that practice (abhyasa) and detachment (vairagya) must go hand in hand. A practice without detachment/restraint could lead the practitioner astray. Iyengar says that through vairagya (detachment) the practitioner “learns to be free from desires and passions and to cultivate non-attachment to things which hinder his pursuit of union with the soul”. Wanting to open a yoga studio is not a bad thing. It’s what I am doing while waiting that makes the difference.

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Why I Love Iyengar Yoga, part 2

Before I list all the reasons why I love Iyengar Yoga let me first say that I think we (as Americans / Westerners) put too much pressure on yoga and yoga traditions. We want it to do everything and be everything to and for us. It must cure our bad back, make us happy always, make us sweat, AND get us a date. We expect all this while we are unwilling to do any real work. I don’t mean we should be doing more Chaturanga Dandasanas or more hard poses. I mean, we expect something out of yoga for doing nothing. We expect all This now, after our very first triangle pose.  It’s not our faults. Yoga has become so commercialized and so widely marketed that the concepts have been distorted.

I am the first to admit that the benefits of Iyengar Yoga are not as apparent at first.  The method is organized in such a way that the student starts with the fundamentals, the basics. We start with Tadasana and the other standing poses so that we learn the perimeter of the body. We learn how to stretch our arms and legs and where to place them in relation to each other.  From there the student learns the other categories of poses (seated, forward bending, inversions, backbends, etc). So at first, someone who has been lead to believe that yoga is for exercise, or strictly for a sensual experience (to make me happy), might not see the point of learning Tadasana. I mean, I am not going to trim my waist size doing Tadasana. But what the student doesn’t realize is that after working on Tadasana I can have a stronger headstand or even drop over to Urdhva Dhanurasana. We can still do all the “fancy stuff”…but maybe not in the first class.

The method works. I can say this with confidence because this has been my direct experience. I started with Tadasana and then built up from there. And the layers of awareness and depth just keep becoming more and more profound as time goes on. Of course, I have been practicing what I have been taught by my teachers, which has moved me along on my journey. Practicing does help but it is possible to reap some of the benefits of the method without practicing.

This has been the case with all certified Iyengar Yoga teachers. They are at first Iyengar Yoga students who have a home practice. They practice and explore what they are taught in class. The method is experiential. The student is taught to “go find out for yourself”. Try it and see what happens. It is this reason that the teaching is so excellent – particularly the senior teachers. The senior teachers have been practicing what they are taught, exploring and finding out for themselves, and then teaching what they know to be true.

The number one reason I love Iyengar Yoga is the quality of the teaching is excellent. I am not trying to toot my own horn here. I say this from the perspective of Aaron as a student, not as a teacher. The instruction I have received over the years has shaped and molded my practice which in turn has had a direct impact on my life. At first it was a direct impact on my physical body but then it became much more internalized.

Any student of yoga should be less demanding of yoga and more demanding of their teacher. They should ask about their teacher training and who their teachers are. They should want to know why they are being taught certain things and not others. Because our teachers are the reason we learn and grown in awareness of ourselves and others. Without a good teacher I am just trying to change the mind that I’ve got with the mind that I’ve got.

 

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Why I Love Iyengar Yoga, part 1

I moved to Cincinnati on July 15 of this year. A short time after I moved I surprised myself when I decided I wanted to incorporate a blog into my yoga site. I mean, I am not a blogger or even a big writer for that matter. I read other blogs only occasionally and am apt to forget they even exist if the author didn’t send me a notice or post updates on Facebook. Blogs are almost as cliche as yoga and a blog about yoga is the biggest cliche of all time. All this said…I am starting a blog. But why? The answer to this question is not exactly clear to me yet. (perhaps it will be by the time I am done writing here).

I think the impulse to start keeping a blog came after visiting many yoga studios in Cincinnati. When I was planning my move here I decided I would take a class at every yoga studio in town – to introduce myself to yoga studio owners, to meet lots of yogis of all traditions in an effort to build up my yoga community (and admittedly to network for possible teaching opportunities). So I have been doing just that. Slowly I am making my way down the list. Reading their websites, emailing the owners, and then scheduling a class to attend. I have not come to the end of the list, not even come close. There’s a lot of yoga here. There’s a lot of yoga everywhere.

Visiting even less than half of the studios on my list has been enlightening on many levels. The classes were very diverse in their approaches. Some studios heated the room, others did not. Some said a chat at the beginning, others did not. Some studios were fancy, others were not. All the teaching skills were varied. Naturally after seeing how other methods are teaching/leading their yoga classes I compared their approach to Iyengar Yoga. In the end I can say that no one is right, no method is better than the other. Everyone is offering yoga. However, the experience has reconfirmed my love and dedication to Iyengar Yoga.

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  • FREE Classes

    Ever wonder what Iyengar Yoga is all about? Come to a FREE class to find out!

    Sunday, March 4, 2012
    2:30-3:30pm
    3 Legged Dog Yoga Collective
    4575 Hamilton Ave, Cincinnati (Northside)

    Sunday, March 11, 2012
    2:30-3:30pm
    Clear Wellness
    2542 Woodburn Ave, Cincinnati (East Walnut Hills)

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