by BlisteredWhippet » Tue 16 Jan 2007, 18:06:45
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Loki', 'e')ric_b, I occasionally tweak my lower back and find that just hanging out in a forward bend (whether standing or on the ground) works wonders. Obviously you have to do it slowly and don't strain. Just bend and relax. I forget what's it called, but I also like being on all fours and slowly rolling my back up and down while also moving my head/neck in the opposite direction (so when you roll your back up, you point your head down, and vice versa). Very gentle movement that's mostly just a warm-up technique, but if your back is messed up, gentle is good.
Heineken, breathing is half of yoga. It's extremely important. I was taught to especially avoid holding the breath (with some rare exceptions). Breathing is as much mental as it is physical. Deep breathing can give you a nice "high" (for lack of a better term) and can help your body relax into the poses.
And thanks for the thread---I have a couple yoga DVDs that have been sitting around for a while unwatched. I'm watching one now. Not following along (obviously, since I'm typing), but just watching to see what it's like. Looks like it would be a good routine, though the instructor talks way too much---very distracting. DVD is "Journey Into Power: Baptiste Power Yoga, Level 1" (got it on Netflix). It's reminded me of a few poses I haven't practiced in many years.
And speaking of yoga products, I highly recommend B.K.S. Iyengar's Light on Yoga. Probably not the best beginner's book, but Iyengar is a big name in the yoga world and his book is pretty comprehensive. He's got some crazy poses in there---I doubt I'll ever be at that level, but it's interesting to see what elite yogis can do.
When you say you "doubt you will ever be at that level", you are actually enforcing a self-defeating belief system. The fact is that those poses are achievable by most people with an anatomical system within a generous average range, and most if not all people could achieve those poses at one point or another in their lives. Problem is, we don't maintain the flexibility we had as children. But some people do have more flexibility. My friend for instance can fold into a full lotus without any stretching practice ever, whereas I have been hard pressed to achieve a half lotus in 6 years of practice. I am also careful to avoid thinking bad thoughts like "can't do" something, which is why I was able to achieve half lotus. Anyone serious enough to practice daily after a while will come to understand that the concept of physcial "limits" is more theoretical a proposition than commonly held. There is no cost and great benefit to actively resisting self-limiting belief systems inherent in negative conceptual thoughts, as in "I can't do..." in terms of practice, because the body's limitations are to some degree primarily the mind's.
As an example, when gymnastics students first try a back bend, the process is helped by a "spotter" whose support is more psychological that physical. The spotter's symbolic support of hands on the body helps the gymnast's mind to direct the body more confidently in a back bend, something that would produce mild panic reactions in most people. The same dynamic is what is occuring when someone "spots" someone lifting weights, by simple touch and verbal encouragement. Individual work in Yoga is much aided by a positive, confident, and willful mindset. Like everything else, though, Yoga helps those who "help themselves".
The best illustration for me of this concept early on was the strech where you stand, extend one leg out and rest the heel on a surface while pulling on a belt wrapped around the ball of the foot, the leg stretched as far as it would go. At first my leg was roughly at a right angle to my body, but day after day I was able to put another 1-inch thick book under my foot until the foot was at the level of my head. Took several weeks as I recall.
I would not suggest DVDs to first time students. Like Heinekin, I learned from a book, initially, and later practiced with a handful of teachers. I might be biased in saying this is the best method, but it appears to me in my experience that people who watch the DVDs or go to classes do not maintain a practice or get the benefits such regular practices require. The DVDs are a distraction from meditation, and classes can be expensive and, depending on the teacher, format, and other factors, detrimental.
Basically, Yoga is about an internal relationship with one's body. I found teachers' approaches to be as individualistic, diverse, and immensely useful in my own practice, but in the end, such mass practice is generic and cannot substitute for true deep self-awareness. If there is a conceptualization in the mind that one "cannot do" something, the automatic willful response is to look for a teacher or "crutch". Such behavior is part of a self-limiting belief system. The true value of Yoga is in the conscious defeat of the mind's limiting belief systems. Everything else is gravy, the "feeling good", the flexibility, etc. Without a basic core strength of the mind, a person will naturally relapse. Hence the failure of schools, which I think many use as if they are going to get an oil change for their car, an aspect of "maintenance" and reliance on "experts"....
Hmm.. .I guess I would retract my admission of bias, since this logic is inherently self-contained.