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Shanti Yoga Brings New Options To Local Practitioners

Posted in : News

(added few months ago!)

Shanti Yoga Brings New Options To Local Practitioners“Be well, be free, be peaceful, be happy” is the mantra of Shanti Yoga, a new studio opened by Grosse Pointe Woods resident Cheryl Koch. Located at 23217 Nine Mack Drive in St. Clair Shores, Shanti Yoga has seven certified instructors who offer “a full range of yoga for practitioners of every capability,” said Koch, who has been teaching since the mid-1990s. “We are delivering health and well being to people who need it.”

Named after the Sanskrit word for “peace,” Shanti Yoga offers an array of practices that focus on relaxation, flexibility, and the prevention of adverse health conditions such as high blood pressure and circulatory problems. They include:

Sunrise Ashtanga: A shortened form of the primary series of Ashtanga Yoga taught by internationally known ashtanga teacher Sri Pattabhi Jois, this involves sun salutations, a standing series of postures, seated series, gentle back bending/heart opening, inversions and rest.  All with breath-linking transitions known as vinyasas.

It's Your Back Yoga: A “challenging yet relaxing yoga practice” that combines postures and breathing techniques that help prevent as well as treat back pain. Hatha Yoga Flow: A flow of postures and breathing techniques to make the spine supple and promote circulation in all the organs, glands, and tissues.

Candlelight Flow: Surrounded by the soft glow of candlelight, students breathe and stretch with a vinyasa flow and long, “restorative” postures. Be Happy Hour Restorative Yoga: This practice uses props to support the body and internal organs and engages the parasympathetic nervous system, which helps to lower the heart rate, blood pressure, and restore the immune system.

Koch, who has been teaching throughout the community in schools and gyms, opened Shanti Yoga to have her own dedicated practice space and to provide more options to practitioners in St. Clair Shores and the Grosse Pointes, which she considers “underserved” areas.

“People from the East side have been going to the West side to practice yoga, but it’s important that people look to what’s here before going over there,” said Koch. “It’s all about sustainability, just like eating local and not driving gas-guzzling cars. Yoga’s not a place; it’s inside.

Shanti offers package rates for classes as well as 30 days of unlimited yoga for $108. Its “drop-in” fee for a one-time practice is $15. It also offers a free one-week trial to residents of Macomb, Wayne and Oakland Counties and a 10 percent discount on yoga class packages to students 24 and younger and seniors 65 and older.

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Tea, football & yoga

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At the Jain residence, the entire family loves spending time in their lush green lawn. The garden has many interesting corners - there is a small hut for meditation and yoga and little mushroom-shaped fountains in a bright nook. Adding to the charm are bright full-bloom chrysanthemums, making the lawn a place of pride.

The family used to earlier reside near Subhani Building and due to shortage of space, could never develop a garden. Moving to BRS Nagar finally made them realize their dream and after shifting to the G block in 1986, the first thing that they did was plant a little lawn in front.

The younger son of the family, Amit, said, "When we were kids, we either used to go to Rose Garden or Rakh Bagh to spend some time amid nature. So having a garden at home was everybody's deeply rooted desire.''

While the elders soak in peace and tranquillity in the lawn, the four kids of the house love playing football there. "Every morning and evening, I meditate in the garden. Sometimes, my daughter-in-law also joins me for light yoga,'' said Amit's mother, Sushma. "We have planted chrysanthemum because there are children in the house and they spoil the flower beds,'' laughed Preeti, the elder daughter-in-law who teaches at Drishti School.

Often accompanying the family in the lawn is their 9-year-old dog, who often lazes on the grass and soaks in the winter sun.  "Our evening tea is also enjoyed in the garden... this is the place where we all bond and share a good laugh,'' Preeti added.

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Yoga routine can give Carl Froch the edge

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YOGA is just about the last fitness regime you would associate with Carl Froch. And the warrior boxer fears he sounds a bit soft after revealing he has copied Ryan Giggs by adding it to his training programme. But Froch has seen how Giggs and David Beckham have prolonged their careers at the highest level by changing their lifestyles.

And now the WBC super-middleweight king has introduced yoga and pilates into his routine and claims that, at 34, he has never felt better. Andre Ward, Froch’s opponent in Saturday’s Super Six Final in Atlantic City, is just 27, but Froch says he feels just as young because of his healthy regime.

“I looked at people like Ryan Giggs and David Beckham,” he said. “People my sort of age, who are still performing at the top level, and thought why can’t I do it too?

“I’ve taken up yoga and pilates and, without sounding like a ponce, I’ve added that to my training regime. I look after myself more these days. “I’m not looking for a sponsor, but I do my pilates on the Nintendo Wii with girlfriend Rachael. There’s somebody on the TV guiding you through the moves. “People think that at 34 I must be coming towards the end. But I think that’s a load of rubbish. You have to look after your body and I’ve looked after mine over the years.

“Some of the lads I went to school with are fat and old. Their hair has fallen out. They are in bad shape, drink, smoke, eat badly and don’t exercise. They’re 34 going on 50. I’m 34 going on 27 or 28 because I look after myself.”

Froch doesn’t drink or smoke and has cut out all dairy products. He’s working with the nutritionist and dieticians of the GB amateur team at the English Institute of Sport, where he trains with Rob McCracken and lives the life of a boxer 24/7.

“The diet and nutritionist for the amateur squad is on the ball and he gives me something Ryan Giggs uses,” he said. “It stops the lactic acid building up in your muscles. I’m pretty switched on and I don’t have any dairy in my diet and the supplements I take are really helpful.

“I don’t drink at all. If I have half a pint of Guinness, I get a headache. I’ve never smoked. Smoking is for mugs and has no purpose being in an athlete’s life. “I stay on it and I don’t take as long off from the gym between fights these days. If I had three or four months off, it would be a like a mountain to climb. When I box, I only take two or three weeks off. That way, I’m always ticking over.”

It all clearly works and Froch looked supremely lean and lithe during his head-to-head with Ward at the atmospheric Edison Ballroom, just off New York’s Times Square.

He sat on the stage, next to a table bearing the Super Six trophy, his green WBC belt and Ward’s WBA strap, across from the unbeaten American and is determined to win after two years of hard slog to get to this defining moment in the competition. “I know hundreds, no, thousands of people are flying over from the UK. I guarantee they will not be disappointed because I know that Saturday will be my night.”

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Cassandra has a passion for yoga

Posted in : Exercise

(added few months ago!)

Cassandra has a passion for yogaLOKHA samasta sukhin bhavantu (may there be an end to all suffering) is a yoga mantra that informs the life, spirituality and even business practices of Balingup woman Cassandra Menard. Cassandra, who is proprietor of Balingup’s Tinderbox, has been passionate about yoga from a young age.

“The backbone of my life is my practice,” Cassandra said. “It’s not about what happens on a few square feet of mat, it’s about taking what arises on the mat into your life and using it to its best potential.

“It’s exciting to come to work and realise the privilege of working in the plant world, it’s a highly creative, fertile environment. “People who come in sense the energy; it appeases something in their hearts.”Cassandra started at a very early age as a dancer.

“When you focus your mind and body on alignment, there comes about a change, you become more aligned, more creating, different aspects of the self are revealed,” she said. “Dance can be translated in so many ways; there’s a dance in the way you blend a perfume and there’s dance blended into yoga.

“I realised at an early age when I passionately gave in to the process of dance, it became very yogic in principle; it brought me into the present moment and gave me a deep contentment.”Cassandra said yoga taught that we don’t own our bodies.

“They are a laboratory for awakening and reaching our full potential, for slowly awakening to who we truly are,” she said. “We are much more than our senses.”

Cassandra said the yogi believed the world was saturated in the divine and when applying yogic principles to her business, she tried to bring the divine into people’s lives through plants and scent so that healing might take place. Recently Cassandra travelled to India to further her studies of yoga.

“India is a really exciting and mystical place,” she said. “It’s so overpopulated, so full of life that is so rich; everywhere there is so much colour and everything is on display that is hidden in Western life.

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Copyright on Yoga? Regulators say that’s a stretch

Posted in : Exercise

(added few months ago!)

Downward-facing dog can no longer be copyrighted. Regulators have decided that yoga poses are “exercises” not “choreography” and can’t be copyrighted like they used to be. The ruling was sparked by a trademark lawsuit by Bikram Yoga College of India against New York’s Yoga to the People and Evolation Yoga.

Copyright on Yoga Regulators say that’s a stretch

The Indian school claims the New York studios appropriated his methods and exercises. They counter that the sequences and poses can’t be copyrighted. Bikram Yoga lawyer Robert Gilchrest noted that the Copyright Office has issued hundreds of copyrights for exercise videos. “But now they’re saying they’re looking at it again and they’ve changed their mind?” he told Bloomberg. “It is meaningless to this litigation.”

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Yoga suit even more tangled

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The U.S. Copyright Office is “re-evaluating” its stance on yoga copyrights, adding fuel to a feud between an East Village-based yogi and his guru. Last month, international guru Bikram Choudhury sued New York's Yoga to the People for infringing on what Choudhury says is his copyrighted sequence of sweltering yoga moves. Choudhury demanded a $1 million payout.

Yoga suit even more tangled

On Dec. 9, Greg Gumucio, owner of Yoga to the People, filed his response claiming Choudhury does not have the copyright. Included in Gumucio's response is an e-mail from Laura Lee Fischer, acting chief of the Performing Arts Division of the U.S. Copyright Office: “We determined that exercises, including yoga exercises, do not constitute the subject matter that Congress intended to protect as choreography," wrote Fischer.

Previously, the U.S. Copyright Office considered yoga sequences a type of choreography, which is subject to copyright. Gumucio heralded the e-mail as evidence that Choudhury lacks a valid copyright, but Robert Gilchrest, Choudhury’s attorney, called it “inconsequential fodder to the litigation.”

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Yoga Gets into Med School

Posted in : Exercise

(added few months ago!)

Emily Holick thought yoga was for sissies. But as a graduate student hoping to reduce stress, she gave it a try. And hated it. What irked the former college tennis player most was her inability to do a move that everyone else had perfected—the wheel, a complex pose that contorts the body into an upside down bridge. Holick says it was only her competitive spirit that kept her going.

Yoga Gets into Med School

Four years later, Holick (MED’14) believes that yoga has transformed her life. Although her first year of medical school was brutal, leaving her stressed and questioning whether she had what it takes to be a doctor, her yoga practice helped her cope. Then a curious string of events pulled her out of the abyss.

Holick took a healing arts class with Robert Saper, a School of Medicine associate professor of family medicine and director of integrative medicine, known for his research involving yoga and lower back pain relief. He recommended that she meet Heather Mason, a yoga therapist and trainer interested in creating a class for medical students, an idea Holick had toyed with herself.

“We met in a coffee shop in Cambridge and started dreaming,” Holick says. “It was amazing to meet someone who independently said this is something that medical students need.”

That java-infused dream has become a reality since, as Mason, Holick, and a team of medical students lobbied for its creation. Starting spring semester, MED will offer an elective called Embodied Health: Mind-Body Approaches to Well-Being. Mason will lead a weekly hour-long yoga session, followed by a half hour discussion of the practice’s medical benefits. The class will also be part of a research study led by Saper, Mason, and Allison Bond (MED’14) that will attempt to document changes in the students’ mental health. A pilot of the elective, called MED Yoga, or Mind-Body Education and Development Yoga, ran this semester, quickly attracting a following of 30-plus students.

While yoga sessions for med students are not unique (the University of Connecticut Medical Center and Georgetown Medical School both offer them), teaching students about yoga’s physiological and neurological effects is. Saper, who will be one of several guest speakers addressing issues from positive thinking to the neurobiology of stress over the 11 weeks of class, says the class “targets the unique challenges and stressors medical students face as well as offers a fairly advanced level of intellectual content appropriate for the medical students.”

And there are stressors: according to a 2009 study in Academic Medicine, nearly 25 percent of medical school students will be depressed at some point during their education. The Journal of the American Medical Association published a study in 2010 showing that the empathy medical students feel decreases as they progress through their four years.

Mason believes that yoga can be a powerful antidote. On a recent Wednesday late afternoon, she tinkered with speakers that send a low chime through the airy space of the MED student lounge where the class was meeting. While she adjusted the sound, nearly three dozen students unfurled yoga mats toward a bank of windows facing the setting sun. Some had come directly from cramming at the library for a pulmonology exam the next day.

Mason, a petite 35-year-old brunette, spent three years in Southeast Asian monasteries as an out-of-the box method of battling chronic depression. That experience led her to earn master’s degrees in Buddhist studies and psychotherapy, and another now in progress in neuroscience.

The New York native paces methodically as she leads the class into a rhythmic ujjayi breath, a diaphragmatic breathing technique. “The chime is like an anchor bringing you back to the breath,” she says. “Inhale, lift, and open your heart center.”

Some students stumble from move to move; others slide into position as if into a second skin, eyes forward, bodies steady. After an hour, Mason directs them to close their eyes, lie down, and relax. Their limp bodies rest on a rainbow of yoga mats.

Mason asks them to count their breaths per minute. She knows that the ideal count of five or six has been shown to increase heart rate variability, which can ameliorate problems like depression, epilepsy, post-traumatic stress disorder, and cardiac disease.

Breaths counted, Mason segues from the practice of yoga to a short dissertation on the neuroscience of yoga, something that has been studied by Chris Streeter, a MED associate professor of psychiatry and neurology. In one study published in the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, Streeter used magnetic resonance spectroscopy to explain why yoga practitioners report a greater improvement in mood and a decrease in anxiety than people who simply walked for relaxation. Streeter found that the yoga group had higher levels of the neurotransmitter gamma-amino butyric acid, or GABA, the likely cause of positive mood changes.

Mason explains to the class how the ujjayi breath and the chiming work together, medically, to bring about a healthful biological balance of breath, heartbeat, and other functions. When the lecture ends, Mason bows, and thanks her class with a namaste, a customary gesture on parting. Mason says the first goal of MED Yoga was to let doctors know how yoga could help their patients, but then she realized how it could help the doctors themselves.

That message resonates with Holick, who feels refreshed by yoga and has renewed faith in her career choice. The past year has “made me realize that I can make medicine my own thing,” she says. “It’s an amazing profession that I really can help people in. Sometimes I really lose sight of these bigger things.”

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Yoga to reform criminals?

Posted in : Exercise

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An NGO working towards bringing criminals into the main stream today claimed to have developed a methodology, blending yoga and behavior therapy, which can bring a perceptible change in crime scenario in the society.

"Yogic Crime Theory -- a fusion of yoga, criminology and behavior therapy -- can modify and change human behavior," Criminologists Society president Rameshwar Singh Jamwal told reporters. This theory works on the mind of the criminal and has been successful in changing the composition and character of billions of neurons in human brain and changing his thought process, enfeebling his negative forces and then finally eliminating them from the brain, filling up the neurons with positive thoughts and making him law abiding citizen, he said.

"So far our approach has been to treat all sorts of offences and offenders by one yardstick, like treating all patients with one medicine and putting him on medication after he gets the disease, putting him in isolation wards without categorisation and without going into the cause of the disease," Jamwal, who is also deputy advocate general, said. This technique, though complex, is totally unique and have over 90% success rate and is inexpensive, he said.

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Yoga Has Positive Influence on CA Middle School: Should More Schools Require Yoga? (Watch Video)

Posted in : Exercise, Videos

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Math, science, social studies, language arts: those are the typical subjects that come to mind when thinking about middle school education. However, students at KIPP Summit Academy also have a less typical class as part of their schedule: yoga.

At first, the idea of yoga in a middle school seems pretty strange. Why, in a time when so many schools are cutting funding for physical education programs, would a school make yoga part of its mandatory curriculum?

The answer lies in the results the San Lorenzo, California school has seen since making the unusual addition to its course catalog: a 60% decrease in suspensions and increased test scores.

The school’s yoga program is run by Katherine Priore, the founder of Headstand, “an innovative non-profit organization that brings stress reduction techniques and yoga to youth in economically-disadvantaged communities.”

Priore first turned to yoga as a way to relieve stress when she was a public school teacher. Now, she is the executive director of Headstand and works to bring yoga to schools around the country.

And the students, teachers, and administrators at KIPP Summit Academy love the Headstand program. Students report feeling happier, calmer, and more relaxed, while teachers explain that because of yoga, students who used to have trouble finishing assignments are now more able to focus.

What do you think? Should more schools make yoga a mandatory part of their curriculum?

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Indian yoga guru sues student for copying technique

Posted in : Exercise

(added few months ago!)

Indian yoga guru sues student for copying techniqueA multi-millionaire Indian yoga guru in the US is suing his former student for over a million dollars for copying his unique 'Bikram Yoga' style of exercises that involve workouts in a 105 degree-fahrenheit room.

Kolkata-born Bikram Choudhury is the founder of 'Bikram Yoga' and has copyrighted his unique hot yoga classes. In the lawsuit filed in a California court for copyright infringement, Choudhury, 65 is seeking monetary damages in excess of a million dollars and asking a federal judge to block 'Yoga to the People', founded by his old student Greg Gumucio, from offering similar hot yoga classes.

Choudhury has alleged in the lawsuit that Gumucio's yoga studios offer a 'Traditional Hot Yoga' class that is identical to his 'Bikram Yoga', which is a 26 posture sequence practiced in a 105 degree (40 degree Celsius) 'Torture Chamber'.

"The hot yoga class is taught in the same ambient environment as Bikram Yoga in order to give students the impression that the class offers the same experience and benefits a student would have at a Bikram Yoga studio," the 25-page lawsuit says.

In the lawsuit, Choudhary says that Gumucio had entered into an agreement with him that prohibited him from using the Bikram Yoga brand name and trademark in any form and teaching his style of yoga to others.

It costs USD 10,000 per teacher to be certified as a Bikram instructor, according to the lawsuit. While a Bikram Yoga class costs USD 25, Gumucio's chain of yoga studios charges eight dollars for the class.

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