Author: Sharon

Holiday Season @ Yoga Matrika

Hello Matrikas!  If you are in Pittsburgh, or visiting Pittsburgh this holiday season, please check out these fabulous holiday events at Yoga Matrika:

FIRST: Elsie Escobar is facilitating a workshop on December 6th (Sunday) in the afternoon called SEASON of LIGHT, BODY of PEACE.  This is a wonderful way to find peace and tranquility in these darkest of days that start to get longer and brighter on the 22nd of December!  Elsie will guide the group in yoga techniques for finding your center, even in the midst of holiday pressures.  She will also help you find an intention for the season and the new year that will guide you into the light of 2010.  There are only a few places left, so please pre-register soon.  https://www.yogamatrika.com//workshops/

SECOND—please come and find lots of handmade, natural and organic gifts for this season’s expressions of generosity at Yoga Matrika’s open house and craft sales.  Many of the items are under $10 and there are also discounted gift certificates and class cards available online and during these sales at the studio

0961100YOGA MATRIKA
Hand Made Holidays &
Celebrations

Shop natural, organic and local hand made this holiday season at Yoga Matrika’s special open house events and online!

 

 

 

 

* Children welcome—they play & you shop!
*Holiday refreshments to sweeten your day!

*Special offers at each open house.
Come to them all!

Sat. Nov. 21
Open House from 2:00-7:00pm
Make any purchase today and get a coupon for a FREE class with Sharon Rudyk in 2010!

Sat.Dec.5th
Open House from 2:00-7:00pm

Make any purchase today and get a coupon for $10 off the price of a massage in 2010.

Sat. Dec.12th
Open House from 2:00-7:00pm

Make any purchase today and get a coupon for $5 off the registration fee for select workshops in 2010.

Sun. Dec. 13th
Open House from 12:00-3:30pm
Make any purchase today and get a coupon for a FREE class with Maria Graziani!

Holiday Class By Donation
December 18th at 6:00pm


Sharon Rudyk is teaching a honey flow yoga class for all levels and anyone over the age of 12 by donation. 

Holiday Party
December 18th at 7:30pm
Enjoy some birthday cake & other sweet treats in honor of Sharon’s 36th birthday, the season of light and the potential fabulousness of the new year!  Everyone is welcome to the party!

We have many gift ideas for $10 or less and ALL handmade by Pittsburgh artists.  Find great office gifts, hostess presents and stocking stuffers and know that you are supporting small businesses, art and ingenuity in Pittsburgh!

www.yogamatrika.com   
6520 Wilkins Avenue/Squirrel Hill
(412) 855-5692   

A Great Healing

About 2-weeks ago now, I went to the emergency room in some of the worst pain I have ever been in.  The back of my throat was blistered and I had a deep pain in my upper chest.  For three-nights I had been up with this terrible pain that did not respond to Ibuprofen or any of the over the counter treatments I had to try.  In the emergency room, I was told that I had acid reflux and was given some very powerful medications—-including one that has irreversable neurological problems as one of the common side effects.

I had a suspicion that I actually had a viral infection and made an appointment with acupuncturist Melissa Sokulski at the Birch Center.  In addition to the viral infection, I suspected that recent headaches and some of my complaints were related to stress and grief.  I had responded well to acupuncture before, so I had high hopes for this treatment and my recovery.

To my absolute amazement, the morning following my treatment, the blisters in the back of my throat were almost completely gone and I had a good sleep.  There was obviously a profound shift in my health and well being.  The Birch Center is a very comfortable and warm place and does not feel clinical.  Melissa provided a unique treatment that was adapted during the treatment based on my response and changes in pulse.  There was a great kindness in the entire experience and I highly recommend the Birch Center both for the sweet environment and the obvious technical skill of Melissa Sokulski.

I have a great admiration for healers in all forms—-biomedical doctors, acupuncturists, therapists of body and mind, shamans, nurses—all kinds.  There is a certain kind of release that happens when we get the sense that we are in good hands and this peace and trust opens the gate to the healing experience.  Part of our yoga practice is being present with both the energetic and the physical body.  Disturbances in the energetic body manifest themselves as dis-ease in the physical body and we should actively use our intuition to seek out healing from people that we relate to with a sense of peace.

Pittsburgh is home to many types of healers and we can open to the experience of being healed when we remain open to our intuition and seek healing experieces that are in alignment with our personal truth.  While not every healer is the best healer for every person or every problem, I can honestly make this referral to the Birch Center for anyone seeking acupuncture or other alternative treatments.  It’s also great to get on the Birch Center newsletter list! The last newsletter had some great information on acupuncture and alternative treatments for H1N1 and for recovery from the flu.  

Melissa and David Sokulski, Licensed Acupuncturists
The Birch Center for Health, LLC
1931 East Carson Street, 2nd Floor
Pittsburgh, PA 15203
(412) 381-0116
www.BirchCenter.com
www.FoodUnderFoot.com ~ Wild Edible Plants

Yoga Therapy for your Lower Body

There is still room in this healing workshop with Elsie Escobar on Friday night, October 30th.  Elsie will teach you yoga techniques for bringing the lower body into alignment and soothing any pain that you might have in your back, hips, knees, ankles or feet through gentle movement and stretching.

Please pre-register for the limited spaces that are still available by calling Sharon at Yoga Matrika (412) 855-5692.

Anusara Therapeutics: The Lower Body
Friday, October 30 from 6:00-8:00 pm
Facilitated by Elsie Escobar
Treat your back, hips, knees and ankles to a mini-retreat!
$25 pre-register/$35 at the door

 

Here is a link to a blog entry that talks about the power of Anusara Therapeutics:

 http://yogaforgeeks.com/blog/sarahfelicity/tips-and-tricks-from-an-anusara-therapeutics-workshop

Here is a link to Elsie’s fabulous online Kula:

http://elsiesyogakula.com/

Desire & Deserve

I was recently supervising my preschooler in the tub and, while he engaged in an imaginary battle between a Thomas the Tank Engine bath squirter and a Fisher Price fisherman, decided to pick up my shampoo bottle and read the text.  This text informed me that, by using this particular product, I would obtain results that would give me the hair that I both desired and deserved.

The desired part, I could identify with.  Of course, I desire healthy, shiny, full, fresh smelling and bouncy hair with appropriate fullness.  I certainly desire to protect my hair from anything that might cause damage.  This may be a whole lot of hope to place in dead skin cells, but I could not deny as I read the back of that bottle that, yes, I desired these things.  Admittedly, I also made my purchase with some hope that using this particular product would, in fact, help me obtain a head of hair that had just this list of delicious qualities.  For those of you who know me, I currently have a head of hair to rival Elvira—-it’s super long, grey at the temples and generally swept up in a casual way with a clip.  So, if I have desires for my hair, it’s both a whole lot of desire and a whole lot of hair to desire it with.

The deserved part, well, this seems problematic (at best!).  Exactly what kind of hair do I deserve and what have I done to deserve hair with these qualities?  I was immediately brought back to a Bill Crosby sketch where he made fun of folks who got drunk to the point of being physically ill at happy hours on Fridays because they had worked so hard that week that they deserved to get drunk. [Curious?  Need a good laugh? Check it out here:   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYsko_tc3a0 ] After an immediate chuckle at this remembering, I started to think about the relationship between our yoga practice and what we desire and deserve.

In general, although we may not be honest with ourselves about the nature of our desire, we start taking yoga classes or start any specific class or practice with a certain goal or want or need that we would like to have satisfied.  We want to relieve stress, feel better, have more energy, look younger, be more fit, lose weight, make friends, be able to say that we too do yoga and fit in, lower our chances of heart disease, get pregnant or find some kind of blissful state.  These desires can be helpful in our practice when we acknowledge them with honesty (satya) and a certain level of willingness to release the desire long enough to focus on our breath and the practice at hand.  Perhaps our practice will show us that we have passions and desires that we were not aware of or not able to name.  In this sense, our practice can help illuminate certain truths about ourselves that may have been hidden.  This type of self-awareness is priceless and our practice, as it evolves, will reveal a revolving set of desires as well.

Thinking about the concept of deserve is at once very non-yogic and what yoga is all about.  It’s at the heart of so many philosophical debates about why bad things happen to good people.  Exactly what does anyone deserve and what role do we play in facilitating our own receipt of that just reward or just punishment.  In some ways, this is part of our exploration of satya (honesty) and ahimsa (non-violence).  When we are honest during our practices and create a flow of movement and breath that is steady and rhythmic that, in turn, steadies the mind, then we are also honoring our limits.  We are, one might say, getting the practice we deserve.  What happens when we fail to honor our limits?  The breath is short and our muscles are shaky and our footing is un-centered.  We feel weak, overwhelmed and our minds jump from one instruction to the next, one pose to the next, one shaky and aching shoulder/neck/thigh to the next.  In this case, one might also say that we are getting the practice we deserve.  On the other hand, we may just be re-enforcing the beliefs that we have about what we deserve that we carry with us on and off the mat.

I would like to suggest that you deserve a calm breath, ease through body and mind and a relationship with spirit that is both an inspiration and guide to act according to your highest ideals.  I desire this for you.  While you may desire a toned and lighter body, less stress, greater sex appeal or a sweaty romp through a familiar and anonymous flow—-you might get what you don’t deserve!  Injury, headaches, a racing heart, exhaustion, shallow breath and negative thoughts racing through your mind about how you would have been able to keep up if you were just a little younger, thinner, or more fabulous.  Desire is an intention that we can guide to a variety of opportunities and possibilities.  This week, in your practice, notice what you desire and see if you get what you deserve.

If all seems a great failure, I assure you that, apparently, bliss is available from an easily obtained bottle of shampoo straight off the shelf at Rite Aid—-for less than $4.00.  So, with a guarantee so close by and so economically obtained, what do you have to lose if you expand these concepts and take them onto your mat with you this week?  Before coming into a pose, honestly ask what it is that you desire from it.  When you come out of the pose, experience what it is that you deserve. Exhale.  You are beautiful!

 

Posted by Sharon Fennimore Rudyk
Owner and Director of Yoga Matrika in Pittsburgh, PA
https://www.yogamatrika.com/
http://www.sharonrudykyoga.info
http://www.prenatalyogapittsburgh.com

Pilates for Pink: Tone Up for a Great Cause

PILATES for PINK

Join Aimee Horn for a BY DONATION Pilates Mat class on Monday, October 26th from 4:45-5:45 pm.  ALL donations will be sent to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation.  Even if you can’t make it to class, you can make a donation at the studio at any time during the month of October.  If you aren’t going to be at the studio this month, you can also make a direct donation by following this link:

 

New Pittsburgh Yoga Web Resources

I’ve designed two online yoga resources:
One for prenatal and postnatal yoga, pilates and exercise classes in Pittsburgh
http://www.prenatalyogapittsburgh.com

Another just for my own yoga classes, workshops, trainings and private therapeutic yoga sessions:
http://www.sharonrudykyoga.info

Yoga & Pittsburgh Rain

I can’t help but notice that, when it rains, less people come to yoga classes.  There’s something about the damp, grey and chilly weather that re-directs intentions and leads people to their home destination rather than to the studio or their mat.  Rather than write this to make all of you who have been skipping your yoga classes in Pittsburgh for the past couple of rainy days feel guilty, I am writing this because it has inspired me to think about yoga practice as a way of grounding and coming home that provides the same comfort as skipping school and cuddling with your cat instead.

When we feel this need to “go home,”  there are ways to shift our practice so that we create an embrace of asana and breath that warms the heart-mind and body.  First, honor your mat.  Make a ritual of your practice and have placing your mat on the earth as one of the elements of that ritual.  Your mat becomes the sacred place where you can explore the embrace of spirit and mindfulness.  When you take your seat and you want to set a cozy tone for your practice, make it a soft seat.  You can do this by placing a cushion under your sitting bones and blankets under your ankles and knees.  If you are in a cooler space, drape a shawl or light blanket over your shoulders. 

Start your practice with a heart warming chant of the seed syllable “Hung.”  First, watch your breath and then, as you deepen the breath, sing “Hung” using your diaphragm muscles and slowly allowing the vibration to ease tension in your heart.  You can chant this syllable for as long as you like, just repeating it over and over again.  Notice where you feel the sound vibrations and give yourself a few minutes after you are done to feel the differences in your body and the quality of your thoughts and breath.

Finally, give yourself permission to stretch and open to movement in your practice in a more organic way.  Not sure where to start, get on your hands and knees and so a few cat/cow and see where the spirit moves you.  Perhaps, you will want to move into some seated stretches or maybe a series of heart opening back bends?  Maybe you will come into downward facing dog and move through a series of lunges and warrior poses.  Maybe you will realise that what you really need is to take your legs up the wall and daydream!  Whatever it is, keep the cozy intentions of your practice and make yourself feel at home.

Cheer up Pittsburgh! 

Posted by Sharon Rudyk
Owner and Director of Yoga Matrika
https://www.yogamatrika.com/

Special Topics Series w/Anna Gilbert

orange-lotus-lady

Special Topics Series with Anna Gilbert
10/14, 10/28, 11/11, 12/9
Wednesdays from 7:15 pm to 8:15 pm
$34 for the series of 4-workshops or $12 to drop-in

10/14 From Kitty Cat to Wagging Dog: Exploring the Spine in Asana
10/28 Is Your Triangle a Rectangle? Explore the Side Body in Asana
11/11 Are you Ready to Rumble? Explore Alignment in Warrior Pose
12/9 Let’s Twist! Explore spirals in seated and standing Asana

More information on topics and to register here:

http://dharmatribeonline.com/matrika/index.php?tab=event_detail&event_id=1704&class_type=session

Posted by Sharon Rudyk, Director of Yoga Matrika in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
https://www.yogamatrika.com/

Make a Poem of your Flesh

“This is what you should do: love the earth and the sun and the animals, despise riches, give alms to everyone that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown or to any man or number of men…re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss what insults your own soul, and your very flesh shall be a great poem.”

WALT WHITMAN

Whitman suggests here what every yogi knows–the choices we make with our mind are reflected in our bodies.  This is  beauty.  You know when you are in the room with beauty. Thinking back on all the beauties you have been around you know that it isn’t the type of beauty that Cover Girl is selling that sticks with you.  The beauty that you see in others is their poem and the memory of it is a song that vibrates through your own body poem.

As we move through various asana (yoga poses), we have an opportunity to try on different characters and ways of moving and being in the world.  One minute a warrior, then next a dog—only to transform with just one breath into a pigeon and end up a cheeky little monkey.  Through this experiment, we find that we can listen to the poem of our body.  Sometimes, the poem rides the rhythm of the breath. Other times, it is our grunts and the sounds of our effort.  Crow or cow face, there is no yogi in history that does not come up against some darkness.  Sometimes, the poem of our bodies in practice is a ballad uncomfortably narrated by cellular memories we have not before dared to expose.  Sometime, the poem of our bodies is like going out for dessert at midnight.  Delicious.

Here is a simple way to listen to your body and get in touch with the poem of your flesh:

Lie down on your back somewhere comfortable.  Before you lie down, take off your shoes and socks, watch and release your hair from any clips or bands.  Place one hand over your heart and the other hand over your navel.  Feel the rise of your body as you take an in breath.  Feel your navel drop down towards your spine as you exhale.  Do this for as long as you like.  The mind will wander, but you don’t need to follow it.  As soon as you notice that your attention has drifted away from feeling the breath move through the body, you just return to watching your next in breath. 

When you feel ready, bring your awareness to the soles of your feet.  As you inhale, feel the energy of the breath enter through your feet.  Relax the space between your toes, ankles and the bones in your feet.  Feel the connection of your palm to your heart and your palm to your navel center.  There was once a time when you received all of your information about the world and all that sustained you through your navel.  Allow this breath moving through your feet and palms to remind you of your origins, your roots.

Inhale a deep breath as you release your hands and bring your arms up over your head.  STRETCH and reach through your arms and hands as you point your toes.  Hug your knees in to your chest and rock from side to side.

Come up to sit for a moment.  See how you feel.  If your flesh was a poem now, what would it be?

Keep up with the poetry Pittsburgh yogis!

Posted by Sharon Fennimore Rudyk
Director, Yoga Matrika in Pittsburgh, PA
https://www.yogamatrika.com/

Early Bird Yoga

Pittsburgh is not a sleeping in kind of city.  In honor of all those who are juggling family and jobs, commitments that make evening yoga impossible and those who just like to see the sun rise, Yoga Matrika is now offering—–Early Bird Yoga with Apple Knisley! 

Every Thursday at 5:45 am you can drop-in for this delicious hour of yoga that will inspire you to greet the day with stretching the body open, taking deep breaths and finding a moment of peace in which to set your intention for the day ahead.  As we imagine that you might need some incentive to get out of bed this early on a regular basis, we have requested that you pre-register for series of 4-Early Bird classes in a row.  It’s $50 for 4-Early Bird Classes and you can purchase your Early Bird Class Card Here: https://dharmatribeonline.com//matrika/index.php?tab=3

Let’s say you are just curious about Early Bird Yoga or maybe you just find yourself wandering about at 5:00am and not able to get back to sleep start thinking about what you might be able to do this early in the morning.  Have no fear!  You are welcome to just drop-in on an Early Bird class.  The fees to drop-in are $15 for one class or current students are welcome to use their class cards.

Come join Apple to meet the sun—Matrika style!

Posted by Sharon Rudyk
Owner & Director, Yoga Matrika in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
https://www.yogamatrika.com/