Author: Sharon

Pre-Existing Condition

The reality is that we all come to our yoga practice with a pre-existing condition.  We all have a human body.  A body with a multitude of capabilities and strengths and vulnerabilities.  We have the capacity for great pleasure, strength and ease.  We suffer pain, disease, illness, grief, emotional distress, exhaustion and tragedy.  Today your are fine, tomorrow you have carpal tunnel or a diagnosis of cancer.  Today you are a hot little number in a fine pair of jeans and tomorrow you are nauseated and bloated with pregnancy.  We change, we grow and we gain and we lose.  We are sick and we get better.  We are sad and things get worse.  We are distraught today and receive fabulous news that raises our spirits tomorrow.  Our condition is unpredictable and change is the only thing we can count on.  There isn’t ONE yoga student or instructor who is not subject to the pre-existing condition of the human body.  The body is our greatest tool for practice BECAUSE of it’s nature!

It is important that you inform your yoga instructor of any recent surgeries or illnesses or chronic conditions that may effect your practice.  This will help the instructor provide appropriate modifications if necessary.  You should always feel free to ask for modifications at any time.  It’s always a good idea to talk with your doctors and/or surgeon to get permission to practice yoga before you start. 

While yoga instructors can help you modify your practice, they are NOT doctors and may or may not be familiar with your diagnosis or type of surgery or injury. Do not assume that your yoga instructor knows medical terms or more than the most basic anatomy.  Some instructors do have an interest in anatomy and medicine.  Some have just a very basic training from the few hours required for certification.   It is your responsibility to practice safely and avoid any exercises or types of movements that are contraindicated for your particular condition.  If you have any question as to whether you should do a certain pose or not, always err on the side of caution.

It is also important to relieve yourself of identification with illness and disease.  The body is constantly changing and there is no benefit in maintaining an illness identity.  This is just as true with a chronic condition like arthritis as it is with survivors of cancer or car accidents.  First, find out how to practice safely.  Then, let go of the label and give yourself the gift of the present moment.  We can use our practice to become intimate with the sensations in our body and to open our bodies and minds to feeling our best in this moment.  Over time, this type of awareness and practice can create a deep healing for our body and mind.  It is not in place of or instead of receiving appropriate medical care.  Rather, the practice provides a knowing of the body as a sea of change.  With this capacity to change, we find hope.

Am I Doing this Right?

Both new yoga students and more experienced yoga students, at some point in a class or practice, may wonder if they are doing a particular pose correctly.  Many students wish that instructors would just come over and correct their pose or hope that, in time, they’ll start to get it right.  Most new students are sure they can’t possibly be doing yoga right and many experienced students have developed poor alignment habits that feel right, but are blocking them from deepening their asana practice.

This is why we all, regardless of experience level, need to continue to take classes, workshops and find instructors that provide encouragement and assistance in deepening our practice at all levels.  Even the Masters have a guru.

A well-trained instructor has studied principles of alignment and guides from their tradition in methods for breathing, moving during and between poses and various modifications for asanas.  It is their job to verbally instruct students and make physical adjustments that keep students moving towards these ideal alignments and to encourage students to deepen their pose while maintaining safety.  

All this being said, I maintain that there is never a “right” way to do a pose.  If you are a perfectionist with a deep commitment to making sure that you do everything right, then this idea might drive you crazy.  The key to your asana practice is coming to terms with the idea that it isn’t how a pose looks that matters, it’s how it FEELS.  In a culture and society that makes appearance a significant priority, this might be an uncomfortable truth.  This is why we practice—–first, we shake our commitments up and then we work honestly with our physical reality.  Having the support and guidance of a fabulous instructor and a community of other students cheering us on is very important.

Yoga Matrika provides a lot of props that you can use to help poses feel better–cork wedges, bolsters, blankets, straps, cork blocks and meditation cushions.  We use these props to extend our reach and grasp and open the body in gentle and supported ways.  If you don’t know how to use a prop, just ask your instructor or watch experienced students to see where they place their block, blanket or bolster to support their pose.  Using props isn’t cheating!  When you use a prop it means that you deeply understand the alignment principles of a pose, feel that your body needs additional space to apply those alignment principles and that you are in touch with how you feel in your body. 

Many of us carry stress in a habitual way in our bodies and have created patterns of movement that are adaptations to this stress.  For example, many people lead with their chins—-sticking their chin out and causing stress in the upper back and neck.  Many of us feel a rise in our shoulders with stress and have daily life-tasks that cause us to round in the upper back and shoulders.  Most of us sit in chairs all day long or spend time waiting for buses with a heavy backpack dangling from one shoulder or the other.  These adaptations manifest themselves in our yoga poses too!  The challenge is to identify these places where we hold stress and allow the alignment principles of asana (poses) to help us open and release.  When this happens during practice, many students have an “ahhhhhhhhh” moment and most students feel more grounded, balanced and even after a class.

Here is a guide to getting it “right”:

1) Each and every time you practice, you have a different body to work with.  Accept that “improvment” and “mastery” are not linear in yoga.  On Monday, you might be able to touch your toes.  On Thursday, you may feel tight and not be able to even look at your toes.  Being in touch with these feelings and changes is an important part of yoga.  It’s not about deepening the pose over time, it’s about working with the pose at THIS time.

2) If something hurts, then you really are doing it “wrong.”  Yoga requires effort and skill, but there should NEVER be pain involved. No pain during your practice and no pain after your practice.   If you are the type of person who tends to “over do it,”  then my recommendation is that you try to do every pose in a practice to 75% of your ability.  See how you feel the next day. 

3) Let your breath be your guide.  During your practice, check in with your breathing pattern.  If you feel out of breath or are holding your breath, this is a sign that you are pushing yourself through your asana practice.  Slow down, exhale deeply and allow a fresh inhalation to guide your pace. 

4) Ask yourself often: “Does this feel delicious?”  If the answer is yes, then you are doing it RIGHT.  If the answer is no, then move around a little to shift your pose or focus or breathing pattern and see if you can move into a sweet spot.  There are no rules and asana are not static.  Sometimes even a slight shift in weight or a bend in a knee or releasing your jaw can make a big difference.

5) Accept the learning curve!  There is a learning curve.  When you start anything new, it takes time to get a feel for it.  This applies equally to basket weaving, piano lessons, swimming and yoga—–anything new feels new, unfamiliar, and strange.  Sometimes this feeling can last a while.  Sometimes it comes back after a long time gone.  As you continue to make a commitment to your practice and roll out your mat more often, the flow and patterns and names of asanas and instruction cues will start to become more and more familiar.  You will gain confidence.  You will feel FABULOUS after your class.

When you take a group class, it is your responsibility to modify your practice in a way that works for you.  During class, if you need to slow things down while everyone is speeding up, then you should always feel free to come into child’s pose to lie down or sit down and breathe.  At Yoga Matrika, you will notice that many students are modifying their practice and not everyone is doing the same thing at the same pace at the same time.  A group class isn’t a coordinated event like underwater ballet.  Instructors provide suggestions, guidance, information—but YOUR body and YOUR breath determine what happens on your mat.

Why should I do yoga?

Yoga means so many different things and with all the different names in various languages, teachers, studios, traditions, locations and books and magazines that take yoga to be their topic that it’s easy to get turned off by the complexity.  It makes yoga exotic, other and certainly not for someone as “regular” as you!  Not to mention the fact that, if all the glossy pictures of young folks who can hold themselves up on their pinky finger while chanting the entire Patanjali Sutra and the cute, size 0 woman on the cover of a fitness magazine doing a “perfect” downdog make it seem as though yoga is only for the most flexible, the young—–the fabulous and beautiful. 

The first truth is that yoga is for anyone who is brave enough to show up. The second truth is that yoga means something different to everyone who practices it.  You can go to many websites and magazines and they will give you a list of the benefits of yoga: weight management, lower blood pressure, less stress, helps with back pain, builds strong bones, etc.  Yes, these are the benefits of yoga and there are many more.  BUT, I can guarantee that these aren’t the reasons you will keep coming back to class.  I guarantee that you will find some personal motivation based on what yoga means to you that is entirely unique to YOU.  This unique motivation will extend itself into your practice—–the way you move, the things that you think, the way that you breathe and the way you decide to make yoga a part of your life will all be unique to you.

You should do yoga because you should learn these things about yourself!  Learn how your mind works—-what do you do when you are faced with a challenge?  What happens to your breathing when you lift your arms over your head?  Can you lie still for 5-minutes?  Is your left ankle stronger than your right?  Are you steady when you try to balance on one foot?  And why should you learn these things about yourself?  This is youth.  This is the work of the young and you will carry this awareness and flexibility into every aspect of your life.  Watch a baby.  They delight in their own toes with their gaze and take great amusement in putting their feet in their mouth.  Babies roll and giggle and breathe fast and slow and balance and fall and get up and crawl.  When you try new things with your body and mind you capture this sense of self-adventure.

No one can give you the courage you need to try yoga.  But I challenge you to look at yourself in the mirror tonight as you brush your teeth and stick out your tongue, make a face, wiggle your nostrils and make a silly face—–go ahead.  You’ll probably laugh and feel silly.  Nothing wrong with that.  As a matter of fact, it will probably feel good to stop being so very serious for even just a few moments.  Multiply that let go and feel good feeling by 500 and that’s what you feel like after a yoga class—–like the weight of years of serious dropped off your body and you feel taller and lighter and graceful and relaxed.  You will wonder why you waited so long.  You will be back.

I can’t wait to meet you!

Community

Recently, I spent some time reviewing the text of this website and found myself drawn to my description of Yoga Matrika as a community-based yoga studio.   What exactly do I mean by this and what do I wish to communicate about the studio when I describe it in this way? 

First, it’s a community-based studio because it has pedestrian access.  It is within walking distance for the greater Squirrel Hill community and anyone who takes busses through the main retail area on Murray and Forbes.  This fact means that many of the faces around the studio are faces that you’ve seen before—at Giant Eagle, at your synagogue and around your local playground.  You may not know the other students at Yoga Matrika, but you share community space and all of our actions around and outside of the studio impact one another—the way we garden, shovel our sidewalks, vote, participate in schools and community activism, etc. 

Second, it’s a community-based studio because it is an intimate space.  This is not a studio where you can remain anonymous for very long.  We learn each other’s names and share in joys and sorrows as they are laid bare in the security of the practice space.  In this way, regardless of where you live, you become a part of the studio community when you take a class.  We notice haircuts, circles under eyes as well as rejoice in births and battles won.  We practice our humanity and vulnerability while maintaining space for privacy and agency. 

Finally, this is a studio that serves students of all ages and abilities while taking into consideration the barriers that family life can impose on our ability to practice.  We strive to make classes accessible to parents with young children and to hire and support excellent instructors who have families and significant responsibilities for partners, parents and children.  We are a breastfeeding friendly and the parents that take advantage of the Me Too yoga, Family and Toddler yoga classes support each other beyond the walls of the studio.  This is not just a place for the young, flexible and beautiful (although you all look pretty good to me!)—-it is a place for real people, with real bodies in all stages of life.  This type of kula (community) dedicated to compassion for others and providing sweet company as we create, grow up and age is priceless.

Thank you to all the instructors and students who make this concept of community based yoga a reality at 1406 S. Negley every day.  I am grateful to you and for all the support and warmth that I receive, not just as the studio owner or your teacher, but as myself—together with you, working it out on my mat and taking it out into the world.

Resolutions for the New Year

I love the way a brand new calendar feels in my hands.  I happen to love setting goals, making lists and delight in dreaming of plans and future days.  All this being said, there’s a whole lot that I don’t like about the classical “New Year’s Resolution.”  For many people, the process of creating a New Year’s Resolution begins with determining what is wrong with them and then deciding that they are going to fix it.  My conflict with this is that any decision rooted in negative energy is bound to fail. 

This year, I encourage you to approach 2009 with resolve from a different perspective.  This perspective asks you to list what you would like to cultivate, grow, create and have in abundance and spend some time feeling the positive energy of this thing that you want EVERY day in 2009.  For example, here is a traditional resolution and a re-framed resolution:

Traditional:  I really need to lose 20 pounds and this is the year I’m going to do it.  I’m so tired of my pants feeling tight and my clothes not fitting right anymore.  I’ve gotten so fat that I can’t stand to look at myself anymore. 

Re-Framed:  I love the way I feel when I am eating well, excercising and getting enough sleep.  When my clothes fit well I know that I look great and I feel confident and beautiful.  This year, I’m going to cultivate this feeling of confidence and beauty and let it guide my decision making. 

If your Traditional New Year’s Resolution is that you want to do more yoga or try yoga or be a more serious yoga student then I encourage you to re-frame this resolution in a way that sets you up for the best success:  I feel so relaxed and well when I take a yoga class.  I want to feel this wonderful as much as possible.  I will allow myself to feel this fabulous as often as possible.  I will cultivate this feeling of health and energy and make decisions based on this desire. 

How does this work?  First, you start with a great feeling.  Second, you allow yourself to access this feeling.  Third, even when the realities of your life are in front of you, the presence of this wonderful feeling assist you in making decisions that bring you more of it.  It doesn’t mean that you don’t have dessert after New Year’s dinner or that you never work late and skip a yoga class.  It just means that you make feeling your best as your guide so that, when you have a choice, you choose BEST.

Trust me, by December 2009, if you’ve made being your best, most fabulous, most gentle, most peaceful, most beautiful self the priority of every day you will have improved the lives of EVERY person you relate to this year and you will have memories of a year well-lived.  Or, you can make a traditional resolution and be kicking yourself next December about how you are really going to change, lose those 20 pounds, take more yoga classes, spend more time with your kids…in 2010.

Good luck with your resolutions and HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Yoga Pittsburgh: Make a Rainbow of Gray

Well, it’s here.  Officially, winter has not yet arrived, but what certainly has are the days of gray.  This is the type of weather that gives “whiter shade of pale” a whole new meaning.  I would like to invite you to make a rainbow of these gray days and allow yourself the freedom and comforts of gray: spend time with a pot of tea and someone whose voice you love to listen to, knit and create more, pop your own popcorn and read a story to a child or adult and, of course, do more yoga!   Sometimes just bringing your awareness to your breath and making gentle movements in the upper spine can bring just the lift of spirit and body you need to inspire the rest of your day.  Here is a gentle exercise you can use anytime and anywhere to boost your mood:

Open your heart: seated in a comfortable position on a chair or on the floor, place your hands palms down on your thighs.  As you inhale through your nose, bring your heart forward and roll your shoulders back behind you.  As you exhale through your mouth, round through your back as you roll your shoulders forward, dropping your chin towards your heart.  As you inhale and open your heart, your palms will move along your thighs towards your body and as you exhale and round, your plams will move away from you.

2.  Reach towards the sky: Seated in a chair, with your arms by your sides, inhaling a breath through your nose lift your arms up beside you bringing your palms together above your head.  Keeping your arms up overhead, relax your face/neck/jaw and release your shoulders away from your ears.  Exhaling through your mouth, release your arms down by your sides.

To finish your energy boost, place your right hand over your heart and your left hand over your navel center (belly button).  Feel the weight of your hands and the movements of your body under your palms when you breathe in and out. 

Cheer up Pittsburgh!  Each day gets a little longer starting December 22nd and it’s always darkest just before the light!!!!

January through March

As the days get darker and we are immersed in this late autumn freeze, here is the tentative January through March schedule so that you can dream of the warmth generated by a beautiful yoga practice in the comfort of our fabulous community:

Mondays: 10:30 to 11:45      Basic Matrika Flow   w/Sharon
                6:00 to 7:15 pm    Matrika Flow            w/Elsie
                8:00 to 9:15 pm   Matrika Flow            w/Alana

Tuesdays:  4:00-5:15           Teen Yoga              w/Sharon [*SERIES CLASS]
                  5:45-7:00 pm    Restorative Flow     w/Sharon
                 7:30-8:45 pm    Matrika Flow            w/Jessie

Wednesdays:  10:30-11:15    Me Too                 w/Sharon
                      11:15-11:45   Mother’s Kula
                      12:00-1:00     Yoga 4 Lunch         w/Leslie W.
                      1:15-2:15       Adaptive Yoga        w/Leslie W.
                      5:45-7:00pm  Pre-Natal Yoga      w/ Bethany
                      7:30-8:45 pm  Matrika Flow        w/Erin

Thursdays:  5:45-7:00 pm     Matrika Flow          w/Cindy
                   7:15-8:15 pm     Mini-Series           w/Sharon [*SERIES CLASS]

Fridays:   9:30-10:45 am      Matrika Flow           w/Katrina
               11:00-11:45 am     Toddler Yoga         w/Cathy [*SERIES CLASS]

Saturdays: 9:00-10:30 am     Matrika Flow/Intensive     w/Sharon
                 11:30-12:45        Yoga Booty Ballet               w/Aleta

Sundays: 9:00-10:15 am        Yoga Basics             w/Jen B.
               5:30-6:45 pm        Fertility Yoga            w/Tara H.  [*SERIES]

Series classes require pre-registration and payment.  You can find more information on the Series Classes page of the website.  All other classes are “drop-in” meaning that you can start anytime in these ongoing classes.  All “Matrika Flow” classes are open level, meaning that the class is a mix of levels,  and beginners are always welcome.  The basic classes provide instruction at a slower pace and the instructor will provide more detailed instructions for poses.  Basic doesn’t mean “easy,”  but it’s a great place to start.  The instructor can always make modifications for more experienced students.  There are Family Yoga workshops, Childbirth preparation workshops and a variety of professional level continuing education opportunities.  Always check the workshops page periodically so you don’t miss something FABULOUS.  This year, don’t make resolutions…..just RESOLVE…..resolve to feel as healthy and energized as possible.  Come on Pittsburgh….do yoga and have fun!

See you soon at The Mat,

Sharon

Welcome Jill!

The Universe has brought a number of absolute angels into my life who have saved me when I most needed a little (and sometimes a BIG) lift.  Yoga Matrika has benefited from many of these most magnificent and generous individuals who share their teachings with our community.  It’s not easy, glamorous or, let’s be honest here….lucrative, to be a yoga instructor.  While I would never want to diminish the amazing value of the dedication and commitment of regular instructors, there have been a few instructors who have come to save the day that I would like to acknowledge.  First, there was Julie Straub….who, with very little introduction, took on pre-natal classes and flow classes last year.  Then, Heidi Zellie ran the entire studio for a week when I needed to be away for my grandmother’s funeral….and we hadn’t even met yet!  And now, I would like to introduce you to Jill Rosenthal…..our newest Yoga Matrika ANGEL.  Jill will be subbing for many of my classes while I finish out this somewhat challenging semester.  She is a Pittsburgher who currently lives in Australia and she is in town for just a short time…….but long enough to save me!  Jill has over 500 hours of training with YogaWorks and is also certified to teach pre-natal yoga.  She has a lot to offer our community and I know that you will enjoy all the classes that you take with her.  Don’t worry, I’ll be back in December, but I KNOW that we’ll be missing Jill for a long time………so catch her while you can!

Dance

While I have always harbored a love of dance and desire to move with grace and agility, my body has not been the most cooperative vehicle for bringing this love into fruition.  I love it, but I can’t seem to get it right.  I know this about myself and this awareness has served me well.  Once, I went out on a date with a (seemingly) wonderful man who suggested that, on our next date, we go swing dancing.  I confidently swung my hair aside and smiled to say that I thought it would be fabulous.  Inside, I was already frantic thinking about how I could learn how to swing dance in time for whenever this next date would be.  The next morning, I had already signed-up for swing dance lessons and went every night that week to a local club that offered nightly lessons and live music.  As Mr. Wonderful never called me again, it turns out that I had an infinite amount of time to learn, but my fear of even the possibility of dancing led me to an immediate obsession with the task.  The good news is that I learned to swing dance and enjoyed many fabulous nights of music and movement.   The bad news is that I never again met a man that wanted anything more than a second date who thought swing dancing was more fun than a root canal. 

All this to say that I love dancing.  So, this fall, I decided to add some dance inspired classes to the Yoga Matrika schedule.  Mindful movement is therapeutic and Yoga Matrika is delighted to offer a Thursday morning Yoga Booty Ballet class with Aleta and a Thursday afternoon Yoga Inspired Modern Dance class with Mercedes.  Get your body moving, heart pumping and limbs shaking and expand your idea of what is possible with your body and mind.  Try these new classes and let these new skills inspire your practice.  You never know what a little dance might bring into your life!

Yoga for the Wind

Wasn’t that wind storm beautiful?  Perhaps, if you were one of the Pittsburgher’s whose car was crushed by a falling tree you might not be able to appreciate the beauty of it just yet,  but for the rest of us it was a powerful, sensual and dynamic experience.  No rain, lightning, hail.  Just wind blowing over 35 miles per hour for over four hours in a row with gusts up to 60 miles per hour thrown in for gusto.

Yoga has many powerful connections with wind.  First, and perhaps the most obvious, is the wind of breath.  We take the wind of breath in through our nose or mouth and it fuels our bodies with oxygen.  Depending on our breathing pattern we can communicate various messages to our brain through our central nervous system.  As the breath moves through our bodies we use the internal architecture and organs of the body to accept the winds, move them to the available spaces and take the excess to appropriate avenues of escape.  Another, somewhat less obvious connection to yoga(unless you have a ‘thing’ for potty humor or happen to be living with a 3rd grader), are the winds of our digestive system.  There’s even a pose called “wind relieving posture” which has been known to massage some winds from a few student’s bellies.  While the sound of the escape of these winds through burps and farts (yes, farts are part of yoga too) may cause some embarassment to the yogi, their release creates space and ease in the digestive system.

Finally, we have the winds of the internal energy of the body.  Have you ever been really angry?  (If the answer is no, then I’m SUPER excited and honored to have you, the Dalai Lama reading my blog!)  Your anger might have risen from your belly your heart and you felt the need to amplify your voice to allow the energy of this angry wind escape through your mouth on the vehicle of your words.  Illness and health is viewed through many healing traditions as management of the internal winds of the body. 

So, today, allow wind to be a part of your yoga.  Try inhaling and exhaling through your nose as you allow your shoulders to drop away from your ears.  Listen to the sound of your breath.  Close your eyes for a moment and look at your internal weather system.  Belly full of wind?  Heart full of wind? Have all the winds become so sedate that you can’t fly your soul kite today?  Whatever your wind status, just spending a few moments to breathe and look at your internal weather might bring you insight and relief.  And, if a tree did fall on your car last night, it will give you something to do as you call your insurance company and get placed on eternal hold.