How to Improve Your Bikram Yoga Practice – Tip #2: Try the Right Way

This is the second of five tips for the month to help you improve your Bikram Yoga practice!

As students, we so often want to be able to do everything in class, but due to old injuries, inflexibility or previously practicing different versions of the poses we find it difficult to perform the entire pose.  This is normal! abby in bow

In Bikram Yoga, you will often hear the teacher say, “Just try the right way and you will receive all the benefits of each pose.”  This means that rather than modifying, skipping or changing the posture, just do one step at a time.  When you get to a point where you are unable to do the next step…stay where you are and breathe.  With each class, you will go a bit further and will see that soon you can get to the next step and beyond.  Don’t worry about how high you are kicking your leg in Standing Bow…just kick back and up with as much strength as you have and you will develop more strength and flexibility by holding the pose still at your maximum.

How to Improve Your Bikram Yoga Practice- Tip #1: Just Breathe

A few years ago, an extremely fit male professional athlete came to me after several classes and said, “I don’t get it.  This is the hardest thing I have ever done.  I am sitting down in class, and can’t catch my breath. The people around me aren’t in very good shape but they seem to be doing fine.  Next to me, this lady in her 70’s is going strong, but I am exhausted.  What is it?”  Screen Shot 2016-03-03 at 5.54.09 PM

This is so common.   It sounds simple…all we have to do is breathe.  However, our natural tendency is to hold our breath or take short, shallow breathes which creates stress in the body. Instead, we need to be conscious of our breath.  Breathing in and out through the nose creates a calm and relaxed condition in the body and mind.  Our minds are often racing and the simple technique of listening to the breath will quiet the mind and bring a relaxation response to the body. When the muscles are relaxed, they will stretch more easily. Furthermore, finding the balance between the body, mind and breath creates the atmosphere for a deeper yoga practice.  We practice proper breathing and asana to prepare ourselves for everything we want to do in life.  The breath, or prana, is our life force and also the foundation of every moment we are alive.

Next time you are faced with a challenge in or out of the yoga room, stop and breathe.  Quiet your mind.  And then… make your next move!

Distractions

In today’s increasingly busy and stressful world, it’s difficult to find the time for yourself.  For those who have begun a Bikram Yoga practice….Bravo! In the midst of your busy day, you’ve made a commitment to yourself. Now, here you are in a 90 minute hot yoga class, ready to take the time, yet your mind won’t let you relax.

In the Bikram Yoga room, you’ll meet yourself face-to-face in the mirror.  You have 90 minutes to work, with the guidance of a trained teacher, on connecting with your body to perform 26 postures and two breathing exercises which strengthen your overall health, wellness, and vitality.  The Bikram Yoga series, always the same 26 postures, is done in room heated to 105-110 degrees F and 40-50% humidity allowing you to relax, focus more deeply, and let your mind go while you perform each posture to the best of your ability.  

So what makes it so difficult?   You know just what to do, so why is it so much more difficult to keep focus some days than others?  

In the yoga room, distractions which you create or choose to acknowledge, hold you back in your practice.   “The room is too hot”,  “The room is too cold”, “I ate too much”, “I think I’m dehydrated”, “This teacher is annoying”, “My shorts are sliding off”, “Wow! I need a pedicure”, “Why didn’t I eat something for breakfast?”, “What time is it?”, “I don’t do this posture very well”, “Who is that bendy girl in the front?”, “The sweat is making my face itch”, “I am almost out of water”…and the mind goes on and on and on.

Distractions are a daily challenge in keeping our focus and staying on our path.  The mind is a collection of thoughts and ideas you’ve gathered, and often not supportive of your true desires.  Through your yoga practice, you can learn to turn off the mind and connect with your true self.  Even if only for a moment, you can realize who you are by letting go of your comfortable, habitual distractions which come in the form of your very own thoughts.   

 In Bikram Yoga, you are given tools to help you focus.  First, you will use the mirror to actually see your body and focus on your movements in the postures.  Next, teachers give you specific commands to lead you into and out of each posture. You don’t have to think.  By moving at the same time as the teacher speaks, you are truly in the moment and connecting your mind with your body.  In addition, the heat creates a challenging environment, which forces you to keep your mind focused to prevent running out of the room.  Bright lights are another tool that help us stay aware of our bodies throughout the class. 

Often times, your mind turns these “tools” into distractions.  The student next to you is sweating too much, the teacher is too loud, the new student behind you is moving around too much in the mirror, you feel like everyone is looking at you in this bright room, etc….  How can you keep your focus?  

The answer: Practice.  As you keep up a consistent practice, you’ll notice it’s 90% mind over the matter.  You’ll choose to follow the distraction, or you’ll choose to keep your focus.  The concept is simple, but distractions are plentiful.  When you are faced with a difficult moment in class, use it as an opportunity to practice concentrating. Bring your focus back to your breath, again and again.  When you’re ready, continue in the posture by moving with the teacher’s words.

Bikram Yoga classes are designed to minimize distractions with strict guidelines such as specific water breaks, lining mats up on the lines, facing the same way, moving together in the postures, scripted dialogue to guide students through the postures, staying in the room for the entire 90 minutes and of course, teaching students how to breathe.  By completing the same 26 posture series, and repeating each pose, in each class you will go deeper and deeper into your understanding of the postures, yoga, and yourself.  

You are the object of your own practice, and the practice is a journey that will take you to places only limited by you.  So start simple… listen and breathe.  And let nothing steal your peace!

 

Building Strength from Within

“Yoga makes you….YOU.” – Bikram Choudhury

People come to yoga for many reasons.  Among these are to improve flexibility, improve skeletal alignment, strengthen and stretch muscles, find relaxation, achieve weight loss, cure spinal disease and arthritis, relieve muscle and joint pain, regulate blood pressure and cholesterol levels, improve focus and the list goes on.  All of these are bi-products of yoga, and yes, with consistent practice they are all achievable.  What most people don’t realize, however, is that yoga, in a broader sense, is a complete lifestyle.  Improved physical, mental and emotional health are all wonderful results that are attained through yoga.  As one gets further and further into their yoga practice, and these benefits abound it becomes clearer that… there is more.  We can do more.  The goals we were once  aiming toward have been achieved and more is possible.  Why limit yourself? The possibilities are endless!  The only question becomes…what do you want?  What do you truly want?  

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Pause.  Slow down.  Wait a minute, you ask.  Can I really have what I want?  Can I really transform into the person I want to be?   The hardest part is knowing what you want.  The first step is to find out who you are.  Yoga makes you….you.  

We look forward to helping you take the first steps in your journey, and getting to know you along your path.  It is not easy to make a change, but you can do it.  You can do anything.  There will be bumps in the road, and moments (that feel like days) of chaos, but you will change.  You will come to know yourself in a way that you haven’t felt since you were a child.  

There is nothing better you can do for yourself than begin your own process of realizing who you really are.  And you can start here…feet together, toes on the line, looking in the mirror.

We can’t wait.

Namaste