Wednesday, December 14, 2016

my yoga experience

Heather Nehl
My Yoga Experience


I began my yoga experience through this class in a very similar way to Nick from Enlighten Up; I was reluctant and critical and did not want to fall into a spiritual practice so I spent the entirety of my practice thinking it through and analyzing critically. I was open to yoga being a new work out, but less open about the other aspects of yoga. While I did grow more comfortable with and knowledgeable about yoga, I certainly looked at my experience with a critical eye. There are things I would do differently with my practice, but I did learn from it and have grown in my yoga practice.
As an American, raised in a non-religious home, I have a tendency to retract away from religious and spiritual experiences. While I respect those who have their gods and practices, I don't want any of it myself. I was interested in this experience as a regular physical practice, a way to get fit and more in tune with my body and nothing else. I used yoga at Stockton in the past as a way to calm down, but I didn't look at my practice this semester in this way. I think I had a goal oriented view of yoga, which certainly doesn't apply to spiritual experiences.  In my first blog post I even talked about how I liked Steevee not being a very spiritual instructor (a view point that eventually does change after experiencing more physical). I think I kept this mentality throughout my practice, and analyzed my practice more than I typically would have if I had just joined a studio. Even in my later posts I was looking at yoga through a physical practice lens, not really taking into account the other aspects of yoga. Not one of my posts discusses my ideas on community engagement, higher enlightened thinking, perfection-related goals, etc. In this sense, my overall yoga practice was probably a bit lacking, but I definitely came to a better understanding of the differences of the physical practices. When I first started this class I had only a DVD and Steevee as a regular practice, which were both Flow practices. I never did extensive research into yoga and into the various styles. I enjoyed learning about the practices and then doing them in class. Learning about the practices in this way allowed for a deeper, more practical understanding of the differences within yoga and how styles and purposes can vary so widely in a practice I tend to think of as a singular practice. I learned how much a private or a group class could make a difference in experience – reflecting that I surprisingly like group classes better than solo classes. I learned that I like yoga to be a blend of work out and self-reflection – as seen in my post about Sivananda practice. I think this is a practice I would like to pursue because I felt in tune with my body in this practice, like I was stopping and making healthy oberservations throughout. This practice was also easiest for me to translate to day-to-day life. Overall this experience has helped me feel more knowledgable and also more assured in what I want from my practice.

          If I could do anything differently with this class and experience, I’d want to have invested more of myself into the experiences of this class. When I first signed up, I wanted to go to yoga multiple times a week and practice on my own as well. The idea of wasting a free semester of classes was a motivator in that thought process but I also really wanted to have a meaningful experience from frequent practice. I think I would be able to monitor my progress more had I gone to yoga more often, experimented with a wider array of classes and studios, and took the time to really practice hard. I also think I could have invested myself in the alternative aspects of yoga – not just the physical practice. Some of the dietary and life style practices, such as the Ayurvedic Gunas really were interesting to me but I didn’t experiment much with applying those practices. A large part of my yogic experience came from my lack of investment in the karma project as well. The purpose of the project was to really examine selflessness and to try it for ourselves, but I kind of skirted around the project because it was inconvenient for me. The karma project could have been a meaningful experience for me, had I made it one. I think in this sense it was an unfortunate lack of time and ordering of priorities that lead to this experience being less than it potentially could have been. I may take this lesson in applying myself and do my own yoga experience on my own time.  

Friday, December 9, 2016

date: 10/8
time: 4:30
instructor: Ash Brooke
style: Glow Yoga

This was one of the most fun yoga experiences I've ever had. For finals week Stockton does a bunch of de-stress activities and one of them was glow in the dark yoga. So I gathered up a whole group of friends and we dove in, not too sure what we'd find. We wound up in a dark room, covered in glow-in-the-dark body paint, doing yoga to up-beat dance music. The class itself was good - the instructor went with a pretty classic sequence - some sun salutations and bridges and shoudler stands - but the atmosphere really made this class. Everyone was there just to have fun  - not to find their zen or improve their inversions or whatever. We danced at some points, sang, sighed out loud and proud Oms. I think what I liked most about this class was that I didn't take it so seriously. I didn't worry about pushing myself and my form and improving my practice, I just let loose. I never realized that I took my practice so seriously until I totally didn't. If I could go to a glow yoga once a month, I think it would honestly be perfect to loosen me up and chill me out. Also, side note, it is very hard to balance when its so dark you can hardly see anything. This was really a great practice to end my journals with.


Saturday, December 3, 2016

date: 11/29
time: 6:30
instructor: Steevee
style: Yin

I brought a friend to this class tonight and he absolutely loved it. Steevee made it a bit more physical than usual, which I liked, but she also incorporated some techniques to reduce stress. It felt like a well rounded practice.

Yoga as a religion is an interesting prompt. In our culture, I'd say it's rare for yoga to be considered a religion. It is a workout that can potentially get spiritual if you make it such, but I don't think it is inherently religious here.

Thursday, November 24, 2016

date: 11/23/16
time: 7:00 am
instructor: Laurie
style: Flow Plus

I got up at 6 am today for Lauries Flow Plus class. The breath actually played an interesting role in this class today. I have a tendency to look at physical activities, including yoga, as a challenge. I push myself into the harder positions and out of my comfort zone a lot, so in yoga I often find myself losing my breath and sacrificing it for the sake of a move. I caught myself doing this a few times during this class which was actually pretty nice because it made me more aware of my physical limits. I think it'll be good to carry over this awareness into later practices because that's kind of an essential point of yoga, awareness that is. It felt good going with my breath and within my limits when I caught myself doing the opposite.

Thursday, November 17, 2016

date: 11/15
time: 9:00 & 6:30
instructor: Annie & Steevee
style: Flow & Yin

I went to two classes today! On the down side, neither of them were the style I was really hoping for - I wanted a work out and I got a lot of relaxation and breathing. On the up side I got to experience a one-on-one class by pure circumstance, which really highlighted the impact of a classroom setting for yoga. While it was nice having an attentive teacher and doing a one-on-one practice, I think I prefer a group class which really surprised me because I really thought myself to be impartial to the community aspect of yoga. The meditative aspects of yoga were also highlighted in both of my practices, bringing to light different things in each. My morning class ended with a really nice savasana, where I very clearly felt the meditation and the calming. Contrarily at night Steevee led us through a loving kindness meditation that I simply could not focus on. In neither physical practice was I particularly focused either. I think yoga is an excellent way to get tune into ones body in a meditative way, but I think the practitioner has to actively make it a meditation. Because I was looking for a work out, not a meditation, I got less out of my practices than I could have.

Monday, November 14, 2016

date: 11/10
time: 2:30
instructor: Laurie
style: Shivananda

I really liked this practice. When the idea of doing Savasana between each small sequence was first mentioned I thought I would hate it, but I thought that was actually the best part of the practice. While I like using yoga as a work out I really felt in tune with my body and what this practice did for me when we took that time to check in with ourselves. I think this type of self reflection can be applied very easily outside of the yoga context. It felt really good in practice to step back and take notice of the minute sensations each pose sequence brought on; outside of the physical practice, it'd really beneficial to take mental steps back and evaluate why you're feeling a certain way or doing what you're doing etc. Giving yourself those mental savastanas can really help put life into a healthy perspective and keep a person from being overwhelmed. I think this is really where the application of yoga practice beyond physical practice comes in. I mentioned the 12-step ideology before, but it really is about taking what works from your practice and applying it how it can be applied. This is how the practice of yoga becomes the lifestyle of yoga, and i think that within reason its not a bad thing to apply yoga ideology to other aspects of ones life.

Friday, November 4, 2016

date: 11/4/2016
time: 3:30
style: viniyoga
instructor: Gary Kraftsow


This was certainly an interesting class. For most of the class I felt like I was in physical therapy - a lot of the moves that we did were actually very similar to moves I was prescribed for my physical therapy. The interesting part about that was that I went to physical therapy for my knees and hips - not my lower back at all. The jargon used by Gary was very interesting because it was absolutely being used to assert some sort of knowledgeable authority - that Gary was a leading doctor in this field. Right from the start, however, I had to doubt Gary. In his initial power point presentation in which he explains how yoga can improve a lifestyle he describes types of pain - chronic versus acute. From this slide on I was distrustful of Gary as a medical professional because he described chronic pain as pain measured by duration and acute pain as pain measured in intensity: chronic and acute are both terms that describe the duration of pain, chronic being long term and acute being short term. There was also the discussion of yoga as an "ancient medicine" from Gary, who described yoga as an ancient physical practice that worked in a similar way to todays prescription/diagnosis style of treatment. Gary also made the bold statement that "proprioceptive neuromuscular fascillitation" was a style of healing known to yoga practitioners for centuries, when PNF was first clinically designed, presented, and implemented around the 1950's. The use of Sanskrit terms to support his yogic knowledge was also weakly-based.So in my book Gary was neither a reliable health professional nor a reliable yogi - simple another person hopping on the yoga trend. The practice itself was awkward and choppy - hopping from one pose sequence to another with poor transitions and guidance that was lacking in clarity. The videos were accessible for all ages and skills, but there were a few moves that I immediately thought "why is he having us do this?" for. The lower back focus also didn't seem all that relevant when looking at what some of these moves worked. Overall it came together as a poor clash of yoga and western medicine.