Our Manifesto

Monday, February 20, 2012

I've been writing materials for our Mentoring Program and it's set me thinking about what we stand for at Adore Yoga. Why do we only teach small classes? Why don't we hire newly minted teachers with industry minimum qualifications? What's the point of yoga?!

I wrote down a few of my strongest held beliefs about yoga and the list started to crystalise into a sort of values statement. A manifesto. It's still a work in progress, but I thought I'd share it with you and see what you thought. What would you add to this:

The Adore Yoga Manifesto

1. Yoga is important. It changes lives because it changes our understanding of who we are.  

2. Yoga is more than 60 minutes of asana. It’s a rich tradition that brings lasting personal transformation.

3. Authentic yoga is taught by experienced, well trained teachers who never stop learning from their own experienced, authentic teachers.

4. The best yoga style is the one most suited to your individual  needs. There is no single system or approach that is right for everybody.

5. Yoga is safest and most effective when it is adapted to each individual in small groups or one-on-one.

6. Yoga is about relationships: your relationship with yourself, your relationship with the world and your relationship with your true source.

7. Yoga uses many tools, including movement, breath, concentration, a healthy lifestyle and mindful action to help us remove the obstacles to a happy, peaceful and authentic life.



Teacher Profile: Donna Gianniotis

Monday, February 06, 2012

Donna Gianniotis is an experienced teacher who specialises in supporting students who are going through treatment for cancer. Having been through breast cancer herself, Donna's yoga story is fascinating and inspiring. We are honoured to have Donna join us at Adore Yoga. 

When and why did you start doing yoga 

I did my first yoga class on a trip to India 15 years ago. I tried it because everyone else was doing it in India! I was very sceptical about it, but from that first class, something happened. I felt, for the first time in my life, more of a quietness in my mind. I had made a connection to my body. 


Tell us about how that connection has helped you in recent years.

I was diagnosed with breast cancer 4 years ago. I underwent surgery, chemotherapy and radiation. My yoga and meditation practise was my rock throughout the year that I underwent treatment for the cancer. I felt very lucky to have the tools through yoga to support my physical body, my emotional body and my mind.

 

What kind of yoga did you practice during your treatment for cancer?

Gentle asana was really important after surgery to regain the full movement of my arm (after having 12 lymph nodes removed) as well as supporting my body through the aches and pains associated with chemotherapy. Breathing practices and meditation were a daily practice (and still are). These practices were so important at that time because our minds can easily project into an unknown future. Meditation helps to keep you in the present moment, to take each day as it comes and to find some stillness and peace within the storm of the cloud. 

What advice about yoga would you give a student experiencing a serious health issue? 

Yoga is a great tool that can work alongside traditional Western medicine to look after your inner world. Yoga means 'union' and it is about re-connecting to ourselves. The reason that we have illness and dis-ease is because somewhere along the line we have disconnected from ourselves. To put it simply, our mind is not with what our bodies is doing. Yoga on the mat helps us to re-establish this connection to ourselves and then hopefully we can then start to take this into our daily living, in all that we do. So my advice, practice yoga to help re-establish this relationship to yourself. But the practice can't remain on the mat, it must go with you into your work, play and relationships. 

What keeps you coming back to the yoga mat every day?

I love the re-connection that is made to myself in the practise and, as a teacher, I love the feeling in a class when students re-connect to themselves. It supports everything in my life, from swimming, snorkelling & bushwalking to my continued studies and practise in energy healing and energy medicine.

Donna is teaching a workshop for students going through cancer on Saturday 10th March, 12-2pm (book here) and will be running a 5 week course for students with cancer on Sundays at 10am from 18 March (book here).

Can yoga wreck your body?

Monday, February 06, 2012

 

A recent article in the New York Times entitled 'How yoga can wreck your body' has caused shockwaves through the yoga community and generated a huge online buzz.


It is certainly confronting to read sensationalist claims such as “the vast majority of people should give up yoga altogether. It’s simply too likely to cause harm,” but the main argument of the article is hard to fault: doing extreme yoga poses, or even practicing simple poses incorrectly, can cause injury. 


So why do yoga students practice poses that are inappropriate for them, or do simple poses in a way that causes harm? An article in the UK newspaper The Guardian provides plenty of explanations:


“Elizabeth Bennett, 45, slipped a disc in her neck after being "bullied" into a headstand at a New York yoga studio. "When I hesitated, he called me a wimp. There are too many teachers who push unwitting students too far to serve their own egos," she said.”


Or take the case of Megan Branch, a 22 yr old who injured her back practicing locust pose “because she was in a class that was so crowded with up to 70 people that she had to lie at an odd angle so the next student did not have his feet in her face”.


Yoga was never meant to be taught in big classes by inexperienced teachers. Traditionally, seasoned yoga teachers worked under the guidance of their own expert teachers, passing down the wisdom of their tradition to three or four students at a time. Teachers got to know their students and taught them poses that were uniquely designed to suit their individual needs.


If you’re doing yoga in a gym or a big studio, you may be one of 30 to 80 students being taught by a teacher with as little as 14 days training. 


Describing a typical community yoga class in New York, Joanna Walters in The Guardian says that a class of over 70 students “simply had a leader to mimic, with no expert correction of students' postures or warnings about injuries or not pushing one's limits. In an industry where there is cursory certification and no official licensing, yoga teachers can become "qualified" with a 200-hour online course”.


Unfortunately, this situation is not limited to New York and the minimum 200-hour certification set by the Yoga Alliance in the USA has become the benchmark for teacher training in Australia too. 


However, Yoga Australia, the professional body that represents yoga teachers in this country, requires teachers to undertake a minimum of 350hrs professional training before achieving Level 1 teacher status and will only accord teachers with a 200hr certification provisional membership. A Yoga Australia Level 2 teacher must have 500 hours training and 5 years/500hrs teaching experience, while a Level 3 teacher must demonstrate 1000hrs training and 10 yrs and 1000hrs teaching experience.


Yoga has been confused with exercise and the gym culture of recent years has normalised the idea of big group classes, obediently mimicking the moves of an ‘expert’ at the front of the room.  It’s certainly a cost effective way for studio’s to run their businesses, but it is not a safe or effective way to teach yoga. 


If you want to practice safe, effective and authentic yoga, here four things to look out for when choosing a teacher:


1. Make sure your teacher is a Yoga Australia accredited Level 1, 2 or 3 teacher.

2. Check that your teacher has experience in modifying poses for individuals (ie adapting for injury, age, flexibility level etc.)

3. Choose a class with a smaller number of students to ensure your teacher is able to spot mis-alignments and prevent injury.

4. A good teacher will ask students at the start of class if they have any injuries or medical conditions. If a teacher fails to do this, it’s an indicator that they may not be trained or willing to teach students according to their individual capacities.

Nikola Ellis is the founder & principal teacher at Adore Yoga. Adore Yoga teaches small groups of 4 and 6 students, as well as providing private instruction and professional mentoring programs for yoga teachers.

Teacher Profile: Mysan Sidbo - Sports Yogi

Wednesday, February 01, 2012

Mysan Sidbo is the sportsperson’s yogi. A former professional snowboarder, qualified personal trainer, massage therapist and kayak instructor Mysan’s approach to health bridges the body-mind gap. 


When did you discover yoga? 

I started doing yoga about 12 years ago in the Alps in Europe were I lived at the time. I started yoga because I was a professional snowboarder and skier and had spent years putting my body through heavy training sessions, pressure, stresses and injuries. 


I had also put my mind through a lot, being in a space where I needed to always be totally focused as well having adrenaline constantly pumping through my system. I needed a change, for my body and mind.


How did you go from being a professional snow boarder in Europe to teaching yoga in Australia?

I’m originally from Sweden and came to Australia when I was 28 to study. Since I had been a skibum for years and my body was totally broken, I needed to get an education and change things up!  I did a bachelor of business and a master of commerce and after finishing my studies I worked very briefly for a recruitment firm but I quickly realised that was not for me.  So I came back full time to fitness and kayaking and completed my Hatha Yoga Teacher Diploma. As soon as I started teaching yoga, I knew I had found my passion! 


What do you love about yoga?

I come from a professional background of sport and remedial massage which, along with my many own sport injuries, has made me passionate about creating better bodies through yoga. I have a great curiosity about how the body works- the mechanics and anatomy.  Linking it all - body, mind, heart and breath – through yoga has helped me, and my students, get happy and healthy.


Yoga helps me in my every day life, in stress full situations, when in need of peace, when in need of focus. And, as a very active sports person, it has helped me achieve better results, reach and last longer, and be at the top of my ability - so awesome!


What advice would you give a sports person starting yoga? 

It would depend on that persons needs, but most sports people needs to create balance in their training. That’s what yoga has done that for me and many others through my Yoga for Sports trainings. When you add the yogic knowledge of the body, breath and mind to any sport, great success follows!


Mysan Sidbo at Adore Yoga:

Core Strength Yoga Workshop: Saturday 19 May, 12-3pm. BOOK

Yoga for Sports Workshop: Saturday 16 June, 12- 3pm. BOOK

Mysan is available for private yoga lessons, specializing in sports and rehabilitiation, Monday & Wednesday evenings, weekday mornings and Sundays. Appointments essential 1300 844 693.

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