Yogasamacher fw 2018 (non member)

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IYENGAR YOGA NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED STATES VOL. 21, NO. 2

Fall 2017 / Winter 2018

21st Century Practice: Adapt, Evolve, Connect Plus

Garth McLean on MS Bobby Clennell on Virabhadrasana I Lifelong Practice: Felicity Green



YOGA SAMACHAR’S MISSION

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Yoga Samachar, the magazine of the Iyengar Yoga community in the U.S. and beyond, is published twice a year by the Publications Committee of the Iyengar Yoga National Association of the U.S. (IYNAUS). The word samachar means “news” in Sanskrit. Along with the website, www.iynaus.org, Yoga Samachar is designed to provide interesting and useful information to IYNAUS members to:

Letter from the President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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News from the Regions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Yoga Tech – Heather Haxo Phillips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Practicing the Social Body: Yoga, Race, Freedom – Kris Manjapra . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Iyengar Yoga on Campus – Annie Melchior . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Exploration. Transformation. Evolution. – Garth McLean . . . .

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• Promote the dissemination of the art, science, and philosophy of yoga as taught by B.K.S. Iyengar, Geeta Iyengar, and Prashant Iyengar

Bobbe Norrise: Trailblazer, Ageless and Timeless – Heather Haxo Phillips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Lifelong Practice: Felicity Green – Paul Cheek . . . . . . . . .

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• Communicate information regarding the standards and training of certified teachers

Ask the Yogi – Bobby Clennell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33

• Report on studies regarding the practice of Iyengar Yoga • Provide information on products that IYNAUS imports from India • Review and present recent articles and books written by the Iyengars

Treasurer’s Report – Stephen Weiss . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Become a Board Member . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Back Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41

• Report on recent events regarding Iyengar Yoga in Pune and worldwide • Be a platform for the expression of experiences and thoughts from members, both students and teachers, about how the practice of yoga affects their lives • Present ideas to stimulate every aspect of the reader’s practice

IYNAUS OFFICERS AND STANDING COMMITTEES

YOGA SAMACHAR IS PRODUCED BY THE IYNAUS PUBLICATIONS COMMITTEE

President, David Carpenter dcarpenter@sidley.com

Committee Chair: Anne-Marie Schultz Editor: Michelle D. Williams Copy Editor: Denise Weeks Design: Don Gura Advertising: Rachel Frazee

Secretary, Michele Galen michele.galen@gmail.com

Members can submit an article query or a practice sequence idea for consideration to be included in future issues. Articles should be well-written and submitted electronically. The Yoga Samachar staff reserves the right to edit accepted submissions to conform to the rules of spelling and grammar, as well as to the Yoga Samachar house style guidelines. Queries must include the author’s full name and biographical information related to Iyengar Yoga, along with email contact and phone number. Please send all queries to Michelle Williams, Editor, yogasamachar@iynaus.org, and we will respond as quickly as possible.

Vice President, Vacant

Treasurer, Stephen Weiss stphweiss@gmail.com Past Presidents Organizational board–1991 Mary Dunn 1992 –1994 Gloria Goldberg 1994 –1998 Dean Lerner 1998 – 2000 Karin O’Bannon 2000 – 2002 Jonathan Neuberger 2002 – 2004 Sue Salaniuk 2004 – 2006 Marla Apt 2006 – 2008 Linda DiCarlo 2008 – 2012 Christopher Beach 2012 – 2014 Janet Lilly 2014 – 2017 Michael Lucey 2017 – David Carpenter

Archives Committee Scott Hobbs sh@scotthobbs.com & Chris Stein shamani108@mac.com, Co-Chairs Lindsey Clennell, Elaine Hall, Linda Nishio, Deborah Wallach

Certification Committee Laurie Blakeney certification.chair@iynaus.org, Chair Marla Apt, Steve Hornbacher, Peggy Kelley, Rebecca Lerner, Nina Pileggi, Ray Madigan, Sue Salaniuk, Jayne Satter, Nancy Stechert, Lois Steinberg

ADVERTISING Full-page, half-page, quarter-page, and classified advertising is available. All advertising is subject to IYNAUS board approval. Ads are secondary to the magazine's content, and we reserve the right to adjust placement as needed based on layout needs. Find ad rates at www.iynaus.org/yoga-samachar. For more information, including artwork specifications and deadlines, please contact Rachel Frazee at rachel@yogalacross.com or 608-269-1441. Cover: Zain Syed, or "Yogi Zain," a CIYT in Oakland, CA, shares inspiring Iyengar Yoga photos and video demos on Instagram. He has more than 3,500 dedicated followers and his posts get tens of thousands of views.

Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018

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IYNAUS OFFICERS AND STANDING COMMITTEES Continuing Education Committee Carlyn Sikes, Chair Peggy Gwi-Seok Hong, Julie Lawrence, Octavia Morgan, Leanne Cusumano Roque, Shaw-Jiun Wang

Ethics Committee Manju Vachher dr.manju.vachher@gmail.com, Chair Members: Robyn Harrison, Faith Russell, Jito Yumibo Contact Ethics at ethics@iynaus.org

Events Committee Sandy Carmellini yogasandy@rocketmail.com, Chair Gloria Goldberg, Randy Just, Suzie Muchnick, Nancy Watson

Governance and Elections Committee David Carpenter, Chair David Larsen, Patti Martin, Michele Galen

Membership Committee Paige Noon paige.noon@gmail.com, Chair IMIYA: Jessica Miller & IYANE: Kim Peralta Katya Slivinskaya,Co-Chairs IYANW: Gwen Heisterkamp IYACSR: Stephanie Lavender IYASCUS: Jerrilyn Crowley IYAGNY: Ed McKeaney IYASE: Samuel Cooper IYALA: Laura Baker IYASW: Carrie Abts IYAMN: Mary Jo Nissen IYAMW: Donna Furmanek IYANC: Richard Weinapple

Next Generation Committee

Letter

FROM THE PRESIDENT

DEAR FELLOW IYNAUS MEMBERS, I have picked a fitting time and place to write my inaugural president’s letter. I am now in Pune, having spent the past month studying with Prashant, Sunita, and the next generation of RIMYI’s teachers. And I just returned from the Punyatithi held on the third anniversary of Guruji’s death. Needless to say, this was an emotional event. It was also inspirational. Abhijata was the featured speaker, and she gave a touching tribute to Guruji. I left the event filled with optimism. To be sure, there will never be another B.K.S. Iyengar. But I think he will prove to have been a transformational figure in world history, and with the generations of teachers he groomed, his impact can be even greater after his death than when he lived. I have also been impressed with the importance that RIMYI ascribes to IYNAUS and our sister national associations. One of the teachers at RIMYI actually began a class by asking the students to think about their national association and bring it within them. The yogic quest for knowledge and freedom profoundly depends on community. As Prashant says, yoga is a cultural activity, and like all aspects of culture, yoga is the creation of a community. We can go to our mats only if we have been educated and oriented by the community, and the community nurtures us in myriad other ways. I feel its energy and power every day in RIMYI’s practice hall, in every class I take, and every time I practice at home.

Amita Bhagat & Gwen Derk, Co-chairs

Outreach Committee Denise Rowe Yogini5352@gmail.com, Chair

Publications Committee Anne-Marie Schultz anne_marie_schultz@baylor.edu, Chair Don Gura, Rachel Frazee, Renee Razzano, Denise Weeks, Michelle Williams

Public Relations and Marketing Committee Shaaron Honeycutt shaaron.honeycutt@gmail.com, Chair Amita Bhagat, Laura Lascoe, Rachel Mathenia, Zain Syed

Regional Support Committee Patti Martin, Chair IYANW: Janet Langley IYAMW: David Larsen IYAGNY: Caren Rabbino IYASE: Lisa Waas IYASCUS: Randy Just IYASW: Marivic Wrobel

IMIYA: Cathy Wright IYAC-SR: Suneel Sundar IYALA: Jennifer Diener IYANE: Jarvis Chen IYAMN: Joy Laine IYANC: Athena Pappas

Scholarship and Awards Committee Carlyn Sikes carlyneileen@hotmail.com, Chair Lesley Freyberg, Richard Jonas, Lisa Jo Landsberg, Pat Musburger, Nina Pileggi, John Schumacher

Service Mark & Certification Mark Committee Gloria Goldberg yogagold2@gmail.com, Attorney in Fact for Geeta and Prashant Iyengar

Systems & Technology Committee Shaaron Honeycutt, Chair Ed Horneij, William McKee, David Weiner

Volunteer Coordinator Ann McDermott-Kave amkave1@optonline.net

Yoga Research Committee Gwen Derk grderk@gmail.com, Chair Jerry Chiprin, William Conde Goldman, Renee Royal, Kimberly Williams

IYNAUS Senior Council Kristin Chirhart, Manouso Manos, Patricia Walden, Joan White

Director of Operations Sharon Cowdery generalmanager@iynaus.org

Contact IYNAUS P.O. Box 538 Seattle, WA 98111 206.623.3562 www.iynaus.org

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Communities depend on communication, and one of IYNAUS’ major initiatives is to improve communications among Iyengar Yoga practitioners in the U.S. We are now sending eblasts to all our members twice a month, and I have also separately sent several eblasts to our CIYT members to apprise them of matters germane to Iyengar Yoga teachers. I plan to do more of that. But I understand that many members have missed some of our communications. Even if you are receiving some of our missives, please regularly check your spam folders and please authorize all communications from IYNAUS. We are also using Facebook and other social media to share important information, and in my time here at RIMYI, several practitioners from Europe have told me that they enjoy our Facebook postings. This piece of news led one dinosaur (me!) to subscribe to social media so I won’t miss out. I urge my fellow dinosaurs to do the same. We are also nearing completion of a top-to-bottom redesign of our website and a major overhaul of its contents. Absent some unforeseen snags, our new improved website will be up and running by the time this issue of Yoga Samachar hits the streets. We plan to regularly refresh the content on our website and use it to channel important information. So we urge each of you to establish a practice of checking the website frequently. As we plan for the future growth of our U.S. Iyengar Yoga community, we should always remember those who have established and maintained it. As a small gesture in that direction, we will now start listing the past presidents of IYNAUS in each issue of Yoga Samachar. We also thank all of you who have volunteered your time and energy to support the Iyengar Yoga community in the U.S. Our community has grown because of the selfless work of volunteers, and we stand on your shoulders as we plan for even better things to come. Yours in yoga, David Carpenter IYNAUS President

Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018


News

FROM THE REGIONS

IYACSR At the end of summer, the Iyengar Yoga Association of California Southern Region (IYACSR) was honored to host Birjoo Mehta again in San Diego. In 2013, he lead the IYNAUS Conference and Convention Sarvabhauma Yog, and in 2015, he came to teach the Panchamahabhutas, Five Great Elements. This time, Birjoo taught the five vital airs, the Vayus. The topic was philosophical, practical, and inspirational. We all learn and teach what to do in the asanas. We all strive to learn and teach how to do them. Birjoo teaches us why we do them. Whether he teaches Elements or Winds or gross physicality, Birjoo shares that any aspect of the practice that we focus on is an important part, something we can conceptualize. Just as there are many kinds of maps—topographical, Thomas Guides, the Waze app—so too are there guides for our sadhana. How one travels may necessitate a different sort of map (for example, Waze is no good to an airline pilot, and a globe will not help someone find a new yoga studio). Birjoo makes new yoga maps accessible to his students. The workshop took place over four days, Aug. 31–Sept. 3, 2017, at the Williams Barn in San Marcos, a beautiful event space in north San Diego County. We were treated to a practice on hardwood floors, with mountains out the windows and glimpses of horses walking past our space. The 150 students in attendance came from San Diego, Los Angeles, Idaho, Michigan, Massachusetts, and Mexico to learn from Birjoo. This was a community-organized workshop, starting with the IYACSR Board and carried out by dozens of volunteers every day. In the end, every attendee contributed to the well-being of the group. The weekend was quite hot—Birjoo jokingly thanked us for the Mumbai-like conditions. IYACSR appreciates the efforts of all who made space for a neighbor, who brought an extra fan into the practice hall, and

Stephanie Lavender supports Kim Mackesy in Adho Mukha Vrksasana during a demonstration at International Yoga Day in San Diego. Photo: Nancy Baldon

who looked out for fellow students as needed. IYACSR plans to share still photographs, captured by the gracious and talented Nancy Baldon, on our Facebook page and online at www.iyacsr. org. We also plan to release a video recording of the entire event, filmed by Certified Iyengar Yoga Teacher (CIYT) Dan Guida, through Vimeo. Please visit our website for more information. The collaboration extended beyond the region. IYACSR was delighted to work with John Schumacher and Unity Woods who hosted Birjoo Mehta in Virginia on the weekend after his time in San Diego. We see this as an opportunity and a model for interregional collaboration. We encourage our counterparts around the U.S. to communicate early and often about special events. On Sunday, June 18, San Diego celebrated and honored International Yoga Day in historic and beautiful Balboa Park. IYACSR represented this method and the Iyengar Yoga centers in our region. Our Community Outreach Chair Stephanie Lavender arranged a booth space, which she and her team of volunteers decorated with photos of Guruji and copies of books written by B.K.S. Iyengar, Geeta Iyengar, and Prashant Iyengar. Of the dozens of booths participating in the event, IYACSR was unique as a noncommercial entity. We were not selling classes or clothing or coconut water. We were simply there to share the method. In addition to our displays, the IYACSR booth hosted a series of Iyengar Yoga demonstrations. Eleven volunteers showed poses in series for over an hour to an audience of onlookers that stood three deep. Practitioners from various regional Iyengar Yoga centers displayed asanas from all categories.

Participants in Birjoo Mehta’s San Diego workshop on the Vayus, or five vital airs Photo: Nancy Baldon

Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018

Outside our booth, Stephanie Lavender (CIYT Intermediate Junior I) taught a class on Surya Namaskar the Iyengar way and Kim Zanger-Mackesy (CIYT Intermediate Junior II) taught arm balances to large and mixed groups. The participants could experience for themselves the practice they had observed earlier. 3


NEWS CONTINUED

IYAGNY This year, the Iyengar Yoga Association of Greater New York (IYAGNY) had our most successful Yogathon to date, raising the auspicious amount of $108,000. That wouldn’t have been possible without the support of our association teachers, which now number 164. This year, we expanded our outreach to all of our association teachers by offering three free professional development seminars to all of our region’s CIYTs. The first was on financial planning, the second on developing a business model, and the third on using social media and marketing. All three were also broadcast on our website, which helped expand our reach to association teachers not in attendance and allowed us to continue the conversation online. We are looking forward to offering these seminars again next year on topics relevant to our teachers. We’re also offering continuing education classes several times a year to help teachers hone and improve their teaching skills, whether assessment is imminent or not. We also regularly offer “Back From India” sharings with CIYTs who have recently attended classes at RIMYI, and we host a guest teacher series, along with various workshops and lectures. This fall, we held a potluck to come together, celebrate our common bond of Iyengar Yoga, and thank our association teachers for all the ways we rely on them. We are truly grateful for all the support and the community.

The new lobby at the Iyengar Yoga Institute of Los Angeles, adorned with archival photos of B.K.S. Iyengar

students for workshops and classes. We continue to be blessed with a plethora of exceptional teachers in our region, many of whom offer regular classes and workshops at the Institute. One of the highlights was a course on menstruation taught by Marla Apt and Gloria Goldberg. Students immersed themselves in readings by Lois Steinberg and Geeta Iyengar and spent three days learning and practicing sequences and modifications for pre-, post- and during menstruation. Lectures by Dr. Lori Silver (OB/GYN) enriched our understanding of women’s bodies and how to respect the entire menstrual cycle by modifying the yoga practice throughout the month.

IYALA “Giving does not impoverish us nor does withholding enrich us.” — B.K.S. Iyengar Reflecting on the happenings in our region over the summer and fall, it is clear that our members have heeded Guruji’s profound words about giving. Free classes, member workshops, and community outreach have brought Iyengar Yoga to new students, while teachers and students alike contributed in myriad ways to strengthen our practice, beautify our surroundings, and encourage us all to become better people. The Iyengar Yoga Institute of Los Angeles (IYILA), now in its 33rd year of operation, has been enjoying a beautiful new studio, which was renovated last spring. We have fresh paint, new floors, and a well-organized and attractive props storage area— thanks to the hard work of many volunteers. Our inviting new lobby is adorned with photos of Guruji, obtained from the historical archive maintained by teacher Scott Hobbs and restored and installed by practitioners and IYALA members Alfred Bie and Joan Watanabe. Our new space is a refreshing change for continuing students and has drawn in many new 4

Our halls were also graced with the lovely voice of Gitte Bechsgaard (Toronto) as she led our community in chanting during a gathering for Guru Purnima on July 11. Gitte also taught workshops on yoga philosophy, supplemented with asana practice led by Gloria Goldberg, where students throughout our community came together to deepen their practice through understanding the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. In another major area of giving, Los Angeles and the surrounding community continues to be a venue for CIYT assessments, with the Institute hosting Introductory assessments in September, as well as Intermediate Junior I assessments in November. Other studios in the area also participate in assessments—Govinda’s hosted the Junior I and Yoga Daya in LA and Palm Desert hosted the Introductory in November. These assessments require generous contributions from both the hosting teachers as well as the students who volunteer for the classes. By the end of 2017, Iyengar Yoga Therapeutics (IYT) will be completing a three-year teacher training program, created under the guidance of Guruji. A new one-year therapy training Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018


The generosity of everyone involved in our community is appreciated, from faculty to students to staff. We look forward to celebrating Guruji’s centennial year in 2018 together with Iyengar Yoga practitioners around the globe. program will commence in 2018 with Manouso Manos. The IYT program has extended into community outreach, whereby teachers are being placed into underserved communities in Los Angeles and Riverside through ongoing classes and workshops. Spanish-speaking parents, Russian immigrants, U.S. veterans, and children traumatized by violence are all experiencing yoga through the IYT outreach. For more information, see www.iyengaryogatherapeutics.com/events/iythelps-under-served-communities-3. Our teachers continue to share their wisdom through both local and out-of-town retreats and intensives. In her efforts to widen the student population and deepen the practice of existing Iyengar Yoga practitioners, Marla Apt will hold a retreat at the newly opened learning center in Santa Cruz county, 1440 Multiversity, Jan. 7-12, 2018. Find more information online at https://1440.org/program/deeper-potential-iyengar-yoga. Marla will also lead two intensives at IYALA next year. The five-day intensives are an opportunity for a kind of urban yoga retreat, to immerse oneself in extended asana and pranayama classes as well as yoga philosophy discussions. On the same days as the intensives, she will offer a course for all teachers who want to refine their teaching skills. Mark your calendars and plan to register early for these retreat weekends, to be held March 19-23 and Oct. 8-12, 2018. Our region extends far beyond Los Angeles and the Institute. Holly Hoffman, owner of The Iyengar Yoga Center Palm Desert, with the guidance of Senior Teacher Cathy Rogers Evans, hosted a five-day Summer Solstice Intensive in June 2017. In the Inland Empire, Amy Brown (CIYT Intermediate Junior I) offered a four-part series, “Foundations of Iyengar Yoga” in the Redlands area. Most of the students were new to the practice of Iyengar Yoga and were thrilled to find that the practice and its elements provide the framework for a mindful yoga experience. We are grateful for IYALA Board members—especially our new president, Mary Ann Kellogg, who is a former dancer and choreographer. Mary Ann began practicing Iyengar Yoga in the early 1980s with Mary Dunn in New York City, after a fellow dancer—Twyla Tharp—introduced her to the method. We also welcomed Lori McIntosh (CIYT Intermediate Junior II) to our board mid-year. Continuing board members include Laura Baker (vice president and membership chair), Don Vangeloff Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018

(treasurer), Amy Brown (secretary), Jennifer Diener (past president), and members-at-large Holly Hoffman, Mike Montgomery, and Becky Patel. Longstanding practitioner and former board member Brad Sklarew is much appreciated for overseeing daily operations of IYALA and for his warm greetings to each person who walks through the doors. The generosity of everyone involved in our community is appreciated, from faculty to students to staff. We look forward to celebrating Guruji’s centennial year in 2018 together with Iyengar Yoga practitioners around the globe.

IYAMN The Iyengar Yoga Association of Minnesota (IYAMN) serves the upper Midwest region of Minnesota, western Wisconsin, Iowa, South Dakota, and North Dakota. Most of the Iyengar Yoga students in this region are concentrated around the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, but there are strong Iyengar Yoga communities outside of that region as well. One of them is the area where Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Iowa meet—a beautiful part of the Midwest with deeply carved river valleys. In Decorah, Iowa, a town of only 8,000 or so, Iyengar Yoga is taught at two yoga studios and at the small liberal arts college in town. Across the Mississippi River is Viroqua, Wisconsin, which has fewer than 5,000 residents yet has its own Iyengar Yoga studio. LaCrosse, Wisconsin, is a vibrant community of Iyengar Yoga practitioners as well, a community built over the course of 35 years by Chris Saudek and Francie Ricks. IYAMN held its biannual Yoga Day in LaCrosse in July. Rachel Frazee taught an asana class to students from Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Iowa. IYAMN member and Matthew Sanford (CIYT) is a jewel of our community. A paraplegic himself, he has used the teachings of B.K.S. Iyengar to help people of all abilities heal their bodies and minds in unexpected ways. An article about him recently appeared in Yoga Journal China, and a dialogue with him about the nature of compassion in our lives is airing on public television in our region. Matthew is currently finishing his second book on his experience with Iyengar Yoga, trauma, and paralysis from the chest down. Here is an excerpt from the in-progress book, Waking Again: With his profound emphasis on alignment, B.K.S. Iyengar not only revolutionized the practice of asana (yoga poses) for all who will follow, but also his approach revealed the possibility of energetic sensation for an aspiring paraplegic yoga practitioner. In my own yoga practice, part of why I was feeling awareness move through my paralyzed legs in Dandasana while sitting up on a blanket was that the simple alignment of bones directed the force of gravity through my body. This happens whether one is paralyzed or not.

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NEWS CONTINUED

IYAMN sponsored another weeklong workshop by Mary Obendorfer and Eddy Marks in October. Other activities in the region included a series of classes on Yoga for Women’s Health and a series on Developing Daily Sadhana, both at the Yoga Place in LaCrosse, as well as a workshop focusing on Muscle Imbalances by Julie Gudmestad of Portland, Oregon, held at the St. Paul Yoga Center. A particular highlight was the visit to both St. Paul and LaCrosse by premiere Indian yoga teacher Swati Chanchani in late August. She taught two extended classes at each place and included a visual presentation of art, architecture, and archeology titled “Yogini: Yoga Practitioners through the Ages,” which she narrated with a fascinating treatment of the history of yoginis.

IYAMW The Midwest Region rolled out a major revamp of its website after many months of work, especially by Alex Hansen (Milwaukee). We are eager for everyone to visit it, become informed, and be inspired, at www.iyamw.org. Iyengar Yoga Detroit continues to be at the vanguard of making Iyengar Yoga accessible to all. This studio hosts numerous Community Gift classes (sliding scale $5–$20) each month, including twice monthly Yoga Philosophy groups, which started this spring with Peggy Gwi-Seok Hong. The studio has been offering much-appreciated Restorative Classes on the second and fourth Friday nights of the month, as well as weekly Black and Brown Yoga specifically for people of color, Women’s Yoga, and Yoga for the Seasons (emotional health). Yoga for the Seasons is a new class taught by Erin Shawgo (CIYT Intermediate Junior I), who recently completed a Master of Social Work degree with a special focus on the use of Iyengar Yoga for mental and emotional health. She received a Community Engagement Grant from IYAMW to support this work. Iyengar Yoga Detroit celebrated its first anniversary as a cooperatively run center this fall.

Every night when I go to bed, I think about everything I am grateful for, including a warm bed and a roof over my head. At the same time, I think about all the people sleeping out on the streets... — Ingela Abbott, IYANW Midwesterners and beyond came together for the Annual Retreat Sept. 15 –17 outside Chicago, themed “Time and Presence.” Mary Reilly and Peggy Gwi-Seok Hong taught asana and pranayama workshops and led discussions focusing on several sutras from the fourth pada. IYAMW was happy to provide six full needs-based scholarships to the retreat. Enlightening workshops, nourishing and delicious meals, comfortable accommodations, a beautiful campus, and the camaraderie of other Iyengar Yoga practitioners contributed to another successful retreat. Hope you can join us in September 2018. Details will be posted on our website. IYAMW provided another $500 Community Engagement Grant to Kate Flock (CIYT) to help build the Iyengar Yoga community in Indianapolis. The money will go to support a new rope wall and student outreach. We hope the budding community there will grow and thrive, promoting the profound and healing teachings of the Iyengars.

IYANC Now three years into our new location in central San Francisco, the Institute and larger community keep growing. In 2016, regional membership increased 33 percent, from 376 to 502 members and continues to increase in 2017. To address the needs of enthusiastic practitioners throughout Northern California, a group of Iyengar Yoga Association of Northern California (IYANC) Board members, CIYTs, and studio owners formed a regional subcommittee to facilitate connectivity, visibility, communication, and growth in our region. The region covers a large area and a variety of cultures and geographies from urban to rural to mountainous, and members on the committee represent our diverse locations. Plans are underway to convene our first IYANC regional event in 2018. In addition to strengthening the links between studios, teachers, and members throughout the region, the subcommittee aims to encourage and support activities that bring Iyengar Yoga to “yoga deserts,” communities that are underserved by highquality yoga instruction. IYANC’s June 10 Yogathon, “Yoga Is One,” was a great success. We exceeded our goal, raising $56,000 to support the mission of the Institute. IYANC is deeply grateful for the generosity of our expanding community. Here are some of the day’s highlights:

Asana demonstration at IYANC's June 10 Yogathon, "Yoga Is One," held at the Iyengar Yoga Institute of San Francisco

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Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018


Yoga and help deepen ties for those who are already members of our local Iyengar Yoga community.

IYANE

CIYTs Mary Wixted (IYANE board member), Kris Manjapra, Nadja Refaie, Carol Faulkner, and Annie Hoffman (Community Service Committee Chair)

– A creative and grounding asana class taught by Victoria Austin, Anne Barbaret, and Cynthia Bates, leading up to a supported Natarajasana – Heartfelt, powerful asana demonstrations by Athena Pappas, Maria Calabria, Theresa Marks, Zain Syed, Victoria Austin, Sachiko Willis, Renee Razzano, and Anne Barbaret, with direction by Julia Sterling and live kirtan by Francesca Nicosia – A lively community reception with delicious Middle Eastern food provided by Janet MacLeod and home-baked cakes from our dedicated volunteer, Greg Silva The IYANC Board extends heartfelt gratitude to our teachers, students, and community members who contributed and were involved in making this year’s event a success. The IYANC Board continues to evolve. Lauren Fogel joined as secretary in February 2017. After four years of dedicated service, Chuck Han stepped down as treasurer, and Karen Woods, vice-president, is serving as interim treasurer. Richard Weinapple now chairs the Membership Committee and is leading the Subcommittee for Regional Development. Brian Hogencamp, Jeff Sikand, and Susan Wong run our Programming Committee. The board is currently seeking new members with a range of skills, including finance, fundraising, communications/marketing/public relations, and commercial real estate. If you are interested, please contact Athena Pappas at athena.pappas@iyisf.org. In August, the Institute launched a monthly community night and invites those who are new to Iyengar Yoga along with current members and students to gather for a variety of fun and enlightening activities. Events will range from movie nights to sound healings to ayurvedic talks and, in November, a kids’ and parents’ yoga night. We hope to provide an opportunity for connection with those who may not yet know about Iyengar

Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018

2017 has been a year of many transitions for the Iyengar Yoga Association of New England (IYANE). Patricia Walden has completed her third three-year term as vice president of IYANE since revitalizing the association in 2009 and is stepping down at the end of the year. We thank Patricia for her unparalleled leadership and championing of Iyengar Yoga in our region. In recognition of her unique role in our community as a senior disciple of Guruji, the IYANE Board has unanimously voted to appoint her as Guiding Senior Teacher of our regional association. She will continue to advise the IYANE Board in her new role. This year, Nancy Watson completes her term as IYANE’s representative to IYNAUS. During her time on the IYNAUS Board, Nancy was instrumental in organizing the 2016 IYNAUS Convention in Boca Raton. We are grateful to Nancy for her service and wish her all the best. The IYANE Board has appointed Jean Stawarz to serve as our new representative to the IYNAUS Board. IYANE Treasurer Claire Carroll is also stepping down at the end of the year. During her tenure, Claire has greatly expanded IYANE’s scholarship offerings as chair of the IYANE Scholarship Committee. IYANE continues to offer scholarships for study in India and to assist deserving students in our region with funds for conventions, workshops, teacher trainings, and to study with local teachers. For more information about IYANE scholarship offerings, visit our website at www.iyengarnewengland.com. IYANE Membership Chair Kim Peralta also steps down at the end of the year. During her tenure, Kim has instituted a monthly email blast to publicize Iyengar Yoga events in the region. We thank Claire and Kim for their dedicated service. With so many board transitions, IYANE is in the process of holding regionwide elections for four board vacancies. The new board members will be announced at the IYANE Annual General Membership Meeting in December. Kris Manjapra (CIYT Intermediate Junior I), in collaboration with the IYANE Community Service Committee, organized Yoga Days at the John D. O’Bryant Public School in Roxbury on June 13-14, 2017. Together with Massachusetts CIYTs Annie Hoffman (IYANE Community Service Committee Chairperson), Nadja Refaie, Tristan Binns, Carol Faulkner, and Lucilda DassardoCooper, Kris’s team taught approximately 200 students in six classes over the two days. The aims of Yoga Days were to

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communities by creating our Community Service Grants. The grant is awarded to CIYTs who donate their time or need help paying for a program dedicated to underserved community members. You can find out more about this program at www.IYANW.org. Looking for yoga in Boise? We are happy to report that The Iyengar Yoga Center of Boise is now open for business. It lies in the heart of Boise’s Historical North End, fitting in well with the active community. The new Boise yoga center currently has seven CIYTs and one teacher trainee, with an ever-growing population of students, many of whom began their study at the now-closed Boise Yoga Center.

Jennie Williford (CIYT Intermediate Junior II), Ananda Johnson (CIYT), Erin Burke-Webster (CIYT), Dani DeLeon (assessing in October), Ashley Tetu (Teacher in Training), Julia Seaward (CIYT assessing Intermediate Junior I in September), Kisa Davison (CIYT and owner of Straight Blast Gym)

introduce 7th to 12th graders in this racially and economically diverse student body to yoga, to stretch the students’ imagination, and to give students an experience of relaxation, space, and wonder, in their first instrument: the body.

IYANW The Iyengar Yoga Association of the Northwest (IYANW) is happy to report on new studios in the region and on our continuing dedication to giving back to our Northwest communities. Yoga Northwest in Bellingham, Washington, which won the “Best of Bellingham” for the 11th year in a row, has dedicated itself to helping the local community. Ingela Abbott, founder of Yoga Northwest, has made combatting homelessness a particular focus this year: “Every night when I go to bed I think about everything I am grateful for including a warm bed and a roof over my head. At the same time, I think about all the people sleeping out on the streets here in Bellingham—cold, wet, lonely, and filled with fear. There are things we can do to help this crisis.” In September, Ingela took part in a 100-mile ride to raise money for a Bellingham organization called HomesNOW, which dedicates funds to building small homes for homeless. Ingela collected pledges from the Yoga Northwest community, and Yoga Northwest matched any funds Ingela raised in the event. Yoga Northwest also took part in a Thanksgiving benefit event, where Ingela taught a class to raise money for the Lighthouse Mission. IYANW has made it a mission for the region to spread Iyengar Yoga while also serving the less fortunate in our Northwest

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The center offers 12 weekly classes, nine Boise State University classes, a monthly mini-advanced workshop, and a community class in which donations go to various charitable organizations. The Boise community is grateful to long-time student, Lisa Bescherer for making this dream possible. We also want to thank Vickie Aldridge (CIYT Intermediate Junior I) for her willingness to share the experience and knowledge she gained operating the Boise Yoga Center, and Don Gura (CIYT Intermediate Junior II), who shares studio management and has been instrumental in organizing studio use. Finally, we have a yoga vacation idea for you: Mountains, rivers, and Iyengar Yoga. Have you heard of Kalispell, Montana? If you are a National Park enthusiast or like to ski, you might recognize this small town as the gateway to Glacier National Park or the Big Mountain skiing in Whitefish, Montana. But if you are also an Iyengar Yoga enthusiast (which you most likely are if you are reading this), you might also want to come to Kalispell for a yoga class at Straight Blast Gym—yes, an unconventional name for a yoga studio but don’t be deterred. In this small northwest corner of a big state, what we call the Flathead Valley, there are many wild and natural spaces to enjoy, but in our opinion, one of its greatest treasures is its energy and devotion to Iyengar Yoga. Straight Blast Gym has two studios dedicated to Iyengar Yoga, with five certified teachers, two candidates assessing this year, and a few more well on their way in apprenticeship. Straight Blast Gym is the brainchild of a husband and wife team, Kisa and Travis Davison. Kisa has nurtured and developed an effective system to introduce the active Montana community to Iyengar Yoga in a fun and dynamic way. We see big things for the future of Iyengar Yoga in the Northwest Region with Montana and the Straight Blast Gym tribe growing at the pace it is. Come visit for the view and the practice.

Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018


IYASCUS We have had a positive and productive year at the Iyengar Yoga Association of the South Central United States (IYASCUS) so far in 2017. Our yoga community is growing and reaching more cities and yoga practitioners around the region. New studios are opening or expanding to larger facilities. We are coming together to practice and learn each month with teacher trainings and workshops, thanks to the efforts of many of our dedicated teachers and leaders. Several studios are offering free introductory asana and pranayama classes as well as sutra study groups to ignite students on the yoga path.

At the Audubon Yoga Studio Teacher Training program in New Orleans, students learn more than just how to teach. They also learn to deepen their practice and come to understand the richness and integrity of Iyengar Yoga. Our region consists of five states: Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, and Arkansas. We are excited to announce that the IYNAUS National Convention will be held in Dallas, Texas, April 12–19, 2019—taught by Abhijata Sridhar! Save the dates and plan to be here for this wonderful week of learning and fun with Texas food and hospitality not to be missed. Randy Just, our fearless leader, is already making plans and mobilizing volunteers. If you would like to be a part of the preparations, please contact Randy at BKS-info@tx.rr.com. Exceptional teacher training this year has proven to be successful as many teachers have moved forward on the path, passing higher certification levels. In August, the B.K.S. Iyengar Studio of Dallas hosted a Junior Intermediate I assessment. Candidates came from all over the country to this wellorganized and calm assessment. In addition, several of our intermediate teachers in the region traveled to New York and were successful in moving up to even higher levels. Congratulations to all our teachers—we appreciate all your hard work and devotion to Iyengar Yoga. In late August, Hurricane Harvey hit the Texas coast and brought destruction and flooding to Houston and many towns. Studios helped out through t-shirt fundraisers with proceeds going to the rescue and relief efforts. This year we have been fortunate to study with our senior Iyengar Yoga teachers. In September, Mary Obendorfer and Eddy Marks were in Dallas, Jaki Nett was in Austin, and Rebecca Lerner in Houston. In Dallas, John Schumacher returned for his famous arm

Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018

balances workshop, and in November Jawahar Bangera brought his wisdom to us. These wonderful workshops help us develop more understanding and deepen our practice. We are blessed to have Guruji’s teachings passed down to us by these teachers and thank them for traveling great distances to teach us. Information and updates from our region may be found on our website at www.IYASCUS.org and on Facebook. Our region is thriving, and we welcome all of you to come visit us soon.

IYASE The Iyengar Yoga Association Southeast (IYASE) sponsors general admission and teacher training workshops one or two times each year. Our schedule for workshops currently extends through 2019. In 2017, IYASE sponsored a joint Introductory and Intermediate Junior I teacher training taught by Kathleen Pringle (CIYT Intermediate Senior I). We also sponsored a “Yoga to Alleviate Anxiety and Depression” general workshop taught by Juliana Fair (CIYT Intermediate Senior I). In March 2018, IYASE will sponsor an Intermediate Junior I and II teacher training workshop in Miami, Florida, titled “Taking the Mystery Out of Shoulder Balance” with Bobbi Goldin (CIYT Intermediate Junior III). In July 2018, there will be a workshop open to all with a focus on knees in Louisville, Kentucky, with Colleen Gallagher (CIYT Intermediate Senior I). Registration is open now for the March 2018 workshop. For more information and to register, go to http://iyaseteachertraining-march18.eventzilla.net. Current IYASE members are eligible for scholarships and can download applications at www.iyase.org. In August, a group of dedicated Iyengar Yoga practitioners and teachers completed our 2017 Audubon Yoga Studio Teacher Training in New Orleans. The late Karin O’Bannon started the Audubon Yoga Studio Teacher Training program in 2009. It is taught by CIYT Intermediate Senior I teacher Randy Just. Over four weekends throughout the year, students come from all over the country to participate in the encouraging, fun, and challenging sessions. Many participants have gone on to pass various levels of Iyengar Yoga certification through the years. In this program, students learn more than just how to teach. They also learn to deepen their practice and come to understand the richness and integrity of Iyengar Yoga. The 2018 dates for the course are Jan. 19–21, March 2–4, June 1–3 and August 3–5. Please contact the Audubon Yoga Studio if you are interested in joining the program.

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Now students practice with a rich array of props, including a trestle, benches, and a rope wall. The student body is diverse in age, ability, and experience. Marcus says, “We share a commitment to Guruji’s work and to sangha—community.” Iyengar Yoga continues to grow in the Southeast. For almost 10 years, Certified Iyengar Yoga Teachers and students held classes at the multidisciplinary Rosemary Court Yoga Center in Sarasota, Florida. Susan Marcus (CIYT Intermediate Junior II) and Deborah DiCarlo (CIYT Intermediate Junior I), grew their community and imagined having a space of their own. In August 2017, with Marcus at the helm, Sarasota Iyengar Yoga moved into its new home—literally a little house near the happening downtown. Now students practice with a rich array of props, including a trestle, benches, and a rope wall. The student body is diverse in age, ability, and experience. Owner Marcus says, “We share a commitment to Guruji’s work and to sangha—community. Some reside here year-round, and we welcome visitors, snowbirds, and new arrivals to sunny Sarasota. Come practice with us!” The only Iyengar Yoga studio in Charlottesville, Virginia, Allied Yoga, was on the brink of closing earlier this year. However, two devoted students and a certified teacher stepped in to keep it open with the new name Iyengar Yoga of Charlottesville. The new owners plan to devote a lot of energy to outreach and education and hope to introduce the magic of Iyengar Yoga to as many new students as possible. The community is grateful for their devotion.

IYASW Through the punishing summer heat, Arizona Iyengar Yoga students stayed dedicated to their practice. Katherine Maltz of The B.K.S. Iyengar Yoga Studio of Tucson commented that “they had an active and busy summer despite the intense heat in Tucson.” SCC Yoga/Iyengar Yoga Center of Scottsdale also saw a greater number of students committing to ongoing practice. This lead up to a busy fall as The B.K.S. Iyengar Yoga Studio of Tucson welcomed Dean Lerner for his yearly visit to the Southwest. All the Iyengar Yoga students in Arizona are thankful

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that he comes to teach, and all continue to be thankful that Katherine sponsors this event. SCC Yoga/Iyengar Yoga Center of Scottsdale saw a record number of students register for classes in the fall. Many came because of their interest in studying Iyengar Yoga as the community continues to grow. This fall a new ropes class was offered, utilizing the new rope wall. SCC Yoga/Iyengar Yoga Center of Scottsdale in collaboration with IYASW also sponsored an Iyengar Yoga assessment in October, hosting candidates and assessors from around the country. Thankfully the weather had begun to cool so the visitors could enjoy the beauty of Scottsdale and the surrounding Sonoran desert. Marivic Wrobel, president of IYASW, and Carrie Abts, treasurer, attended the Sedona Yoga Festival to represent Iyengar Yoga at this popular yearly event. They were joined by volunteers Michele Cook, Jean Saad, and Steph and Robin Rubin to operate a booth providing information about Iyengar Yoga complete with books, brochures, and their personal testimony as to the benefits of this practice. Marivic Wrobel taught an Introduction to Iyengar Yoga asana class that was very popular with the festival goers. Because of the success of this event in 2017, IYASW will participate again in 2018 and will offer more classes. Congratulations to Terese Ireland of Tucson for passing Intermediate Junior I and Lily Tista of Pinetop for passing Introductory I in 2016. We are very proud of these new Certified Iyengar Yoga Teachers and are very glad to see our community of certified teachers grow. Lauren Barnert-Hosie (CIYT) and Carlyn Sikes (CIYT Intermediate Junior I) completed their three-year Iyengar Yoga Therapeutics Training for Teachers with Manouso Manos. These ladies also received their CYT from International Association of Yoga Therapists. Carlyn Sikes completed a research article titled “Your Health is in Your Posture” through a grant issued by Maricopa County Community College District Professional Growth. The current IYASW Board, which has done great work promoting the growth of Iyengar Yoga in Arizona, is completing its term of service in May 2018. The board positions of president, vice president, treasurer, and secretary are open. Please consider volunteering for the IYASW Board and continuing the work that has begun in making Iyengar Yoga more well known throughout Arizona.

Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018


YOGA TECH

FROM DVDS TO FACETIME, HOW TECHNOLOGY CAN DEEPEN PRACTICE

By Heather Haxo Phillips

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n today’s parlance, we would call our Guruji an “early adopter”—a person who starts using a technology as soon as it becomes available. When he was a teenager, Guruji was willing to use any medium to inspire others to practice yoga. Imagine the year 1938: The first commercial films made in India were gaining popularity, but few people had cameras of their own. Yet there was Guruji, participating in the first known yoga demonstration ever to be captured on film.

Decades later, when TVs appeared in most households, he was on every show that invited him, demystifying the practice, making it both accessible and exciting to viewers so they would take up a practice of their own. Today, technology plays an equally important part in spreading the practice of yoga. So much has changed since the days when Guruji was the only Iyengar teaching yoga. We now have access to his family, to senior teachers in India, and to thousands of other Certified Iyengar Yoga Teachers (CIYTs) worldwide. But also, anyone who has access to an internet connection can create their own deeply personal and personalized practice. That is not to say that the direct guru-sisya relationship is not tremendously important. The practice has to be handed down in person from teacher to student, with the right information given at the right time to progress in the practice. Yet technology today is so varied, so vast, that it creates incredible opportunities to propel us in valuable ways. My first direct experience with technology in yoga was around the year 2000. I had been going to classes for several years, no longer a complete novice but completely dependent on my teacher for guidance. I was offered an opportunity of a lifetime— to move to Beirut to start a nonprofit organization. My one hesitation about moving across the world was leaving my yoga classes. How would I survive without my teacher’s guidance? Unsure of what to do on my own, I slipped an AM/PM yoga DVD featuring Patricia Walden into my suitcase. I decided to let Patricia be my guide! Having no home practice whatsoever, I completely relied on Patricia every day for the months I lived in Beirut. Each evening, I pulled out my very heavy laptop and let Patricia direct me as the sun set over the Mediterranean. Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018

In the weeks and months after each workshop, I return to the audios again and again. Those months in Beirut with Patricia by my side were deeply transformative. I learned that I could practice on my own. I went from doing yoga twice a week to doing yoga every day. I saw how much my body and mind could transform with a daily practice. Stateside, my yoga life continued with technology firmly in it. I was still a novice, but somehow, I got talked into teaching yoga (I guess the daily practice had taken hold in my body, and I showed some tiny amount of promise). Eventually I became certified and continued my studies, listening to audio classes from my trips to Pune, taking careful notes, and bringing what I could into my own teaching. And then when I was preparing for my Intermediate Junior II assessment, I got stuck. Where could I learn these Junior II poses? I wasn’t learning them in class. Luckily, I discovered the website iHanuman and realized I could download audio classes with John Schumacher. Over several years of studying for the assessment, I downloaded dozens of asana and pranayama classes with John. I felt like I got to know everyone in class—including his students and assistants. I felt hot even in January, because John’s class that day had been recorded in August when it was sweltering. I tried out the knee pain variations even when my knee was fine. I groaned at certain poses, along with the rest of the class. In some ways, it was a surreal experience. I studied “with” John as often as I studied with my local teacher. I took all 11


The most innovative uses of technology provide platforms where we teach and learn in a deep and sustained way. his advice, though it was never offered to me personally. So was John my teacher? No, he wasn’t. But John was part of my support team. And I studied with him enough that it seemed important to reach out and create an actual relationship. I helped organize a trip for him to the San Francisco Institute and made sure to take his class at the 2013 IYNAUS convention in San Diego. When it came time for me to develop my own pranayama course, I reached out to John for advice. He responded immediately with incredible generosity, not knowing me but trusting me nevertheless. Using technology in my yoga practice and ongoing studies has given me direct access to particular knowledge when I’ve needed it. Despite being on opposite coasts, John and I have developed an actual student-teacher relationship in a limited but critically important way. I have been lucky enough to do two assessments at Unity Woods with students I knew from his online classes and with John actually in the room. Our smartphones have also revolutionized practice in so many ways. We can “voice memo” classes and workshops and use pictures to document setups to try at home. I have done informal recordings of every Lois Steinberg workshop I have taken since the day I got my iphone. In the weeks and months after each workshop, I return to the audios again and again. I especially rely on them when I am traveling and without my local mentor for weeks at a time. Even without a smartphone, you can have the Iyengars with you every day if you want. Every major convention has been carefully recorded and edited for all of us to enjoy. The online store at www.IYNAUS.org has nearly all the American conventions. These classes offer a trove of riches as valuable today as when they were recorded. It’s fun to watch clips of these videos at home and with others. Especially if you mentor others, these videos are a critical way for students to feel connected directly to the Iyengar family. Want to get started right away? Go online and search “Master Class with B.K.S. Iyengar London 1985.” Watch the video, and take part in the class. Better yet—project the video onto the studio walls where you practice, and invite your students and colleagues to join you in “taking the class.” Senior teacher Carolyn Belko did this at her center. It was a popular event and the studio was packed mat to mat.

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Today, technology affords us all more opportunities than ever. Those of us who enjoy Facebook have benefited tremendously from the videos and quotes that social media provides. For example, a group of ladies from New Zealand wrote daily dispatches from RIMYI on the ropes course that Geeta taught this summer. The pictures and descriptions were so vivid, I was able to take it directly into my practice and teaching. No longer do we have to wait months for our friends to bring us CDs from RIMYI. Now we can benefit from the teachings on the same day. We benefit and our students benefit. Instagram is another platform that can be a tremendous source of information on how to use certain props or how to address certain issues. In the same way that Guruji used pictures in Light on Yoga to instruct us as we approach our practice at home, Instagram can be a similar tool for investigation and inspiration. Last month, I hosted a teacher gathering to discuss what to do when a pregnant woman shows up in a regular class. We invited one of our pregnant students and together with the teachers, we practiced many of the most important poses. There was one particular setup I just couldn’t get quite right, so we returned again and again to a particular picture I had stored from Lois’ pregnancy workshop in 2014. Other poses were much more familiar to us and came easily. One of our colleagues documented the session with pictures, and we were able to narrate it using the Instagram Story function to help others in our community spark their own personal study. It was a student who pushed me to venture into Instagram in the first place. Yogi Zain Syed encouraged me to be an “early adopter,” patiently explaining all the different social media platforms and how to use them to communicate Iyengar Yoga effectively. In fact, he launched the social media program for Adeline Yoga and then went on to develop his own niche, combining his passion for Iyengar Yoga and videography with his DJ skills. And now yogis from around the globe can enjoy and learn from his artful videos. These social media platforms are helpful teaching tools, but they also help our Iyengar Yoga family get to know each other better and stay in touch. They give us a forum to be creative and express ourselves to a larger audience. The most innovative uses of technology provide platforms where we teach and learn in a deep and sustained way. In my teacher education program, it is important to connect participants to the lineage of Iyengar Yoga. I introduce my students to the Iyengar family as well as to the senior teachers who have impacted my personal practice. Students learn in a variety of ways: They have to see, hear, and experience. So instead of relying on books and my personal stories, I include videos as homework assignments so my students can develop their own connection to the Iyengars.

Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018


In the first month of the program, we contemplate the term sadhana. I assign the video of Geetaji’s discourse on sadhana as a way for students to tease out what sadhana can mean to them personally. Much later, we get to Marichyasana III, a pose with many approaches. I assign videos of Marichyasana III as taught by Rebecca Lerner and as taught by Lois Steinberg. Students practice it both ways and write an essay comparing, contrasting, and applying the techniques in their own body. You can find these videos yourself on the Roads to Bliss website for your own compare-contrast experience. The Roads to Bliss videos are incredible learning tools and worth checking out if you haven’t already. Technology not only helps the students in the room, but it also helps students far away. Over the past two years, Carolyn Belko has been my main mentor. Monthly, I have been flying 500 miles to study with her—but what about weekly classes? Carolyn has opened my eyes to the opportunities. First, she invited me to Facetime into her weekly advanced class, which works amazingly well. I have a yoga buddy who patches me into class, setting me up on a stool right next to all the mats. I am part of the class but practicing from my studio at home. She catches my mistakes and encourages me as if I were right there with them. Other times, I have actually been in Carolyn’s studio during peer teaching sessions while the peer teaching us handstand was in Oregon. It seems highly unusual, but this does work very well for us. In part, it works because the person teaching from Oregon is a long-time colleague and already an experienced teacher. Also, we keep the setup to only one long-distance student among a group of students in person together, with a senior teacher present. Of course, my colleague misses out on the opportunity to physically help us get into Adho Mukha Vrksasana, but nonetheless, she can participate and gain knowledge when otherwise she would have been completely left out. The use of technology is exciting, but I do not recommend that everyone run out and start pressuring their teachers to get on the bandwagon. It works for Carolyn because she is excited about technology and its ability to bridge the distance with her students. Teachers and students need to be interested in using technology and sticking with it even if a call drops in the middle of class. Not every technology works for everyone. Years ago, excited by my experience with iHanuman and John Schumacher, I signed up to be an iHanuman teacher myself. It took me exactly three classes before I dropped the idea. The iphone and lavalier microphone combination that was strapped to my arm made my demonstrations clumsy and put a psychological barrier between me and the students in front of me. At the same time, I felt disconnected to any potential students who might be listening. Realizing that I just wanted to teach the students in front of me was a valuable lesson, and I let go of my audio dream.

Yoga Samachar Fall 2017 / Winter 2018

Tech Resources for Yogis IYNAUS Video Collection: Find a long list of YouTube videos featuring Iyengar Yoga, including interviews, lectures and demonstrations, examples of teaching from various classes in Pune, as well as conventions led by B.K.S. Iyengar, Geeta Iyengar, and many senior teachers. https://iynaus.org/articles-essays/videos iHanuman: Download audio classes with John Schumacher, Lois Steinberg, Kofi Busia, Elise Miller, Bobby Clennell, and many more. Or, sign up to offer audio classes of your own. www.ihanuman.com Iyengar Yoga 101 With Carrie Owerko: Take this online yoga course as part of AIM Healthy U. www.aimhealthyu. com/courses/iyengar-101-reg John Schumacher Yoga: Download audio classes, including pranayama, asana, and more with John Schumacher. www.schumacheryoga.com/ Roads to Bliss: Discover free video clips with senior Iyengar Yoga teachers from around the country. www. youtube.com/user/Roads2bliss Vimeo: Type “Iyengar Yoga” into the search tool to find many snippets as well as full-length presentations from aspiring teachers on up to B.K.S. Iyengar. www.vimeo.com IYNAUS Facebook page: Read posts from Iyengar Yoga practitioners around the world, sharing inspiring teaching tips, videos, quotes, and sequences. www.facebook.com/ IYNAUS Instagram: Sign up and search for “Iyengar Yoga” to find and follow Iyengar Yoga practitioners around the world posting interesting prop setups and more. www.instagram.com Skype: Try “skyping” with your colleagues to share teaching techniques, or skype in a student who is far away. www.skype.com FaceTime: Use this built-in iPhone app in the same way as Skype to connect with students and colleagues over long distance. FaceTime can also be downloaded for Android smartphones or for use on a PC or Mac-based desktop computer. IYNAUS member benefits: Login at www.IYNAUS.org, and click the “Member Benefits” tab to see sequences, interviews, as well as audio and video recordings for members only. 13


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