Archive for February, 2010

I took my yoga practice to a new level as I travelled abroad recently. Short on time and logistics with ample space in my hotel room, I brought a few pull outs of the Home Practice section of Yoga Journal that I have been collecting for the past few years. Perfect short practices to help get over the jet lag and the adjustment period. Bring your laptop or iphone and search for Home Practice on www.YogaJournal.com

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A post-flight practice helps you get grounded and enjoy your destination after a journey.

By Diane Anderson and Ross Rayburn

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Traveling, especially by air, can wreak havoc on your posture and your mental state, not to mention your energy body. Not familiar with your energy body? Think of a time when you felt spacy, anxious, or generally unsettled after traveling. Many yogis believe that such a state occurs when there is too much upward-moving energy in the body, which leads to a sense of imbalance.

“My teacher John Friend believes that travel results in decreased apana vayu, the downward-moving, or rooting, energy of prana,” says Anusara Yoga teacher Ross Rayburn. To mitigate the negative effects of a long journey, Rayburn designed the following sequence to root your energy down, which will help you feel physically strong, mentally clear, and energetically balanced.

“As you do this practice, cultivate a slow, deep, even breath. On slow inhalations, focus on rejuvenation, and on long exhalations, focus on steady groundedness,” says Rayburn. “And focus on a peaceful image or thought so that your attitude grounds you as well.” On the physical side, he advises that you anchor yourself in three primary ways: “Hug the muscles to the bones,” he says, “like a warm embrace with the intention of insulating the body and making it feel secure”; move the thighbones back toward the hamstrings, which has a grounding effect on the body; and root the pelvis down toward the earth so the abdomen, low back, and upper body feel light.

To Begin

Be still. Sit for a few minutes in a comfortable cross-legged posture. Cultivate a breath that evokes calm, patient feelings, and think of situations or places that make you feel stable, grounded, and secure.

Invoke. Chant Om or an invocation to connect to something bigger. Warm up Do three repetitions of Sun Salutation.

Home Practice with Ross Rayburn
Lunge Pose From Adho Mukha Svanasana (Downward-Facing Dog Pose), step your right foot forward and come to the ball of the left foot. See that your front shin is vertical and your left leg is straight. Come up on all 10 fingertips and breathe deeply. On each inhalation, with your “grounded” image in mind, engage the muscles of your legs and lift the back thighbone. On exhalations, keep your legs strong, scoop your tailbone down and in, and root your pelvis toward the earth. Repeat for 5 breaths on each side. Then return to Down Dog.
Utthita Parsvakonasana(Extended Side Angle Pose) Step your right foot into a lunge and bring your left heel to the floor. Engage your leg muscles with a grounded quality up the legs to the pelvis. Keep the legs strong. Place your right hand by your right foot and lift your left arm up and alongside your ear. Scoop your tailbone so that the abdominals lift. Root your pelvis so that your upper body lifts and stretches. Stay for 3 to 5 breaths, then switch sides.
Downhill Skier Stand with your feet parallel, sitting-bone-distance apart. Deeply bend your knees and place your forearms on your thighs. Breathe deeply and spread your toes to engage your leg muscles. Keep your legs strong and move your thighbones back and apart. Energetically root the pelvis down and feel how this encourages the torso and spine to lift and stretch upward. Stay for 3 grounding breaths. Stand upright to come out of the pose.
Downhill Skier Twist Now add a twist to Downhill Skier. Once the thighs and pelvis are rooted, place the right forearm on the left knee, twist your torso, and raise your left arm. The challenge of this pose is to maintain a grounded lower body while twisting and lifting one arm. Stay for 3 breaths before standing all the way up. Then pause and switch sides.
Prasarita Padottanasana (Wide-Legged Standing Forward Bend) Take a wide stance. The feet should be wide enough to feel a stretch yet close enough to engage the muscles. Bend forward and touch the floor with both hands. Spread the toes and isometrically sweep the feet toward the midline to engage and ground the muscles. Keep the muscles strong, especially the outer-shin and inner-thigh muscles. Maintain grounded thighbones as you exhale, scoop the tailbone, and root the pelvis down. Stay for 5 breaths, then slowly come up and stand in Tadasana (Mountain Pose).
Parsvottanasana (Intense Side Stretch) From Tadasana, step the left foot back and place it flat on the floor. The distance between your feet is shorter here than in previous standing poses, and all your toes should face forward. On an inhalation, engage your leg muscles from your feet to your pelvis. Move both thighbones back. Scoop your tailbone so that the stomach lifts. Root your pelvis down. Place your hands by your front foot and bend forward. Breathe here for 3 breaths. Switch sides.
Sphinx Pose, with bent knees Lie on your stomach with your forearms on the floor, elbows under the shoulders and hands elbow-distance apart. Place your knees sitting-bone-distance apart, and bend your knees 90 degrees so the shins are vertical. Breathe deeply. Flex your feet and spread your toes to engage the muscles of the legs. Press the bottom of your thighs and your knees down and notice how this creates space to move the top of your thighbones back. Keep the thighbones back (and the knees down), and scoop your tailbone until your abdominals lift. Ground yourself for 5 breaths.
Pigeon Pose, variation Bring your right leg forward into Pigeon. Align the left leg behind the left hip. Bend your left knee. Twist to the right. Hold your left foot with your right hand. Place the left hand or the left forearm on the floor. Breathe deeply and soften any tension. Engage your leg muscles. Keep the lower legs strong, left knee solidly on the floor as you scoop your tailbone, root your pelvis, and twist your spine. Stay for 5 breaths, then repeat on the other side.
Supta Padangusthasana(Reclining Hand-to-Big-Toe Pose) Lie on your back with the legs extended. Lift your right leg and interlace your fingers around the back of it at the middle of the hamstring muscle. Engage the muscles of both legs. Root your bottom thigh down as you scoop your tailbone, root your pelvis down, and stretch through both legs. Take 5 breaths, and then switch sides.

To Finish

Meditate Sit. for a short meditation. Focus on sending blessings to loved ones.

Rest. Enjoy Savasana (Corpse Pose) for 5 to 10 minutes.


Oh yes, the MCTWIST by Shaun White, I knew he’d win the Gold. Congrats USA!

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Surf on snow continues with the Olympics. Are you watching? Go Shaun! Go USA! All week on NBC.

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We at Liquid Yoga + Surf are also snow people so we’re adding a special summer trip to Chile this August led by yogi-shredder Will Duprey (you might know him from teaching at Sonic Yoga). Liquid partner Surfcat is tagging along as this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. We’ll be heading to Farellones for 7 days of powder bliss! Only 45 minutes from Santiago. And when we return to the Northern Hemisphere it’ll still be summer! $1399 early bird (deposits available). Check the website towards the end of the week for more info.

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We’re leaving in a month for Matapalo, the little jewel in the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica. It’s way down south, off the grid, peaceful except for the occasional howler monkey. We have a few spots left. $1299 includes 7 nights at Encanta La Vida, an upscale jungle resort right in front of Pan Dulce (a great surf spot for the beginner), three delicious, homemade meals a day and twice daily vinyasa and restorative yoga with Lauren Hanna & Tracy Mohr. Car rental not needed, you can walk everywhere within minutes. Encanta has a beauitful new yoga deck under the rainforest canopy overlooking crystal blue water (pictured). Check the Schedule page of our website for more information.

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Taking a spring break somewhere beachy? You’ll need a new bikini. One of my all time fave surf brands is Billabong. They fit, they last, they’re cool. I especially like this Sprouse-inspired bikini top called Sage Bandeau from the Spring 2010 collection. It reverses to a solid, two tops in one!

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Modern Meditations, music to Om to. Your favorite rock tunes transformed to blissful music to yoga to. No pan flutes or wind chimes allowed. www.modernmediations.com

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Budget Travel is my favorite new magazine for travel ideas. This cover got my attention a couple of years ago. They feature exciting destinations that are outside the box. I like it so much I got a subscription. Check it out.

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You can find good yoga at the gym. When I first started yoga in the late 90s I was a member of Crunch (NYC), we had a real yoga teacher, not just a staff member of the gym. I still go to the gym because I like to mix up my routine; I am lucky that my gym has enlisted very good yoga teachers. Most gyms these days offer yoga, if yours doesn’t ask them to.

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Yoga Journal has a beginner’s guide I highly recommend for anyone starting their journey. I can’t tell you how much I’ve learned over the years, not only in classes, but between the pages of Yoga Journal. www.ShopYogaJournal.com/shop/back_issues/

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