Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Karma Yoga


Taking time to serve children of Bodhi Home, Penang

A breather...


A breather....such an apt word for yoga teachers and yogis :) We all need to take a break now and then to get a better perspective of reality and look at life with fresher eyes. As my trainee teachers should know, it is all about manas, cit-citta, citta prasadam, ananda, sukham, all beautiful words that make up our reality. And svadhyaya will show us the way to a better world, namely one that is within us when our vrttayah are stilled.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Show-off adjustment



Hey Dante, you get the same effect if you asked Ken to bend his knees and you pull his hips back to straighten out his back. No need for this acrobatics :)

Fine details




What's the difference between straight spine and concave spine? What are the anatomical benefits and set-backs of each? (Exam questions)



Basics....



To do a good downward dog, start from the basics. Do a good table. What are the six checkpoints????

Sexy legs




Legs are important because .... they take us where we need to go in life. Also something about philogeny recapitulates ontogeny....(yeah, can't spell).


It never looks the same in books....





Yes, it can be difficult to make the leap....especially if one is visually challenged. Gianinna trying to draw Raymond's subscapularis and having difficulty in visualizing Raymond's scapula from the inside of his body rather than the more familiar superficial back piece...


So we made 3D models with mahjong paper. Ken said he felt like he's in a design course. And I said that if I had been the one to design the human body, I would have done things slightly differently....

Monday, September 5, 2011

More anatomy fun













Relating what you see in textbooks with what you see in your yoga students' bodies is a HUGE leap. So we practice on each other.



SURFACE ANATOMY


(1) Locate the landmarks: eg occipital bond and mastoid


(2) Move to activate the muscle groups you are interested in


(3) Trace the outline of the bunched up muscles.


(4) Consult a textbook (Netter's is a very good one) to see if you are on target (roughly).


Most important is, do the asana associated with the muscle group you are interested in and FEEEEEEL it.

2D and 3D




Above: Kai Li's sternocleidomastoid


I often wonder how people learn anatomy from textbooks. 3D is so different from 2D. Like the trapezius muscles, for example. Do you know the upper fibres over the shoulders like a shawl, to finish on the clavicle, around 1/3 to the edge? Beautiful! (Though in the pages of a book, they look flat like a diamond shaped pancake).


As for serratus anterior and posterior, the actual layout get even more complicated.....what fun! Is it necessary, I hear you ask. Of course! Because if you pull your serratus, it hurts when you breathe, and it feels like heart attack.


I love anatomy!