Articles
by Tracey Rich
Move Your Arsana
Five Keys to a Personal Yoga Practice
How many winters have you complained about the dark
doldrums, lack of inspiration, and excess winter weight
to move around? Spare yourself the flagellation. You’re
not alone. But then what seems to be the excuse when
it comes to spring, summer and fall and your yoga practice
at home seems to be non-existent or uninspired? Having
or maintaining a personal practice is a huge challenge
for many people. My hope here is to give you some tools,
tricks, and inspiration to take one of most loving actions
towards yourself by giving you the keys to the door
of your personal yoga practice. Getting started might
feel like the long walk home but you will never be happier
when you arrive on the doorstep to your own power, heart
and mind, and step into one of the most valuable parts
of your daily life.
Where do I begin, I’m asking myself as I offer
you hope of inspiration. And this is what you’ve
probably been saying to yourself when peanut butter
and chocolate sound like a far better idea than doing
yoga when the opportunity arises. Yes? I can only say
this because I know this dance so well. Okay, so let’s
move our arsana.
You have no time. Let’s begin there. And even
though this is not true and often code for I have no
idea what to do, we will, for the mind's sake, pretend
that this is the case. So, with no time how could one
do a practice, right? Wrong. You begin with the idea
that you have no time and while your mind is busy congratulating
itself on a battle won…
you begin by breathing. It is the first breath
(use ujjayi, if you will) that bridges our practice
and breaks the hold of our mental masturbation. The
mind even becomes curious when it hears the sound of
the breath and often falls into tandem with the breath’s
rhythm, becoming clear and calm. You have just begun
your personal yoga practice! It’s that easy. Breathe,
with no greater ambition than that. The breath
is where your curiosity lies. It is the link to everything
about you. It begins to tell you how you are feeling
today, what your body is truly asking for in the ways
of movement, and it will lead you deeper and deeper
in to the day’s practice - body, heart and soul.
Even if the clock only gives you ten or fifteen minutes
on this particular day, you have spent the kind of time
with yourself that no class or teacher can give you.
The first breath will lead
you into an array of options. You may decide
to sit and practice listening to your breath. You may
choose to move into sun salutations with each breath
measuring the length of each movement. You may want
to lie on your back, and feeling your breath upon the
earth, be inspired to release your spine by pulling
your knees to your chest and then twisting from side
to side. You may decide that you love the feeling of
your breath moving into your feet and the power and
strength of your legs takes you from triangle position
into warrior two, then three, then one, feeling the
balance of this dance. There are infinite ways to play
when you are on your own turf and listening within.
Keep your intention on your
breath, not on what you think constitutes a “yoga
practice”.
It matters not how you begin. If you like the idea
of music to underscore your breath and movement then
this could be something you might choose on a given
day. If you want to put on a DVD and follow someone
else’s flow one day, this might be your perfect
flavor. There are numerous great sequences to follow
and they provide all kinds of creative ideas and fuel
for your personal practice. If you have an interest
or intention to work on a particular set of hip openers
or split positions you may take out your favorite book
and read a few pages all the while letting the long
muscles of your legs relax. These large muscles take
time and repetition to release. No matter what entrée
you choose, your breath and your powers of observation
will build a trust that deepens and blossoms in your
personal yoga practice.
Initiating your practice is the first step in winning
the battle called moving your arsana. Every practice
is a self-discovery. It is deeply personal and individual,
thus the term personal practice. It does not
matter that it compares with group classes; it is something
completely unique, driven and inspired by you. Your
practice may be of any duration constrained only by
outside demands or by your lack of enthusiasm or interest.
The cultivation of energy derived by what you discover
and explore is a journey worth taking. It is worth the
attention required to take that first breath. Once you
have these keys then no matter the season, the weight
gain, the myriad mind fluctuations, you know that your
personal yoga practice is only a breath away. So
why not get up now after reading this article, take
that last potato chip out of your mouth, imbibe your
first breath, and move your arsana.
Sequence suggestions:
Breath sequence: Sit
quietly on a chair or the floor (with hips elevated
on a blanket). Using ujjayi pranayama
keep your attention on your breath for a 5 to
10 count inhalation and exhalation. Continue
this for 10 rounds. Place your attention
on the threshold where the inhalation and exhalation
exchange. If desired, increase the subtle pause at this
breath exchange, letting it extend as long as you feel
comfortable.
Salutation sequence:
A practice of Sun Salutations A, B, and C in
continuous repetition for whatever time or
timelessness available to you. Practice with all A salutations
first, then move into B, then C Salutations. Or
practice a series of (1) A, (1) B, (1) C and
repeat in an endless chain until you feel complete.
Modify or delete any salutations as you choose. Finish
with Savasana (final relaxation).
Standing sequence: Triangle,
Rt.Angle, Extended Rt.Angle, Half Moon, Forward Hero,
Hero Balance, and Straddle Fold Twist. Practice
each standing pose for a minimum of 5 breaths per side.
Let the sequence flow from pose to pose, or try doing
the right side of each pose in the sequence first and
then follow with the left side of each pose in sequence.
This is the standing pose sequence from our Flow Series,
Fire, DVD.
Seated sequence: Begin with a few rounds
of ujjayi breathing in a comfortable
seated position. Move into a simple cross legged
spinal twist (R, L). Change into a
cross legged seated forward stretch. Change
the cross of your legs and repeat. Come into seated
half forward fold (R, L), then into full
seated spinal twist. Repeat half forward
fold (R, L), then come into the cobbler
position (first sitting with a straight back, and then
folded forward). After the cobbler, pull knees
to chest and hug knees, then one last time
come into the seated half forward fold
(R, L). Follow with reverse plank position
then into full seated forward fold.
Next pull knees to chest and roll onto
your back for a series of rock ‘n rolls. Laying
on your back pull your knees to your chest, then move
into bent knee spinal twist and lying
straight leg spinal twist. Finish sequence
by releasing knees to chest again and
then take your legs up the wall. Finish
with savasana (final relaxation).
*This entire set of sequences can be combined
for an extended practice.
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