Yoga
training Curriculum
ASANA
Asana practice
is the core of Hatha Yoga. We live in a fast paced,
rapidly changing, electronic world. Yoga can be a source
of balance, well being and rejuvenation. We need to
develop a yoga approach that is attuned to growing,
evolving individuals–an approach that is sensitive
to the moment and responsive to our ever-changing bodies
and minds. You will learn to combine ancient wisdom,
contemporary insight, new innovations and developments
to find an evolutionary Yoga practice and understanding.
Instruction will include:
- Twice Daily Asana and Pranayama practice
- Using seven classes of asana (standing poses, forward
bends, backbends, Inversions, twists, balancing poses,
moving sequences)
- Flow Yoga–the dance of control and surrender
- Advanced Flow Series
- Advanced Teaching Techniques
- Healing Yoga Practices
- Sequencing
- Creative Use of Sun Salutations
- Working with subtle energies
- Potentiating your practice with internal levers
and locks
- Using lines of energy
- New asanas and techniques
- Requested postures
- Using energy flow as guide in adjusting postures
- Developing a lifelong personal yoga practice
PRANAYAMA
Breath is life.
It is our constant reminder of and connection to life
force. There are five levels of pranayama, 1. Learning
to use the respiratory structure 2. Strengthening and
toning it. 3. Using breath to recharge, and restore
4. Using breath to change mental, emotional states 5.
Using breath to enter altered states.
Instruction will include:
- Kapalabhati, Bhastrika, Alternate Bhastrika
- Kundalini Bhastrika, Siva Pranayama, Anuloma Viloma
- A balanced 20 minute practice
- Using Ujjayi
- Teaching pranayama
MEDITATION
Meditation can
be a practice for stilling the mind and for concentration
and focus. It can also be a quality of attention that
is an awakening that pervades all of life. We will discuss
meditation in a way that aims to free one from compulsory
and regimented viewpoints that are often the norm.
- Inquiry into meditation
- Using sitting practices
- Breath and meditation
- Nature as the core of meditation
SHIFTING THE CONTEXT OF YOGA
Satsang (gathering),
Upanishad (sitting together) and Vichara (inquiry)
During our discussions and dialogues we will explore
the inner philosophical roots of our Yoga practice.
Philosophy means love of wisdom and it will be our goal
to move from static beliefs to a living awareness that
guides us in the moment. When one is freed from the
burdens of the past, Yoga can become an effortless,
joyous flow. Our goal will be sharing this inspiration.
- What is the nature of advancing in yoga practice
- Yoga as a dynamic process Vs a goal
- Making sense out of conflicting claims, beliefs,
and systems
- Learning to listen
- to the body’s intelligence
- to subtle forms of energy
- -to the voice of internal feedback
- Shifting the context of Pain
- Preventing and healing injuries
- sources and causes of injury
- using injury as a guide
- Deprogramming the mind
- spontaneous instead of compulsory meditation
- freeing oneself from the dictates of the past
- Inspiration Vs discipline for lifelong practice
- Hints, tools, and principles to transform your
practice
- Cutting through karma and dogma
- The nature of balance
- Using inner and outer navigation systems
- Getting past authoritarian Yoga systems
OTHER TOPICS
- Developing workshops, courses, retreats and centers
- Evolving your next step as a teacher
- Networking
- Using Council to free the group voice

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