[ print this page | close this page | home ] |
|
nilambu notes Vol 2 Issue 4 Welcome to nilambu notes by Cass Metzger, RYT. This issue explains what yoga nidra is and highlights two articles on yoga’s salubrious qualities. Plus nilambu yoga sessions are set forth through the end of July. So plan ahead and make yoga a part of your summer. I will be out of the country and won’t be able to access emails until April 29th, 2005. So if you email me or info@nilambu.com, I won’t be able to respond until then. Bad timing, I know, but I’ll be on a pilgrimage to Walsingham. http://www.walsinghamanglican.org.uk/intro.htm Thanks for your patience. If you know anyone in DC (Georgetown) who might be interested in this newsletter or in yoga lessons, please pass along my email or refer them to my web site www.nilambu.com. For the first time I am offering classes during the day and at a later time at night. Thank you! Summer Sessions Announced Come and try out some yoga this summer at nilambu where the classes are extremely personalized. Only 5 students are permitted to enroll, so the teaching responds closely to the participants. The two sessions are:
Classes will be held on the following days and times:
Classes will focus on one of the following: standing poses, balancing poses, backbending poses, twisting poses, seated poses, prone poses, supine poses and restorative. For sample classes click here. Please note: because of the Memorial Day holiday on May 30th and the 4th of July holiday, no classes will be held on those Mondays. Therefore, registration for the Monday 5:30 class is $105 for the first session and $115 for the second, reduced to reflect fewer classes. Single classes are available for $20. Make-up classes are also allowed. Please just email first to ensure that there’s a mat for you. New clients are entitled to a free 45 minute private orientation session with me. Ideally this private time should be scheduled before attending any class. But any one is welcomed to attend any time, and if there's room, we'll accommodate you. Please email me first to ensure a space is available at cass@nilambu.com Private sessions are always available. Also, if you have a group of friends and would like to schedule a class, just let me know. With a minimum of three, I’d be happy to set up a session at a convenient time. Yoga Nidra – Do it. Say what? Yoga Nidra. I just like to say it. What does it mean? Well, the answer to that has varied over the centuries. It’s often translated as yoga sleep, but sleep is understood very differently in yoga. In yoga, sleep is not the absence of consciousness. It’s just a different stage of consciousness. In the earlier centuries of yoga, yoga nidra even was considered the highest form of consciousness, the closest to God. In this altered conscious state, one experiences continuous awareness of the self and a merging or even engrossing with God’s consciousness. But today, yoga nidra most often refers to a state of deep relaxation in which the senses are aware of external stimuli but do not in any way react, even in the mind. How does one get to that state of relaxation?
You can do yoga nidra on your own. Admittedly, it’s easier to have someone with a kind and gentle voice to guide you in, through your body survey and back out. I’ve actually transferred some of Shiva Rae’s yoga nidras onto my Ipod and sometimes go into yoga nidra to help me transition into night or during the day when I need deep rest. (See review of her Yoga Nectar CD next month, but if you want to check out her web site, click here. www.shivarea.com). I like to say “yoga nidra,” but I also really relish doing it. I come out feeling refreshed and renewed. Nectar, indeed. Patanjali wrote of sleep in the 10th Sutra of Chapter One - Sleep is the mental activity that has as its content the sense of nothingness. - trans. by Alistair Shearer Sleep is the turning of thought abstracted from existence. - trans. by Barbara Stoler Miller For general background on Patanjali click here and the Yoga Sutras, click here. Magazine articles of note Judith Hanson Lasater wrote an informative, reflective essay on pratyahra, which is the yoga practice of withdrawing the sense. (Yoga nidra is a state of being, pratyahra is an action) Take the time to read her essay, Return To Stillness; In a world of information overload, the yoga practice of pratyahara offers us a haven of silence. Click here. http://www.yogajournal.com/wisdom/459_1.cfm Yoga International featured a woman who teaches yoga and who, like me, has fibromyalgia. Her experience closely mirrors my own. Click here to read about how yoga helps alleviate the symptoms. http://www.yimag.org/features.asp?articleid=3. In three respects, my experience diverged from the woman featured:
To read of my own experience with yoga and my disease, click here. Next month – Review of Yoga CD and more on the strength of surrender. If you have any suggestions for future nilambu notes, please feel free to email me at cass@nilambu.com |
© 2004 - 2012 nilambu.com PO Box 40811, Washington DC 20016-0811 www.nilambu.com 202 333 8854 |
[ print this page | close this page | home ] |