Saturday, August 24, 2013

Surrender

The final niyama invites us to surrender our perceived control to a higher power, however you define that power.

This niyama is considered the last step toward enlightenment, but we can also think about surrender in terms of loosening the tight rein we have on our daily schedule and overall life plan.

That way, when the universe throws you a curve ball, you can easily recover and move in a different direction without losing your balance.

1. Sit up tall in your chair with lower belly muscles firm. Place your hands against your lower ribcage and notice the rise and fall of your breath. Stay here for 5 complete breaths.

2.  Let one hand rest in your lap as the other hand *very slowly* begins reaching for the ceiling, your eyes focused on your fingertips, carefully following the movement. When your hand is as high as you can comfortably reach, relax your shoulder and neck, continuing to look up at your hand for 3 breaths. Rotate your wrist and squeeze your fingers, making a fist, then release your fingers once again. Reverse the movement by slowly watching your hand return to your lap- challenge yourself to move as slowly as possible! Patience, remember? Repeat all instructions with your other hand this time.

3. Let's use that same focused movement with our legs now. Hands can rest on your lap again. Push away from your desk so that you can see your feet. Begin to straighten one knee as you *very slowly* lift one foot off the floor, eyes fixed on your toes. Pay attention to the feel of each muscle working to make the movement possible. When leg is straight, flex the toes toward your body as you push through your heel. Take 3 slow breaths as you keep watching your foot. Then point your toes away from you, taking 3 full breaths. Circle the ankle in each direction 3 times. Then you can very slowly lower the foot back to the floor, eyes watching. Once it's lowered, gently shake the whole leg a bit to relax the tight muscles. Repeat all directions with opposite leg this time.

4. Sit back comfortably in your chair, let your shoulders relax down, release your jaw so your teeth are not clenched. Close your eyes and just breathe. See if you can count to 100 before getting distracted.

5. Did you skip #4 completely? Did the slow pace of #2 and #3 drive you crazy? Impatient, maybe? Let that message be your theme of the day. :)





Sunday, August 18, 2013

Discipline

Discipline gets a bad rap in our culture, especially as it applies to health and fitness. This niyama is called tapas in Sanskrit, meaning "to burn." If you immediately thought of that old demand to "feel the burn" as it applies to physical exercise, you can toss that idea right out the gym window.


In this case, tapas refers to the right effort that we apply to our burning passions, whether they include yoga practice, music, art, parenting, cooking, or Web-surfing. With a healthy desire to learn, and without getting stuck on the outcome of our actions, we display positive discipline in our lives.













1. Sit up tall away from the back of your chair, use the lower belly muscles to keep your spine supported.

2 Inhale as your roll your shoulders up then exhale as they roll back, completing 5 rolls total.

3. Bring both hands to the back of your head, elbows pointing out to the sides. Gently press your head back into your fingertips . As you breathe deeply, draw the shoulder blades together behind you, opening through your chest. Stay here for at least 6 breaths.

4. Move hands under right thigh, lifting it off the chair seat. Rotate the ankle and wiggle your toes. Repeat with left leg.

5. Bring both hands to left armrest, twisting your upper body to the left as your bottom stays in the seat. Breathe 3 full breaths. Repeat on right side.

6. Bring hands under right thigh again, this time lifting the knee high. You can even move your hands to grasp a few inches below the front of your knee, hugging the thigh into your body for a deep hip stretch.  Take three breaths once your knee is at its highest. Repeat with left leg.

7. Open your legs as wide as you can while still staying seated. Inhale your arms reaching for the ceiling, then as you exhale, sweep the arms forward and down, fold at the hips to rest your torso onto or close to your thighs. Hands can rest on legs or hang down to the floor. Gently nod your head "yes" a few times and then shake it "no" to loosen your neck muscles. Let your head hang without tension. Stay here for 5 full breaths. Use your hands on your thighs to slowly rise to sitting.

8. Rest against the back of the seat, elbows relaxed down, fingertips on lower belly. Inhale for a slow count of 4, then exhale for that same slow count of 4. Continue this counting to four on the inhale and exhale for 5 full breath cycles. Return to your day with a renewed sense of power! 

Monday, August 12, 2013

Purity


Do true yogis only have angelic reflections and scrub under their fingernails three times daily?  Doubtful. This niyama refers not only to the cleanliness of our bodies, both inside and out, but also to the purity of our thoughts.

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Ancient yogis had elaborate rituals to observe purity, or saucha, but we can begin by simply eating healthy foods.  Meditating for even a few minutes can begin to clear the clutter from our minds. Yoga asana, or the physical postures, cleanse the body by increasing circulation and eliminating toxins.

Don't forget that if your are subscribed by email, you can listen to the audio version of the practice below by clicking through to the Quick Desk Yoga website





1. Begin with palms of your hands pressed together in front of your chest, thumbs touching at your "heart center." Bring into your mind the image of a loved one. Close your eyes and take 5 deep calming breaths.

2. Inhale as you open your arms wide at shoulder height, palms facing front.  Notice the opening in your chest as you reach for left and right walls. Exhale as you close your palms together once again at heart center. Repeat 2 more times.

3. Bring left fingertips to grasp your chair under the left edge of your seat. Inhale as you lift the right arm straight up to ceiling, lifting up and out of rib cage even as your bottom stays planted in chair. Exhale with a side stretch to the left, inside of elbow stays over the ear. Keep your right sitting bone in the chair. Inhale the right up back up toward the ceiling, then exhale it down to grasp the right edge of your chair's seat. Repeat using left arm this time.

4. Repeat #3 two more times on each side.

5. Let your hands rest on your thighs as we work on leg lifts next. Sit up tall and tighten your lower belly. On an inhale, lift both lower legs off the floor, straightening the knees, toes pointed toward the wall behind your desk. An exhale lowers the legs back to the floor. Next inhale, do the same leg lift, but this time with toes flexed, pointing up at the underside of your desk. Always exhale as you release the legs back to the floor. Is your lower belly still firm? Are you holding your breath?

6. Repeat both parts of #5 three times: one lift with toes pointed, then the next with feet flexed- counts as one round. Check your posture: sit up tall!

7. Bring fingers to grasp under each side edge of your seat. As you inhale, lift up through your chest, drawing shoulders back, arching your spine toward your computer monitor. On the exhale, relax back into your chair. Repeat 2 more times.

8. Still holding edges of seat, take inhale, then exhale and fold forward bringing chest toward your thighs. Inhale back up to sitting.

9. Inhale both arms up toward the ceiling, then exhale ending with palms together at heart center. Once again bring to mind someone special in your life. Close your eyes and breathe, slowly counting to 20 before resuming your work of the day.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Contentment

The second niyama, or personal observance, is santosha, which means contentment. I think it's fair to say that most of us spend our days wanting more: more energy, more sleep, and definitely more money. Sometimes what we desire is less of something: illness, rainy days, and the dreaded housework.

The point is that we are rarely happy with what we have right now. Finding peace with your present life is an ongoing challenge, but one way to bring contentment into your life is to create a daily gratitude list of three things for which you feel thankful. Once you start you may find that you could easily list thirty things instead of only three!

Here's mine for today: family, health, and adjustable desk chairs for those of us who are vertically challenged. According to Patanjali, "from contentment, unsurpassed happiness is gained." Agreed.




 Instructions for all sessions: FAQs

1. Begin by warming up your shoulders: roll them up to your ears as you inhale and roll them back and down as you exhale. Repeat 3-4 times.

2. Stretch your arms wide on an inhale then as you exhale, swing the arms around so the hands land on the opposite shoulders, giving yourself a big hug. Repeat the wide stretch and as you hug the second time, the other arm can be on top.

3. Lift one knee off the chair seat, you can hold the back of the thigh for support. Flexing the foot on the raised leg, slowly spin the lower leg in both directions 3 times each. Place the thigh back on the seat and repeat on the other side.

4. Inhale both arms straight up for the ceiling, then on your exhale, fold at the hips so your belly comes to rest on your thighs. Let your head hang, releasing all the neck muscles. You may even rest your head on your knees if you can reach. Let your arms flop to the floor on either side of your legs. Rest here for 5 complete breath cycles.

5. Bring your hands to your knees and on an inhale, slowly push yourself back to sitting.

6. Cross your legs by bringing your right ankle to rest just above your left knee, keeping the right foot flexed at the ankle. ("man sit") If this stretch feels toe intense, rest your right ankle across your left shin, or even in front of your left ankle. Whatever leg cross works for you, think of pointing the right knee toward the ground, feeling the opening in your inner thigh and hip.

7. Still with your ankle resting across your knee/shin/opposite ankle,  rest your hands on your thighs for support, then begin a forward fold by slowly leaning your chest toward your knees, folding at the hip with your back staying flat. Lean forward enough to feel a gentle stretch, but not so far that you feel pain.

8. Return to sitting upright. Repeat #6 and #7 with the left ankle crossed above the right knee (or shin, or ankle).

9. Inhale your arms up to the ceiling, then exhale bringing your hands together in front of your heart, palms pressed together, thumbs on sternum. Close your eyes and take 5 slow, deep breaths before returning to your day.