Guest guest Posted August 13, 1999 Report Share Posted August 13, 1999 1. sweat is indiscrminate, bearing minerals as well as toxins to the skin. wiping sweat equals losing minerals.<br><br>2. sweat acts as a wet suit, keeping heat on the inside where it is required. wipe it off and you waste energy and/or lessen the transformative effect of the bandhas. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 1999 Report Share Posted August 13, 1999 furthermore, copious sweating is a sign of 1. excess liquid 2. too much external heat 3. excessive toxins.<br>1. vegetarians, esepcially those who dont eat refined sugar, need far less liquid than carnivores, so it becomes very easy to drink more than required. then it pours out in practice.<br>2. external heat draws out liquid, even if there is not excess liquid. internal heat does not have the same effect as it is regulated by the same metabolic controls that monitor internal liquid levels.<br>3. we live in a toxic world, in air water plants etc. we can minimise by drinking spring water, preferably from source with long time&space gap bewteen rainfall and surfacing for better filtering. and by eating organic vegetable quality food and not taking ANY drugs. grass/hash is very toxic to the body and produces deep muscle and joint pain in yoga practitioners. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 14, 1999 Report Share Posted August 14, 1999 So what happens with postures that require the grip of skin on skin, like some arm balances?<br><br>Most of them I can easily achieve if dry but when sweating profusely during practice, they are near impossible to achieve.<br><br>In some arm balances you get the time to arrange yourself but in others...For example even with just a light coat of pespiration covering my upper arms and legs, jumping into bakasana (2nd series) is suicidal! But If I am dry I can achieve the hop into a pretty decent,high, straight armed asana even if my body has had no warm up whatsoever.Titivasana presents me with the same kind of problems : very easily done when not sweating and damn tough when sweating.Have you seen people directly hop from down dog into garbaha pindasana in the first series?Very hard for me to do when sweating. Well, I have seen David Swenson hop straight legged from down dog into titivasana in order to land ,with control and in one smooth motion, directly into kurmasana.Let me repeat myself : Suicidal! (For me that is, David didn't bat an eyelid).<br><br>I find it hard to imagine that my sweat will in the future be so reduced or it's quality so altered that this situation will change.(Maybe there is a potion I can drink that will produce sticky sweat )<br>I am ,of course, trying all the time to use my muscles and locks to stay up instead of leaning on my other limbs for support.<br><br>However, just yesterday I did slip and fall from galavasana , an asana I can normally achieve just fine, except when I practice it as part of the whole series!It never ceases to amaze me how you can fall from so low (just forearm length height from the floor) and hurt so much. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 14, 1999 Report Share Posted August 14, 1999 I use a t-shirt that I put on for postures that would be too slipery with skin on skin... bujapidasana, supta kurmasana, bakasana, for example. It works well for me. Once you get over the initial feeling of putting on a shirt when you're really sweaty, it keeps the practice flowing while allowing you to do these postures more satisfactorilly. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 1999 Report Share Posted August 16, 1999 The question of who sweats, how much, and why is an interesting one. A friend of mine saw Richard Freeman demonstrating some postures of an advanced series. My friend said Richard was absolutely *pouring* sweat in these postures!<br><br>This being so, I'm not sure copious sweating is a factor of one's physical condition. It may be to some degree, but there are no doubt other factors as well. Heredity, as usual, plays a greater role than is generally considered.<br><br>Anyway, Freeman's perspiration demonstration makes me feel better about me alter identity as the super hero "Slimeman"! Most every session I pour sweat. It's especially impressive when I'm doing one of those arms-behind-the-back postures, and the water flows down my arms to the mat like I've got a spigot on my head...<br><br>But then . . . there's the women of astanga. <br><br>I've yet to see a woman sweat anything like most men. Hey, this is in no way a commentary on expenditure of effort in one's practice between the genders -- I have no doubts that the women are working just as hard as the men. Still, they don't sweat nearly as much as the men do, and that's a fact. It's a nice fact too, if you ask me.<br><br>What I find truly astounding is the sound of women using water spray bottles at garbha pindasana time! How can some women go through first series in an 85* room and not be sufficiently sweaty at that point?? Our bodies are a real mystery sometimes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 1999 Report Share Posted August 17, 1999 trayam, id be more interested to know how much richard sweats doing primary practice. for me there is a huge difference between the accessibility of the primary and advanced series postures, that correlates very closely with my sweat levels. but when i first did primary i sweated like i do now on advanced. factor four then is the challenge represented by the postures. why are we so hot on sweating while mr. iyengar appears to be so cool in saying that sweating is a bad sign. i have this genetic defect of always wanting to harmonise apparently conflicting positions by trying to penetrate their core. my respect for the vinyasa practice is no less nor more than my respect for the lion of pune, whose words, while never mistaking them for the roar of truth, i would never dismiss simply because they appear to contradict my predelictions. how could anyone ever find yoga boring? namaste, may we sweat together in laughter someday Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 1999 Report Share Posted August 17, 1999 i used to wear thick wristbands on my biceps to stop me slipping in 3rd series armbalances, easier than a shirt.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 1999 Report Share Posted August 17, 1999 Good points Godfrey, thanx..<br><br>And that Mr. (BKS) Iyengar guy -- I respect him too. I wonder how he does it all without sweating . . . I really need the heat. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 29, 2000 Report Share Posted March 29, 2000 Hi all,<br><br>I know I'm replying to a very old message, but firstly, I just joined the club/started Ashtanga, and secondly, I was very amused by that turn of phrase, "the women of Ashtanga"! <br><br>It sounds like some kind of risque magazine pictorial, no? <br><br>Anyhow, I'm female and I sweat like you would not believe during Ashtanga (I"m learning primary series now). Just astonishing, copious amounts of sweat. But then, I was always a sweaty one .. I sweat during aerobics classes, kickboxing, weightlifting, if I don't let too much time lapse between sets ... you name it. By the end of any given class, I appear to have been standing in a downpour. <br><br>As I go in Ashtanga, I'm learning, though, that bringing a towel to practice is key ... I've started to slide in downward dog towards the end of class before. Grabbing my foot from behind or clasping hands either around the foot or in the standing poses (sorry, still learning names of asanas!) gets tricky when extra sweaty. I've had a couple of giggly moments as I achieve a pose and then feel myself steadily slllliiiiddddding out of it.<br><br>I like that coating of sweat, but drying my hands off as often as possible is necessary for me.<br><br>Christina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 31, 2000 Report Share Posted March 31, 2000 Hey Christina, <br>Ihope with all that sweating you do that you know to repleniish your fluids. Drink alot of water...<br>I sweat too during class , my towel is always handy. Sometimes during the dancer I have to grab my foot with my towel so I can hold the pose.<br>I also have stopped wearing body cream, I find that I slide all over when I do..<br>~Rose Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2000 Report Share Posted April 3, 2000 > Ihope with all that sweating you do that you know to repleniish your fluids. Drink alot of water...<br><br>Yeah, I do drink a couple of liters of water a day, I'd say. I've been doing that for a good while, so my body is used to all the fluid (meaning my bladder isn't in over drive the way it was when I first started drinking lots of water). <br><br>> I sweat too during class , my towel is always handy. <br><br>Check...<br><br>>I also have stopped wearing body cream, I find that I slide all over when I do..<br><br>.. and check again. Learned this one the hard way.<br><br>Christina<br><br>PS what's "dancer" ? Is that an asana I'm not familiar with? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2000 Report Share Posted April 3, 2000 Hey Chris, <br>The dancer is a slang name for the Standing bow pulling pose Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2000 Report Share Posted April 3, 2000 .... and I'm guessing that "the standing bow pulling pose" is a slang name for natarajasana, on account of natarajasana being named after the dancing incarnation of Shiva? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 4, 2000 Report Share Posted April 4, 2000 Hey Alan, <br>Thaty is so interesting. It never dawned on me to think where the names originated. Im sure there is an explanation for each asana somewhere. hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Im on a mission. : )<br>~Rose Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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