Guest guest Posted February 15, 2000 Report Share Posted February 15, 2000 ASHTANGA, VINYASA & IYENGARE YOGA<br><br>There is a debate about the relationship between, the validity of and the comparative merits of Iyengar Yoga and Vinyasa Yoga. As a student and teacher who has explored both with equal passion and commitment I would like to offer some insight derived from my experience. For 18 years I studied with Iyengar trained teachers, including Iyengar and his daughter, and participated in a teacher training course, but did not take the assessment. I never felt that I quite understood the subtleties of alignment that my teachers were presenting. I often could not see what they were describing in their presentations, nor feel it within my own body. I couldn't help but feel I was stuck somewhere on the surface of yoga. Nevertheless I gained a great deal from the method and that can clearly be seen in my practice. <br><br>Then I unintentionally found myself in a class presenting the Primary Series of Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga. All of the 55 postures were familiar to me but their context was not. The breathing method, the bandhas, the jumping style, the physical and psychological continuity, the sweat, the surrender provided a context in which my body began, at last, to express more fully and deeply what my Iyengar teachers had been trying to instil in me with regard to alignment. The effect of the vinyasa practice on me was to shift that knowledge from my brain to my body. At last I felt I was practicing yoga. Despite my enthusiasm for the feel of vinyasa practice I did not become a practitioner of Vinyasa Yoga. Just as previously I had never been a practitioner of Iyengar Yoga. The vinyasa techniques were there, the alignment of Iyengar was there, and for me they served only to clarify, enhance and expedite each other. As a student of both the Iyengar method and the Vinyasa method, I am simply a practitioner of yoga ..<br><br>However over the next four years my passion was to get the better of me. I soon created a reckless imbalance in my practice, doing sequences of up to 300 asana in six hours practice. This did not allow enough emphasis for the nourishing inversion section of the vinyasa sequences. Eventually all the jumping, the heat and sweat were no longer purifying me of toxins but draining me of moisture and energy. I became dehydrated, depleted and physically exhausted. But worst of all I became psychologically exhausted, and lost the ability to recognise the imbalances I was creating, until finally, at the point of breakdown I stopped. My body refused to allow me to practice any more, and would insist that I sat in meditation, or laid myself over a chair in ardha halasana, and other supported postures. While doing these poses I explored the nature of the bandhas and realised that I had not been correctly applying them. In error I had been creating hardness where there should have been softness: especially in the brain. It was this hardness, I realised, that was damaging me: not the techniques. I had been misapplying the techniques by my faulty attitude. The essence of this attitude was greed. I wanted to know more, to feel more, to be more than I was. This ambitiousness was creating an insensitivity to the subtleties of technique, and resulting in a subtle but insidious form of violence. And although i was using some of the techniques of yoga, i was not practicing yoga. I was breaking all of the yamas and niyamas every time i went to the mat. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2000 Report Share Posted February 15, 2000 Great posts Mr. D. Hope to hear more from you! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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