First Street Yoga Community News and Blog

4-WEEK SUMMER CONDITIONING SERIES Saturdays June 2-23 11:00-12:30

With spring finally here, we’re ready to break out the summer clothes and get outside. The Northwest is known for all of it’s outdoor activities, hiking, biking, swimming, jogging and more. This 4-week series is geared towards toning and strengthening the muscles needed for these activities as well as stretching and lengthening them. We will also focus on the breath in our poses, which is so essential to these more strenuous outdoor exercises.

Yoga helps us to become more balanced in everything that we do. We learn to cultivate self-discipline or tapas through strengthening our bodies by using effort. We also learn how to become compassionate, karuna, with ourselves by stretching and lengthening those stiff and hard muscles.  And finally, through the breath, we learn to relax and find joy, mudita, in being in the moment.

Join Alison on Saturdays, June 2nd-23rd from 11:00-12:30 pm. This class is appropriate for beginners. If you know anyone who might be interested, please let them know.

schedule change

The Wednesday 4:15 Vinyasa class with Alison has been cancelled. The last class will be May 9.

In the past, we have offered classes other than our basic Levels 1 and 2. Recharge classes moved at a slower pace; this vinyasa class moved more quickly. As teachers, we believe many of you students would benefit from these options, however, we haven’t had sufficient interest to continue with them. We’re curious: are you interested in these options and did we just pick an inconvenient time? Or are you satisfied with just the two levels? Please let us know — in person, by phone or on-line, we’re always interested in how we can make First Street Yoga the best yoga center around.

spring tonic sunday april 29 1-4pm

Tonic n. 1. a medicine taken to give a feeling of vigor or well-being. 2. something with an invigorating effect.

Join us to shake off the dark and heaviness of winter! In this workshop, we will use the tools of classical yoga to refresh and invigorate ourselves: gentle stretching and exercises will help the muscles let go of old habits; twists will bring heat and energy while cleansing the internal organs; mindful breathing exercises will soothe and strengthen the nervous system. In the long and wise tradition of spring cleaning, a yoga tonic clears away the old and prepares us for new experiences.

Who should attend? If you are feeling lethargic, you will learn how to take yourself to greater energy. If you are feeling congested, you will learn how to let go of old patterns, physical and mental. If you are feeling bored, you will be reminded of the tremendous power and opportunity that is available in each moment of a thoughtful life. This workshop is appropriate for all levels: beginners will experience the profound change a yoga tonic can give; more advanced students will gain additional knowledge in how to use the tools of yoga to support a happy, healthy life.

Call or email to reserve a spot, or simply show up and attend first-come-first-served. I hope to see you!

whole person: whole yoga

Whole Person

Classical yoga is unique in its approach to problems in that it targets the whole person, not just the part that hurts. Long ago, people realized that many of our problems were caused by conflicting desires – the mind knows we need more exercise, but the body may feel lazy, or the heart craves friendship and connection but the mind is afraid. Whenever we find it difficult to make chosen changes, the problem is usually caused by such conflicts. Yogis found the greatest success when they deliberately addressed all parts of the person: body, mind, and spirit. Whether the problem is back pain or anxiety, yoga offers physical exercise to sooth muscles, breathing exercises to organize the nervous system, and meditation to strengthen the brain.

This is the great, wonderful economy of classical yoga: physical trainer, breathing coach, and therapist all rolled into one. But for yoga to address the whole person, it really needs to be whole yoga, not just the physical exercises popular in gym class and advertising.

Whole Yoga

By whole yoga, I mean deliberately and systematically addressing the breath and mind, as well as working and stretching the muscles and joints. A good yoga session should take you safely through the physical exercises as well as any gym class. But it should also help your understanding so you can develop individual strategies to manage ordinary aches and pains. Clear focus on correct physical alignment develops this knowledge and lays the groundwork for deeper meditation. Especially in our physical practice, we want to use the mind more than muscle and the breath more than mind. When we practice in this way, asana becomes a laboratory where we are free to experiment with the ancient wisdom of  Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras. Only through long-term personal engagement can we understand how this wisdom underlies everything we do at First Street Yoga, from stretching a hamstring to managing the business.

Next time you practice, notice: are you all there? If you’re thinking about lunch or the person practicing next to you, your session is not as effective as it could be. As Patanjali taught: tatra sthitau yatnah abhyasah (I.13). Practice is the effort to be here now. All of you.

ABCs of Upside Down

Why should a grown-up take the risk and trouble to go upside down? Handstands, cartwheels, hanging from your knees are all familiar movements from childhood but for most of us, as we age, we stay upright. And there is risk upside down. Weakness, lack of coordination and spinal problems can add real elements of danger. So why do it?

Because we can.

Learning to do difficult things expands our abilities and increases our range of options. Avoiding doing difficult things reduces our abilities and limits our options. When we learn to do a handstand, for example, we teach our arms to be sturdy and strong like legs. The upper back and shoulder area must learn to be firm and stable, yielding great benefits to normal posture. At the same time, we teach our mind equanimity, the ability to be calm and reasonable even when things look difficult and confusing. These are some of the first gifts we get from upside down.

Besides building strength and confidence, upside down poses are naturally calming. Really. When we put most of the body above the level of the heart, gravity assists the venous return of blood, easing the heart’s work. Our lungs work differently, too, as the postures allow more space in the rib cage and more blood to the upper lung tissues. Inverted poses are believed to be fortifying and beneficial for supporting a healthy immune system. The concentration that balancing requires helps focus and calm the mind.

This Sunday (2/19 1-4pm) I’ll be teaching the ABCs of Upside Down, a workshop designed to introduce inverted yoga asanas and how to practice them safely. We will spend some time on anatomy and physiology in order to understand the various dangers and how to avoid them. You will learn how to prepare your body to practice headstand and shoulderstand safely, and you will have the opportunity to work on these poses as appropriate. We will have  time to practice a variety of relaxing supported inversions as well.

Who should come? Students should be reasonably healthy (no congestive heart problems, serious eye problems, or untreated high blood pressure) and should have at least four months of alignment oriented yoga instruction. Beginners who are interested in moving on to L2 but are nervous about the inversions will particularly benefit from this workshop. More advanced students looking to refine their practice will learn different approaches and props to help their practice develop.

This small workshop will have plenty of opportunity for questions and for adapting the practice to suit the individual. These are some of my very favorite asanas and I am eager to share their discoveries. I hope you’ll join me!

To register, call or email. You are welcome to show up that afternoon and attend as space allows. Questions? Let me know. -Jane