Daily affirmations of a word mercenary
One of my longtime readers expressed interest in hearing more about my morning yoga practice, so here you go.
I flirted with a home yoga practice in 2000, when I was living in Olympia. I’d started taking vinyasa classes and was just starting to get the hang of sun salutations and wanted to do them at home in the mornings. I didn’t quite have the muscle memory down, however, and I spent most of my mornings shuffling around trying to remember if I’d already done the right side and was I breathing in or out on this move and wtf?
Then I went to Gathering of the Tribes and when I came back, all cracked out and disheveled, I realized that cracked out + home yoga practice = no, I’ll just sleep more instead.
No yoga then for me for a while. I didn’t get back into it until summer of 2004 when our friend Joshua offered one free class a week at the studio where he was training to be a teacher. Andreas and I seemed to be the only friends who regularly took him up on the offer (come on: FREE YOGA!) and I quickly remembered how much I liked it. Despite having no previous experience, Dre caught up pretty quickly and was soon popping up into all sorts of inversions and handstands. (Which I still, uh, can’t do.)
After the free classes ended, we kept going. My favorite was the 7am classes. There’s just no better way to wake up than yoga. Then the studio stopped offering the 7am classes (Dre and I were often the only ones there) and I started going to Sunday morning Ashtanga primary series classes. They’re extra long (almost two hours, with shivasana) and I liked the series.
Then we moved, and suddenly the yoga studio went from an 8 minute drive to a 20+ minute drive. I keep trying to make it to classes (I took a morning series this fall for twice a week 7am classes), but it’s harder and harder to justify the drive.
So, this summer I started my own morning practice. The goal is to wake up and do yoga, 5 days a week. Even if it’s only one sun salutation, I do it. Every morning. The best mornings are when Dre does it with me and we do the first 20 minutes of the primary series, and then whatever mat asanas we feel like (we’re both big fans of pigeon). But some mornings (like today!) it’s all I can do to haul my tired ass out of bed and do exactly one sun salutation. And some mornings, that’s just fine.
The effects of this morning practice have been interesting and subtle. I like the mental satisfaction of knowing I’m doing it (determination! discipline!). As for physical results, well, as discussed before I am hyperflexible. I’ve always been magical gumby-girl, but now I’m bordering on rubber band freak.
I also find myself stretching a lot during the day … my coworkers probably think I’m a freak because when ever I stand up to talk to someone I’m always propping a foot up on someone’s desk and stretching over my leg, or standing on one foot and tipping over to stretch out a hip flexor. When I’m writing my book, I get up to stretch around periodically, under some slightly woo-woo delusion that by increasing blood flow to my muscles I’ll increase blood flow to my brain, too.
Hey there. I'm Ariel Meadow Stallings, a native Seattleite who's written my way up and down the Left Coast. Electrolicious is where I post daily randomata, but I also write for a living. My first book, Offbeat Bride, was published last year.
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amy.leblanc
December 9th, 2005 at 3:06 pm
i’ve been trying (ok, so NOT really trying) for years to have the discipline to do a home practice because it’s just so expensive and often inconvienent to do classes. i quit going to classes earlier this year and do some home yoga, but i find that what i enjoy more than anything is Walking Yoga (practicing best posture, breathing, and full muscle mindfulness while walking), and i also do a lot of adjustments etcetera almost everywhere i sit and stand, etcetera.
a true yoga practice is said to never stop.
Esther
December 12th, 2005 at 10:06 am
That’s funny, Jason and I are both obsessed with pigeon too - if there’s any pose we’re likely to practice other than Sun Salutation, it’s that one.
Jodie
December 13th, 2005 at 1:52 pm
Hi - I love yoga too and have mostly done Iyengar. I’m curious what the primary series involves?
Thanks,
Jodie.
Ariel
December 13th, 2005 at 1:56 pm
Here’s the basic list of poses. It takes about 1:45 to do them all:
5 Surya Namaskara A
5 Surya Namaskara B
Padangusthasana (big toe pose)
Pada Hastasana (hands under feet)
Trikonasana (triangle)
Parivritta Trikonasana (revolved triangle)
Utthita Parsvakonasana (side angle)
Parivritta Parsvakonasana (revolved side angle)
Prasarita Padottanasana A,B,C,D (wide leg forward fold)
Parsvottanasana (side intense stretch)
Utthita Hasta Padanghustasana (extended hand to big toe)
Ardha Baddha Padma Uttanasana (half bound lotus forward
fold)
Utkatasana (fierce)
Virabhadrasana I and II (warriors)
first series poses–
Dandasana (staff pose)
Paschimottanasana (west intense stretch)
A — grab big toes
B — sides of feet or C — reverse clasp beyond the feet
Purvottasana (east intense stretch)
Ardha Baddha Padma Paschimottanasana
(half bound lotus forward fold)
Trianga Mukaikapada Paschimottanasana
(1 leg folded back, forward fold)
Janu Sirsasana A, B,C (head to knee pose)
Marichyasana A,B,C,D
Paripurna Navasana (boat)
Adho Mukha Vrksasana (handstand)
Bhujapidasana (arm pressure pose)
Kurmasana (tortoise)
Supta Kurmasana (reclining tortoise)
Garbha Pindasana (embryo in the womb)
Kukkutasana (rooster)
Baddha Konasana (bound angle)
Upavista Konasana (wide angle seated forward fold)
Supta Konasana (reclining angle pose)
Supta Padangustasana (reclining big toe pose)
Ubhaya Padangustasana (both big toes pose)
Urdvha Mukha Paschimottanasana (upward facing paschimo)
Setu Bandhasana (bridge building pose)
finishing poses–
Urdvha Dhanurasana (upward bow)
Paschimottanasana (forward fold)
Savasana (corpse)
Salamba Sarvangasana (shoulderstand)
Halasana (plow)
Karnapidasana (ear pressure pose)
Urdvha Padmasana (lotus in shoulderstand)
Pindasana in Sarvangasana (embryo)
Matsyasana (fish)
Uttana Padasana (flying fish)
Sirsasana (headstrand)
Urdvha Dandasana (upward staff)
Balasana (child’s pose)
Baddha Padmasana (bound lotus)
Yogimudrasana (yogic seals)
Padmasana (lotus)
Tolasana (scales) aka Utplutihi, “the uplifting”
Savasana (corpse)