Workshop in Buenos Aires
Wednesday, February 24th, 2010http://iyengaryogabuenosaires.blogspot.com/
http://iyengaryogabuenosaires.blogspot.com/
At blissful yoga
Jan 9 & 10
http://www.blissfulyoga.net/Special_Events_Schedule.html 26 minutes ago
BANDHA: ESSENTIAL INGREDIENT OF YOGA PRACTICE
with Paul Cabanis
YOGA AT THE VILLAGE
1306 Sonora Ave, Glendale, CA 91201
818-265-9833
Sunday, August 9, 2009
1:00-4:00pm
Patañjali states that after physical conditions have been stabilized,
disturbing pains removed, effort transcended and dualities overcome by
the process of asana (position), emotional stability is gained by the further practices
of pranayama (control of the life-force).
For this practice, it is essential to apply bandha (closing) to prevent the dissipation of energy and to direct it through the right channels, into the right areas without causing damage elsewhere.
Prana can turn lethal when misdirected and the improper performance of bandha will carry numerous adverse effects in its wake. Bandha can only be learned through asana and pranayama is not possible without it. This is practical confirmation of Patañjali’s postulation of a distinct progression
from asana to pranayama.
In this class we will explore the three main bandhas through asana and apply them to pranayama.
Workshop Fee: $45 per person
*TEACHERS: Earn 3 continuing education units toward your Yoga Alliance renewal.
PUNE STYLE
self practice course
at YogaWorks Westwood
This class will provide an opportunity for students to develop a personal practice with the guidance of a teacher. In the Iyengar system, practice is not static, but changes based on an individual’s physical and psychological state, environment, general health, and age. You will learn how to adapt your practice in accordance with your daily needs and develop a rhythm that will help you to firmly establish the yoga practice in your life.
It is recommended that students have at least 6 months of Iyengar yoga experience. Limited to 20 students
Schedule Information
Fridays, June 19 – July 24
7:30-9:00am
THE AYURVEDA OF YOGA
at YogaWorks Westwood
Ayurveda and yoga are considered “sister sciences” that have been united for thousands of years for the sake of healing body, mind, and consciousness. Generally speaking, Ayurveda deals more with the health of the body, while yoga deals with purifying the mind and consciousness, but these two purposes complement and embrace each other. Besides sharing a philosophical foundation, both systems have many similarities in relation to attitude, nutrition, diet, hygiene, exercise and spiritual practices. Yoga practitioners can benefit from a basic knowledge of Ayurveda to help establish a healthy daily routine and adjust their practice according to their constitution, dosha imbalance and environmental/seasonal influences to prevent disease and promote longevity. In this workshop we will learn some of the basic concepts of Ayurveda and how they relate to our practice of yoga.
Schedule Information
Sunday, June 28 2009
1-4pm
Off to study with Geeta and teach in Athens. See you in a few weeks!
Hope to see you all there! It’s from 1:30 – 3:30pm.
January 13-February 24
Intro to Yoga Course, 4-Week Series
Mondays, 9-10:30am
IYILA
February 8
Yoga for Depression
2-5pm
Yoga Works on Montana in Santa Monica
February 27-March 1
Iyengar Yoga Retreat
Casa Barranca
Ojai, California
March 20-22
Weekend Workshop
Shizen Yoga
Tokyo, Japan
March 27-29
Weekend Workshop
mYoga, Hong Kong
May 22-24
Weekend Workshop
Athens, Greece

Work on your own practice!
Location: Westwood
Dates: 9/12 – 10/24
Contact Information: Westwood Studio
310.234.1200
Schedule Information
Fridays, 7:30-9:00amPricing Information
Prerequisites
It is recommended that students have at least 6 months prior Iyengar experience.
We will spend an extended period of time examining what is involved in the practice of this most vitally important asana and study its many permutations.
Location: Center for Yoga
Dates: 3/22-3/23
1:30-4:30pm
Contact Information: Center for Yoga
323.464.1276
$100 per weekend
All the efforts of the human mind cannot exhaust the essence of a single fly.
Thomas Aquinas

The One, perfect in seeking nothing, possessing nothing and needing nothing, overflows and creates a new reality by its superabundance.
The process is like the unfolding of a seed, moving from simple origin to termination in the world of sense, the prior always remaining in its place, while begetting its successor from a store of indescribable power – power that must not halt within the higher realm . . but continue to expand until the universe of things reaches the limit of its possibility, lavishing its vast resources on all its creatures, intolerant that any one should have no share in it. Nothing is debarred from participation in the Good, to the extent of its receptivity.

Imagine a body in which every muscle, nerve ending and square inch of exposed flesh seems utterly relaxed yet briskly attentive, as if meant to be receptive to the slightest sign of life outside itself, and you’ll have some idea of how remarkable the pose is. It’s as if the entire body functions as a kind of human dowsing rod, mystically attuned to the hidden rhythms of the universe.
The pose is called kayotsarga, which roughly translates into “body- abandonment” posture. It is believed to represent a perfect pose of nonviolence, in which a human being can inflict the least harm on any living thing.
Christopher Knight on Jain Statuettes
The dog picks up a bone, a dry bone, there is nothing there, and then it bites, and the bone hurts the gums, and the blood comes out of it. And the dog believes — imagines, experiences, feels, whatever word you want to use — that the blood which is coming out of its own gums is from the bone. So that is the kind of trap in which the whole structure of thinking is caught up, and tries all the time to get out of that, the trap it has created.
UG Krishnamurti
In truth, of course, I am a transcendental ego, but I am not conscious of this; being in a particular attitude, the natural attitude, I am completely given over to the object poles, completely bound by interests and tasks which are exclusively directed towards them.
Edmund Husserl, Cartesian Meditations