DARREN MAIN



Resources for the Urban Mystic

May 2, 2013
by Darren Main
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NYT: Yoga After 50

Great article in the New York Times about  yoga in the second half of life.

While many yoga classes across the country seem to cater to the youthful enthusiast who wants to sweat his or her way through an hour-and-a-half workout, a growing number of longtime yoga devotees are raising questions about the best way to safely continue a yoga practice into midlife and beyond.

“I suspect that yoga was at times an old person’s sport, and that it has prolonged the life and liveliness of people over the millennia,” said Dr. Loren Fishman, a back-pain specialist in Manhattan who uses yoga in his rehabilitation practice and has written extensively about yoga as an adjunct to medical treatment.

“Designed appropriately and taken in proper dose,” he said, “it is certainly safe.”

Carrie Owerko, a New York-based teacher of Iyengar yoga who has been a yoga student for decades, agreed. “Yoga can be practiced fully and deeply at any age,” she said, with an added caution that “the practice has to change as the body changes.”

Dr. Fishman noted that aging brings impairments of range, motion, strength and balance that can require modifications, even among veteran yogis, like using the support of a chair or the wall for many poses. In addition, students may begin to feel the effects of arthritis, injuries and other ailments that may require students skip certain poses altogether.

Someone with osteoporosis, for example, may want to avoid headstands and poses requiring extreme spinal flexion or extension, while someone with glaucoma may want to avoid taking the head below the heart in poses like headstand, handstand, shoulder stand and standing forward bends. When in doubt about the safety of practicing with any specific medical condition, Dr. Fishman recommended working with a doctor.

Generally speaking, a warm-up sequence is important for the veteran yogi, Ms. Owerko said. “Our bodies may need more time to warm up properly, especially if we are experiencing stiffness or arthritic changes in the joints or in areas that may be more vulnerable to previous injuries,” she said.

It is also important to include various one-legged standing poses — Tree Pose or Eagle Pose are examples — that challenge one’s ability to balance, even if you need the support of the wall, Ms. Owerko said. Weight-bearing poses, like Plank Pose and Forearm Plank, and standing poses like Warrior pose variations, are also important to help counteract the decline in muscle mass and strength as we age, she said.

To help maintain flexibility, poses like standing or seated forward bends and hip openers, like Bound Angle Pose or Pigeon Pose, are also important, said Roger Cole, a longtime Iyengar yoga teacher and psychologist in San Francisco.

Mr. Cole emphasized that a regular yoga practice can help the body maintain a high level of flexibility into midlife and beyond. If a student continues the same practice as much as possible without interruption through the 50s and beyond, he or she will see a gradual decline in certain abilities, but not necessarily a decline in flexibility, he said.

“I think the average person probably does get stiffer as they age,” he said, “but I believe that it’s mainly because they stop doing the things that keep them flexible.”

The passage of more and more baby boomer yogis, teachers as well as students, into and past middle age has sparked interest in creating a new kind of peer yoga community as well.

Desirée Rumbaugh, a longtime yoga teacher who passed the 50-year mark a few years ago, started a class in Del Mar, Calif., aimed at yoga veterans 50 and over. Called Wisdom Warriors, it was intended to offer veteran yogis the chance to keep learning in an environment that is comfortable and encouraging.

“People want to be pushed, but not in the same way they did in their 30s,” she said. “They want a little slower pace.”

Slower pace or not, Ms. Rumbaugh includes a full range of poses in her classes, including backbends and inversions. A recent Wisdom Warriors workshop, presented by Ms. Rumbaugh and Cyndi Lee at the Yoga Journal Conference in New York in April, would have been a vigorous day of yoga for students of any age.

Debra Hodgen, 61, of Vista, Calif., is a student in Ms. Rumbaugh’s class. A former dancer, she said that she began a consistent yoga practice when she was 48. She said she has become “stronger and more fearless” as a result of the class, despite having osteoarthritis, no cartilage in her right knee and joint pain throughout her body.

“I may have trouble just sitting in simple cross-legged pose, but I did full Monkey Pose recently,” she said.

The most important way a seasoned student will be able to continue to practice safely, many teachers say, is to listen to signals their body sends them in class, and know when to back off.

“In my experience, older students often bring a mature wisdom to the practice,” said Ms. Owerko, who turned 51 this week and has for many years attended an advanced yoga retreated for women over 40. “They have lived long enough to have a sense of humor about themselves. And they are often more compassionate toward themselves and other students.”

Do you have a question about yoga over 50? Dr. Loren Fishman is answering reader questions on the Booming blog.

May 1, 2013
by Darren Main
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OMies iPhone App

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This new iPhone App is super cool, has just been released as a Beta to a limited number of yogis.  The Creator of the App is giving my students a head start in downloading it.  Get it while you can or get stuck waiting for the official release!
Darren

DETAILS

OMies ia a brand new (and free!) iPhone app for the yoga community. Find classes near you, see which classes your friends are going to, track your practice, and connect with your favorite teachers. We’ve launched our beta version in San Francisco. Now we’re seeking beta testers to give us feedback and help us make the app awesome before we open it up to the larger community. If you are an iPhone-using yogi, you can download the free app HERE.

April 24, 2013
by Darren Main
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Integrative Medicine Network Forum

Yoga & Western Medicine: Darren Main

IMN

June 1, 2013 1:30 PM • Register Online

In recent decades, the practice of yoga as gone mainstream with millions of people practicing it in some form every day.  Scientific literature is continually publishing articles about the therapeutic benefits of yoga, and doctors, nurses and other healthcare providers regularly suggest their patients explore this ancient practice.

In this discussion, author and yoga teacher Darren Main will explore the practice of yoga and how it can complement Western Medicine. Because there are so many styles of yoga from which to choose , important considerations when talking to patients about yoga will also be discussed.

This discussion is perfect for any healthcare professional wishing advise their patient on the practice of yoga.

April 23, 2013
by Darren Main
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Remembering Swami Kriyananada

In 1920 a boat docked in Boston, MA and a man by the name of Paramahansa Yogananda stepped onto American Soil.   He was only the second swami to come to the United States at that point, and his teaching and writing sparked the imagination of many young spiritual seekers.  Thus began the yoga revolution here in the West.

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Donald Walters was a direct disciple  of Yogananda and a member of Self Realization Fellowship  (SRF),  an organization founded by his guru. Walters eventually took vows and became known as Swami Kriyananda.   Yet after  a rather public and acrimonious split with SRF,  he went on to found Ananda, author over 150 books and teach worldwide.

On Sunday, April 21st, Krinanada passed away leaving behind many devoted followers.  While he will likely be remembered by some as a rogue Swami and by others as a great teacher, I think he and his generation of  Western yogis is most influential in the brave choice they made to explore yoga at a time when it was known only as an exotic Indian practice.

If not for people like Kriyananda bringing yoga to the mainstream, I might well be wearing a suit to work each day rather than yoga shorts and bare feet!   For those of us who have had our lives healed by yoga, the people like Kriananda who came before us, deserve our gratitude.

Please keep Kriananda’s many students in your thoughts and prayers as they greave the loss of their teacher.  You can also listen to my two part interview with Kriyananda (part 1part 2).

 

March 20, 2013
by Darren Main
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March for Marriage Equality

March 25, 2013 • 6:15 PM Castro & Market
(Look for the Grace Cathedral community in front of Bisou at 2367 Market)

Join the broader Grace Cathedral community in a march for marriage equality. Whether you are gay or straight, this is a chance to take a stand for love. We hope to see you all there! Darren