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San Francisco 2006 - Conference Blog

« Rodney Yee on Asana and Pranayama | Main | You Tube video of Ana Forrest at Grand Geneva »

Shiva Rea on the Yamas and Niyamas

Thank Krishna that Monday's intensive on the Eight Limbs of Yoga began with Shiva Rea giving us permission to relax and catch what is relevant to us. "You will only retain a drop, but a drop that is very potent," she advised. We were relieved— there was a lot to catch in an 8-to-5 day on the yoga mat, in the presence of three awesome teachers: Shiva, Rodney Yee and Gurmukh.
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Shiva's job was to elucidate the first two limbs, the yamas and niyamas, which she did beautifully.

She talked extensively on ishvara pranidhana, or offering everything we do back to the Source. She talked about her first year of teaching, 15 years ago. She was so nervous, she said, that she had "Spongebob Knees," and the only thing that saved her was ishvara pranidhana. When she offered her teaching back to the source, it kept her focused and got her through.

She offered the same advice to anyone faced with the challenges—whether it is teaching a roomful of yoga students or negotiating a big contract. When we freak out and think we can't do it—that's the time, she said, to offer it back to the Source.

"Connect back to the moment of inspiration that started you down the path...that pause of memory, of gratitude, is huge." The reflection serves to create space around the neuroses that has you feeling so incompetent. And the practice of offering to the Souce can be done with anything in life: eating, cooking, taxes, and business.

Shiva asked us to reflect internally on our own personal relationship with the some of the yamas and niyamas, then to offer any behaviors we wish not to keep back to the source.

Ahimsa: Not Harming. Think of ways you have been unkind in action. How can you transform violence to benevolence?
Satya: Truth. What are the ways we've been in denial or not relaying 100 percent of the truth? What are the lies we tell ourselves and the lies we tolerate in the world?
Asteya: Not Stealing. What are the ways we're borrowing from future generations? (Can you instead replenish?)
Bramacharya: Right use of sexual energy. What are the ways we neglect or abuse our sexual energy?
Apariraha: Non-greediness. How do we degrade things, instead of blessing them?
Sauca: Purity. How are we creating internal or external toxins?
Santosha: Contentment. Are we content?

After a discussion with a partner on which yama or niyama is most relevant in our lives right now, we wrote a sankalpa, or resolution of awareness, then concluded the class with 18 sun salutations.

Next came Rodney Yee to teach the asana and pranayama portion of the Eight Limbs.

posted by Andrea Kowalski and Kaitlin Quistgaard













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