Atha Yoganusasanam. Patanjali Yoga Sutra I.1

The wise sage Patanjali says here that yoga is meant to be learned in a group setting because we learn about ourselves through our interactions with others.

Yoga hayat, digerleri ve kendimizle olan iliskimizdir. Yogada ogrenme ve gelisim baskalariyla paylastigimiz oranda artar. Kula Sanskritce aile, topluluk anlamina geliyor. Yogakula Istanbul daki amac yoga severleri bir araya getirmek ve yogayi hayatlarina uygulamayi ogrenecekleri destekleyici rahat bir ortam sunmaktir.

ders programi


monday / wednesday / thursday 7 - 8:30 pm


pazartesi / carsamba / persembe 19:00 - 20:30



tek ders nakit 25TL / 10 ders nakit 180 TL / 8 ders nakit 160 TL (2 ay gecerli)
Sakayik sokak No: 56 Kat:4 Nisantasi

Thursday, May 27, 2010

HAMILELIK VE YOGA PRATIGI


Hamilelik sirasinda harekete devam etmek cok onemlidir. Yoga hamilelik suresinde size vucudunuzu bilinclice kullanmayi ogreterek ve ozguveninizi arttirarak manevi bir destek sunar. Yavas, hizaya ve nefese dikkat edilerek yapilan yoga duruslari kisa zamanda inanilmaz degisiklikler geciren vucudunuz hakkinda bilinclenmenize, bebeginiz ile erken iletisime gecmenize, dogum sancilarinda ve herhangi fiziksel rahatsizlik durumunda size yardimci olacak uygun nefes ve durusu bulmaniza yardim eder.  

YogaKulaIstanbul'da hamilelere yoga dersleri sunulur. Bilgi icin lutfen 0 530 413 9143 u arayiniz. 

Friday, April 2, 2010

UNDER THE TONE

I went to Berkeley California to attend a Body Mind Centering workshop in Embodied Developmental Movement and Yoga. As usual it is amazing to watch Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen share her wisdom and turn your preconceptions upside down when she shows that there is not one way of doing a yoga pose. I often leave these workshops with one or two crucial teachings. It often manifests itself first in my brain then it is a play of curiosity to see how I embody it in the following months.

The highlight of the recent workshop made its way straight deep into my cells. The teaching is: Go under the tone. No wonder our workshop topic was movement patterns that first appear in the womb and continue emerging and integrating through infancy. The way we breathed, pulsed, yielded, pushed, reached and pulled from early on serve our cellular tone and fluidity. Overall they play an important role supporting the more complex movement of yoga.

"Going under the tone" means finding the support underneath in a given pose. It does not matter whether the pose is easy or challenging. All that matters is that a pose becomes complete and whole when executed from different possible perceptions. It is all about achieving ease but staying alert after all. 

If for instance folding forward gives you a painful experience, notice first whether you fold from your front body or back body. Then try doing it otherwise. It might soothe your nervous system more efficiently. 

Savasana, which is done as the very last thing in a yoga class, is a very exposing pose in my opinion. It opens our front body and organs to the space surrounding us. I often wondered how such a pose that can make us quite exposed and vulnerable made perfect sense at the end as we all gave ourselves in to the trust of it.  It made sense to me in this workshop that for savasana to act quite effective it has to enclose the actual enfolding of the front body and organs as if we are curled safely in our mother's womb. In other words a strong preparation for internal calm and clarity is necessary before we go ahead and open ourselves to the world. This is what "going under the tone" implies for me. 

Just notice next time when you practice savasana: Will it become more nurturing when done after a long held child pose? 

It surely is for me. 

Monday, February 22, 2010

Julie & Julia filmi ve yoga


Gecen gun Julie & Julia filmini seyrettim. Filmdeki hikayelerden birisi Fransiz mutfagi konusunda uzman Amerikali asci Julia Child'in mesleginde meshur olmadan onceki yillari. Megerse Julia Child "Mastering the Art of French Cooking" kitabi basilmadan evvel sekiz sene beklemis. 8 SENE kitap hakkinda tam gaz calismasina ragmen yayin evleri tarafindan reddedilmis ve bir turlu istedigi hamleyi atamamis. 

8 sene lafi film bitene kadar beni bayagi bir dusundurdu. Yoga derslerinde de ilerleme kaydetmek, olesiye istedigimiz bir pozu bir turlu yapamamak konusunda konusuyoruz. 

Yogada kendinize ne kadar zaman sure taniyorsunuz? Bir poz veya bir ogretiyi tum hucrelerinize sindirmek ne kadar zaman alir? Ne kadar zaman istediginiz olmayinca pes etmek akliniza geliyor? Ya da umudu kesmek? 

Herhangi bir yoga durusunda ustad olmanin ideal zamani nedir diye hep kendi kendime sordum. Soruma cevap gunun birinde bir muzisyenden geldi: "The form is the amount of time it takes." (Sekil ve bicimi olusturan ona harcanan zamandir) 

Yani bir poz uzerinde 8 sene bekleyebilir miyiz? Neden olmasin ki? Belki de daha uzun. Esas verimli olan poza hazirlik asamasinki niyetimiz, gayretimiz, bazen de lokal detaylardan cikiverip butunu gorebilme becerimiz ve eglenerek zevk almamiz...  

(Not: Bu yaziyi yazma sebebim gecenlerde Eka Pada Bhakasana I durusunu sonunda dislerimi sikmadan, surat kaslarimi germeden basarmam. Tam 6 sene surdu!) 

Friday, February 12, 2010

Bir seyi yoga yapan ne yapildigi degil nasil yapildigidir

Tesaduf diye buna derler. Tam da bu sabah ders verdigim ozel ogrencim ile yoga gelenegi uzerine konustuk; aksama da Leslie Kaminoff sagolsun (www.breathingproject.org) blog sayfasina gunumuzde yapilan yoganin geleneklere bagliligi ile ilgili alinti bir makale koymus. Dayanamadim yaziyi aynen ekledim. Tum yazi asagida blogda.


Makalenin sahibi Anne Cushman'a gore yoga tekil bir gelenekten gelmiyor; yazisinda yogayi karmasik dalli bir banyan agacina benzetiyor. Bir suru gelenek birbirini beslemis, birbirinden ilham almis ve esinlenmis. 

Acaba gunumuzde yaptigimiz yoga duruslarinin kaynagi nerden geliyor? Kim yaratmis bunlari? 
Yazi bunlardan bahsediyor. 

Anne yazisinin sonlarina dogru hocam Paula Tursi'nin dinlediklerimi siraliyor: "Bir yoga durusunu neden ve nasil yapiyorsun? Yaptiginin sana bir katkisi var mi ve nedir bu? Yoga yaparken bunlari dusun."

Bir diger hocam Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen'in dediklerini de duyar gibiyim: "Yogayi moda oldugu icin mi yapiyorsun? Yoganin sana yararli olacagina inandigin icin mi, yoksa tum hucrelerin ile sindirerek mi yapiyorsun yogani? Kendine karsi durust ol."

Ya John Friend hocam ne demisti: "Yoga duruslarinda ilerledikce daha iyi bir insan mi oluyorsun? Ailene ve topluma katkin artiyor mu? Bunu dusunerek yogani yap." 

Anne Cushman yazisini aynen benim defalarca John Friend'den duydugum gibi bitiriyor: "Yoga duruslari aslinda icimizde varolan degisken yasam enerjisini bir cesit gosterme ve disa vurma yollari. Aslinda duruslarin ne oldugundan cok icimizdeki enerjiyi hissetmeye olan kararliligimiz ve tutkumuz cok onemli. Pozlari hayat enerjimizi disa akitmaya yarayan fiziksel sekiller olarak algilayalim. Yoga bu olsun. Yoga bizi hayatimiza tutkuyla bagli insanlar yapsin.

Yani....  What makes something yoga is not what is done but how it is done..... 


New Light on Yoga

Anne Cushman

From loincloths to leotards, yoga has come a long way in 5,000 years. But is yoga as we know it really that old?
By Anne Cushman 

A couple of years ago, when I had just returned to Yoga Journal after six months of traveling to ashrams and holy sites in India, I got a call from a writer for Mirabella magazine who was researching a fashion spread on exercise wear. 

"I was wondering" she said, "what is the traditional outfit for doing yoga?" 

I thought of the naked yogis I had seen on the banks of the Ganges, their skin smeared with ashes from the cremation pyre to remind themselves of the body's impermanence, their foreheads painted with the insignia of Shiva, the god of destruction. I couldn't resist. 

"Well, traditionally, you would carry a trident and cover your body with the ashes of the dead," I told her. 

There was a long pause, during which I could practically hear her thinking, "This will never fly with the Beauty Editor." Finally I took pity on her. "But alternatively," I said, "a leotard and tights will work just fine." 

"Tradition" is a word that gets tossed around a lot in yoga circles. We're taught the "traditional" way to do poses: "The feet are hip-width apart in Downward-Facing Dog." We're taught the "traditional" way to string them together: "Headstand comes before Shoulderstand." We take comfort in believing that we're the heirs to an ancient treasury of knowledge, the latest bead in a mala that stretches back, unbroken, for generations. In rootless, amnesiac American culture—where "traditions," like lipstick colors, change every season—the very antiquity of yoga gives it instant cachet, as evidenced by the jackets of yoga videos advertising a "5,000-year-old exercise system." 

Modern yoga masters present us with a whole galaxy of different poses, or asanas—Iyengar's Light on Yoga (Schocken Books, 1995), the modern illustrated Bible of asana practice, depicts more than 200. And most new yoga students accept it as an article of faith that these poses have been practiced—in more or less this form—for centuries. As we fold into Downward-Facing Dog, arch into Upward Bow, or spiral into a spinal twist named for an ancient sage, we believe that we are molding our bodies into archetypal shapes whose precise effect on the body, mind, and nervous system has been charted over generations of practice. 

In its most extreme form, homage to tradition can create a breed of "yoga fundamentalists"—yogis who believe the asanas were channeled directly from God and passed down through their particular lineage. Any deviation from their version of gospel will result in excommunication.
Tradition? Says Who?
But what really is "traditional" hatha yoga? You don't have to look much further than Mirabella (orYoga Journal) to realize that yoga in the West has already changed form. Some of these changes are superficial: We don't practice in loincloths in solitary mountain caves, but on plastic mats in crowded, mirror-walled gyms wearing outfits that would get us lynched in Mother India. Other changes are more significant: For example, before the twentieth century, it was practically unheard of for women to do hatha yoga. 

According to yoga scholars, even the yoga postures—the basic vocabulary of modern hatha yoga—have evolved and proliferated over time. In fact, only a handful of these now-familiar postures are described in the ancient texts. Patanjali's second-century Yoga Sutra mentions no poses at all, other than the seated meditation posture. (The Sanskrit word "asana" literally means "seat.") The fourteenth-century Hatha Yoga Pradipika—the ultimate classical hatha yoga manual—lists only 15 asanas (most of them variations of the cross-legged sitting position), for which it gives very sketchy instructions. The seventeenth-century Gheranda Samhita, another such manual, lists only 32. Conspicuously missing are the standing poses—Triangle, Warrior, etc.—and Sun Salutations that form the backbone of most contemporary systems. 

Other venerable texts on hatha yoga eschew mention of asanas altogether, focusing instead on the subtle energy systems and chakras that the poses both reflect and influence. The modern emphases on precision of alignment, physical fitness, and therapeutic effects are purely twentieth-century innovations. 

Rumors abound about lost, ancient texts that describe asanas in detail—the Ashtanga vinyasa system taught by Pattabhi Jois, for example, is allegedly based on a palm-leaf manuscript called theYoga Korunta that Jois's teacher, renowned yoga master T. Krishnamacharya, unearthed in a Calcutta library. But this manuscript has reportedly been eaten by ants; not even a copy of it exists. In fact, there's no objective evidence that such a document ever existed. In all his voluminous writings on yoga—which contain extensive bibliographies of all the texts that have influenced his work—Krishnamacharya himself never mentions or quotes from it. Many of Krishnamacharya's other teachings are based on an ancient text called the Yoga Rahasya—but this text too had been lost for centuries, until it was dictated to Krishnamacharya in a trance by the ghost of an ancestor who had been dead nearly a thousand years (a method of textual reclamation that will satisfy devotees, but not scholars). 

In general, the textual documentation of hatha yoga is scanty and obscure, and delving into its murky history can be as frustrating as trying to snorkel in the mud-brown Ganges. Given the paucity of historical evidence, yoga students are left to take the antiquity of the asanas on faith, like fundamentalist Christians who believe that the Earth was created in seven days.
Not only is there no clear textual history, but there's not even a clear teacher-student lineage that indicates systematized oral teachings handed down over generations. In Zen Buddhism, for example, students can chant a lineage of teachers stretching back for centuries, with each Zen master certified by the one preceding. No such unbroken chain of transmission exists in hatha yoga. For generations, hatha yoga was a rather obscure and occult corner of the yoga realm, viewed with disdain by mainstream practitioners, kept alive by a smattering of isolated ascetics in caves and Hindu maths (monasteries). It appears to have existed for centuries in seed form, lying dormant and surfacing again and again. In the twentieth century, it had almost died out in India. According to his biography, Krishnamacharya had to go all the way to Tibet to find a living master. 

Given this lack of a clear historical lineage, how do we know what is "traditional" in hatha yoga? Where did our modern proliferation of poses and practices come from? Are they a twentieth-century invention? Or have they been handed down intact, from generation to generation, as part of an oral tradition that never made it into print?
The Mysore Palace
I found myself pondering these questions afresh recently after I came across a dense little book called The Yoga Tradition of the Mysore Palace (South Asia Books, 1996) by a Sanskrit scholar and hatha yoga student named Norman Sjoman. The book presents the first English translation of a yoga manual from the 1800s, which includes instructions for and illustrations of 122 postures—making it by far the most elaborate text on asanas in existence before the twentieth century. Entitled the Sritattvanidhi (pronounced "shree-tot-van-EE-dee"), the exquisitely illustrated manual was written by a prince in the Mysore Palace—a member of the same royal family that, a century later, would become the patron of yoga master Krishnamacharya and his world-famous students, B.K.S. Iyengar and Pattabhi Jois. 

Sjoman first unearthed the Sritattvanidhi in the mid-1980s, as he was doing research in the private library of the Maharaja of Mysore. Dating from the early 1800s—the height of Mysore's fame as a center of Indian arts, spirituality, and culture—the Sritattvanidhi was a compendium of classical information about a wide variety of subjects: deities, music, meditation, games, yoga, and natural history. It was compiled by Mummadi Krishnaraja Wodeyar, a renowned patron of education and the arts. Installed as a puppet Maharaja at age 5 by the British colonialists—and deposed by them for incompetence at the age of 36—Mummadi Krishnaraja Wodeyar devoted the rest of his life to studying and recording the classical wisdom of India. 

At the time Sjoman discovered the manuscript, he had spent almost 20 years studying Sanskrit and Indian philosophy with pundits in Pune and Mysore. But his academic interests were balanced by years of study with hatha yoga masters Iyengar and Jois. As a yoga student, Sjoman was most intrigued by the section of the manuscript dealing with hatha yoga. 

Sjoman knew that the Mysore Palace had long been a hub of yoga: Two of the most popular styles of yoga today—Iyengar and Ashtanga, whose precision and athleticism have profoundly influenced all contemporary yoga—have their roots there. From around 1930 until the late 1940s, the Maharaja of Mysore sponsored a yoga school in the palace, run by Krishnamacharya—and the young Iyengar and Jois were both among his students. The Maharaja funded Krishnamacharya and his yoga protégés to travel all over India giving yoga demonstrations, thereby encouraging an enormous popular revival of yoga. It was the Maharaja who paid for the now well-known 1930s film of Iyengar and Jois as teenagers demonstrating asanas—the earliest footage of yogis in action. 

But as the Sritattvanidhi proves, the Mysore royal family's enthusiasm for yoga went back at least a century earlier. The Sritattvanidhi includes instructions for 122 yoga poses, illustrated by stylized drawings of an Indian man in a topknot and loincloth. Most of these poses—which include handstands, backbends, foot-behind-the-head poses, Lotus variations, and rope exercises—are familiar to modern practitioners (although most of the Sanskrit names are different from the ones they are known by today). But they are far more elaborate than anything depicted in other pre-twentieth-century texts. The Sritattvanidhi, as Norman Sjoman instantly realized, was a missing link in the fragmented history of hatha yoga. 

"This is the first textual evidence we have of a flourishing, well-developed asana system existing before the twentieth century—and in academic systems, textual evidence is what counts," says Sjoman. "The manuscript points to tremendous yogic activity going on in that time period—and having that much textual documentation indicates a practice tradition at least 50 to 100 years older."
Potpourri Lineage
Unlike earlier texts such as the Hatha Yoga Pradipika, the Sritattvanidhi doesn't focus on the meditative or philosophical aspects of yoga; it doesn't chart the nadis and chakras (the channels and hubs of subtle energy); it doesn't teach pranayama (breathing exercises) or bandhas (energy locks). It's the first known yogic text devoted entirely to asana practice—a prototypical "yoga workout." 

Hatha yoga students may find this text of interest simply as a novelty—a relic of a "yoga boom" of two centuries ago. (Future generations may pore with equal fascination over "Buns of Steel" yoga videos.) But buried in Sjoman's somewhat abstruse commentary are some claims that shed new light on the history of hatha yoga—and, in the process, may call into question some cherished myths. 

According to Sjoman, the Sritattvanidhi—or the broader yoga tradition it reflects—appears to be one of the sources for the yoga techniques taught by Krishnamacharya and passed on by Iyengar and Jois. In fact, the manuscript is listed as a resource in the bibliography of Krishnamacharya's very first book on yoga, which was published—under the patronage of the Maharaja of Mysore—in the early 1930s. The Sritattvanidhi depicts dozens of poses that are depicted in Light on Yoga and practiced as part of the Ashtanga vinyasa series, but that don't show up in any older texts. 

But while the Sritattvanidhi extends the written history of the asanas a hundred years further back than has previously been documented, it does not support the popular myth of a monolithic, unchanging tradition of yoga poses. Rather, Sjoman says that the yoga section of the Sritattvanidhiis itself clearly a compilation, drawing on techniques from a wide range of disparate traditions. In addition to variations on poses from earlier yogic texts, it includes such things as the rope exercises used by Indian wrestlers and the danda push-ups developed at the vyayamasalas, the indigenous Indian gymnasiums. (In the twentieth century, these push-ups begin to show up as Chaturanga Dandasana, part of the Sun Salutation). In the Sritattvanidhi, these physical techniques are for the first time given yogic names and symbolism and incorporated into the body of yogic knowledge. The text reflects a practice tradition that is dynamic, creative, and syncretistic, rather than fixed and static. It does not limit itself to the asana systems described in more ancient texts: Instead, it builds on them. 

In turn, says Sjoman, Krishnamacharya drew on the Sritattvanidhi tradition and blended it with a number of other sources, as Sjoman discovered by reading the various books by Krishnamacharya in the Maharaja's library. Krishnamacharya's first writings, which cited the Sritattvanidhi as a source, also featured vinyasa (sequences of poses synchronized with the breath) that Krishnamacharya said he had learned from a yoga teacher in Tibet. Over time, these vinyasa were gradually systematized further—Krishnamacharya's later writings more closely resemble the vinyasa forms taught by Pattabhi Jois. "Therefore it seems logical to assume that the form we find in the series of asanas with Pattabhi Jois was developed during Krishnamacharya's period of teaching," writes Sjoman. "It was not an inherited format." To dedicated Ashtanga practitioners, this claim borders on the heretical. 

Along the way, claims Sjoman, Krishnamacharya also seems to have incorporated into the yogic canon specific techniques drawn from British gymnastics. In addition to being a patron of yoga, the Mysore royal family was a great patron of gymnastics. In the early 1900s, they hired a British gymnast to teach the young princes. When Krishnamacharya was brought to the palace to start a yoga school in the 1920s, his schoolroom was the former palace gymnastics hall, complete with wall ropes and other gymnastic aids, which Krishnamacharya used as yoga props. He was also given access to the Western gymnastics manual written by the Mysore Palace gymnasts. This manual—excerpted in Sjoman's book—gives detailed instructions and illustrations for physical maneuvers that Sjoman argues quickly found their way into Krishnamacharya's teachings, and passed on to Iyengar and Jois: for example, lolasana, the cross-legged jumpback that helps link together the vinyasa in the Ashtanga series, and Iyengar's technique of walking the hands backward down a wall into a back arch. 

Modern hatha yoga draws on British gymnastics? The yoga of Iyengar, Pattabhi Jois, and Krishnamacharya influenced by a potpourri that included Indian wrestlers? These are claims guaranteed to send a frisson of horror up the limber spine of any yoga fundamentalist. But according to Sjoman, his book is meant not to debunk yoga—but to pay tribute to it as a dynamic, growing, and ever-changing art. 

Krishnamacharya's genius, says Sjoman, is that he was able to meld these different practices in the fire of yoga philosophy. "All those things are Indianized, brought into the purview of the yoga system," Sjoman says. After all, he points out, Patanjali's only requirement for asana was that it be "steady and comfortable." "This is a functional definition of asana," he says. "What makes something yoga is not what is done, but how it is done." 

This realization, he says, can be liberating, paving the way for a greater appreciation of the role of individual intuition and creativity in the development of yoga. "Krishnamacharya was a great innovator and experimenter—that's one of the things that gets missed in the tendency of Indians to make hagiographies of their teachers and to look for ancient lineages," Sjoman says. "The experimental and creative abilities of both Krishnamacharya and Iyengar are very much overlooked."
Yoga's Banyan Tree
Of course, Sjoman's scholarship is just one perspective on the Mysore Palace lineage. His research and conclusions may be flawed; the information he has uncovered is open to multiple interpretations. 

But his theories point to a reality that you don't have to probe very deeply into yoga history to confirm: There really is no one monolithic yoga tradition. 

Rather, yoga is like a twisted old banyan tree, whose hundreds of branches each support a full load of texts, teachers, and traditions—often influencing one another, just as often contradicting one another. ("Be celibate," admonishes one scripture. "Get enlightened through sex," urges another.) Like snapshots of a dance, different texts freeze and capture different aspects of a living, breathing, changing tradition. 

This realization can be unsettling at first. If there's no one way to do things—well, then how do we know if we're doing them right? Some of us may long for a definitive archaeological discovery: say, a terra-cotta figure of a yogi in Triangle Pose, circa 600 B.C., that will tell us once and for all how far apart the feet should be. 

But on another level it's liberating to realize that yoga, like life itself, is infinitely creative, expressing itself in a multitude of forms, re-creating itself to meet the needs of different times and cultures. It's liberating to realize that the yoga poses are not fossils—they're alive and bursting with possibility. 

That's not to say that honoring tradition is unimportant. It's vital to honor the common goal that has united yogis for centuries: the quest for awakening. For thousands of years, yogis have sought to contact directly the luminous source of all being; and for hatha yogis in particular, the vehicle for touching the infinite spirit has been the finite human body. Every time we step on the mat, we can honor tradition by "yoking"—the original meaning of the word "yoga"—our purpose with that of the ancient sages. 

We can also honor the forms of yoga—the specific asanas—as probes for exploring our own particular forms, for testing the limits and stretching the possibilities of the bodies we have been given. In doing so, we can draw on the experience of yogis that have come before us—the wisdom that's gradually accrued over time about working with the body's subtle energies by means of physical practices. Without this heritage—whatever its sources—we're left to reinvent afresh 5,000 years of innovation. 

Yoga asks us to walk a razor's edge, to devote ourselves wholeheartedly to a particular pose, while fully understanding that on another level, the pose is arbitrary and irrelevant. We can surrender to the poses the way we surrender to incarnation in general—letting ourselves pretend, for a while, that the game we are playing is real, that our bodies are who we really are. But if we cling to the form of the poses as ultimate truth, we miss the point. The poses were born from the practice of yogis who looked inside themselves—who experimented, who innovated, and who shared their discoveries with others. If we're afraid to do the same, we lose the spirit of yoga. 

Ultimately, the ancient texts agree on one thing: True yoga is found not in texts, but in the heart of the practitioner. The texts are just the footprints of the elephant, the droppings of the deer. The poses are just the ever-changing manifestations of our life energy; what matters is our devotion to awakening that energy and expressing it in physical form. Yoga is both old and new—it's inconceivably ancient, and yet fresh every time we come to it.
Anne Cushman is coauthor of From Here to Nirvana: The Yoga Journal Guide to Spiritual India(Riverhead Books, 1998) and a recent writer-in-residence at the Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health in Lenox, Massachusetts

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

KULA'DA YOGA CALISMALARI


Kendinizi gelistirme yollarindan birisi de vucudunuzla yapacaginiz calismalardir. Yoga ilmi binlerce cesit durus (asana) sunar; bu duruslar fiziksel ve bedensel boyutunuzu gelistirir. Yoga duruslarini dogru ogrenmek daha sonra gelen nefes, konsantrasyon ve meditasyon calismalarinda enerjitik, zihinsel ve sinirsel boyutunuza emin ilerlemek ve kendinizi derinden dogru bir sekilde kesfetmek icin sarttir.  


Her insan vucudunun yapisi farklidir. Dolayisi ile mukemmel yoga durusu yoktur; mukemmel caba (tapas) vardir. Bu caba insanin kendi vucudunu iyi tanimasi, vucudunda herhangi bir bolgenin nasil calistigini anlamasi ve yoga egzersizlerini kendi vucuduna uyarlamayi ogrenmesidir. 


Anusara yoga tarzinda hizanizi ve temelinizi kavrayacak, var olan potansiyel enerjinizin en ust seviyesine cikarak yasam gucunuzun farkina varacaksiniz. Beden-Zihin Butunlesmesi -Body Mind Centering- metodu sayesinde nefesinizi, dikkatinizi ve farkindaliginizi en derindeki hucrelerinize yonelterek yogada bahsedilen beden-zihin-ruhsal birlikteliginin ta kendisi, somut ornegi olacaksiniz.  


1999 yilindan beri yoga ile ugrasan Naz Anusara yoga ile Beden-Zihin Butunlesmesi metodlarinin sentezini yaparak sizlere eglenceli, rahatlatan ve kesfettiren bir yoga deneyimi sunmayi amaclar. 

"KULA VE MANEVI ARKADASLIK" yazisinin tercumesi

Istediler diye yaziyorum yoksa kendi kendimi tekrarlamayi hic sevmem:


Budizm "guzel arkadas" denilen bir kavramdan bahseder. Bu arkadas sizi manevi yukselten kisidir. Yalniz umutsuz veya stresten gerilmis anlarinizda bu guzel arkadas oyle bir sey soyler ki zihninizi tum negatif ve yargilamalardan arindirip bulundugunuz anin kiymetine ve edilen lafin bilgeligine ceker.

Kendinizi gelistirme yoluna girmisseniz eger onunuze bir suru engel cikacaktir. Size bu engellerin aslinda icinizdeki gizli potansiyelleri cikartacak birer arac olduklarini guzel arkadasiniz size hatirlatir. Yine bu arkadas sorunlarinizin sadece size ozgu olmadigini soyler ve alginizi kucuk dunyanizdan buyugune cevirerek benzer kargasalarda debelenen insanlara sevkat duygu ve farkindaliginizi asilar. Bazen sizden sadece kendiniz olmamizi, kalbinizden cikana itiraz etmeyerek o duyguyu ozgunce yasamamizi ister.

Kula Sanskritce bir kelime: Guzel arkadaslardan olusan bir topluluk. Guzel arkadaslar sizin en samimi dostlariniz degil de hayatin ozune inmeyi ve cesurca kendileri olmayi niyet etmis kendilerini gelistirmeye adamis kisiler. Hissettiklerinizi anliyorlar cunku sizle ayni yoldalar.

Kendini gelistirme yolunda ilerleyenler baskalariyla paylastigi oranda buyurler. Hareketle vucudunuzu tanimak, sifa ile derine inip duygusal ve ince enerjitik boyutunuzun farkina varmak, gerektigi zaman gulmek veya sessiz meditasyonda oturmak bu yolun taslari; bunlari size destek gosteren samimi ve rahat bir toplulukta yapmanin zevki is bambaska olacaktir.

Monday, January 25, 2010

KULA AND SPIRITUAL FRIENDSHIP

Buddhists have a term "kalyana-mitra" which means "beautiful friend." This beautiful friend is the one who uplifts you all the time. No matter how bad your day might be, how lonely or frustrated you might feel, this beautiful friend says something so wise that it shifts your mind instantly from the negativity and judgment and lets you focus to the preciousness of the moment or the thing said.

If you are on the path of yoga (a.k.a. path of self-growth) the most likely to happen is that you might forget. You might forget how far you have come on the way... For instance... you struggle in a pose that should happen easily right 'cause you have been working steadily for it... but damn... it is not happening and you are ready to quit. But can you notice all the information that registers into the data of your cells in the meanwhile, which one day all of a sudden, will manifest itself surprisingly, perhaps not in a yoga pose but in an intelligently managed crisis situation at work or at love.

Well... if you have a beautiful friend, he or she will remind you this. This person may not be your best friend but he/she is on the same path for sure.

Beautiful friends also remind you that on the path of self-growth there will be obstacles that actually serve you to push your limits so you end up discovering your hidden potentials. These friends remind you that your situation, however desperate, is not uniquely yours... that you can offer compassion towards others in similar struggle. Or these friends simply let you feel whatever is pouring from your heart and you know that it is okay to express yourself honestly in their company. Again... it is not what they say or do, but how they make you feel.

I found a very humble description of mine of the term "kula" in my earliest yoga philosophy notes: It is a community of the heart. It is a group of like-minded people, people who support each other. It is a group in which you choose to participate because of all the things mentioned above.

Kula is a community of "kalyana-mitras" - beautiful friends.

If you practice yoga you are gaining a tool to empower yourself. Yoga is about having choices. You can choose your kula, people who uplift you. People who understand the immediacy of life and tell you to live it shamelessly. People who take you back to the path whenever you are confused. People who offer plain laughter but also know the place for an eye contact. There is a common saying: "You become the company you keep, so keep good company."

After all, it feels so good to stretch each other's arms and plug them into the shoulder sockets before the yoga class begins...