Bikram yoga: the marathon of the yoga world

Karen after BikramOMG. That was the first thing I said to my workmate Ritu in the locker room after the Bikram yoga class last night. I survived! We all survived!

By the second of the 26 poses I was beginning to have my doubts whether I would. Not due to the heat, which at the early part of the class just felt pleasant to me. But due to the pace. No offence to Ulrike, the amazing teacher of the class I attended at Bikram Yoga Vancouver’s Cambie location, but my first impression in the class was of boot camp with a sadistic drill sergeant! The pace was non-stop, with urgings to try harder and push, push, push! Ulrike kept up a constant flow of exhortations and precise, skilled instructions for 90 minutes—an amazing demonstration of expertise and love of yoga.

In spite of my initial misgivings and questioning of the sanity of myself and all those attending the class, I made it through to the end. There were 11 first-timers in the class with me, and probably about 30 students in total. Four of us were from Vancity, and two of my workmates have done Bikram yoga before, while two of us were new. The class was packed, and it just kept getting hotter.

Using stubborn will, I kept up with the pace and did all of the poses, though some in bent knee rather than straight leg form, due to my extreme lack of flexibility. And in some cases I needed to back out of the full version to an easier form due to cramping in my feet at one point, and my calf muscles at another point. The heat did help me go further and deeper into some of the poses than I’ve ever done before. It was satisfying to test myself and be pushed almost to my limits, though what kept me going was the mantra that once this was over I was never taking another Bikram class!

The first half of the class was standing poses, and the second half was seated or supine poses. You would think the second half would be easier, but it was not. By the last 30 minutes, the heat was unbelievable, and it began to resemble a sweat lodge, which is meant to be so hot it forces the participants to be humbled, submit, and lay on the floor crying for release. In the seated part of the Bikram series, there is a short period of savasana between each pose; probably about 15 seconds of resting on one’s back before doing a super-sit-up, turning around, and quickly getting into the next pose. It was during these resting periods that I questioned whether I would be able to keep going. The teacher said something wise at this point, which was that we actually only needed to rest for a few breaths in order to integrate the previous pose and recover in time for the next one. Without anticipating what was coming next, it was truly a moment of relishing rest and being fully in the present. I began to experience emotional release and open-heartedness during the resting phases. And it was incredible how the super-sit-up became a flow of lightness, with no effort at all.

I felt like the previous days of yoga for the Reach Out Challenge had prepared me well for the challenge of the Bikram yoga class. Like training for months for a half-marathon, and then really pushing myself on race day, going at a sub-six-minute pace rather than my fastest training pace of eight-minute kilometres! I don’t know how the other first-timers did it, or whether, like me, they had experience with other yoga forms before taking this class. If not, it would be like trying to run a marathon without any training.

So for me, the class was like a race that was the culmination of many months of work. I wouldn’t want to run a half-marathon 3 times a week, and I don’t think I would ever want to take Bikram classes 3 times a week. I prefer my slow, plodding runs, with moments of grace where I have a great run that takes me by surprise. And slow, contemplative yoga classes, where there is time for deep sensing and inner reflection. But obviously there are many finer athletes than me, in running and in the yoga world, and some people get into doing the class 3 or 5 times a week and no doubt live radiant lives because of it.

Thanks to my friends and family who have pledged 50 cents or a dollar or even two dollars a day for the 30-day Reach Out Challenge. The total pledges is now at $285 dollars! Almost at my goal of $300. If you haven’t done so and would like to sponsor me to raise money for Yoga Outreach, you can use the online donation link. Or phone me at 604.251.6337 or send an email to kyrempel@gmail.com. Thanks!

Bikram is hot even in a normal room!

The bible of Ashtanga yogaI printed out the 26 poses for Bikram yoga yesterday, and spent about 40 minutes practicing the poses, with 6 ujjayi breaths per pose per side. I used David Swenson’s Ashtanga Yoga: The Practice Manual for insight into some of the poses, but he doesn’t use all of the Bikram poses in his primary and intermediate series. I used pictures from another website to get additional info about some of the poses.

By about the third pose I was starting to get hot, so I can just imagine how it will be in a studio that’s heated to 104 degrees! I like the series, and it was interesting to discover some new poses I’ve never tried before. Toe stand pose, the culmination of the standing part of the series, was particularly challenging, both because of the balancing and because of the pressure squeezing my knees. I was a little worried afterwards that I might have overdone it, but the knees seem okay this morning.

Tonight is the Bikram class with my workmates. The class is 90 minutes, so we’ll probably be in each pose longer than 6 breaths. Plus there might be variations within the poses. I’m interested to see how the transitions flow. I’ll let you know how it goes.

Thanks to my friends and family who have pledged 50 cents or a dollar a day for the 30-day Reach Out Challenge. If you haven’t done so and would like to sponsor me to raise money for Yoga Outreach, you can use the online donation link. Or phone me at 604.251.6337 or send an email to kyrempel@gmail.com. Thanks!


Vinyasa flowing into fall

Fall Seasonal Vinyasa Flow classYesterday I continued the Reach Out Challenge with the Fall Seasonal Vinyasa Flow class on My Yoga Online, taught by Melina Meza. I am loving her classes. I’ve gotten used to the fact that the instructions are audio-recorded by the teacher, while a student is shown doing the poses in the video.

Melina is a brilliant teacher. She gives instructions for subtle positioning, and describes the impact the slight change in position has within the body. This helps the student focus inwards and increase their capacity to sense deeply. Her language fosters a sense of spiritual connection with yoga, the seasons, and the nature of reality.

The vinyasa flow class moves more quickly than the restorative classes she teaches. I was feeling quite hot by the end, which is why I didn’t dress very warmly for my run! But I could really feel the impact of the class on my running. The looseness in my body helped the energy flow freely and added to the effects of the cold to help me run very quickly.

Melina’s Fall Seasonal Vinyasa Flow class includes a great sivasana, with a wonderful sensing practice that “stores” attention in the bones of the body. I will definitely do this class again. But first I want to try all Melina’s other classes. However, today my practice is going to be an attempt to learn the 26 poses of the Bikram’s yoga flow, in preparation for the class with my workmates tomorrow night. Yikes!

Thanks to my friends and family who have pledged 50 cents or a dollar a day for the 30-day Reach Out Challenge. If you haven’t done so and would like to sponsor me to raise money for Yoga Outreach, you can use the online donation link. Or phone me at 604.251.6337 or send an email to kyrempel@gmail.com. Thanks!

Restore me and rest me

Relaxing setting for restorative yogaLast night I finished the work week with another restorative yoga class from My Yoga Online. I chose the Fall Yin Restorative Practice, by the same teacher as the Yin Yoga for Winter class (my Get Out of Jail Free card), Melina Meza. 

I was so tired, this class seemed like the perfect choice. It was 22 minutes long, with a short series of poses, each held for 12 to 30 breaths:

  • supine butterfly
  • supine twist (two sides)
  • modified child’s pose with forearm stretch (two sides)
  • sphinx – this was much easier today, after having done it 5 days ago – a testament to how quickly the body adapts to new forms
  • virasana (kneeling pose)

Since the class was 8 minutes short of the full 30 minutes of the Reach Out Challenge, I followed it with 4 minutes of legs up the wall and 4 minutes of sivasana on the bolster. Then I did about another 10 minutes of Mysore practice (named after Mysore, India, a centre for yoga, the Mysore practice can be a free-flowing practice responding to the body’s spontaneous desire for movement).

According to the class description at My Yoga Online, “In the autumn, the Chinese Five Elements system promotes the lung and large intestine meridian lines to ensure that sufficient heat is drawn inward and downward, preventing imbalances that may result in the common cold, constipation, or insomnia. Yin yoga is a wonderful way to help restore your sense of balance after a long summer. In addition to calming the restless and anxious energy of fall, the longer held postures in this class will help prepare your mind, body, and spirit for meditation.”

Unfortunately, while the class did help me get to sleep, I woke up at 3:30 am feeling anxious and unable to get back to sleep! So I am not sure about the overall calming effects of the class. I did get up and meditate, so perhaps that part of the claim is true. However, it is possible that this new routine of practicing yoga daily, and doing poses that are not part of my regular practice, is opening up the energy channels (meridian lines) in my body. Perhaps I have so much energy running through the channels that I don’t need as much sleep. In any case, I love the Yin or Restorative yoga style, and look forward to trying the other classes with Melina Meza. She has several slightly longer vinyasa flow classes, as well as a Spring yin yoga class.

Thanks to my friends and family who have pledged 50 cents or a dollar a day for the 30-day Reach Out Challenge. If you haven’t done so and would like to sponsor me to raise money for Yoga Outreach, you can use the online donation link. Or phone me at 604.251.6337 or send an email to kyrempel@gmail.com. Thanks!

Everybody has to hatha

My yoga roomLast night I went for a run after work, so I began my 30-minute practice with some of the poses from my regular yoga routine. After I run I do a sequence of stretches aimed at keeping my legs relatively flexible and my knees strong. Some are actually physio stretches to which I add the ujjayi breath, and some are typical runners stretches like the calf stretch and ankle circles. Then I move into cat, mountain, standing forward bend, and so on.

I had been thinking of continuing on with my regular routine, but My Yoga Online was calling to me seductively. I wanted to continue the enchanting process of discovery. So I set up my laptop table in front of the mat, and searched for a Hatha (the root of all other yoga forms) yoga class that was about 22 minutes. Using the easy search boxes on the Video page, I found a 20-minute class called Short Hatha Flow, and let er rip.

This was another class with Martha Waal, of Get set for a good night’s sleep fame. I really liked the level of difficulty (beginner) and relaxed pace of the class. Again, I would have like to stay in each pose a little bit longer, but there were some nice spaces for checking in with the breath and overall sense of self throughout the practice. I started out with a stiff ache in my left sacroiliac joint (from the run), and the practice released the ache, with rag doll, and a lovely floor sequence that really got into the lower back with side twists and knees hugged to chest.

In contrast to this lovely way to loosen the SI joint, consider this “medical” approach, from the Sports Injury Clinic:

Treatment of SIJ Pain: What can you do to treat sacroiliac joint pain yourself?

  • Rest from any activities which cause pain. (That is, don’t run! Not!)
  • If the surrounding muscles have tightened up, use a warm-pack to help them relax. (Nice.)
  • Don’t heat if an inflammatory condition is suspected.
  • Anti-inflammatory medications such as ibuprofen may be helpful. Always check with your Doctor first. (While it’s important to reduce swelling, we also want to make sure not to numb the pain rather than address it.)
  • Try wearing a sacroiliac back belt. (Yeah, that’s gonna happen!)

Or, do yoga and experience calm, inner peace, kindness towards self and others, and at the same time release the tension in the joint.

The class ended with a short sivasana (corpse pose, or final resting pose, for those who are new to yoga). I followed that with the closing sequence from my regular practice (since I still had two minutes to do), which includes seated forward bend, butterfly, a variation of triang mukhaikapada paschimottanasana (thanks to Iyengar for the Sanskrit), and a seated twist. With the TMP, I do the forward bend, but then lay back fully and stretch out the bent knee that way too. I swear this is essential for preventing my IT band from spazzing out when I run! I finished with another physio stretch for my knees, which involves sliding the knee caps up towards the thighs.

My Yoga Online studioOnce again, I felt very grateful to Yoga Outreach for the Reach Out Challenge, and to My Yoga Online for this amazing offering of teachings. Having done five of their classes now, I am noticing a bit more about how it all works. It seems many of the classes were recorded by My Yoga Online especially for the website. What tipped me off is that the lovely studio is the same, with beautiful wood floors and creamy painted radiators and arched windows (see picture). This innovative website was founded in 2005 in Vancouver, BC, by renowned yoga and wellness experts Michelle Trantina and Kreg Weiss, and business entrepreneur Jason Jacobson.

Thanks to my friends and family who have pledged 50 cents or a dollar a day for the 30-day Reach Out Challenge. If you haven’t done so and would like to sponsor me to raise money for Yoga Outreach, you can use the online donation link. Or phone me at 604.251.6337 or send an email to kyrempel@gmail.com. Thanks!

Anusara wind-down

Karen in lotus position (not)Last night I tried my first ever Anusara-style yoga class. I love the possibilities for yoga exploration that have opened up through My Yoga Online and the Reach Out Challenge. This particular class, taught by Christine Price Clark, was a thirty-minute after work wind-down called Coming Home: Anusara Yoga.

I was confronted with my lack of flexibility, and found it difficult to stay with the breath during this class. Every pose was held for only one or two breaths, which wasn’t enough time to really relax into it. The exception was pigeon, which we went into one and a half times! I must have missed something, because after repeating the first side, it seemed the teacher had moved on to a different sequence. I had to stop the video and do the second side again when I realized it wasn’t just an extended flow, I had actually missed the boat!

It also seemed that the teacher recorded the postures and the commentary separately, which caused a slight feeling of not being in real time with the visual aspect of the teacher doing the poses. So as you can see, this was not my best class. But it is always good practice, and useful to learn more about what I like and don’t like. I did really enjoy the 8 minutes of sivasana at the end! That was always my friend Dorrie’s favourite yoga pose.

Next Monday night I am going to my first ever Bikram yoga class with some mates from work, so that will be a terrific opportunity to look like an idiot! 🙂 I’ll have to practice the 26 postures of the Bikram flow this weekend, so I can be prepared. All for a good cause, of course.

Thanks to my friends and family who have pledged 50 cents or a dollar a day for the 30-day Reach Out Challenge. If you haven’t done so and would like to sponsor me to raise money for Yoga Outreach, you can use the online donation link. Or phone me at 604.251.6337 or send an email to kyrempel@gmail.com. Thanks!

Get set for a good night’s sleep

Blanket, bolster, and timer for savasanaThat’s exactly what I did on Day Two of the Reach Out Challenge. I was so energized by opening blocked channels in my body from the previous two yoga sessions from My Yoga Online that I didn’t sleep well the night before. So last night I chose a class called Get Set for a Good Sleep. And the class delivered as promised!

I liked the teacher, Marla Waal. Her voice was very clear and light, but also matter of fact. The sound of her voice seemed to support me to have a very gentle practice. And this was definitely the easiest of the classes I’ve tried so far. It began with a lot of seated poses, including some great neck stretches. We did get onto our feet eventually, for some easy down dog, transitioning into a simple kneeling position rather than the typical arm-straining plank pose to the floor.

With yoga, the breath and physcial movement is one thing, and the shift in inner state is another. It is remarkable to me how the physical aspects of yoga transform the emotional, mental, and spiritual experience. At the end of the class I felt calm, quiet, and in a deeper, more present state. It was a wonderful way to end the day. Since it was a 25-minute class, I finished with 5 minutes of sivasana with a long bolster under my back and head, creating a gentle chest-opening position.

The folks at Yoga Outreach had recommended focusing on ahimsa for Day Two. Ahimsa is sometimes translated as non-harming, though they focused on the positive act of having compassion rather than the negative act of refraining from harm. So I used the attitude of having compassion towards myself in the poses, and found this increased the feeling of gentleness during the practice, including during the savasana at the end. It is a wonderful gift to deliberately treat oneself with tenderness. I recommend you try this at home!

Thanks to my friends and family who have pledged 50 cents or a dollar a day for the 30 day Reach Out Challenge. If you haven’t done so and would like to sponsor me to raise money for Yoga Outreach, you can use the online donation link. Or phone me at 604.251.6337 or send an email to kyrempel@gmail.com. Thanks!

P.S. If you have donated through Canada Helps before, the site might recognize you and behave a little differently. If you get the message that your session has timed out, click the Home link in the message. Then click on my donation link, above, again. Please let me know if you have any problems making a donation.

Get Out of Jail Free card for Reach Out Challenge

Get Out of Jail Free cardToday is the first day of the Reach Out Challenge for Yoga Outreach, and I’ve already got a Get Out of Jail Free card! I did a 30-minute yoga session last night, and will count this for one day of yoga if it so happens that during the October 10 – November 10 period I have to miss a day of doing yoga. It’s not cheating, it’s working the system.

Knowing how life brings surprises, and things rarely go exactly as planned, this seems like a good way to support my success in the month to come.

I went online last night to try out My Yoga Online, and I have to tell you, this site rocks! There are hundreds of yoga classes, in every style imaginable. You can sort the possibilities by teacher, style of yoga, length of class, level, or yoga studio. I am so excited about learning from a slew of world-class yoga teachers over the month to come.

Last night I did the Yin Yoga for Winter class. I’ve never done Yin yoga before, so it was a great learning experience. Since I was doing it right before bed, I wanted something relaxing, and this was just the ticket. It was a short series of pretty easy poses (I chose the Gentle tag), each held for a few minutes:

  • Child’s Pose
  • Sphinx – actually amazingly hard when sustained for a few minutes, with the option to transition to a more difficult arms straight version
  • Low Lunge
  • Seated Forward Bend
  • Cross-Legged Meditation

The class was 25 minutes, and I finished with 5 minutes of Legs Up the Wall. The teacher, Melina Meza, allows plenty of time for silent awareness, but also includes an inspiring story of the winter season and how this influences our bodies and spirit.

It was a great start to the month to come. I thank all of you who have already pledged me, and invite you to join in the challenge, even if you don’t have time to do it every day.