During a time when many of our social connections have come to a halt, and external practices to support employees’ well-being are no longer being offered the workplace, employers are seeking ways to find connections and supportive practices to offer online. Mindfulness meditation classes are typically 30 minutes in duration and structured as part of the working day. At the end of class cameras are turned on and conversations bubble up, but even without this interaction there is a communal energy that comes from sharing meaningful experiences. This energy, this connection, is not limited to in-person experience. Human connections can span time and space. Just think about a phone call or text exchange you've had with a loved one, friend, or colleague. Did you feel connected with them? Were you able to feel their energy?
Read MoreIt’s a guilt-free, low-commitment purchase, guaranteed to enhance your wellbeing … who doesn’t love that!
Sylvia’s online yoga classes are suitable for all levels of yoga practice, however if you are completely new to yoga you may wish to start with Sylvia’s Hatha Yoga Video to learn the basics. If you have an injury Sylvia will offer you guidelines on how you might modify a pose; if you are unsure just watch and listen. If you’re still unsure please check with a medical professional before attempting a pose.
To join live online weekly yoga you simply purchase one Tuesday / Thursday 1-2PM Live Online pass before 11am Tuesday, receive the link to the class via Zoom. Recordings of the class are sent afterwards and remain live for one week, practice any time.
If you prefer the predictability and polish of pre-recorded classes you can purchase Rise and Shine, Ground and Release or the Zen Collection.
I’m chatting to you about all this and more on my YouTube channel here. https://youtu.be/VKnGQeVRzSA
Join us to come back to your best self, in body, mind and spirit.
Read MoreIf you are resistant to considering a virtual yoga class you are not alone. We all miss yoga the way it was, all of us together in a room, the safe space of our own mats held in the supportive space of the studio, and all the variety and vibrance within.
However, like many of the best things in life, once you try it you might find you love it. Many students feedback to me, again and again, how much they love their twice weekly yoga classes on Zoom. Here’s why.
1. It’s really comfortable. In the privacy of our own homes the comfiest gear comes out! Your favourite baggy bottoms, your faded Rolling Stones t-shirt, it’s all appropriate attire. It feels good. Your yoga corner becomes more familiar and more important as time goes on. Your own space. A smell you like, the view you prefer, the level of tidiness - or not - that is conducive to your own personal comfort … you are the boss of your world on your mat!
Read More“The essence of mindfulness practice is to work at waking up from the self-imposed half sleep of unawareness in which we are often habitually, but not inevitably, immersed.” Jon Kabat Zinn.
The ultimate path we are on, as yogis and as practitioners of mindfulness, is one of wholeness, of being wide awake. The price of wholeness is nothing less than total commitment to recognising our intrinsic wholeness, and an unswerving belief in our ability to embody it at any moment.
Read MoreAre you one of the many tend to carry your tension in the shoulders? They hunch up towards the ears a little when we feel rushed, anxious, busy or stressed. They can do the same when we are met with feelings of fear, guilt or shame. Conversely they can droop forward and round down when we feel dull, depressed, sad or lethargic.
These feelings, thoughts, and life situations present themselves to us all the time. As the Buddhists wisely tell us, life is suffering. Our job is not to place further suffering on the difficulties we already face, but instead to accept the moment and soften into it. We practice acceptance of what is and we add on to that an element of compassion, of softness, of consciously relaxing at will, regardless of the external circumstances.
In Mindfulness they tell us the key to being present and minimising this suffering is to feel what we are feeling in the body. How appropriate, then, for us to practice tuning into the sensations in the shoulder area and using that awareness to move from the busy, noisy, thoughts of the mind to the mode of simply being. Being with what is.
The shoulder joint is one of the most interesting and complex in terms of mobility and range of motion. In yoga we explore this; we take the shoulder joint through it’s full range of motion to explore freedom of movement and to notice the sensations when we feel a little stuck. By breathing, moving gently and consciously relaxing the tension naturally melts a little. It feels good. When we are feeling, we are practising mindfulness; mind and body get to relax.
We don’t even have to be on the yoga mat to practice our ability to relax the shoulders and soften at will. Try it now, on an inhale lift your shoulders up towards your ears and on an exhale allow them to soften and fall. Try that three times. Make your exhales big and deep and noisy if you’d like - the out-breath is releasing.
On the yoga mat we have a multitude of ways to get deep into those complex muscles that support this incredible joint. Eagle pose, cow face pose, even a simple sun salutation. “Binding” where we take the hands together to get extra leverage to really stretch out can happen in many creative poses. In a well sequenced yoga class the muscles gradually get looser and looser, warmer and softer, tension naturally melts.
The life changing skill happens when we really pay attention to these feelings and we fine-tune our ability to turn the attention to sensation in the body - we notice. That is our moment of mindfulness. In noticing on the yoga mat we develop the skill of noticing in life. In learning to relax the shoulders on the yoga mat we learn to relax in life, consciously relaxing at will, regardless of the external circumstances.
Come to yoga to change your body, come to yoga to change your mind, come to yoga to change your life!
Next week on the mat we delve deep into the shoulder area. Join us Tuesday and Thursday, 25th and 27th August, 1-2pm. Recordings of both classes are available to you for one week. Maybe this is your time to explore daily practice?
Following this I’m rolling out a focused programme for us for the four weeks of September: Intention.
Read MoreJust two weeks of classes in August; an opportunity to go deeper into awareness of your own posture as you move on your yoga mat, deeper into awareness of your posture as you move through your life.
Good posture was there for all of us as children, our job in August is to notice the patterns of tension and stiffness in our bodies which take us away from the natural feeling of moving with ease in a body that is well aligned. When we are moving in optimal alignment it feels right, we move freely. The great thing is that each one of us have our own unique best pattern of alignment, you move in a way that feels good for you.
I’ll guide you through discovering the patterns of movement that tend to suit most of us best, you will fine-tune your awareness and learn to relax muscles that are tight and strengthen muscles that support your good posture.
Note, just 2 weeks of live classes in August, no yoga Tuesday 4th, Thursday 6th, Tuesday 18th, Thursday 20th. (Recordings of yoga classes will be available for you.)
Each class is a complete range of motion, hatha yoga class with a particular focus in each class on quietening the mind, and developing progressive learning.
Week 1: Head, neck and spine: perfect your posture! August 11 and 13th. (One week break follows, recordings available.)
Week 2: Soften your shoulders; ease and relaxed movement. August 25th and 27th .
“By cultivating strength without rigidity and relaxation without collapse in our yoga poses we are training our bodies, and our minds, to remain awake and yet calm, regardless of the external circumstances.” Jason Crandell.
Please sign up for the entire month by selecting two class passes here, you’ll also have access to four class recordings for our weeks off. To join us for one week select one class pass here.
Read MorePreceded by yoga you get an opportunity to bury your feet into the soft supportive earth gently holding you. You tune into your yoga alignment which promotes ease of movement and good posture. You can wake up the senses and tune into the subtle sensations of the inner body, the sensations associated with connecting and relaxing. Wide awake, fully aware, relaxed and curious you begin your forest bathing immersion.
Following the experience you get to reconnect with your yoga. Standing tall and with dignity, like the trees, you get to reflect and allow the experience to soak in. Noticing what calls to your attention with a calm, open mind, you open up new, fresh thought patterns and patterns of behaviour. Observing with calmness and compassion, your mindfulness practice soaks in and spreads from there far beyond the experience, into the rest of your life, filtering out to those around you.
Read MoreWe have a natural tendency, as humans, to dwell on what's wrong or what could go wrong. Add in a pandemic, uncertainty, and fear, and imagine the potential for damage that can cause! It's helpful and healthy for us to actively cultivate a positivity bias to counter these negative thoughts. Where better to practice that than our yoga mats? I will be guiding you through gratitude and present-moment-awareness practices, while guiding you safely through (fun) yoga poses that express joy in our bodies for the month of July.
Read MoreWhat kind of a yoga teacher am I if I talk to you about connecting with your core on your yoga mat while ignoring the suffering in our community? What kind of a human am I to speak of the virtues of solitary moments of connection on the mat without acknowledging the interconnectedness of all humans on our planet?
Read MoreOften, the hardest work is just committing to your practice, and cultivating the discipline and perseverance to simply show up.
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