Solar Alvura Yoga Retreats ~ Reduced prices!

Join us for a rejuvenating yoga retreat at Solar Alvura, where you can immerse yourself in the serene beauty of the Algarve. Our experienced instructor, Sylvia Ferguson, will guide you through daily yoga and meditation sessions, complemented by delicious and nutritious meals to nourish your body and soul. You'll also have access to our spa and wellness facilities, as well as the opportunity to explore the breathtaking natural surroundings through guided walks and hikes. Come unwind and find your inner peace at our idyllic yoga retreat. Please book by contacting Solar Alvura Health Hotel or let me know if you have any questions.

 

Nurture, Heal & Transform Yoga Retreat Dates

 

24-29 June 2023

15-20 July 2023

16-21 September 2023

28 October-2 November 2023

11-16 November 2023

10-15 February 2024

 

5 nights (6 days) Yoga Retreat

 

Prices start at €1062 per person sharing 

 

Solar Alvura Yoga Retreats are supportive, invitational and fun. They are designed by Sylvia Ferguson who has over 20 years of experience in teaching yoga.

 

Retreat includes:

 

Full use of the extensive facilities and optional group excursions with optional extra treatments, procedures and excursions available

5 nights luxury accommodation 

All meals

Alcohol free drink (cocktail) or one glass of wine or beer per meal

Twice daily yoga, meditation and mindfulness practices with all of your equipment provided, no need to bring your yoga mat unless you'd like to

Excursions with the group (depending on the time of year) beach days, hiking, a visit to a local olive farm, cooking demonstrations

Airport collection on arrival from Faro airport (only 25 minutes away)

 

Add ons:

 

Weight loss program 

Colonic hydrotherapy

Massage and all other Spa treatments

Airport drop off

 

We are expecting you to leave with a healthier body and mind having had the space to nurture and relax with the support of your group and your mentors. Your learning programme will include practices for daily meditations, yoga and mindfulness as well as education on nutrition. Our intention for you is that your practices explored on retreat could come home with you to be incorporated into your daily life: 5 Tibetans, Dr Eva's method of healthy daily maintenance diet, daily mindfulness practices. 

 

A typical day includes: 

 Sunrise meditation and yoga followed by a healthy indulgent breakfast

Time to chill or hike - wander through the orange grove or settle in a sun-lounger by the infinity pool

A healthy lunch

Afternoons for optional excursions or to enjoy the property, book a treatment, or relax by the pool or in the Hammam

Evening yoga or sunset meditation, or group Hammam depending on the time of year

A leisurely dinner

An evening star-lit stroll after dinner

 

Prices :

 

Classic room sharing €1062 per person

Classic room single €1450

 

Superior room sharing €1125 per person

Superior room single €1575

 

Superior room plus sharing €1200 per person

Superior room plus single €1725 

Please contact the hotel directly to pay your 50% deposit to secure your place. We look forward to welcoming you!

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The three-step anchor space; a mini-mindfulness practice.

The Three-Step Anchor Space is a mindfulness practice taught in Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) courses. It is a brief mindfulness practice that aims to cultivate present-moment awareness and provide a sense of grounding. It consists of three steps and typically takes about three minutes to complete:

  1. Step 1: Awareness of the Present Moment - Begin by intentionally bringing your attention to the present moment. You can do this by closing your eyes or keeping them open, and then simply notice and acknowledge your current thoughts, emotions, and bodily sensations without judgment.

  2. Step 2: Focusing on the breath or another anchor point of your choosing - Shift your attention to the sensation of your breath or the somewhere else in the body or the sounds around you. As best you can maintain your attention on your anchor while acknowledging it might drift and that’s ok, in that case you just gently guide it back.

  3. Step 3: Expanding Awareness - In this final step, expand your awareness to include your entire body. Notice any bodily sensations, tension, or areas of discomfort, as well as any emotions or thoughts that arise. Try to hold a spacious and accepting awareness of your experience, allowing whatever arises to be present without trying to change it.

The Three-Step Anchor Space serves as a mini-meditation that can be practiced throughout the day to cultivate mindfulness and reconnect with the present moment. It helps individuals develop a greater awareness of their thoughts and emotions and fosters a more balanced and compassionate response to difficult experiences. You can hear Sylvia guide you through a Three-Step Anchor space on Soundcloud here. Please sign up for the newsletter on the homepage of sylviayoga.com to keep updated on classes, courses and events.

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Outdoor Yoga in Marlay Park Spring Summer '23 ~ join us!

Join us in Marlay Park this summer! An invitation to be courageous, curious, and ready to embrace whatever unpredictable adventure the Irish weather might offer us. Yoga, mindfulness, playfulness, relaxation.

Enter the Park at the main (Grange Road near Lidl) entrance and from the Car Park turn left. Walk over one bridge and you will see us on the left, near the big tree and the iron man statue.

9.30am-10.30am all summer long except concert days, June 23rd and 30th - no yoga those days.

Friday 12th May - Friday 1st September.

Of course we all love a sunny day with clear blue skies, and it often is. However our experiences of outdoor yoga are just as rich and meaningful when it’s dull or raining. As we know only too well with Irish weather we could easily have both climates in the same hour and it’s often hard to predict. Here are some things you can do to prepare to be comfortable and well prepared for your experience. 

  • Prepare for all weathers. Bring warm removable layers. I suggest a vest, a t-shirt, a sweatshirt, a coat you can move in, a hat for sun, a hat for cold, shoes for rain, warm socks, your yoga mat, a small folded blanket (to sit on or throw over you), water and sunblock.

  • I suggest arriving around 10 minutes early so you are relaxed and ready to enjoy the whole experience from the moment you enter the park. Of course it’s no problem if you find yourself running late, just join us when you can. The most important thing is your relaxation; it’s extra special if you can begin to experience it from the moment you arrive in your haven!

  • I will adapt the class to suit the weather. My intention is to bring your body through it’s full range of motion for a big tension-releasing stretch everywhere! If it’s cold and wet we may just do this standing and then head off on our silent, mindful, tree-lined walk: forest-bathing. If it’s dry and/or sunny we’ll enjoy our movement on the mat. I feel we can all benefit from plenty of movement while soaking our senses in present-moment awareness and we have loads of creative ways to do both, whatever the weather!

  • I teach classic hatha yoga with a dose of playfulness. All yoga poses are suitable for all levels, please chat to me at the beginning if you have any concerns. Every movement I suggest is options and I give plenty of options for all levels. It’s always fine to do your own thing on the mat!

  • I teach mindfulness meditation as we practice. I have a Masters of Science in Mindfulness based interventions and will explore the skills for developing a mindfulness practice of your own.

  • Please let me know if you have any feedback, any questions or any suggestions.

  • Please note the events go ahead in the case of cold weather or light rain. In the case where the event does not take place due to really bad weather conditions a full refund will be issued.

Hope to see you in our little slices of heaven! 

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Yoga and weight management: 4 ways yoga can help.

If you have trouble maintaining a healthy weight despite your best efforts, this is because weight gain is a complex process with many causes. A family history of weight issues, a diet high in processed foods and sugar, and being sedentary can all contribute to weight gain. Stress, struggles with mental health, some medications, poor sleep, and hormonal changes, are all factors that further contribute to weight gain.

There are many ways to combat excess weight, but there is no single solution. If you are trying to lose or maintain your weight, you may want to explore yoga. There is good research that yoga may help you manage stress, improve your mood, curb emotional eating, and create a community of support, all of which can help with weight loss and maintenance.

1. Yoga is healthy exercise. 

Yoga can help you burn calories, as well as increase your muscle mass and tone. Yoga may reduce joint pain, which in turn allows you to exercise more and increase your daily activities. These physical benefits are only some of the many benefits of yoga.

2. Yoga can help you manage stress that can impact weight gain.

Yoga is derived from the Sanskrit word yuj, which means to unite the body, mind, and emotions. It is a holistic mind-body practice that improves many of the causes of weight gain.

Stress leads to an increase in the hormone cortisol. Cortisol increases abdominal fat, decreases muscle mass, causes cravings for fat and sugar-rich food, and thus can lead to obesity. Yoga can decrease stress and cortisol levels, enhance mood, decrease anxiety and depression, improve sleep, and improve chronic conditions such as high blood pressure and diabetes.

Yoga is not a miracle cure for excess weight, but it may work on the underlying causes. Its benefits extend beyond the calories-in-versus-calories-out equation.

3. Yoga can improve mindfulness related to eating behaviours.

We all know that eating vegetables and lean protein is good for our health and weight. While this knowledge is necessary, it’s sometimes not enough to help us stick to our healthy eating plans.

One of yoga's benefits is that it improves mindfulness of the body and awareness of body sensations. This is why yoga is called Moving Meditation. Research shows that you don't have to do any formal sitting meditation to get the mindfulness benefits of yoga.

By improving mindfulness, yoga can help decrease emotional eating, stress eating and binge eating. A study published in 2015 showed that practicing yoga led to healthier eating, including lower fat intake and an increase in vegetables and whole grains.

In summary, the best diet plan is the one that you can stick with over the long term, and by improving mindfulness, yoga can help you make healthier food choices.

4. A yoga community can provide acceptance and support.

Yoga culture embodies kindness, support, and self-acceptance. On a yoga retreat you are invited to surround yourself with non-judgemental support for days on end. Research shows that social networks influence behaviours that affect weight. A welcoming yoga group may help you improve your self-esteem and confidence. Teachers can help beginners or those with physical limitations by modifying poses.

The benefits of yoga are universal — no matter what your shape or size. A yoga retreat can help you establish a yoga practice, and ongoing practice is key for long-lasting benefits

Sylvia Ferguson has been teaching yoga in Dublin for over 20 years and recently completed a Masters of Science in Mindfulness Based Interventions. She is one of Dublin’s favourite yoga teachers frequently hosting events in nature, finding ways to bring community together. Sylvia is a lead teacher trainer with Yoga Hub is leading yoga retreats in Solar Alvura Health Hotel in Portugal. 

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Luxury yoga retreats in a very special place in Portugal: you are invited!

Dear yoga friends,

Many of you have been asking me about running retreats abroad and I have been hesitant to do so until I found the right fit for us. As you know I am scientist committed to teaching practices that are grounded in integrity and evidence-based results. As you also know I love hosting in beautiful venues that have amazing facilities with opportunities for relaxing and adventure, connection and fun!

Dr Eva and I met at one of our Full Moon Meditations where I tucked her in under a blanket on a yoga mat under a blue sky one summer evening and she promptly slept for the session. It was the beginning of a friendship grounded in our shared passion for good health. Since then I have visited her stunning Health Hotel in Portugal, learnt more about the incredible work she does there supporting guests with weight loss, and explored how we can indulge guests with supportive practices on retreat and help them maintain continuity with daily practices at home.

Many of us go to a yoga retreat simply for relaxation, yoga, sun and fun. Solar Alvura offers all the luxury of a 5* hotel, the healthy, locally-sourced food is abundant, the bar is open, the infinity pool awaits you! 

Not just your typical yoga retreat, however, you are nourished and supported by the most incredible healthy food in Dr Eva’s Health Hotel with the option to add on a medically supervised weight-loss diet, or a ketogenic diet for the keto-curious, into the programme. 

The 5-night retreat includes 6 days of yoga, twice a day on most days, meditation, relaxation and mindfulness practices, all your delicious healthy locally sourced food prepared by the amazing chef, and all of the facilities of the stunning hotel. Offering optional excursions as a group, there are lots of choices to add on excursions or extras; massage, spa, gym, steam and beauty facilities are all on-site. Local towns and beaches are a short taxi ride away. 

The first one is running in late June, I’ll be posting all the dates in the coming days. Prices are designed to be as affordable as possible with options to upgrade the package to a larger room or suite, or to upgrade the package to include a medically-supervised weight loss aspect to your programme. The intention is to run the retreats almost monthly, almost year-round, so it is something you can plan or do at short notice, a home away from home that can become your refuge. Portugal is only a short hop from Dublin, the hotel is about half an hour from Faro airport.

More details on the way soon dear friends. In the meantime please email me, comment here or shout out on social media so I can start to get excited about building our tribe in the sunny Algarve. You are most welcome!

Looking forward so much to seeing you there. xS

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Sylvia FergusonComment
Balanced living: are we all getting a bit better at it?

Dear Yoga friends,

I hope you are enjoying your Easter Bank Holiday; a bit of sunshine between the clouds and left-over eggs has me perfectly content for the day! It's been lovely to have a week of packed classes and a full workshop on Saturday at a time of year we might have all stepped completely away from yoga for the easter holidays. It's interested how our practices are more seamlessly blended with our lives now, and how they remain more steadfast in our routines even when the sunshine and the chocolate beckons! Balanced living … are we all getting a bit better at it, I wonder?


No class today; our new course is starting this Thursday in The Park Community Centre with a small number of spaces free; you are most welcome! Next Monday will be week 4 of our current course and new course sign-up. 

Monday 6.45pm, Thursday 6.45pm. One class €10, one course €35 for four weeks, all welcome. Do both courses for four weeks, eight classes, €60 (please select 6 at the link)

Morning classes are ongoing in Ballyroan Community Centre, Tuesdays 10.45am, Thursdays 9.30am, drop  in spaces available. Classes run as usual this week, week 4 of current courses. Please confirm your next course this week, spaces available in both classes. 
Tuesday’s class is 10.45-11.45m; Thursday’s is 9.30-10.30am.

A four week course is €40. Drop-ins, when available, are €12. Courses run on an ongoing basis, you can join in any time. Sign up for both courses (two classes for four weeks, eight classes) for €70.

We will run straight through with no breaks over Easter and classes will continue for the summer. Outdoor yoga option: We will be in Marlay Park at 9.30am on Fridays beginning in May, you are most welcome. 

Live online yoga classes are on pause until September. 

We have a great selection of yoga workshops coming up, Full Moon meditations and Saturday morning workshops are held in nearby Mutton Lane Yoga Studio in the mountains, just 5-10 mins from Ballyroan. All upcoming events are listed on the events page of the website. Events can be booked via eventbrite here, please make use of the waiting list function. 

We will be back in Marlay Park for outdoor yoga on the grass from Friday 5th May, 9.30am-10.30am. Keep us in mind when you are making summer plans, we would be delighted to welcome you to the best hour of the week, it's always sunny then! 

Looking forward very much to seeing you on the mat this week.

Kindest regards,

Sylvia.

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Sylvia FergusonComment
Your one wild and precious life.

What do you wish for yourself, for your life? Moving through life like a zombie, on autopilot, doing what is needed to make money, survive, eat sleep and repeat. Or living a full, rich, life, wide awake, full of choices, of moments of awe and wonder. 

In either case we will encounter difficulty, that is inevitable for all of us as humans. Sadness is inevitable, worry, stress; nobody has a life free of hassles. But we can choose to acknowledge this and create a way of being that is larger than the worry, we can move with it. 

This week we completed an 8-week MBSR course and spent some of our last session reflecting on the trajectory of the course and the changes that were apparent as we learnt and practiced. It’s not always easy, waking up to the full catastrophe of being human. After all, who wants to acknowledge there’s sadness present when we could busy ourselves along and pretend it’s not there? But in waking up to the sadness, and recognising it, a small degree of acceptance creeps in and a small bit of space emerges and we find ourselves open and receptive to other emotions, new ways of thinking and being in the world, new patterns of thought and behaviour. In waking up we live the life we were destined for, a life full of joy and opportunity and choices.

The practices are subtle and they are layered. In breathing out and letting go of the awareness of your big toe and moving on to awareness of your little toe you are carving new pathways in the brain and your capacity for greater awareness increases. Tiny bit by tiny bit, moment by moment, like a large bucket being filled with single drops of water. 

If you would like to know more about the 8-week MBSR course and what it entails please join us for an online information session on Wednesday 29th March at 10am. Our next course will start in May running in Mutton Lane on Wednesday mornings from 9.30am-12noon for an 8-week period and you would be most welcome.  I’m here for any questions, x Sylvia.

The Summer Day.

Who made the world?

Who made the swan, and the black bear?

Who made the grasshopper?

This grasshopper, I mean—

the one who has flung herself out of the grass,

the one who is eating sugar out of my hand,

who is moving her jaws back and forth instead of up and down—

who is gazing around with her enormous and complicated eyes.

Now she lifts her pale forearms and thoroughly washes her face.

Now she snaps her wings open, and floats away.

I don't know exactly what a prayer is.

I do know how to pay attention, how to fall down

into the grass, how to kneel down in the grass,

how to be idle and blessed, how to stroll through the fields,

which is what I have been doing all day.

Tell me, what else should I have done?

Doesn't everything die at last, and too soon?

Tell me, what is it you plan to do

with your one wild and precious life?

—Mary Oliver

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Sylvia FergusonComment
Spring is in the air and Sylvia's Yoga is making plans!

Dear Yoga friends,

Can you hear it, can you smell it!? Spring is on the way. Finally. They say being tuned into nature makes us more mindful as we naturally understand the ebb and flow of life then. Dark days are followed by light. Sunshine is temporary so we’d better make the most of it! In Buddhism we are taught to recognise that tough times are inevitable but suffering is optional. As we emerge from the darkness why not join me in getting excited about making plans for Spring and Summer.

Our community yoga classes are all full of enthusiastic, committed yogis, showing up as best we can when we can. If you have come to class with me and lapsed you are ALWAYS welcome back. Newcomers, I will do my best to fit you in but you might have a short wait until a space comes up in class. I’ll be sending a usual regular email to all venues in the coming days to clarify where we are with courses, the events page of the website is up to date. There you can sign up for the individual email lists for all venues.

Our 8-week MBSR course in Mutton Lane is underway. We alternate between the cosy seated outdoor area, the deck surrounded by nature and the studio with it’s wood-burning stove. It’s all gorgeous! Our next course runs in May, please ask me if you’d like more information. Here’s a little snippet from one participant:

“I felt starting it was all about being more relaxed but particularly after the second class I realised it was more about acceptance and being with how you feel and not fighting against it which has brought me huge contentment.”

Our workshops in Mutton Lane are running twice monthly, an evening meditation and a Saturday morning 2-hour workshop. All abilities and levels of practice are welcome. We are outdoors and inside, making the most of the beautiful fresh air and the cosy fire-lit studio. Please book early, March and April events are open for booking, February’s are full (please check out the waiting list as we do get cancellations). We have a sound-bath in the Park Community Centre in March, two hours of bliss on a Saturday afternoon.

I’m back teacher training with Yoga Hub, this time in our gorgeous new studio in Frascati Centre in Blackrock. I am so excited to have some regular students joining this 10-month course starting soon, and many more of you curious about undertaking a course like this. You don’t have to want to be a teacher, you don’t have to be able to wrap your leg around your neck, the only requirement is that you are passionate about yoga and curious about committing to a deeper practice. Let me know if you’d like to chat more about this.

I’m doing some travel in Spring and Autumn this year, yoga and adventure in far-flung lands with friends and family, always with an eye to planning a retreat for us somewhere warm! This means I am home for the whole summer which is something I increasingly treasure as I get older, I LOVE Irish summer. I’m already researching our venue for Friday mornings, possibly Marlay Park, I’m open to other suggestions. Requirements are space, shelter for rain, free parking, beautiful nature, lots of trees and open sky. If you’re planning yoga time for yourself in the coming months please consider the Friday morning slot with us.

I’m back in the Corporate World teaching in-person, immersive, interactive Mindfulness sessions. I’m loving what I am seeing in the work environment, a huge emphasis on well-being, respect and compassion. Isn’t it wonderful how we are all becoming so much more aware of the impact we have on each other? We are all connected in the ocean of humanity, you rise and we all rise.

We have been gifted a Bank Holiday weekend in early Spring, the sun is shining and days are getting longer. Let’s go and live our best lives!

Thanks so much to all of you, thanks for all the kindness and empathy you all show me.

Kindest regards,

Sylvia.

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Sylvia FergusonComment
Some helpful things to know when attending yoga with Sylvia.

Hi, I’m Sylvia, your yoga teacher. I have been teaching yoga close to 20 years and I am also a Mindfulness Teacher teaching MBSR (Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction). I have a Masters of Science and enjoy sharing snippets of science with you, interesting things about the body mind connection that might help us gain a more understanding and therefore a fresh view of things.

The yoga instructions I give you are invitational, I make suggestions and you move your body in a way that feels right for you. I will never call you out on anything, I will never ask you to do anything you don’t want to. I will always be supportive if you need to make modifications to how you move. My classes are for everyone. Thank you for considering my yoga classes, it is a huge honor for me to teach what I love.

All of the yoga classes are mixed ability. Typically at one of my classes you will find someone new to yoga, someone who is doing yoga a little while and ‘getting it’, someone who is doing yoga a long time and still learning, someone who is just back to yoga after a break. Old and young, with injury and without injury, a cross-section of humanity. Yoga is for everyone. With yoga we show up as we are, it’s not competitive.

As newcomers to yoga we often compare ourselves to others. We can feel inadequate and feel that we are somehow not ‘doing it right’ or ‘not good enough’. Don’t worry, that’s normal, many of us feel that. So step one is nice and easy, there is no judge. You are just fine the way you are and nobody’s looking at you anyway. Don’t criticise yourself (or others), do your best, and don’t worry about how you look. Wear warm, comfortable clothing you can layer.

There are many options available to newcomers to yoga. Some do a specific ‘Yoga for Beginners’ course or a beginner’s workshop. Google search your nearest studio for further information. As a former Yoga Hub teacher-trainer I have trained hundreds of yoga teachers over the years and can happily recommend the Yoga Hub teachers. However, Dublin is full of amazing teachers so I highly recommend finding a teacher that suits you timewise and location-wise. Keep it as easy as possible on yourself.

Many, if not most, newcomers to yoga just come along to a class to give it a go. If you have no injuries or limitations (e.g. high blood pressure, a recovering injury, a pregnancy currently or in the recent past) this is fine. Accept that you won’t do it perfectly straight away; go with an open mind. If you have a limitation or an injury get your doctor’s approval first and then chat to your teacher about whether or not the class would be suitable for you. Often, with a little bit of common sense, it will be. If you’d prefer to try your first yoga class from home you can sign up for live online yoga or try a pre-recorded yoga class suitable for beginners.

Yoga is union. Union of breath and moment, union of mind and body, union of effort and surrender. Your first class might be different to what you expect. It will possibly be harder (I teach people to be strong) and more relaxing (we meditate from the moment you take your first breath) than you had expected. Learning more about ourselves and what makes us tick is one of the many benefits of a yoga practice. It’s slow, it’s subtle but it’s profound.

Wear loose comfortable clothing. Yoga is typically done barefoot. Don’t worry if you don’t have perfect feet, nobody will care … it’s also fine to keep socks on if you prefer. It’s nice to put the effort into being well prepared with fresh, comfortable clothing you feel at home in. I like to think of going to yoga a bit like going on a date with myself, I make a bit of effort to show up clean and fresh in clothes I like.

Please bring a yoga mat (let me know in advance if you need to borrow one) and a small blanket you can sit on, or use as padding under your knee or your head, or throw over you for final relaxation. Yoga mats can be purchased in any sports shop, luxury mats such as Manduka can be purchased online, the cheaper ones tend to be a bit slippy. Buy your throw / blanket in Pennys! Bring warm layers for relaxation, a sweatshirt or hoodie, cosy socks, maybe an eye pillow to block out the light.

Take is easy and listen to your body. The teacher is like the waiter at a huge buffet, showing you the table full of choices. You are the discerning customer, choosing what suits you. Listen to your body. Listen to your breath. If it feels wrong or too hard, don’t push it. If you are gasping for breath, slow down. Staying in touch with the breath is what we, as yogis, do. But don’t worry if you don’t ‘get’ the breath straight away, just move and follow the class and the breath will come. Simply listen without trying too hard. It will just happen. And when it does, it feels great. Above all else, as you move through your yoga practice, it should feel good. With practice and consistent effort your entire yoga practice might become a moving meditation.

Typically we will move slowly to start, combining breath and movement. Then we might flow through some sun salutations and standing poses and you may find your transitions between poses are slow and awkward the first time, that’s normal. With time you will flow with ease and grace and fluidity, even if you aren’t doing everything perfectly. Towards the latter end of the class we might explore a peak pose, an advanced yoga pose. You can try it, you can watch, you can go a few stages into it; you will be given instructions and guidance on what to do at any given moment. Have fun, be adventurous and playful if you feel like it, but above all else use common sense and keep yourself safe.

Finally we relax; usually for about 5 minutes. Often the relief that the class is over is enough to enable you to take a deep sigh and lie down and just rest! If not I might guide you on where to take your thoughts as your body relaxes more and more with each exhale. Sometimes during the relaxation phase I might talk you through a longer guided relaxation practice. Sometimes there might be music, sometimes silence.

If you have any questions. observations or feedback please do chat to me after class or get in touch by email. I love feedback, requests and questions.

My weekend and evening workshops have the same ethos, everyone is welcome, beginners are always welcome. MBSR courses run in Mutton Lane, suitable for everyone.

Please feel free to drop me an email here. Some of my courses are full and have a waiting list so if you’re not sure please check first. Classes, workshops and yoga retreats in beautiful locations are detailed on my website and announced on my Facebook page, Sylvia’s yoga

I’m looking forward to seeing you soon on the mat. Imperfect and simply showing up. Just like me!

Namaste.
“When I am in the place in me where I am truly me, and you are in the place in you where you are truly you, there is only one of us.”

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Sylvia FergusonComment
Something big for you in 2023?...

Embarking on an adult education programme is both daunting and exciting. Is there ever the perfect time? Many of us are caring for elders and youngsters, some of us feel we have the energy and the resources to just barely get through the week, and yet there can often be a spark of curiosity, of excitement, of trepidation when we are faced with an invitation to step into the courageous, structured, demanding world of undertaking a new course of study, especially when the subject of that study is our own beautiful minds! 

The 8-week MBSR Course is such an invitation. Each class is two and a half hours a week. For many of us that is a half-day out of life, it is a big undertaking. Home practice of up to 45 minutes a day is encouraged for the duration of the course. This aspect of the course is supported, it's explored, it becomes a subject of our study as we learn new ways of relating to ourselves. For many, after the 8 weeks, the daily habit is ingrained and sustained. For many, the biggest learnings of the 8-week course are daily light-bulb moments (or moments of 'awakening') when we recognise our patterns of thinking and make wiser choices in seemingly small ways as our life unfolds. 

Does this all sound like a lot to you? It is a lot. This might not be the right time for you. You might never undertake a course like this in your lifetime and simply continue to explore moments of mindfulness, of curiosity, of awakening on the yoga mat or as we navigate life from a place of calm awareness. And some of you reading this email perhaps know that one day you will do the course when the time is right. In any case, the invitation is simply to be curious and listen to any spark of excitement that might lead you to an adventure that could change your life. Once you express an interest the next step is scheduling a chat with me. 

Our first 8-week MBSR of 2023 begins on Wednesday January 18th at 9.30am in Mutton Lane Yoga Studio, Tibradden. Our venue is surrounded by nature, we practice both outdoors and inside, we support this with cosy layers of clothing, a kettle that is always on, and a wood-burning stove inside the studio. Our time together is nurturing, supportive, sometimes challenging, always interesting. We'll have a second course in Spring/Summer and a third in October.

We're back on the yoga mats from Thursday 5th January, I'll be back in touch with you all before then with booking links. Thanks so much to so many of you who have confirmed your January courses, we currently have spaces to accommodate everyone who has been coming regularly, many of you coming twice in the week. 

Please visit the website for details and booking links or email me with any questions. Looking forward so much to seeing you in 2023, it's lovely to see so many of you coming regularly and committing to regular practice. 

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Sylvia FergusonComment
What is a Silent Retreat?

A retreat is an opportunity to get away from the stresses and busyness of your daily life. A silent retreat can last anywhere from a day to a long weekend. Some, more intense, retreats even continue on for a week or more. A silent retreat is basically just that. You are to remain silent throughout the event. 

As part of the 8-week MBSR Course we do a silent retreat day together some time towards the end of the course. In our courses this day is held in Mutton Lane Yoga Studio. We come together for a whole day of practice, working in all the ways we have learned in the course so far and guided by the teacher. 

For some people even the thought of having day without speaking can feel daunting and bring up a lot of anxiety. We all have previous experience of silence, some of which may have been positive, but it is possible that some of it may have been difficult for us and may have left negative associations. The suggestion is to bring a kind, curious approach to whatever arises for you, as best you can, knowing you have the support of the teacher if you need it. 

The intention for the day is to nurture yourself, to notice what arises for you as we move through the day and to begin the attitudes of kindness and friendliness to yourself and your experiences. 

On our silent days in Mutton Lane Yoga Studio we go out to lunch in nearby Hazel House Cafe. We break our silence for the meal and resume silence afterwards. On many silent day retreats the invitation is to continue silence throughout lunch.

The benefits of silence. 

1. More than just being silent the retreat gives you an opportunity to reflect inwardly and process your thoughts in a calm, constructive way. We notice the liking, disliking, wanting and not wanting, the running commentary, the story telling and so on and as the mind settles this narrative starts to settle. 

2. A silent retreat helps us notice the energy you usually devote to communication and interaction with others. 

3. We become aware of our habitual modes of communication and impulses to talk.

4. We may find we can meet ourselves more fully even if this means acknowledging and processing more uncomfortable and usually undiscovered thoughts and feelings. The teacher is here to support you in this. 

During the MBSR Course the participants get lots of practice of being in silence, this day is really about exploring that with some time and space in a supportive, nurturing environment. Once you have done an MBSR course you will be invited back to these silent retreat days in the future.

If you are curious about the MBSR course you can read more here.

Autobiography in Five Chapters.

1
I walk down the street.
There is a deep hole in the sidewalk
I fall in.
I am lost … I am helpless.
It isn’t my fault.
It takes me forever to find a way out.

2
I walk down the same street.
There is a deep hole in the sidewalk.
I pretend I don’t see it.
I fall in again.
I can’t believe I am in the same place
but, it isn’t my fault.
It still takes a long time to get out.

3
I walk down the same street.
There is a deep hole in the sidewalk.
I see it is there.
I still fall in … it’s a habit.
my eyes are open
I know where I am.
It is my fault.
I get out immediately.

4
I walk down the same street.
There is a deep hole in the sidewalk.
I walk around it.

5
I walk down another street.

by Portia Nelson

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Sylvia Ferguson YogaComment
The style of yoga that changes how you think.

A very recent study on the benefits of yoga explored two groups as they attended yoga twice a week for 10 weeks.* In the first group the language was ‘movement-focused’, in the second it was ‘interoception-focused’. Interocpetion is the ability to sense or feel what’s happening inside the body; your yoga teacher may guide you to notice your breath, for example, or to feel or sense a body part, maybe the contact of your feet on the floor in a pose.

In the latter group the study showed an increase in ability to pay sustained attention, meaning higher levels of focus and concentration. This leads to a greater ability to tolerate stress; improvements in sustained attention can lay the groundwork for improved mood. Yoga can change the patterns and shape of the brain when taught with an awareness of the body. This is what we practice on the yoga mat all the time!

In our classes in Mutton Lane Yoga Studio we have been taking the practice outside a lot. This surprisingly milder weather allows us to be under the rustling trees and ferns, nurtured by the breeze, supported by the sounds of birds and nature. All of these things help bring us back to awareness of the body. The moist, fragrant air as it enters the body as our breath. The breeze gently moving us as we sway and respond to it, feet firmly rooted into the supportive wooden deck. The contrast when we transition in silence to the studio with its warm crackling fire.

Come to yoga to feel, not to accomplish. We’ll move and stretch, we’ll strengthen and lengthen and relax our bodies and we will train, shape and cultivate the mind. We might not be present in thought all the time, the mind will wander. That’s what minds do, as sure as the heart will beat the mind will wander. That’s not a mistake, our rich, brilliant minds are designed to be creative and free-flowing. I will help you come back to awareness, awareness of your steady feed, your strong spine, your big heart and your fine mind.

Join us for regular classes, monthly events outside in nature morning or evening, special events like our upcoming Sound Bath in The Park Community Centre in December. Online classes may support your intention to visit your yoga mat twice in each week, our live weekly classes are recorded for you to access again during the week. Hope to see you on the mat soon.

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Sylvia Ferguson YogaComment