Saturday, June 29, 2013

How To Look Good Naked

Come on. Admit it. You want to look good naked.
Everyone does.
Is that enough to make you set up an exercise regiment and STICK TO IT? Or take what you eat into consideration? If not, why not? Laziness? Too much on your plate? Don’t feel like dealing with it? How important to you is it?
I’m going to put it out there. Call me crazy, but...



Friday, June 28, 2013

How To Get Your Sex Drive Back

Most women don’t even know they’ve lost their sex drive until they get it back full force. When asked, most women say they would prefer an evening in the bedroom over a night on the couch, but let’s get real, when’s the last time you had your man naked and covered in chocolate? 

In truth, how bad you want it (and how creative you are in the bedroom) is directly influenced by birth

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Straight to the Heart

women in Ardha MatsyendrasanaWhen former president Bill Clinton mentioned in a CNN interview that he'd adopted a near-vegan diet for the sake of his heart's health, the media went wild. Once known for his love of hamburgers and junk food, Clinton—who had bypass surgery in 2004 and an angioplasty in 2010 to remove blockages from a clogged artery

Western Science vs. Eastern Wisdom


t's 7:30 a.m. at the Vivekananda ashram - Prashanti Kuteeram, or "the abode of peace"- situated on a bucolic hundred acres outside the city of Bangalore, India. The third "Om" from the crowd assembled for morning Bhagavad Gita chanting is starting to fade when a familiar melody rises from

Diet For A Healthy Planet

Kat Saks grew up in Montana, where meat was always on the table. In fact, she had never considered not eating meat. But when she began yoga teacher training at Laughing Lotus Yoga Center in Manhattan and her instructor mentioned that vegetarianism was one way to practice ahimsa, the yogic principle of nonharming, she decided to try it for the duration of the program.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Healthy Heart

Drinking a couple of eight-ounce cups of coffee a day may protect against heart failure, according to a recent study at Harvard University. But there's a sweet spot, since drinking too much coffee (four or more cups a day) appears to increase your risk of heart problems. "Moderate consumption of caffeinated coffee was associated with an 11 percent lower risk of heart failure," says study author Elizabeth Mostofsky.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Magic Touch

Wheel Pose first brought Stacey Rosenberg face-to-face with her body's limitations back in the late 1990s. She was a serious yoga student then, with a good five years of practice and a Sivananda teacher training under her belt. Still, every time she pushed up into Urdhva Dhanurasana, she experienced resistance in her lower back and pain in her knees. Thinking more practice was the answer, she practiced more.

Soak it

Increase your exposure to morning light and you may slow the onset of common aging-related illnesses such as insomnia, cognitive slowdown, and depression, according to a growing body of research. When your eyes take in bright light, especially the blue-spectrum light found in sunlight, nerve cells in the retina send messages to the brain's internal clock. This helps set your body's circadian rhythm, the synching of physiological processes with the 24-hour solar cycle.

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Flight Risk

Air travel may be more than just uncomfortable; it could be the cause of a serious medical condition referred to as deep vein thrombosis (DVT). DVT occurs after periods of prolonged immobility when a blood clot—usually formed in the lower leg, but sometimes beginning in the thigh or pelvis—blocks a major vein. Typically, such a clot dissolves once a traveler reaches his or her destination and walks around.

Why Yoga Works When Diets Fail

Lanita Varshell is a round, vibrant woman with a zest for life, a joyful smile, a gentle voice, and a passion for teaching yoga to women with weight issues. But Varshell wasn't always this spirited or committed to yoga. Six years ago, she was incapacitated by fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome and could barely care for her two young children.

Friday, June 21, 2013

Less is More

Many yogis are reminded of their excess when they are attempting a twisting pose and a roll of flesh on the hips or abdomen gets in the way. And while most know the importance of reducing unnecessary fat for health reasons, they may not realize how excess weight can hinder their practice by reducing vitality and restricting range of movement.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Allergy Antidote


At least 35.9 million Americans annually are plagued by seasonal allergic rhinitis, according to the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology. And the number of sufferers has doubled in the last 20 years, due to factors such as environmental pollution, poor diet, and increased stress, which make our immune, nervous, and respiratory systems hypersensitive. Allergies aren't just annoying; they can affect sleep, concentration, and productivity and put you in a bad mood.

Happy Feet

They hold us up all day long, they get us everywhere we need to go, and they connect our bodies to the earth. Some yoga teachers even call the feet the "roots" of the body.
Yet for all that our feet do for us, we don't do much for them in return. We cram them into tight shoes, pound along on them all day, and generally ignore them unless they're giving us serious trouble. The result is that at some point in their lives 7 of 10 people will suffer from foot problems, many of which are entirely preventable.

This Is Your Body on Stress

People have struggled with bumps on the path of life since before the dawn of history, but it was not until the middle of the 20th century that physiologist Hans Selye labeled our reaction to life's challenges with a simple word: stress. Now, 50 years later, there's a conversation you hear so

Cold Comfort

During the winter months, most of us come down with at least one common cold, that ubiquitous viral infection that typically runs its course in about a week. Yet many people who adopt a regular yoga practice find they get fewer colds than they did previously, and if they do get one, it doesn't seem to be as severe. Though it has never been directly proven that yoga can prevent or treat colds

Healing Journey

Breast cancer affects many of us: One in eight women in the United States will develop invasive breast cancer in her lifetime. The good news is that more women today are beating the illness. There are more than 2.5 million breast cancer survivors in the United States.
Yoga can be a valuable part of the process of healing and recovery from the disease, and classes for cancer patients and survivors are readily available.

Down to Earth

Heather, a Boston-area bodyworker, has been under stress lately, and she's starting to feel its effects. Blustery winter weather has arrived in New England, and she has a hard time keeping warm. With the economy yet to rebound, appointments at the spa where she works are still off

More Power to You

Yoga practice often acts like an elixir for restoring energy. Yet there are times when even the most energetic practitioner suffers from fatigue while on the mat. There are numerous causes for low energy during yoga: stress, overwork, lack of rest, a poor diet, digestive problems, and toxicity (ama), to name but a few.

An Ancient Cure for Modern Life

Like most Americans, I'm an expert at multi-tasking. I eat at my desk, wash dishes while on the phone, go through bills on the bus, and drive while talking on my cell phone. Based on his knowledge of the Eastern wisdom of Ayurveda, the internationally recognized Ayurvedic physician and author Robert Svoboda has another name for this rushed, fragmented way of functioning. He calls it "vata-deranged."

Spring It On

Springtime is magical, dynamic, and even sexy. As nature moves out of the cold, wet, dark winter toward spring, the pulse of life quickens, the earth warms, and blossoms unfurl, reaching for the sun. Nature makes it look smooth, but for us humans it's not as easy to transition gracefully from one season to the next

True Beauty

TrueBeauty_HPEach morning across India and beyond, people offer prayers to the resplendent, full-breasted goddess Lakshmi. Adorned in a rich red silk sari with copious golden ornaments and a full head of gleaming, long dark hair, Lakshmi Devi's luminous skin, full face, and deep magnetic eyes signal her irresistible enchantment.

Intro to Ayurveda

ayurvedaAyurveda, which translates as "knowledge of life," dates back 5,000 years to the ancient Sanskrit texts, the Vedas. It's a system of healing that examines physical constitution, emotional nature, and spiritual outlook in the context of the universe. According to the philosophy, universal life force manifests as three different energies, or doshas, known as vata, pitta, and kapha. We're all made up of a unique combination of these three forces. Though everyone has some of each, most people tend to have an abundance of one or two of the doshas.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Pigeon Pose


Yoga handles stiff hips in a variety of ways, but most directly through a family of poses that are known loosely as "hip openers." Some hip openers increase the external, or outward, rotation of the femur bone in the hip socket. Others lengthen the psoas muscle, a primary hip flexor connecting the torso and legs that gets chronically shortened in our chair-bound society.

Heels over Head

Halasana (Plow Pose) is often taught hand-in-hand with Sarvangasana (Shoulderstand); both poses are great mood stabilizers, said to simultaneously relax your nervous system and boost your energy level.You can do Halasana, which takes its name from the humble horse-drawn plow it resembles, before or after Sarvangasana, (itself referred to in much more regal fashion as the queen of asanas)

Which Yoga Is Right For You?


YogaStylesWhich yoga is for you? Yoga, by definition, is one thing: union. But the methods used to achieve that union are many. By some counts, there are hundreds of styles. To help you understand what's on offer, we've created this guide to prominent yoga styles.

The Branches of Yoga

In ancient times yoga was often referred to as a tree, a living entity with roots, a trunk, branches, blossoms, and fruit. Hatha yoga is one of six branches; the others include raja, karma, bhakti, jnana, and tantra yoga. Each branch with its unique characteristics and function represents a particular approach to life. Some people may find one particular branch more inviting than another. However, it is important to note that involvement in one of these paths does not preclude activity in any of the others, and in fact you'll find many paths naturally overlapping.

Downward-Facing Dog Pose

Occasionally a body builder will wander into one of my yoga classes in Venice Beach from the famous Gold's Gym down the block (where Arnold Schwarzenegger trained in the 1970s). These students have powerful bodies, but I've noticed that they often struggle with poses like Adho Mukha Svanasana (Downward-Facing Dog Pose) because their muscle mass isn't balanced with flexibility.

Eagle Pose


eagleposeRemember Twister? It was "The game that ties you up in knots!" Introduced in the 1960s, Twister took off after Johnny Carson and Eva Gabor played a risque version of it live on The Tonight Show. The point was for players to stretch in all directions; learn to balance on their hands and feet in strange positions without falling over; interact with friends in a new, slightly outrageous way; and of course, have fun!
Practicing Garudasana (Eagle Pose) is like playing a solitaire version of Twister. You twist and stretch and wrap your limbs around each other, until you can barely tell right from left.

Wide-Legged Standing Forward Bend

How often have you heard people say, "I can't do yoga—I can't even touch my toes"? What they don't realize is that yoga isn't about touching your toes or achieving any other goal; it's about learning to skillfully move your body through its appropriate range of motion. When you practice Prasarita Padottanasana (Wide-Legged Standing Forward Bend)

Find Your Roots

tree pose
One of the most recognizable yoga asanas, Vrksasana (Tree Pose) has been identified in Indian relics dating back to the seventh century. "A figure standing in a one-legged balance is part of a famous stone carving in the town of Mahabalipuram," says Tias Little, the director of YogaSource in Santa Fe, New Mexico. In ancient times, he says, wandering holy men called sadhus would meditate in this posture for long periods of time as a practice of self-discipline.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Supta Padangusthasana

Early in your practice, you're faced with what seems to be a contradiction—as you move into unfamiliar, awkward, and difficult postures, you're asked to let go of tension in your body, mind, and breath. While you struggle to hold the pose your teacher gently reminds you to combine effort and surrender—to be both alert and relaxed at the same time. This is an essential teaching that comes straight from Patanjali's Yoga Sutras (verse II.46, to be exact).

Half Lord of the Fishes


When you take Ardha Matsyendrasana toward the end of a challenging sequence, it can be tempting to relax and use the twist as a way to wind down. But don't let yourself zone out, or you'll miss the gifts this pose has to offer. The real essence of a twist is not the shape of the pose, which can seem fairly easy to assume. It's the action of twisting that brings benefits—the contracting of your torso muscles, the elongating and rotating of your spine, the deepening of your breath. If you work consciously step by step

Raised Stretched-Out Foot Pose


Though it sounds impressive in Sanskrit, Urdhva Prasarita Padasana rendered in English becomes the decidedly clunky "Raised Stretched-Out Foot Pose." The name is much ado about a fairly simple exercise that has deep benefits, but most teachers just call it by its initials. UPP involves nothing more than lying on your back and swinging your extended legs through a slightly less than 90-degree arc, from perpendicular to the floor to nearly—but not quite—parallel, and back again.

Warrior I Pose

Virabhadrasana I (Warrior Pose I) is a vigorous standing pose that demands focus and determination to meet its challenges. The full expression of the pose takes some serious multitasking. It asks you to do several actions at once that seem to pull you in opposite directions: You must lift up while grounding down and press forward while reaching backward.
Although it can sometimes feel like one battle after another, mastering this foundational pose offers great rewards. Your thigh muscles get a workout.

Not All Yoga Is Created Equal


Bharadvajasana I

As studies continue to reveal yoga's many health benefits, this centuries-old Eastern philosophy is fast becoming the new fitness soul mate for workout enthusiasts. Contemporary devotees range from high-powered execs trying to keep hearts beating on a healthy note to image-conscious Hollywood stars striving for sleek physiques. Even prominent athletes are adding yoga to their training regime to develop balanced, injury-free muscles and spines.
Yet to applaud yoga for its physical benefits alone would only diminish what this entire system has to offer as a whole. By practicing yoga on a regular basis

Monday, June 17, 2013

The Meaning of "Namaste"

The gesture Namaste represents the belief that there is a Divine spark within each of us that is located in the heart chakra. The gesture is an acknowledgment of the soul in one by the soul in another. Nama means bow, as means I, and te means you. Therefore, namaste literally means "bow me you" or "I bow to you."
To perform Namaste, we place the hands together at the heart charka, close the eyes, and

Strong Armed

Whether you spend your days typing, driving, playing guitar, or adjusting your yoga students, repeated motions can cause tightness, strain, and repetitive stress injury. Because so many daily activities involve the arms, shoulders, and wrists, says Daren Friesen, director and founder of Chicago's Moksha Yoga Center, you'd be wise to build

Home Stretch


YHC_205_OPENER.jpg
The first day of my two-year teacher training program, I experienced something akin to an existential crisis. It didn't have anything to do with awakening kundalini or realizing my true Self. Sadly, it was much more mundane: It hit when I realized that in order to participate in the program, I had to agree to the mandate to "have your own home practice."
A few days later, when I unrolled my sticky mat at home alone for the first time, I wanted to bolt. Up until then my idea of yoga was attending a class, which is kind of like being chauffeured around town, sitting comfortably in the