Tag Archives: yoga

Canal ommmmm – weekend yoga retreat

Catching up… This is a post from February.

Just one week into our second semester of the school year, I was ready for a break. Fortunately, another teacher, Tiffany, had organized a yoga retreat at the coast for the weekend. Double bonus: It was my birthday!

My actual birthday – Friday, Feb. 22 – was fabulous with a special lunch prepared by my EAL teaching team and the best cake of my life.

After school, I hopped in my car with two friends and took off for Canal Om, a seaside resort near the town of Los Vilos.

The location was stunning, even if the facilities were a bit neglected. Our meals were served by an eccentric female chef, who was possibly a bit obsessed with how each dish positively impacted our bodies. “Legumes are great for your period,” she said. What does that even mean?

Anyway, we ate, drank, soaked (in hot and coooold water), strolled around the gorgeous hills, practiced yoga, meditated, got reiki, and laughed. Just what I needed to kick off the semester.

Look at this place!
I skipped one yoga class to sit at the top of the hill and meditate with the Calm app on my phone. The beach is my happy place.

Rainforest yoga – showered with bliss

I woke up this morning with my calves in knots (bounding up 500 steps will do that to you). I dragged myself out of bed, waited for a break in the rain, and walked to the yoga deck for a 6:30 a.m. class. Although not quite awake, I couldn’t help but appreciate the peaceful setting, and I looked forward to loosening up my tight muscles and stiff joints.

In nearly every asana, I noticed something special.

Standing in a wide-legged forward fold, I turned my upside-down focus to the blooming plants surrounding the spacious gazebo. I watched a hummingbird hover and sip at a huge persimmon-colored trumpet blossom before zipping away. The light rain tip-tapped on the metal roof. Back upright, I looked out at the heavy fog blanketing the Arenal Volcano. Moving into a balancing pose, I fixed my gaze on a fountain in the garden, steadily pouring water into a small pond. By the time we reached savasana, resting pose, torrential rain obscured the view and drowned out the gentle voice of our instructor, Griselda. Lying on my back, I smiled up at the draped white fabric and ornamental lamps hanging from the dark wood rafters before closing my eyes, taking a deep breath, and letting the downpour provide a backdrop for deep relaxation.

At the end of the class, we all enjoyed a cup of tea while waiting for a relatively rain-free moment to head out. Eventually, the deluge dwindled to a drizzle, and I jogged the short distance to meet Tony for breakfast, ready for another Costa Rican adventure.

Yoga, Cats, and Coffee!

Three of my favorite things came together today in a couple of joyful hours at El Mundo de Dali, a cat café in Santiago.

The café features a two-story cat playground, complete with towers, hammocks, scratching posts, observation platforms, toys, and furniture, all for the pleasure of the 10 or so furry friends who presently call the place home. Rescue cats are dewormed, sterilized, vaccinated and offered up for adoption. In the meantime, they live in a feline fantasy world.

After rubbing hand sanitizer on our hands and disinfecting our shoes, we entered through the café into the cat casa, where the kitties were ready for some play time. Some planted themselves demurely on a mat and watched the action while others chased toys or attacked our shoe laces. A few immediately moved in for some cuddles. A spritz of catnip spray on our mats made some cats wild with ecstacy (but led to collateral damage evidenced by chunks of rubber scattered about).

The upstairs loft space includes these platforms for cats to check out the action below.

This brilliant event is the brainchild of Kristen VanderVoort, an expat and certified yoga teacher living in Santiago. She led a chill vinyasa class interrupted only occasionally by cat interference.

One black-and-white sweetie named Chaplin (for his iconic little mustache) alternated between dashing, flipping, spinning around to chase the teaser toys and then hunkering down in someone’s folded jacket or even on one girl’s legs during “up dog.” Nina, a spitfire and a bit of a bully to the other cats, was nosing around my bag during a vinyasa, but when I lowered into “chaturanga,” she launched herself claws-out onto my head. “Ouch!” I exclaimed with surprise, but really Nina was adorable, so I didn’t mind. Sombra posed on Nancy’s mat as she pushed back into “downward facing dog.”

Lying on our backs for some final twists, this was my view. Martin, a permanent resident of the café, had a great seat for watching the yoga class.

After yoga, the café workers brought in stools and low tables for coffee and cat-themed treats.

Then we had a little lesson on making origami cats. Cheesy but fun.

As the event wound down, I went up to the loft and hung out a bit with these two lovelies.

Café cats who’ve been adopted.

Other shots from our visit.

Play time! Hard to know where Martin ends and Moise starts.

A photo of Jackson Galaxy, a big celebrity in cat lady circles. Check out his youtube channel.

When I got home, Ella sniffed my yoga mat, gave me the stink-eye and walked around the house with her tail fluffed up for a while. It took a while to convince her that she’s the only cat for me.

Still, I can’t wait for the next Yoga, Cats, and Coffee!

Back on the mat – finding yoga inspiration in Chile

In recent months, two incredible yoginis have come into my life. Their powerful classes and inspirational words have me back on the mat and recommitted to making yoga a priority. Unfortunately for the English-speaking yoga community of Santiago, both ladies are leaving soon. Fiona is moving home to Canada, and Charlotte is moving to Mexico. I feel immense gratitude for the opportunities to laugh and learn with them.

The weekend of March 23-25, Fiona and Charlotte offered a yoga retreat in Pichilemu, a beach town about three hours from Santiago. I had registered for the retreat, but then I almost skipped it after making last-minute plans to spend Easter with my parents in Florida. Fortunately, I didn’t skip it, and I had the best weekend in recent memory.

Just steps from the retreat center, Conviento de Lobos, we could clamber over boulders, stroll on the long sandy beach, or dip our toes in the chilly Pacific Ocean.

Our accommodations were basic. I slept in the top bunk in a room shared with two friends. We practiced yoga in a spacious yurt with the sound of crashing waves filling the silence. Meals, served at a long table in the common area, comprised scrumptious vegetarian fare featuring seasonal food from the onsite organic garden.

Such a gorgeous setting.

This huge tree arched over the path between the lodges and the common area.

Yoga in the yurt. (Photo courtesy of Charlotte)

Some of us took a surfing class …

… while some of us merely waded and instantly lost all feeling in our legs.

Getting attacked by a massive sea snake!

JK … it was really just this stuff, a type of sea weed used in cooking.

A few weeks later, on April 7, my yoga sheroes led a class at Wanderlust Santiago 2018.

Here they are in all their awesomeness. Charlotte, left; Fiona, right.

Loving their class.

Other highlights of the day included a 5K walk, a meditation class in Spanish, a climbing wall, and a variety of healthy snack and drink samples. I wanted to try the slack line and the hammock yoga, but I couldn’t be bothered to stand in the lines.

An overcast morning evolved into a gorgeous sunny day.

At the starting line for the 5K, which Nancy and I walked.

Lina and I hit the wall.

With this many yogis in a space, you know there’s going to be an awesome energy.

Wanderlust drone photo.

Last week, my friend Nancy and I attended Fiona’s Yoga & Wine/Food Pairing event, which took place at Sala Indriya, a beautiful studio in Santiago’s funky Barrio Italia district. Fiona led a class combining power flow and yin yoga, followed by a gathering on the restaurant patio downstairs. We sipped wine, ate tasty snacks, and tried to muster enough sophistication to discuss the wine and food pairings. But mostly we just sipped wine, ate tasty snacks, and laughed a lot.

I try not to think about the impending departure of Fiona and Charlotte, but I know my life is richer for having known them.

Yoga in India – omnipresent yet elusive

India is the home of yoga. People come from all over the world to study yoga here. You can’t throw a scented candle in this city without hitting an ashram or yoga center. And yet … I just couldn’t seem to find what I was looking for.

Maybe I’ve been spoiled by all the mutant yoga in the States: Anusara, Yin, Slow Flow … with the hip music, clean props and blankets, gentle voices, supportive comments and eucalyptus-scented cream rubbed on my temples during savasana. I thought I would appreciate frills-free get-back-to-the-roots yoga, but apparently I like frills.

First, I enrolled in a Bikram Yoga class taught by an American instructor two evenings a week at school. I had tried Bikram before and couldn’t cope with the nonstop instructions (which I think is intentional to maintain the correct flow and timing of postures), but I figured it was better than nothing. After just a couple weeks, I bailed. The talking still annoyed me, but even more un-doable were the long days. Delhi’s heavy traffic precludes heading home after school when you know you have to return a few hours later, so I would just stay and work or socialize until 6:30 p.m. when yoga started and then get home around 8 p.m. Exhausting.

Tony and I then tried Active Yoga, which has branches all over Delhi. We were optimistic when we realized one branch was just a block from our house in the basement of an apartment building. When we entered the studio, the instructor immediately accosted us to buy a membership, but we insisted on trying a class first. He told us to set aside our yoga mats. Instead, padded mats were provided for the class, which included marching back and forth (two steps each way … weird), getting into a pose and then bouncing, running in place, and lots of push-ups. We did end in savasana, “corpse pose,” but the instructor yelled at us the whole time.

Next, I tried yoga after school with a teacher who trained in the Sivananda tradition. It was fine, but … meh … I couldn’t muster the enthusiasm to return.

For awhile, two girlfriends and I practiced yoga with a popular teacher, Raju, on Sunday mornings. Quite a character, she focused extensively on breathing and getting us to activate our “urinary muscle.” It was the best instruction I’ve ever had in “mula bandha,” a fundamental technique. However, I longed for a yoga practice with a little more emphasis on the asanas, eager to stretch out my entire body.

Finally, a friend from water aerobics said, “I have a great yoga teacher.”
(a) Yes, I go to water aerobics. That’s another story.
(b) I didn’t really believe her.

Fortunately, my friend had more perseverance than I do and arranged for me to attend her private class. I met Rita, a lovely gentle woman who teaches in her tiny basement space with room for only six mats. She did the whole practice with us, unlike Stateside yoga, where teachers often roam the room while giving instructions. She also counted off every movement. “Inhale one, exhale one.” The practice felt a bit calisthenic, different from what I thought I wanted, but not in a bad way. My joints felt looser, my muscles longer, my mind calmer. At the end of the class, we all sat together and enjoyed hot tea and homemade cookies. Again, not a typical experience in Michigan.

Rita told us that she had wanted to remodel and expand her studio, but she was discouraged by none other than the Dalai Lama himself. Some of her students were U.S. diplomats hosting the Buddhist spiritual leader, so they brought him to her studio to practice yoga. “He sat here and prayed, although I couldn’t understand his language,” she said. “Afterwards, he told me to take down all the mirrors and posters. He said I shouldn’t knock down the wall because it was a healing place.” Strangely, it really does feel like a healing place with a soothing energy.

Since returning to India, Tony has also craved yoga, so I invited him to join me at a class with Rita. The two of us and an Israeli lady named Yanna practiced with Rita Saturday morning. Tony had to change spots several times or risk smacking a sconce or whacking his hands in the ceiling fan at the start of a sun salutation. However, when we headed back out into the steamy Delhi air, he said, “That was probably my favorite yoga class of all time.” Maybe because of the cookies.

It takes about 15 minutes by car to reach Rita’s home early on a Saturday, but we live on either end of the Aravalli Biodiversity Park path, so we may start walking the 2.5 kilometers through real nature (!) to reach our class each week.

When I think back to summer in Michigan with all the trails and clean air and Americanized yoga that we love so much, I realize how big this void has been in our Delhi lives. I have made a commitment to finding more balance in my life this school year, and I think Rita may just help me do that.

Namaste.

Cleansing my chakras

I can’t believe I forgot to blog about this recent energy workshop! It took place on the same day that our high school girls won the basketball championship and my Lao friend Johnny got married. So I guess my brain was full. Anyway, here it is.

The workshop took place in my village at Healing Mudras and was led by visiting energy guru, Guy, who lives in Chiang Mai, Thailand. It alternated between uber-cheesy and nice. We did an awkward group dance to get the energy flowing, and the owner of Healing Mudras offered some fluffy words about our power to transform the world with energy.

But then we made an energy ball, which I loved. I’ve done this before in yoga. You sit on the floor and inhale your arms up with your hands facing each other. Visualize a big ball of energy pulsating against your hands. It really works! Sometimes I like to squeeze the energy ball and imagine all the energy dripping down over my whole body.

We also participated in a group meditation: First, some of us sat in a circle while people took turns hovering their hands above our heads. I really tried to absorb their energy, but the only person who really zapped me was my friend Whetu. I honestly felt a heavy warm vibe when she energized me. Cool. Next, I joined the standing circle and returned the favor to those sitting down. I hope I didn’t kill the collective buzz when I paused to snap some photos.

Here’s a link to Guy’s website – Lanna Yoga, where he posted a video from the energy workshop.

Energy duck duck goose.
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I skipped out of the workshop early to watch the girls’ basketball championship game. I gave the team my energy ball, which clearly gave them to boost they needed to win the game!

Yoga inspiration

As international teachers and travelers, we can’t keep track of the people who skitter in and out of our lives. Some encounters are short, entertaining and casual, such as a chat with tourists who heave their oversized backpacks in the corner of the fruit shake shop and share their travel stories. Other encounters have an enduring impact. In this post, I introduce you to Lily Russo, a yoga teacher who visited Vientiane recently and changed my life.

When we returned to Laos after our month-long winter break, I received an email from the Vientiane Yoga Studio saying there would be a guest teacher for the next couple weeks. After just one class with Lily, Tony and I both developed a big crush.

Colorful feminine tattoos devoid of dark outlines embellished her arms – rainbow finches, symbolizing her parents and her brother, on one arm, and elegant blooming flowers on the other. Her soothing voice offered specific instructions to attain proper alignment in the asanas while making each person in the class feel like we were doing everything just exactly right. Her vinyasa-flow-style classes challenged us to find our edge, to focus on the breath, to revel in our strength and flexibility. Energizing music, often lyrical takes on traditional mantras, accompanied her practice. Emerging from savasana at the end of each class, I always felt happier and more relaxed than I did at the start.

For three weeks, I didn’t miss a class with Lily. I also caught myself chanting softly and practicing pranayama (breathing exercises) at school. I felt joyful and light, even when faced with life’s daily frustrations. Patience, not usually an attribute assigned to me, suddenly came quite easily.
A week after Lily’s departure, I still feel the inner peace she brought to our hectic little city. My history of on-again off-again yoga obsession suggests I’m unlikely to maintain that gentle connection. But I hope I can.

Lily and her husband, Chris, left Laos to travel through Thailand and later up through Nepal and India. They plan to arrive in northern India about the same time Tony and I move to New Delhi, so we’re keeping in touch. (If she sees this blog post, she may start to worry that I’m a stalker. But I swear, I just deeply appreciated her reminder of yoga’s transformative power.)

This week, a new guest teacher arrived with her own brand of inspiration. Toni, a lovely yogini from England, leads strong hatha classes followed by wonderful restorative yoga. Unfortunately, she’s only here for two weeks. If you know of any fantastic traveling yoga teachers, please send them to Vientiane!

Following Lily’s last yoga class, she invited us to play on a slack line she had rigged up behind the studio. I had never heard of a slack line, but according to the rest of the ladies, they are incredibly popular in parts of Europe, Australia and the U.S. It’s basically a tightrope strung a couple feet off the ground. Here are a few photos.

Lily offers some slack-lining tips.
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Getting on the line is the scariest part.
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Such concentration! But I couldn’t do it without spotters.
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