Archive for the ‘satyananda’ Tag

the Real Exam

On Tuesday I am going to hold a one hour class in Danish to a group of retired people. This is the first time I teach yoga in Danish and this is the first time I hold a complete lecture in front of a big group. I have the structure for the lecture on paper and I have done some research into the Danish language but still I am really nervous. A little step for humanity but a big one for me. Cross your fingers please !

my first yoga instruction video

Most of us probably associate yoga with postures that takes years to master and you have to be born with a rubber body. Yoga is for everyone and this practice may look simple but it will take a long time to master. The most important thing is that you do it with awareness.

feedback is welcome

Teaching yoga in a small scale – the first month

This year have been totally fantastic ! I got the chance to go to a Teaching Training Course, TTC in Yoga and I have had the chance to teach yoga when I came back from India ! it turned out exactly how I wanted it to be and I am so grateful.

I had the intention to start teaching yoga in a small scale and the pieces of the puzzle felt together nicely. Students showed up from unexpected places and situations I was worried about beforehand got a very nice ending.

Before going to India I did not know the  TTC would have so much focus on the importance of teaching yoga to children and now when I look back at it it makes perfect sense. I teach yoga to my girlfriends daughter  in a fun way and for me it is a chance to discover how much fun yoga can be. Since me and my girlfriend had just started to date when I went to  India for 4 weeks I was not sure how it was going to be when I got back. As a happy surprise she is really interested in what I do and she supports me 100 %.

My girlfriend visited me for a week and and she wanted to learn some relaxation techniques and she also wanted to
have a reminder about yoga techniques. I planned a class consisting of 3 exercises from the Pawanmuktasana series followed by pranayama and then relaxation. Since I know her health situation I did not give a full health- questionnaire which I would do in a class. Outside of the lecture I played a cd I bought in India to her with Anuradha Paudwal & Kavita Puadwal.

First class was a short yoga nidra :

  1. Preparation for the practice
  2. Resolve
  3. Body rotation
  4. Breath awareness
  5. Externalisation / Ending the practice

Second class

instruction during the whole class was

” do it slowly and with awareness and in a speed you feel comfortable with. If you feel pain in any of the movements stop the practice or take it much slower. it is not about how far you can reach in each asana. It is about doing the
practice with awareness and feeling your body from within. “

  1. initial very short relaxation and tuning into the class in
    Shavasana
  2. Skandha Chakra – shoulder socket rotation and then sitting for some time afterwards and feel the effect of the practice
  3. Poorna Titali Asana – full butterfly and then sitting for some time afterwards and feel the effect of the practice
  4. Chakki Chalanasana – churning the mill and then sitting for some time afterwards and feel the effect of the practice
  5. Jhulana Lurhakanasana – rocking and rolling
    feeling the effects of the practice in shavasana
  6. Gradual introduction to yogic breathing. first abdominal
    breathing , chest breathing , clavicular breathing and then together.
  7. Checking if some nostril is blocked before the practice
  8. First stage/ preparatory practice with nadi shodhana pranayama with: 5 inhale and exhale through left nostril , 5 inhale and exhale through right nostril and then 5 inhale and exhale both nostrils. Then sitting for some time afterwards and feeling the effect of the pranayama and feeling the natural breath
  9. Short relaxation with listening to sounds and body/breath

awareness. I gave a recap, not the full instructions for each asana
but a short description, of what practices we have done. I gave the
instructions to visualize/remember how it felt doing the practices.

feedback: We talked some time afterwards and I realised two mistakes.
Instead of doing full butterfly I should have done Ardha Titali Asana
- half butterfly and I should have stayed with abdominal breathing as
the first pranayama. I forgot one asana in the short ending relaxation
when we went through the postures mentally. she wanted me to teach her
again and she was happy with the class in general so I guess I made
some things right :)

Third lesson

I include the instructions I gave on top of the ones given in APMB.

a general note: I watched my student all the time and whenever I
noticed that she looked a bit tensed I repeated ” do the practice so
that it feels comfortable for you. if it feels better to do smaller
circles then do that. the most important thing is that you are aware
of the movement and that it feels good. ” when it comes to repetitions
I said the instruction of the prescribed number first and then a bit
into the practice I said ” whenever you feel that you have done enough
of this practice let your arms relax and sit in the base position”.

  1. shavasana – I instructed my student to start in Shavasana on her
    own and feel her body from inside and feel the breath as she
    remembered it from yesterday. So I let her lay down for a while with
    some time to try to remember how the short relaxation is done. then I
    started to give instructions “feel how your body is laying down on the
    floor” short body awareness “feel your body from head to toes and
    notice if there are some tension somewhere.  and breath awareness and
    then ” now prepare yourself that you are going to do a session of
    asanas and pranayama. “- to tune in to the yoga lecture
    “when you feel ready open your eyes and sit up in a comfortable
    meditation posture”
    when the student is sitting up “now we are going to practice the neck
    movements”
  2. greeva sanchalana – neck movements
    after the student have done the practice for some time “close your
    eyes and feel the movement from within, feel the neck area and the
    shoulders”, “if there is pain in a position stop there and feel the
    pain from within”. “do the practice slowly and with awareness”
    after the student have finished the practice “sit with closed eyes for
    a moment and feel the neck and shoulders after this practice. how do
    this area feel ?” – similar instructions I give after each asana and I
    tell the student to notice the area of the body that is affected by
    this asana.
  3. manibandha chakra – wrist joint rotation
  4. goolf chakra – ankle rotation
  5. Skandha Chakra – shoulder socket rotation
    “how are you doing ? are you OK ? ” here the student said she had some
    pain / strain in her back so I changed the order of my scheduled plan
    and instead of doing ardha titali Asana next I gave the instructions
    for rocking and rolling.
  6. jhulana lurhakanasana – rocking and rolling
  7. Ardha Titali Asana – half butterfly
  8. Abdominal Breathing in Shavasana
  9. Nadi Shodana – step one. One round in a comfortable meditation pose with the back straight.
    - 5 inhale and exhale through left nostril ,
    - 5 inhale and exhale through right nostril
    - 5 inhale and exhale both nostrils.
    “sit for a while and let your breath come back to normal breathing.
    Feel your stomach. feel how the stomach is expanding when you inhale
    and contracts when you exhale. it is a normal breathing and you do not
    affect it in any way. when the breathing is totally relaxed and you
    feel ready for it open your eyes”
  10. Shavasana – relaxation with listening to sounds, body awareness and breath
    awareness. instruction to students ” go through the practises we did
    today and feel how they affected your body. now feel your body from
    inside and feel if there is some difference in your body. Now go back
    even further in the day and remember your day. what you did in the
    morning and what happened during the day. was there something that
    made you really happy or was there something that made you
    frustrated ? “. then return to your body and feel it from inside and
    then remember how the room around you looks start to move your body as
    you would do when you wake up in the morning …

Advertisement for yoga lecture and fourth lesson


I am living in a big house together with 7 other people and I wrote a note that I will be having a free lecture in yoga for those who are interested. I wrote that no previous experience is needed and it is going to be simple practices for the back, neck and shoulders. I just thought about the aspect of doing something for the neighbour. In
the house we cook food for each other and we are responsible for different tasks. You could say it is a small ashram with not so strict rules.

fourth lesson

I held a lecture to one of the people in my house after he answered to my advertisement. My first male
student since I arrived back from India and he is roughly my age and we know each other since we live in the same house.

He said he wanted postures for the back and I know he have done some yoga before but I made the decision to go with a beginners class as close as possible to what our wonderful teacher told us in Rikhia Peeth. People say they want advanced postures but when I teach Pawanmuktasana Series and stress the importance of doing it slow and with awareness they really like it in the end.  I asked before the class if my student have some back pain or other things he take medications for and he said he have had some back pain but that it was fine now.

I asked him already in the base position – Prarambhik Sthiti how he is feeling and I am happy I asked because he felt pain in the arms and I tried to be aware of this. I told him to stop whenever there was pain and to change sitting position for example. I also made clear that the most important thing is the awareness and he should do it so it is
comfortable for him.

This lecture was held at 21:15 in the evening depending on work schedules etc. and I pointed out to him that the best time is to do the practice is in the morning according to tradition. At the same time we have to accept reality and do the best out of it.

I could really see that he got more relaxed when I made sure that it is the best to do the asanas slowly and with awareness.

This is the program I prepared before the class:

all dynamic postures are from Pawanmuktasana Part 1

  1. Initial relaxation in Shavasana
  2. Goolf Naman – Ankle bending
  3. Goolf Chakra – Ankle rotation
  4. Ardha Titali Asana - Half Butterfly. I said before the half Butterfly that we hold a lot of tension in the hips and thighs and it affects our posture and back. With the half butterfly we loosen up the knees and hips. “sit for a while and feel the effect of the posture you just did”
  5. Skandha Chakra -Shoulder Socket Rotation . before shoulder rotation I said this is a practice which is really good for when you have been sitting in front of a computer for a long time or similar.
  6. Natural Breathing in Shavasana.  I talked a little bit about how beneficial it is to lay down in shavasana and do some awareness on the natural breath before sleeping
  7. abdominal breathing in Shavasana
  8. Relaxation in Shavasana -  with body awareness , breath awareness and finally visualisation of all the practices we did today. externalisation

Feedback: He said he was really happy with the lecture and slept very good during the night. He especially mentioned that he was very pleased there was no goal like you have to be able to sit in a perfect Padmasana or similar. I mentioned that I will probably give this lecture again when I am back from Germany and more people have the possibility to attend. He said he would like to have the same lecture several times.

Yoga lectures for a child

After giving 5 lectures to my girlfriend in yoga I started to feel that her daughter, 7 years old was left out and actually she asked about if I could teach her some breathing exercises and postures. I read the  Yoga Education for Children recently and I received teaching in how to educate children in Yoga on the TTC in Rikhia Peeth but still I felt nervous about it since it is such a big responsibility.

I started to teach some easy yoga practices to my girlfriends daughter. The asanas I introduced are skandha chakra – shoulder socket rotation, greeva sanchalana – neck movements , ardha titali asana – half
butterfly. I had a rough idea of how to introduce these postures but at the same time I wanted to do it in small fragments which we later could put together into a series of postures. I wanted to see how she reacted to these postures and if it could be done in a fun way.

It all began when we were in the living room and we danced/jumped around to stupid music on the radio and she showed me moves she learned in Judo for warming up. That was the first point where I showed her some of the yoga practices from pawanmuktasana part 1. She did it really quickly and I repeated several times “do it slower and
with awareness”. I decided that it was the wrong point to do slow yoga since she was excited after dancing/jumping around.

Later in the evening her daughter came down to me in the living room to say goodnight and I noticed she was much more calm at this moment and I took the chance to explain Skandha Chakra – Shoulder Socket Rotation again and now she did it very nicely with a slow movement and big circles. I repeated the instructions for Greeva Sanchalana – neck movements and Ardha Titali Asana – half butterfly . To my surprise she ran away looking at something that caught her attention in the middle of everything. I realise that you really have to talk to the child all
the time to keep them in the yoga practice. When her mother came down to pick her up  I told her to show the asanas she had just done to her mother. She was really proud to show it and I reminded her of the starting
positions but the rest she remembered. I was really surprise how enthusiastic she was after the yoga practices. She found the book Yoga Education for Children on the table and she wanted to do the
asanas she saw on the pictures.

I felt very happy in evening and at the same time a bit surprised how open children seems to be to dynamic yoga postures. I also noticed how easy it is for them to understand pictures compared to text.

The next day my girlfriends daughter arrived back from her violin lessons and wanted to see TV and I said that first we are going to do a yoga practice. I started to show her Surya Namaskar – sun salutation and she started doing it by looking at what I did. I told her to sit in the sofa and I did the practice with her in the audience but very soon she was on her feet and this time it was much easier for her to follow since it was the second round . In total we did 2 rounds and we were both laughing and I did not force her to do it very strictly and to my surprise she corrected the posture herself and she remembered which leg to put forward when we did the second part of the round.

So much fun to teach yoga to children and at the same time it is demanding.

Review: Teacher Training Course in Rikhia Peeth , India

(c) Michael Howden

One of the students showing more advanced practices that he learnt elsewhere. photo: Michael Howden

Bihar School of Yoga offers an intense 3 weeks workshop for people interested in teaching yoga.  To be honest it felt more like a pilgrimage than participating in a course. For 11 years I practised yoga with the help of books containing teaching from Satyananda and I had teachers in Sweden and Denmark who got their teaching directly or indirectly from Satyananda.  I had a strong urge to see this man with my own eyes. What really struck me is how different this place is from the ashrams in Sweden. We sit on the floor when we eat, we are surrounded by people from the village when we sing kirtans, we participate in serving  food to kids from the village. The school in India is so closely connected to the surrounding. The singing and seminars in the evening is open to anyone and having kids climbing on you when you sit in a meditation pose was a new experience to me. Kids are spontaneous and seeing them dance classical Indian themes on the stage was such a joy. Some of the women on our course were teaching Computer Science and English to the kids from the surrounding area. One evening a young girl told the story of how life was in this area before the yoga school came. My heart melted when I heard about how people used to live for days without food in this area and now they got

 dance

Almost every evening we sang together. Here children from the village are performing a classical Indian Dance. photo: Michael Howden

education through the yoga school and they can make a living on the crafts they learned when working for the yoga school. People from the village came into the school during my stay and they worked hard with different tasks in the gardens etc. 

I learned from this course that yoga is very closely related to helping your fellow man in every way you can.

I got the chance to talk to Swami Satsangi and Swami Satyananda himself gave a lecture/speech for us one day. Satsangi made the strongest impression on me with her speech about how greed  is something we have to accept within ourselves since it is the reason why we are alive. Acceptance and awareness seems to be the keywords in this tradition.  

I have to admit that I had a flu during this course which I should have gone to a doctor with much earlier. The climate itself is very different from where I grew up and yoga is not a cure for everything I have to point out. The hygiene in the ashram is very good and I drank the tap water all the way through the course and off course my stomach was unbalanced once in a while and I ate tablets daily to keep the bacteria in shape in the stomach. On the negative side I am not a big fan of polished rice and we got this daily and usually 2-3 times a day.

During the course the very colourfull "holi" festival took place all over India. Including our ashram photo: Michael Howden

During the course the very colourfull "holi" festival took place all over India and even inside the ashram people threw colour on each other this day. Photo : Michael Howden

I recommend this course to people who have been practicing yoga for many years and feel the urge to take the next step and begin teaching. I started teaching myself in a small scale straight after the course and I feel this is an important turning point in my life. You get the essentials for teaching on a beginners level and you get to lead 4 lectures in the course.

What i realise now 1,5 months after the course is that an essential part of the yoga teaching course is missing. The missing link is your own Sadhana. I notice a big difference in my own life when I do my schedule consisting of The Plough, the Bridge, the Headstand etc.  After 3 weeks of neck movements, shoulder joint rotations etc. I felt a big urge to go back to my own sadhana which there was no space and time for in Rikhia Peeth.  When I started to teach in a small scale I realised that when I spend 2 hours preparing a lecture and then 45 minutes on giving the lecture I felt happy that I made it but also very drained from creativity and energy in the evening. The balance between your own practice and your teaching  is important and as they say in the aeroplanes ”if you are in a plane together with a small child you first put on the oxygen to yourself in case of an emergency” . You are of no help to others if you are in bad shape !

In the beginning of the course I did my own practice/sadhana in my room and this was not a good place to do asanas I quickly realised. I was lucky enough to have my own room, most people where 2 persons in this space, but even then there was very little space for doing headstand for example. Then the addition of  people talking to late in the night and slamming doors etc.

Another thing which irritated me a bit was that there are no requirements for participating on this course. Some people had only done asana and pranayama for a few month and there was no real exam as such. Sure you get a certificate that you are a yoga teacher after this course but it is no way a guarantee that you have a deep knowledge of Yoga. I find this a bit strange since most serious yoga teacher courses with the Satyananda School in Europe run for  2-3 years where you have regular stays in an Ashram. The reason for this is maybe that there already exist a lot of university programs on yoga in India in case you want to go in depth with the asanas and the pranayama.

When i read the books by Satyananda on hatha yoga i got the impression that the Bihar School of Yoga is not connected to a specific religion but this is something I have to reconsider. On the course we read from the Bhagavad Gita and other scriptures and we used mantras. My personal view is that you can find knowledge and wisdom in the Qur’an, the Bible and Norse mythology as well.  I am bit fed up with the Superstition around Sanskrit. I say superstition because there is no conclusive evidence that the vibrations from talking sanskrit is really doing anything.  Sure it is fine with me if we had at least sung something in English when the course is said to be conducted in English. As the course is now it feels like it is mostly catering towards Indian people.

In general I found it really hard to get knowledge around this course and the price was 4 times more when I actually arrived on site compared to what was said on telephone. I pay 4 times more because i am not an Indian ! This is a problem for several reasons since you have to bring cash to the ashram and it is quite complicated and time consuming to get a permision to go to a cash machine.

I try to write this review as critical as possible and i have to add that I met a lot of wonderful people on this course and there were a lot of fun !

Books I really recommend for the serious sadhaka are Asana Pranayama Mudra Bandha , Prana Pranayama Prana Vidya, Kundalini Tantra, A Systematic Course in the Ancient Tantric Techniques of Yoga and Kriya

yoga teacher training in Rikhia peeth , India – Part 1

alternative title: amazing weight loss method made me loose 8 kilos in 4 weeks

I arrive in Delhi and thought I was going to be prepared since this is my second visit.  Imediately I have a taxi driver grabbing my arm and trying to sell me a ride. I offer some advice to a doctor student from Kenya who is in Delhi for his first time and we decide to share a prepaid taxi. I remember thinking ” what am I doing here ?” during the intense and totally unsafe ride into town. Now I remember Indian traffic. Honking , honking and then some more honking. I decide to scout the New Delhi train station to see how it is organised. I am really close to fall for a scam at my arrival and I dodge it by taking aim at a military guy in uniform and insisting on talking with him. In the tourist office I talk to a guy from United States and I am so happy having another westerner to talk to right now. We decide to have lunch together and decide to go to a place called The banana Leaf.  almost every Indian person who wants to talk to us on the street is offering us help on finding the tourist office. From Lonely Planet I know this is a common scam to get you to visit a travel agent where “the street seller” get commission. An Indian guy gets really confused when I offer to show him the nearest tourist office :)

the information boards is not updating in the train station and I have to walk around quite a bit with my big back pack to get on the right train. Well on board I am so happy that I bough a first class ticket and I really enjoy the silence and polite atmosphere. The train journey is smooth and one of the passengers which I talked to the previous day starts to do yoga in the morning. I think he does it to show me since he yesterday referred to himself as a master of yoga.

I arrive in Deoghar and the athmosphere is different here and people are not so aggresive in selling you things. Several times I notice that they do not even take any extra money because you are a westerner. But a thing that makes it a bit more complicated is that very few people know a little bit of english and I am the only westerner werever I go. The whole lesson in trust is completed when I arrive at the ashram and there is no sign in English. I have arrived at the right place and everybody is friendly. I arrive early and a man named “Pragia” is showing me my room. He is from Denmark and have been in the ashram for 8 years. The room is basic and clean. there are blankets and pillows availible so bringing a sleeping bag was not really nescessary.

IT efficiency contradicts spiritual awakening ?

I am very excited to get to the yoga ashram and already before the plane have even left the airport I have learned some valuable lessons in patience and how to react to the unknown. With a smile on your face and politeness you can get very far and this is something I will try to have with me all the way trough this journey ! May I be humble even in situations where I feel nervous and scared.

After several days of trying to call Bihar School of Yoga, BSY, in Rikhia I feel that  my patience is very well tested at this point in time and I have not even arrived in India yet. My rational intellectual westernised mind wants the latest IT solutions all the time. First of all they have decided to not use e-mail, a technology that has been standardised since 1982 . What is the reason for this ? OK yesterday I sent a fax or rather I tried to send a fax to the Bihar School of Yoga head quarter. The lady in the Secretary position for all the courses kindly said that the fax will arrive next week due to the fax arriving at another place. Next week ? I have already arrived at the ashram by next week. Then she told me she could do nothing about helping me to deliver this information to the right person since the course is with another institution. The problem when I call the right institution is that usually there is nobody picking up the phone. If somebody answers the line it can be broken  in a matter of seconds or minutes without warning and then I am stuck with not getting through again. English is not my first language and using the Spelling alphabet takes time over a bad line and I am usually in the middle of  stating who I am and I have not even got to the subject when the line is broken.  Please, Internet was built to sustain a nuclear war so please let me send an e-mail !  At the same time it could be like a quest to teach me how to trust my gut feeling and have trust in the fact that there are a lot of friendly and helpfull people in India and me with all my consumer products is a spoiled brat. I have the possibility to buy vaccination most Indians can not afford and I can travel in first class on the train. I want to turn this around and also think about what I can offer on my journey. I should take every opportunity to pay a bit extra for something that feels great in the heart and will help the rest of the world to have the luxury I have been born into. Maybe I can give some of my knowledge about IT to them ? Or at least I would like to to do that. The luxury of IT makes it possible for me to practice yoga several hours every day and spend just a few minutes on fixing a lot of tasks that used to be time consuming in the past. I rather sit in lotus position than stand in line at the post office to pay my bills.

I was very suprised in a good way that Satyananda himself is writing a blog , Satyananda’s Blog

My advice for somebody who want to travel to the BSY centre would  be to plan at least some months ahead if you live on another continent like I do.  Write them a letter in ordinary mail, and make a copy of this,  including the following information:

  • your arrival time at the course centre and your departure time (check out with train schedules at the Indian Railway homepage to make sure there is a train going at the weekday you want to travel. Information on train traveling in India. For the 3 week yoga teaching course they want you to be at the course centre at noon the day before the official start date)
  • which course you apply for and which dates it will take place and at what location
  • all kinds of contact information to you like e-mail, telephone and an ordinary post address
  • specific questions you want to have answered regarding what to bring etc. in your return mail

In general make sure to get down all the information you would think is hard to deliver on a telephone line with the above restrictions. Include an envelope for the answers with your full address and with enough stamps to pay for the journey back to you. At the same time fax them the same information to the fax numbers given and not the ones saying both fax/telephone. Then after aprox  3 weeks, the time taken for a normal letter to arrive is pretty long and easy to forget,  call them.  Remember this is probably another time zone from where you live so please try to match their office hours. The office hours at the rikhia office is between 10:00-16:00 for example and will be between 5:30 – 11:30 in Denmark. use time and date if you are lazy like me to find out what the time is right now in Delhi.  Check that your information have arrived and if you have a confirmation on the course ? The confirmation it self will take some days when your mail/fax have arrived so estimate for this.

Before I even contacted Bihar School of Yoga the first time I considered using a service like Your Man in India
to contact them. Now with some experience of outsourcing to India I think I made the right decision to avoid it. That would have added more confusion and more delay probably. If you already have a well established contact in India you can probably send them the application letter as an e-mail and ask them to print it out and send it to BSY.  To get a contact person/assistant who is reliable with an outsourcing company like Your Man in India or Brickwork India will take weeks if you are a new customer or at least that is my experience and then you have the additional waiting time on e-mails from them once you are a customer.

I hope you got some valuable information out of this post and my intention with this post was to show you how it works from my experience so that you can avoid the pitfalls and have a really pleasant travel to the extremely beautiful country that is India. I will get back with more information after my course is over and if it is even half as a good as the incredible books they have published in this place I am well pleased.