Monday, July 25, 2011

Where did Thai Yoga Therapy come from?

The seventh (and last) law of yoga is The Law of Dharma. We all have a purpose in Life. We all have unique abilities and our own way of expressing them. There are needs in this world for which our specific talents are ideally suited, and when the world’s needs are matched with the creative expression of our talents, our purpose—our dharma—is realized.
            The practice of yoga provides a direct mechanism to release energy blockages in the body (thai therapy does this also on a bigger level). When obstacles to the flow of our vital energy are removed, we become capable of expressing more expanded aspects of our self. Increasing compassion, wisdom, and playfulness are evidence that your life is flowing in accordance with the Law of Dharma.
            The history of Traditional Thai Partner Yoga dates back about 2500 years ago, along with the introduction of Buddhism from India into Thailand. It became one of four branches of traditional medicine in Thailand. Herbs, Nutrition, Spiritual Practice and Nuad bo-Rarn (Thai Partner Yoga Therapy) which means "ancient body of work"
             Around the second century B.C.E, there was a movement of medicinal practices into Thailand that accompanied the migration of monks and Ayurvedic doctors from India to Thailand around this same time.
Nuad bo Rarn developed with in the walls of Buddhist monasteries and temples.
               Traditionally, when there was disharmony in a villager's life, whether it be physical, mental, emotional, spiritual, they would seek relief from suffering from a monk within the wallls of the temple. Prior to practicing Nuad bo Rarn, the monk would have undergone deep mind, body, spiritual study and transformation in order to practice this type of healing. It is impossible to separate TPYT from the spirituality of its beginnings. The most predominate aspect of TPYT is that it is first and foremost a "spiritual Practice". The Bodhi Yoga philosophy roots TPYT in Yoga and Ayurveda, rather than massage. Thus, when practiced from it's original perspective, it is first and foremost a form of Ayurvedic Partner Yoga.
http://www.gobodhi.com/

Monday, July 18, 2011

The second weekend of thai therapy class

I finished my second weekend of thai therapy classes. The 1st weekend we learned about the Marmas and how they are holding places for stress and illness, they are like pressure points and a Thai therapist works them like acupressure.
The second week we learned about the Sen (Energy) lines and how to run those to help people feel better.
next week I'll talk more about where thai yoga therapy came from. this week I want to finish talking about the seven laws of yoga.
      The 4th law of yoga: The Law of Least Effort means that nature’s intelligence functions with effortless ease. If you look at  the flow of the tides, the blossoming of a flower, or the movement of the stars, you do not see nature struggling. The Law of Least Effort is so valuable during the practice of yoga. Yoga is the antidote to the prescription “no pain, no gain.” The greatest benefits of yoga come from relaxing into a pose, rather than forcing your body into it. When moving into a flexibility pose, find the point of resistance. breathe into the resistance—surrender into the resistance.
     The 5th law of yoga: The Law of Intention and  Desire. If you accept that your  body is not separate from the body of the universe, then by consciously changing the energy and information  of your own body, you can influence the energy and information of your extended body.
     The 6th law of yoga: The Law of Detachment: In order to acquire something in this world, you have to give up your attachment to it. your willingness to embrace the unknown, is your only true security.  By  giving up your attachment to the known, you step into the field of you true self in which the wisdom of uncertainty is factored into all your choices. Being open to what is happening instead of trying to control how things unfold; you experience the excitement, adventure, exhilaration, and mystery of life.
     Look for the 7th law of yoga next week.
     Thai Yoga therapy is way faster than any other therapy. If you need therapy or your knees or hips hurt give thai a try. Namaste
http://www.gobodhi.com/



    

Monday, July 11, 2011

seven spiritual laws of yoga

Every month I do a home work paper and a hand out, which is something I run across that I think will help my students in their yoga. In February I decided to expound on the seven laws of by breaking them down and talking about one law each month. We already talk about this all the time but we had never labeled it. Deepak Chopra has written a great book on the laws of yoga.
    The first law of yoga is the law of pure potentiality. This is not your social mask, the roles you are playing (parent, child, teacher, student, friend). Your social mask thrives on approval, strives to control. Your ego lives in fear of losing approval, control, and power. Your true Self, your soul, is completely free of these things. It is immune to criticism, fears no challenge, and feels neither beneath nor above anyone. Your soul recognizes at its deepest level that everyone else is the same Self in different disguises.
   The second  law of yoga is the law of giving and receiving. Your body, your mind, and the universe are in constant and dynamic exchange, stopping the circulation of energy is like stopping the flow of blood. When a river stops flowing, it begins to stagnate. You must be open to giving and receiving in order to keep the life force circulating within you. The intention should always be to create happiness for the giver and the receiver, because happiness is life-supporting and life-sustaining. The act of giving has to be joyful—the frame of mind has to be one in which you feel joy in the very act of giving. Then the energy behind the giving increases many times over. have the intention to give something to everyone you come into contact with. It might be a kind word, a compliment, a smile, a prayer, or a small gift.
   The third law of yoga is the law of karma. Every action we take generates a force of energy that returns to us in kind—as we sow, so we reap. When we consciously choose actions that bring happiness and success to others, the fruit of our karma is happiness and success.
   If everyone in the world followed the laws of yoga what a great place to live.
four more laws next week.
http://www.gobodhi.com/

Thursday, July 7, 2011

The Yoga Life

I love Thai Yoga Therapy, I worked on five of my yoga students (of course the were willing to be experimented on) they all loved it and said they preferred it over massage. That kinda makes me feel bad because my daughter is a massage therapist. I also worked on a friend, my massage therapist, and my husband. Some of the people I worked on have been coming to me for the yoga therapy that I developed myself over the past three years, I just added the Thai Therapy to what I already do for them. I can tell this Thai Therapy is going to make me much better. Yoga can't help but heal people, I invented props and poses to help heal people that had knee or hip surgeries, or people who have really stiff necks. I think I like to work on necks the most, it almost always helps when I work on them, and I love to see the relief on their face when they leave because they feel so much better. Yoga therapy gives people who have any kind of problems a better life, It can strengthen you and stretch you so you feel strong and healthy, hence my business name YOGA STRONG
http://www.gobodhi.com/