My Yoga Online Supports Yoga in Motion

Shake your booty and rock your asana–all for a good cause. At 10 am on April 25, 2010, Toronto’s Liberty Grand Entertainment Complex will host hundreds of men and women uniting to raise funds for breast cancer research. Participants join in on four Zumba® cardio dance sessions and four yoga sessions, all taught by Toronto’s top instructors. There are great gift bags, lots of prizes, product vendors, food samples and more. Information on living a healthy lifestyle will also be readily available. And all participants can attend the opening and closing ceremonies. Everything comes together for a $25 registration fee and a minimum $250 fundraising goal. Register as an individual or form a team to fundraise together. For more information, visit www.yogainmotion.ca .  My Yoga Online is proud to be a media sponsor of this event. “Breast cancer research is something I’m passionate about,” says My Yoga Online co-founder Michelle Trantina, “so I’m excited we can share our resources for this important event.” No Tags

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My Yoga Online Supports Yoga in Motion

The Hip – Yoga Anatomy Video

My Yoga Online has posted a new Yoga Anatomy video featuring David Keil: The Hip Yoga Anatomy yoga video. Learn the important aspects of the hips including major muscles surrounding the hip joint. Discover why the hip has the amount of tension it has around it. Learn how the hamstrings and quadriceps function as “two joint muscles”. Demonstration of where and how tight hips play a role in knee dysfunction. Demonstration to show where movement does or doesn’t happen at the hip joint. Click to watch this The Hip Yoga Anatomy video class About David Keil: David Keil was introduced to yoga in 1989 by his Tai Chi Chuan teacher. Both the Tai Chi and Yoga practice at the ripe age of 17 began his research into his own mind-body connections. As an instructor of Kinesiology (the study of movement and musculoskelatal anatomy) at Miami’s Educating Hands School of Massage, David had developed a fun, informal and informative style of teaching. Because of his passion and desire to share the human body with everyone, he delivers this complex and sometimes frustrating topic in a way that is very accessible and understandable to yoga practitioners. No Tags

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The Hip – Yoga Anatomy Video

Ahimsa: An Ancient Vow for Healing and Peace

The yoga path shows us how to charge neutral when we feel disagreements with our fellow human beings. The greatest yoga teachers know that we will not always get along, so they teach us that we do not need to make war based on our divergent points of view. We will not always feel joyful or loving, but we do not need to take out our unhappiness on others. We will not always be able to live totally without fear, but we do not need to let desperation for control determine our actions. This is the essence of ahimsa, non-violence, in action. One of the most basic commitments on the spiritual path is ahimsa, the resolution not to do harm to other beings. Ahimsa is a noble proclamation that aims to align our actions with our intentions to be a force of healing in the world. However, a heartfelt commitment to refrain from harming others does not mean that we will never feel a negative thought again. Nor does it truthfully mean that we will never perpetrate another violent act. Instead the vow of non-violence undertaken by spiritual seekers throughout all time stems from a basic recognition that we have a choice in how we live our lives. While I practice yoga almost every day and live a spiritual life to the best of my ability, I am not always a peaceful person. Sometimes my past ways of waging small interpersonal wars tie me into a sticky knot of anger, fear, sadness and resentment. When I find myself in that hot, uncomfortable space I often feel trapped with no way out. Sometimes I am present enough to remember my desire to live in alignment with ahimsa, and sometimes not. In moments when anger is too large, practiced and habituated the commitment not to do harm can feel like another burden to bear instead of the release it actually is. Anger breeds illogical states of mind and the nervous system needs time to cool down before any positive action can take place. We will never solve something in the midst of an angry wrath that we cannot solve when we are even tempered and clam. In fact sometimes the mere presence of anger and the urge to fight is itself the problem. Like fiery goggles that paint the world in bright hues of red, anger prevents us from seeing reality clearly. The most peaceful thing you can do when you find yourself caught in a conflagration of emotions is to walk away and regain the balance of your mind. Only once you train the mind to return to a clear state is it possible to reconnect to the path of peace through ahimsa. All human beings want to live in peace and feel love. What gets in the way is not the desire to do good, nor the desire not to harm, but instead our past patterns of warfare and disagreement. Whenever we react in a callous, confrontational way with people close to us it is more often based in an assumption made in the past than in an actual grievance in the present. Sometimes drama is all we know because that is all we have experienced in the past so we keep recreating it in the present. It could even be said that some people have an addiction to pain and drama that prevents them from living a peaceful life. But when a dramatic interlude is a substitute for a way of living, it is a deep samskara, or habit pattern, that is a detrimental force of pain and suffering in life. Yoga helps build the bridge from past addiction to pain into a more peaceful life in the present. The only benefit that waging war with those around actually has is that a state of combat is perhaps the greatest motivator for a desire for peace. You never want peace more than when you feel yourself surrounded by war. War does not have to involve dropping bombs, gunfire and fighter jets. It can be waged with an arsenal of words and actions that are almost as traumatic to the heart as weapons of destruction are to the body. When partners live in war zones, erect mine fields around our hearts and cast out others whose culture or appearance is different than ours, peace and ahimsa are simply not possible. As the people of nations sometimes at way we have a responsibility to live more peaceful lives on a direct and personal level. It is an ironic double stand when we expect entire nations to sign peace treaties and when we are not able to make peace with our neighbors. In some sense world peace is a personal ethic choice as well as an global governmental action. The yogic path pledges its allegiance to peace through the ancient vow of ahimsa. The battle in yoga, if there is one, is actually fought on the inner terrain. The great paradox that many longterm practitioners find out is that the only one they are really fighting with is themselves. Yoga asks you to make peace with the deepest, most secretive, terrifying and even shameful parts of yourself. In doing you you find the only way possible to make that peace with the external world too. It is not that you will never feel irritated, frustrated, angry, sad or fearful again, but that you will learn how to manage these difficult emotions when they do arise. In actively choosing your course of action you will transform the old habituated patterns of war and fighting into peace and friendship. By doing so on the internal level you will naturally change your outer world as well. Yoga means to unify, to yoke, to bring together and one of the most omnipresent things that yoga brings together is the unity of the inner and outer worlds. For was is possible only when we believe we are separate from others and we focus on that separation. Like battle-tired soldiers we must learn to lay down our weapons and surrender to the true power of peace. Navigating the inner world is not easy and sometimes when we truly realize the harm of being at war with one another we take a inner vow of ahimsa. This vow sometimes creates non-confrontational people who are actually unresolved on the inner plane. While the intention is good, the path to peace sometimes involves a bit of confrontation and inner searching. The non-confrontational person who feels anger and avoids confronting it or other difficult emotions ends up in a kind of cold war with themselves and the people in their lives. This type of peace is not really peace, but instead is a kind of passive aggressive boiling pot that usually bursts at some point. Yoga practitioners cannot dig their heads in the sand like ostriches in the name of peace when conflict arises. Instead we must learn to negotiate a peaceful solution with presence, consideration, compassion and compromise. Just like we learn to practice through an injury into healing we must approach difficult emotions and situation with the same consciousness and awareness if we are to experience true healing. While it could be said that holding the unhappiness in is at least better than lashing out at others, the danger in being so outwardly peaceful in the midst of inner turmoil is the falsity of peace. The pretense of a desired state is not replacement for the actual experience of it. The substitute for the real goal does not produce a sense of accomplishment. The Yoga Sutras state that the deepest benefits of Ahimsa are not gained when we go about the world in a state of non-harming, but instead when a state of absolute non-violence lives within us to the degree that violence is no longer possible on any level in our very presence. Friend and colleague Govinda Kai introduced the notion of ahimsa as being more than merely non-violent. He stated that ahimsa must mean the radical and spontaneously occurring opposite of violence. As such non-violence cannot be the true antithesis of violence. Perhaps peace is the true opposite of violence, but perhaps healing is as well. For only if we heal the root cause of the violent action can we truly experience peace and resolution. It is healing on all levels that allows our souls to rest in the peaceful acceptance of a situation. Until that healing has transpired the risk of recidivism into a state of warfare will always be there. In a karmic sense healing could be understood as removing the root of a negative habit pattern. Unless the samskara is healed at the deepest level so that there is no trace of it remaining then there is always a chance that it will resurface and re-ignite the fire again. Yoga is the process of burning away old karmic seeds of destruction and planting in their place the vow of ahimsa. Whenever you practice yoga and align your actions with the spiritual path you nurture these new seeds of change in your life. Peace is a moment to moment choice just like healing. It is a fragile balance that is easily lost in a hateful argument. Peace is an active choice made each time we maintain our balanced mind amidst difficult circumstances. The peace of ahimsa is not boring, just as the meditator’s mind is not dull. Instead this peace, like love, is a dynamic balance where life happens. About Kino MacGregor Kino MacGregor is a small business owner ( www.miamilifecenter.com ), yoga teacher and freelance journalist who has produced two yoga DVDs and is currently working on her first book, Inner Peace, Irresistible Beauty to be released late April 2009. For complete details please see www.ashtanga-awareness.com . No Tags

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Copenhagen: Free bike rental

Things can get pricy pretty quickly in Copenhagen, but you can still grab some wheels for free. The city’s free bike program, called “Bycyklen Kobenhavn,” was a pioneer in the urban bike program phenomenon. The city provides 1,300 free bicycles to anyone to zip around the city center.

The program is popular with visitors and residents alike, doubles as a rehabilitation program for locals, and is environmentally progressive. (The city even gave a city bike to Bill Clinton, when he visited in 1997.) In short, the program is just another example of why the Danes are so cool.

It’s a straight-forward system:

1) Find your way to one of the city’s 125 bike parking areas. They’re all located in the city center.

2) Leave a small deposit (a DKK 20 coin, worth about $3) and ride off with your bike.

3) Stay in the city center. The bikes are easy to identify, and you might get some looks if you’re outside the central zone. According to the official website, “If you ride on a city bike outside the zone, you might get fined by the police.” Also, remember not to ride on any of the city’s pedestrian-only streets (you can walk the bike, however).

4) When you’re finished, return the bike to one of the 125 bike parking areas, whereupon you’ll get back your deposit.

New Online Pilates Video Workout

My Yoga Online has posted a new Pilates video featuring Rachel Wainwright: Pilates Workout video . Is fun yet effective way to reshape your backside. This class provides exercises to tone & tighten your glutes for all fitness levels. These Pilates exercises will heighten your body awareness and improve your self-image. Be prepared to fall in love with your booty. Click to watch this Pilates Workout video class About Rachel Wainwright: Rachel is the creator and owner of Exhale Studio. Her goal is to create a very special comfortable environment so her clients get a great workout, relieve stress, gain fulfillment, feel stimulated and have fun while doing it. Her hope is to inspire people to better themselves, to enhance their self-image and self-confidence. A highly qualified teacher, Rachel is a Yoga Alliance Certified Yoga Instructor, BCRPA Registered Pilates Instructor, BCRPA Registered Group Fitness Instructor, and BCRPA Registered Personal Trainer. She also, did her Advanced Pilates Mat & Reformer Certificate at The Pilates Den to PMA standards. Rachel is a professional dancer, and has performed in a variety of stage shows, TV and film work. An avid practitioner of Yoga and Pilates, her other main interests include snowboarding, wakeboarding, scuba diving, surfing, soccer, and traveling. Rachel combines all of her diverse background, experience, and knowledge to create a well-rounded and effective class. She uses her energy and motivational skills to get you inspired and moving. No Tags

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New Online Pilates Video Workout

Common Sense Teacher’s Training

I used this teacher training and thought I would pass it on. Even though it’s common sense, sometimes volunteers need to be reminded.

BE READY

  • One of the most important things that will happen in your class is what happens before you ever get there.
  • Prepare your lesson.
  • Prepare spiritually.

START OUT WITH A GOOD IMPRESSION

  • If you come to class 10 minutes late and unprepared, the class will take over during the free time.
  • Parents, especially new parents will feel uncomfortable leaving their children in a class with a teacher who is late.
  • BE READY TO GREET THE CHILDREN AND THEIR PARENTS.

DON’T PLAY THE “WHERE ARE YOU?” GAME

  • Do not release children without their parents.
  • Do not release children to people you don’t know.
  • Do not release your class to another classroom teacher.
  • Do not release children to teenagers or other children.
  • Be with your children at all times.
  • If a child has to go to the restroom, have someone either take them or watch for them.
  • Don’t draw children out of other classrooms to help you. Then their teacher won’t know where they are.
  • If you must allow an older child to go to the restroom alone, use the buddy system.

CAN YOU BE TRUSTED?

  • Can you be trusted to model a lifestyle to the children that their parents would want them to imitate?
  • Can parents trust you to be loving and respectful to their children?
  • Will you safeguard children’s safety when they are in your care?
  • Can children trust you to be faithful to be there on time for them or to make arrangements when you can’t be there?

Enter to Win a 1 Year Membership with MyYogaOnline.com

THE PRIZE: We are giving away 3 x 1 Year Memberships to MyYogaOnline.com CONTEST TIMELINE: Contest begins at 12: 01 am Pacific Standard Time (“PST”) on February 25, 2010 and ends at 11: 59 PST on February 28, 2010. HOW TO WIN: You could be one of 3 lucky winners by following these three steps: Step 1: Become a fan of MyYogaOnline.com Fan Page on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/myyogaonline Step 2: Post the following message on the wall of your Facebook account for a chance to win: “I entered MyYogaOnline’s contest to win a 1 Year Membership. Become a fan & post gets you entered too! http://www.myyogaonline.com/blog/ “ Step 3: Stay tuned for the results! The winners will be contacted on their Facebook account on March 1, 2010. Terms and conditions apply: *To participate you will need to have a Facebook account. If you do not have a facebook account, sign-up here: http://www.facebook.com. *Become a fan of MyYogaOnline.com’s Fan Page on facebook and write on your wall (using your own Facebook account) announcing the contest and you will receive one (1) contest entry. *Membership prize is non-transferable and can not be redeemed for cash value. *By submitting an entry, participants consent to MyYogaOnline using their personal information from their Facebook public profile for the sole purpose of this Contest. If you have any questions, suggestions or requests please Contact Us . No Tags

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Maltese property owner wins landmark European Court case over imposed lease

The European Court of Human Rights has ordered the Maltese government to pay compensation to a Maltese landlord who filed a complaint after Maltese law was changed, thus allowing his tenant to continue to live in his property even after a temporary emphyteusis expired.

Mr Philip Amato Gauci said his property rights were infringed as a result of the new law, which imposed on him a unilateral lease relationship for an indeterminate time without providing him with a fair and adequate rent.

He explained to the court that he owned a maisonette in Sliema which in 1975 was granted on temporary emphyteusis for 25 years for a ground rent of €210 per year.
But as a result to a change in the law in 1979, once the term of the emphyteusis expired, tenants were granted the right to retain possession of the premises under a lease, without the consent of the owner. The law did not apply for post 1995 emphyteusis.

Mr Amato-Gauci said he had been unilaterally deprived of his property without being able to have recourse to a court for a determination as to whether it was necessary for the tenants to retain the property or to establish just and fair lease conditions.

He also submitted that the tenant also owned other property, whilst he could not make use of his own property for his daughter, who was getting married.
The case was referred to the European Court of Human Rights after Mr Amato Gauci lost cases before the local courts, although the government submitted that not all local remedies had been exhausted.

Guide For Transitioning To A Healthier Diet

My Yoga Online has posted a new nutrition article by guest author Brendan Brazier: Guide For Transitioning To A Healthier Diet . Brendan offers simple, but effective advice in how to start adding healthier foods into your diet in order to avoid physical shock to your systems. Enjoy these great nutrition tips as part of your overall yoga and wellness program. At this point, most of us know what foods are healthy. The challenge is no longer in finding the best health-promoting foods, but rather conveniently incorporating them into the diet on a daily basis without overextending our time budget. What then is the best route to take when aiming to integrate more healthy foods into the diet by replacing the less-healthy options? A common approach when transitioning to a new way of eating is to eliminate certain non-health promoting foods. However, the most effective way to seamlessly adopt a new eating plan is to include more health-promoting foods as opposed to eliminating the less healthy. This is a practical solution that works on a physiological level as well as a psychological one. Enjoy reading more Guide For Transitioning To A Healthier Diet No Tags

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Guide For Transitioning To A Healthier Diet

Give Love!

A few weeks ago, the YJ staff got a special treat when MC Yogi and Amanda Giacomini stopped by our offices to teach our daily staff yoga class. We don’t usually practice with music here in the offices–mostly because our yoga room is also our conference room and isn’t really set up with a sound system–so I’m always grateful when we have a teacher come in with her own iPod docking station. Of course, we would expect no less from the infamous, self procraimed yoga “unrapper” . . . who came with a big, shiny boom box in tow. Sure, I was skeptical of the whole yoga hip-hop thing at first, but now, I’ll admit it. I’m a fan. So I was thrilled to see his newest video posted to Huffington Post today. “It’s about being generous with ourselves with our hearts, with our time and with our energy,” he writes. “It affirms the universal principle of attraction. What we give is what we get.” Where do I sign up? MC Yogi – Give Love (Giving4Living Mix) from MC Yogi on Vimeo . So, that’s my yoga video pick of the day. I’d love to see some of your favorites in the comments section below!

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Give Love!

I love JackpotsHeaven.com!
I LOVE JACKPOTSHEAVEN.COM!