Sarah Powers:

MOVING INTO MEDITATION

YIN-YANG YOGA and MINDFULNESS MEDITATION

Sept 29th-Oct 1st, 2006

This workshop is suitable for those with at least one year of yoga experience

and anyone interested in taking their practice to an increased level

of awareness and stillness, both inside and out.

 

This workshop will focus on long held, passive Yin postures that  prepare the

body for sitting meditation. The Yin style also keeps the body supple at its core while

encouraging stagnate chi (prana) to flow throughout the joints. Explanation of this practice

will be given while in the poses during the 1st part of the practice. The remainder of the time

in the Yin practice will be devoted to hearing about and exploring the 4 foundations of Mindfulness. A Yang flow style asana practice will follow, geared toward strenghening the core while encouragaing ease and grace in movement. Both Yin and Yang practices will be

followed by Mindfulness meditation, both led and silent.

YIN-YANG YOGA integrates Yin yoga (long-held passive poses that

target the meridian system and connective tissues) with Yang yoga

(a vinyasa practice, one which moves from pose to pose with the breath).

Each session begins with a Yin practice, then moves into a

vinyasa practice to stimulate the muscles and breath.

We finish with a sitting meditation practice.

WORKSHOP SCHEDULE

Location, Triangle Yoga
Friday, Sept. 29th, 6pm-8pm: Introduction to Yin Yoga and Meditation

Friday night only $50.

Sarah requests that you sign up for the entire weekend as she teaches progressively.

Saturday, Sept. 29th, 1pm-5pm: Yin-Yang & Meditation

Sunday, Oct. 1st, 12:30pm-4:30pm: Yin-Yang & Meditation


A deposit of $85 will hold your space if paid prior to Aug 29th.

After Aug. 28th the fee becomes $220.

Deposits and fees cannot be refunded, but may be transferred to other workshops or classes.

If you must cancel, there will be a $35 administrative fee.

This weekend workshop will focus on long-held floor poses that enhance the meridian system, thereby helping to restore a balanced equilibrium internally, preparing one for meditation. While participants experience the practice, Sarah Powers will lecture on the importance of meridian health on one’s overall well-being. This combination of practice and theory should enhance your understanding of the poses that promote organ health and emotional vitality.

Each Yin session will target a different area of the body; Session 1 will focus on the kidney and liver meridians. Session 2 will emphasize the stomach, spleen, lungs, and heart meridians. You will explore how to work with difficult feelings, such as fear and anger, embedded not only in your heart and mind but in your very tissues. Since breath is the inner catalyst for pranic circulation, pranayama (the breath) will also be explored during the Yin sessions.

All sessions will end with Mindfulness Meditation.

Sarah Powers offers a unique inter-disciplinary approach that blends the insights and

practices of yoga with Buddhist mindfulness and meditation. As a result, her retreats

and workshops interweave many disciplines into a single integral practice.

SARAH POWERS began teaching in 1987. She interweaves the insights and practices of Yoga and Buddhism into an integral

practice to enliven the body, heart and mind. Her yoga style blends both a Yin sequence of long held poses to enhance the

meridian and organ systems, combined with a flow or Yang practice, influenced by Viniyoga, Ashtanga, and alignment based

teachings. Her Buddhist training in Insight Meditation includes many retreats with Spirit Rock trained teachers, time spent in a

Monastery in Burma, and a dharma teacher training with Bhante Gunaratana. Her main influence for the last 7 years has been

the Dzogchen teacher, Tsoknyi Rinpoche. Sarah teaches retreats with her husband Ty, and together they home school their

teenage daughter, Imani Jade. They live in Marin, CA.

 

REACHING DEEPER

Through studying yin yoga, Sarah learned that it had its greatest benefit when practiced before a more active asana practice,

not afterward. When we work actively, the pranic flow and circulation are directed into the muscles and superficial connective

tissues. By comparison, a long-held passive pose practiced while the muscles are not yet warm allows the energy to reach the

deeper connective tissues of the joints and the corresponding pathways of the meridian system. (The meridian system is

composed of energy channels) The prana (or life force) stimulates and tones the joints, deep connective tissues, increasing

the supply of fluids to them, making them less dense and enabling them to stretch appropriately. As a result, we become more

  flexible, our joints become "juicier," and energy blocks along the meridians are removed, enabling the organs to function better.

And because the influx of prana works on the nervous system too, we become not only calmer but also more focused. 

"If you never go into the deeper connective tissue," Sarah says, "it becomes denser and less flexible-more yin-making it more

difficult to go deeper into asanas and uncomfortableto sit in meditation. For me, the purpose of doing yoga is to feel more at

home in my body. I'm interested in having harmony in my body and in enabling energy to flow freely to all channels, joints,

muscles and organs. Yin yoga enables me to reach levels of myself I otherwise could not get to."

PUSHING YOUR EDGES

Sarah finds that the passive yin approach gives students a new edge to work with in their yoga practice -the edge of just being

in a pose without trying to get anywhere in it. "Yin practice takes you deeper into where you are, not out to where you think you

should be, "Sarah notes. "This approach challenges us to rethink what asana is about. It marries meditation and asana into a very

deep practice. Some people, especially beginners, are not interested in or willing to do this -to sit inside their discomfort and just

watch their reactions instead of trying to fix or change the pose. Yin yoga challenges you to sit in the pure presence of awareness.

It's hard in a different way than active asana practice, but in a way that's more profound and satisfying as  well as more beneficial to

the deeper tissues." This doesn't mean that Sarah has given up her active asana practice. In fact, she is continually working on

deepening her yang practice, too. "We learn how to be still, but we also have to utilize our muscles and express ourselves

energetically," she says "The goal is a sattvic [pure] balance of tamasic (passive) and rajasic (active) energies -a beautiful marriage

of yang and yin, effort and surrender, ha [sun] and tha [moon]. The practice of yin/yang yoga helps us learn about stillness in

movement and the flow in stillness." Sarah finds that her yin practice has helped to facilitate and deepen her yang practice.

"The ability to surrender to that yin practice becomes deeply engrained in you and carries over into your yang practice," she says.

"This keeps you from 'overefforting' and trying to push yourself into various poses, which increases the likelihood of injury.

Plus after yin practice, you find that there is already more energy flowing at deeper levels, so you are more flexible and

require less warm-up. As a result, you go deeper with less effort."

CULTIVATING WHOLENESS

Sarah's meditating has been primarily in the Buddhist traditions. She has studied in the U.S. and Asia with highly distinguished

teachers - most notably, Jack Kornfield in the vipassana tradition, Toni Packer in the open awareness of the Zen tradition, and the

Tibetan reincarnate lama Tsoknyi Rinpoche in the Dzogchen path of effortless clarity. Buddhism has given her a clear map to the mind

and helpful tools for getting into silence and stillness. She is also inspired by the teachings of Ramana Maharshi and Nisargadatta Maharaj of the

Advaita Vedanta, school of Indian philosophy based on the Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita that emphasizes non-duality and holds that liberation

is attained through a dissolution of all individuality. She uses these tools in her workshops because she wants to share them with others and help them

experience the power of stillness that she finds in yin/yang yoga.