Teaching Yoga Quotes
Teaching Yoga: Essential Foundations and Techniques
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Mark Stephens1,412 ratings, 4.29 average rating, 61 reviews
Teaching Yoga Quotes
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“The ultimate language of yoga is expressed in doing yoga, a practice that transcends words as we open our lives to living more consciously through the infinite wisdom of the heart.”
― Teaching Yoga: Essential Foundations and Techniques
― Teaching Yoga: Essential Foundations and Techniques
“Yet Yogi Bhajan describes mastery of this practice as arising from teaching it: “If you want to learn something,” he says, “read it. If you want to know something, write it. If you want to MASTER something, Teach it!” (Bhajan).”
― Teaching Yoga
― Teaching Yoga
“Even when choosing stillness we are still moving, our hearts beating, breath flowing, all our systems at work.”
― Teaching Yoga
― Teaching Yoga
“The eight-limbed path, or ashtanga yoga, is: yama, niyama, asana, pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, dhyana, and samadhi.”
― Teaching Yoga
― Teaching Yoga
“the breath is seen as a gateway to the world of vital energetic currents generated in the human body and controlling all the biological processes.”
― Teaching Yoga
― Teaching Yoga
“not that the person needs to accommodate him- or herself to yoga, but rather the yoga practice must be tailored to fit each person”
― Teaching Yoga
― Teaching Yoga
“the mind ceases to be a separate entity, and the intelligence and the body become one.”
― Teaching Yoga
― Teaching Yoga
“Perfection in an asana is achieved when the effort to achieve it becomes effortless, and the infinite being within is reached.”
― Teaching Yoga
― Teaching Yoga
“integral yoga aims at “opening the springs of creative inspiration hidden in the human psyche” and the “active participation”
― Teaching Yoga
― Teaching Yoga
“Yoga is a tool for realigning our awareness with the divine, creating a state of oneness that is our true nature.”
― Teaching Yoga
― Teaching Yoga
“I learned through yoga asana that the body is a map to the soul and that my own body speaks a language that is designed for me to hear and learn from. Everyone’s body and practice are different in the sense that the language that the body speaks is entirely different from one person to the next, but”
― Teaching Yoga
― Teaching Yoga
“Bahya Kumbhaka Introduce bahya kumbhaka after students are at ease doing antara kumbhaka. Guide them into ujjayi, bringing attention to the natural pause when empty of breath. Do several rounds of ujjayi, refining awareness of the movement in and out of that pause. With the first few retentions of the exhalation, hold for just one count and then do several rounds of seamless ujjayi before repeating. Gradually expand the count, staying with simple retention. Encourage students to keep their eyes, face, throat, and heart center soft and not to grip in their belly. Unlike inhalations, exhalations naturally stimulate mula bandha and uddiyana bandha.”
― Teaching Yoga
― Teaching Yoga
