Fall is coming late to the Chicago area… get ready!
Get ready to modify your yoga practice to compliment the season. Listen and enjoy! If you feel like joining in the discussion… Email: dan@yogastudents.org Twitter: @yogastudents |
Fall is coming late to the Chicago area… get ready!
Get ready to modify your yoga practice to compliment the season. Listen and enjoy! If you feel like joining in the discussion… Email: dan@yogastudents.org Twitter: @yogastudents |
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This is our fifth installment of our discussions with Abhi Ghosh. Is yoga a religion? Abhi answers this question, and others, as he illuminates hidden areas of the studies.
Listen and enjoy! If you feel like joining in the discussion… Email: dan@yogastudents.org Twitter: @yogastudents |
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Pose of the week:
Parsvaikapada Sirsasana
Side One-Legged Headstand
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While testing out our radio equipment for our 3-way skype connection, we had a short, impromptu Question and Answer session.You will find out many things you did not know, or thought you know.
Listen and enjoy! If you feel like joining in the discussion… Email: dan@yogastudents.org Twitter: @yogastudents |
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Pose of the week:
Parsvaikapada Sirsasana
Side One-Legged Headstand
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Hey! It’s earth day. Wondering what that has to do with yoga?
Listen and find out! If you feel like joining in the discussion… Email: dan@yogastudents.org Twitter: @yogastudents |
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Pose of the week:
Parsvaikapada Sirsasana
Side One-Legged Headstand
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The snow has melted, trees are budding, and we’re in April. April 1, otherwise known as April Fools day.Did you have a prank played on you today? The thought of reading 29,250 emails makes me want to think this is a joke… is it?Listen and find out!
If you feel like joining in the discussion… Email: dan@yogastudents.org Twitter: @yogastudents |
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Pose of the week:Eka Pada SirsasanaFoot Behind the Head Pose |
Tonight’s special guest will again be Abhi Ghosh, a scholar of the Sutras. We will begin our discussion of the Sutras. A sutra (Sanskrit: सूत्र, Pāli: sutta, Ardhamagadhi: sūya) is an aphorism or a collection of aphorisms in the form of a manual or, more broadly, a text in Hinduism or Buddhism. Literally it means a thread or line that holds things together and is derived from the verbal root siv-, meaning to sew.[1] The word “sutra” was very likely meant to apply quite literally to these texts, as they were written down in books of palm leaves sewn together with thread. This distinguishes them from the older sacred Vedas, which until recently were only memorised, never committed to paper.Please listen, and feel free to send an email to dan@yogastudents.org if you have a question you would like to pose to Dr. Ghosh.
Email: dan@yogastudents.org Twitter: @yogastudents |
Tonight’s special guest will again be Abhi Ghosh, a scholar of the Sutras. We will begin our discussion of the Sutras. A sutra (Sanskrit: सूत्र, Pāli: sutta, Ardhamagadhi: sūya) is an aphorism or a collection of aphorisms in the form of a manual or, more broadly, a text in Hinduism or Buddhism. Literally it means a thread or line that holds things together and is derived from the verbal root siv-, meaning to sew.[1] The word “sutra” was very likely meant to apply quite literally to these texts, as they were written down in books of palm leaves sewn together with thread. This distinguishes them from the older sacred Vedas, which until recently were only memorised, never committed to paper.Please listen, and feel free to send an email to dan@yogastudents.org if you have a question you would like to pose to Dr. Ghosh.
Email: dan@yogastudents.org Twitter: @yogastudents |
Tonight’s special guest is Abhi Ghosh, a scholar of the Sutras. We will begin our discussion of the Sutras.A sutra (Sanskrit: सूत्र, Pāli: sutta, Ardhamagadhi: sūya) is an aphorism or a collection of aphorisms in the form of a manual or, more broadly, a text in Hinduism or Buddhism. Literally it means a thread or line that holds things together and is derived from the verbal root siv-, meaning to sew.[1] The word “sutra” was very likely meant to apply quite literally to these texts, as they were written down in books of palm leaves sewn together with thread. This distinguishes them from the older sacred Vedas, which until recently were only memorised, never committed to paper.
Please listen, and feel free to send an email to dan@yogastudents.org if you have a question you would like to pose to Dr. Ghosh. Email: dan@yogastudents.org Twitter: @yogastudents |
Tonite’s guest is David Angsten: Meditator, Yoga practitioner and author. We’ll have a discussion with David about his 40 plus years of meditation, yoga, and how he became an author.He has just released his 3rd book: ‘The Assassin Lotus‘, a fascinating story of modern adventurers in pursuit of the legendary plant elixir called soma. In the oldest religious text still in use today, the Rig Veda of ancient India, soma was said to confer courage and enlightenment to those who imbibed it. Although there have been many theories, the true identity of this miraculous plant has been lost to the mists of time. The Assassin Lotus imagines the rediscovery of soma in Asia, and the feverish hunt this triggers to find the lost plant’s hidden source.David will be interviewed by the delightful Kathleen Waterloo!
Email: dan@yogastudents.org Twitter: @yogastudents |
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Pose of the week:Parsva SirsasanaSide Headstand |
Shouldn’t yoga be fun to do? Getting in a rut? Listen tonite as we talk about how to make it fun and what you can do to ‘pep-up’ your practice. Please listen inHave an opinion? Join in by sending an email, or a tweet, using the links below… Email: dan@yogastudents.orgTwitter: @yogastudents Facebook.com/yogastudents |
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Pose of the week:PadmasanaLotus Pose |