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Ashtanga vinyasa yoga

Ashtanga vinyasa yoga is a style of yoga as exercise popularised by K. Pattabhi Jois during the twentieth century, often promoted as a modern-day form of classical Indian yoga.[1] Jois claimed to have learnt the system from his teacher Tirumalai Krishnamacharya. The style is energetic, synchronising breath with movements. The individual poses (asanas) are linked by flowing movements (vinyasas).[2]

Ashtanga yoga
FounderK. Pattabhi Jois
Established1948
Practice emphases
Employs Vinyasas, connecting movements
Related schools
Iyengar yoga

Jois established his Ashtanga Yoga Research Institute in 1948.[3] The current style of teaching is called "Mysore style", after the city in India where the practice was originally taught.[4] Ashtanga vinyasa yoga has given rise to various spinoff styles of power yoga.

Approach

Traditionally, ashtanga vinyasa yoga students memorised a sequence and practised it together without being led by a teacher. Teacher-led classes were introduced in K. Pattabhi Jois's later years.[5][6] Such classes are typically taught twice per week in place of Mysore style classes. Teachers guide the practice, adjusting and assisting with postures and leading the group of students through a series of postures all at the same time.

Sequences and series

 
Eka Pada Galavasana, flying pigeon pose. Ashtanga's advanced (A) Series

An ashtanga vinyasa practice of asanas typically begins with five repetitions of surya namaskara A and B respectively, followed by a standing sequence.[7] The practitioner then progresses through one of six series of postures, followed by a standard closing sequence.[7]

The six series are:

  1. The primary series: Yoga chikitsa, yoga for health or yoga therapy[8]
  2. The intermediate series: Nadishodhana, the nerve purifier (also called the "second series")
  3. The Advanced series: Sthira bhaga, centering of strength
  1. Advanced A, or third series
  2. Advanced B, or fourth series
  3. Advanced C, or fifth series
  4. Advanced D, or sixth series[7][9]

There were originally four series on the ashtanga vinyasa syllabus: primary, intermediate, advanced A, and advanced B. A fifth series was the "Rishi series", which Pattabhi Jois said could be performed once a practitioner had mastered the preceding four series.[10][11]

Method of instruction

According to Pattabhi Jois's grandson R. Sharath Jois, practictioners should master each pose separately attempting the others that follow.[12] However, Pattabhi Jois's son Manju Jois disagreed; in his view, students were occasionally allowed to practice the postures in a non-linear format.[13][14][15]

Since the beginning of the twenty-first century a new generation of ashtanga vinyasa yoga teachers have embraced Sharath's rules, teaching in a linear style without variations. Practice typically takes place in a strict, Mysore style environment under the guidance of a Sharath-approved teacher. Workshops, detailed alignment instructions and strength-building exercises should not form part of the method, neither for the practitioner nor for the teacher.[12] However, most teachers who claim to have been taught by Sharath do in practice employ the above methods, exercises and postures in their teaching.[12]TH

Principles

Ashtanga vinyasa yoga emphasizes certain key components, namely tristhana ("three places of action or attention", or the more physical aspects of poses) and vinyasa (which Sharath Jois defines as a system of breathing and movement).[16]

Tristhana

Tristhana means the three places of attention or action: breathing system (pranayama), posture (asana), and looking place (drishti). These are considered core concepts for ashtanga yoga practice, encompassing the three levels of purification: the body, nervous system, and the mind. They are supposed to be performed in conjunction with each other.[16]

Each asana in ashtanga yoga is part of a set sequence, as described above. The stated purpose of the asanas is to increase the strength and flexibility of the body.[16] Officially, the style is accompanied by very little alignment instruction.[17] Breathing is ideally even and steady, in terms of the length of the inhalations and exhalations.[16]

Drishti is the point where one focuses the eyes while practicing asana. In the ashtanga yoga method, there is a prescribed point of focus for every asana. There are nine dristhis: the nose, between the eyebrows, navel, thumb, hands, feet, up, right side and left side.[18]

Vinyasa

Vinyasas are flowing sequences of movements that connect each asana to the next.[19][20][21] Additionally, modern vinyasa yoga coordinates the breath with the vinyasa transition movements between the asanas.[22]

According to Sharath Jois, the purpose of vinyasas is to purify the blood, which is supposedly otherwise heated and contaminated by the practice of asanas.[18]

Breath

Although ashtanga yoga keeps a general principle of steady and even inhalations and exhalations, the particulars of pranayama during the asana practice are debated.

In his book Yoga Mala, Pattabhi Jois recommends remaining in each posture for five to eight breaths, or else staying in each posture for as long as possible.[23] Breathing instructions given are to do rechaka and puraka (to exhale and inhale) as much as possible.[23] "It is sufficient, however, to breathe in and out five to eight times in each posture."[23] In an interview regarding the length of the breath, Pattabhi Jois instructs practitioners to inhale for ten to fifteen seconds, and to exhale for ten to fifteen seconds.[24] He goes on to clarify: "[if] your breath strength is possibly ten-second inhalations and exhalations, you do ten; fifteen seconds possible, you do fifteen. One hundred possible, you perform one hundred. Five is possible, you do five".[24] His son Manju Jois also recommends taking more breaths in difficult postures.[13]

Various influential figures have discussed the specific process of breathing in ashtanga yoga. Pattabhi Jois recommended breathing fully and deeply with the mouth closed, although he did not specifically term this as ujjayi breathing.[23] However, Manju Jois does, referring to a breathing style called dirgha rechaka puraka, meaning long, deep, slow exhalations and inhalations. "It should be dirgha... long, and like music. The sound is very important. You have to do the ujjayi pranayama".[13] In late 2011, Sharath Jois stated that ujjayi breathing as such was not to be performed in the asana practice, but that asanas should be accompanied merely by deep breathing with sound.[25] He reiterated this notion in a conference in 2013, stating: "You do normal breath, inhalation and exhalation with sound. Ujjayi breath is a type of pranayama. This is just normal breath with free flow".[26]

As far as other types of pranayama are concerned, the consensus is that they should be practised after the asanas have been mastered. Pattabhi Jois originally taught pranayama to those practicing the second series and later changed his mind, teaching pranayama after the third series.[27][28][29]

Sharath Jois later produced a series of videos teaching alternate nostril breathing to beginners. This pranayama practice was never taught to beginners by his grandfather and it is one of the many changes Sharath has made to the ashtanga yoga method of instruction.[17]

Bandhas

Bandhas are one of the three key elements of ashtanga vinyasa yoga, alongside breath and drishti. There are three principal bandhas which are considered internal body locks:

  • Mula bandha or root lock at the pelvic floor (drawing in the perineum)
  • Uddiyana bandha, drawing back the abdomen approximately two inches below the navel
  • Jalandhara bandha, throat lock (achieved by lowering the chin slightly while raising the sternum).

Both Pattabhi Jois and Sharath Jois recommend practising mula and uddiyana bandha even when not practicing asanas. Pattabhi Jois explains: (translated quote) "You completely exhale, apply mula bandha and after inhaling you apply uddiyana bandha. Both bandhas are very important... After bandha practice, take [your attention] to the location where they are applied and maintain that attention at all times, while walking, talking, sleeping and when walk is finished. Always you control mula bandha".[30]

Sharath Jois says: "Without bandhas, breathing will not be correct, and the asanas will give no benefit".[18]

Opening chant

Ashtanga practice is traditionally started with the following Sanskrit invocation to Patanjali:[31]

Sanskrit Translation
vande gurūṇāṁ caraṇāravinde
saṁdarśita-svātma-sukhāvabodhe
niḥśreyase jāṅ̇galikāyamāne
saṁsāra-hālāhala-mohaśāntyai

ābāhu puruṣākāraṁ
śaṅ̇kha-cakrāsi-dhāriṇam
sahasra-śirasaṁ śvetam
praṇamāmi patañjalim
I bow to the lotus feet of the gurus,
The awakening happiness of one's own-self revealed,
Beyond better, acting like the jungle physician,
Pacifying delusion, the poison of Samsara.

Taking the form of a man to the shoulders,
Holding a conch, a discus, and a sword,
One thousand heads white,
To Patanjali, I salute.

and closes with the "mangala mantra" (Lokaksema):[31]

Sanskrit Translation
svasti prajābhyaḥ paripālayantāṁ nyāyena mārgeṇa mahīṁ mahīśāḥ
go-brāhmaṇebhyaḥ śubham astu nityaṁ lokāḥ samastāḥ sukhino bhavantu
May all be well with mankind,
May the leaders of the Earth protect in every way by keeping to the right path.
May there be goodness for those who know the Earth to be sacred.
May all the worlds be happy.

History

Pattabhi Jois claimed to have learned the system of ashtanga from Tirumalai Krishnamacharya, who in turn claimed to have learned it from a supposed text called Yoga Kurunta by the otherwise unknown author Vamama Rishi.[32] This text was imparted to Krishnamacharya in the early 1900s by his Guru, Yogeshwara Ramamohana Brahmachari. Jois insists that the text described all of the asanas and vinyasas of the sequences of the ashtanga system. However, the text is said to have been eaten by ants so it is impossible to verify his assertions. Additionally, it is unusual that the text is not mentioned as a source in either of the books by Krishnamacharya, Yoga Makaranda (1934) and Yogāsanagalu (c. 1941).[33]

According to Manju Jois, the sequences of ashtanga yoga were created by Krishnamcharya.[34] There is some evidence to support this in Yoga Makaranda, which lists nearly all the postures of the Pattabhi Jois primary series and several postures from the intermediate and advanced series, described with reference to vinyasa.[35]

There is also evidence that the ashtanga yoga series incorporates exercises used by Indian wrestlers and British gymnasts.[36] Recent academic research details documentary evidence that physical journals in the early 20th century were full of the postural shapes that were very similar to Krishnamacharya's asana system.[33] In particular, the flowing surya namaskara, which later became the basis of Krishnamacharya's Mysore style, was in the 1930s considered as exercise and not part of yoga; the two styles were at that time taught separately, in adjacent halls of the Mysore palace.[33]

Etymology

 
Ashtanga yoga may owe its name to Ashtanga Namaskara, a pose in an early form of Surya Namaskar, rather than to any connection with Patanjali's eight-limbed yoga.[33]

Jois elided any distinction between his sequences of asanas and the eight-limbed ashtanga yoga (Sanskrit अष्टांग asht-anga, "eight limbs") of Patanjali's Yoga Sutras. The eight limbs of Patanjali's scheme are yama, niyama, asana, pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, dhyana, and samadhi.[37] It was Jois's belief that asana, the third limb, must be practiced first, and only after that could one master the other seven limbs.[38] However, the name ashtanga in Jois's usage may, as yoga scholar Mark Singleton suggests, derive from the old name of surya namaskar in the system of dand gymnastic exercises, which was named ashtang dand after one of the original postures in the sequence, ashtanga namaskara (now replaced by chaturanga dandasana), in which eight body parts all touch the ground, rather than Patanjali's yoga.[33]

Tradition

There has been much debate over the term "traditional" as applied to ashtanga yoga. The founder's students noted that Jois freely modified the sequence to suit the practitioner.[39] Some of the differences include the addition or subtraction of postures in the sequences,[7] changes to the vinyasa (full and half vinyasa),[27][40][41] and specific practice prescriptions to specific people.[39][42]

Several changes to the practice have been made since its inception. Nancy Gilgoff, an early student, describes many differences in the way she was taught ashtanga to the way it is taught now.[10] According to her experiences, some of the differences include: Pattabhi Jois originally left out seven postures in the standing sequence, but later assigned utthita hasta padangusthasana and ardha baddha padmottanasana before the intermediate series was given; utkatasana, virabhadrasana A and B, parivritta trikonasana, and parivritta parsvakonasana were not in the series at this point; and Jois did not give a vinyasa between the same poses on the different sides of the body or between variations on a pose (e.g., janu sirsasana A, B, and C were done together, followed by a vinyasa. Likewise baddha konasana, upavishta konasana and supta konasana were also grouped together without a vinyasa between them, as were ubhaya padangusthasana and urdhva mukha paschimottanasana.[10]

According to Gilgoff, Pattabhi Jois prescribed practising twice a day, primary and intermediate series, with no vinyasa between sides in krounchasana, bharadvajasana, ardha matsyendrasana, eka pada sirsasana, parighasana, and gomukhasana in the intermediate series. Shalabhasana to parsva dhanurasana were done in a group, with a vinyasa only performed at the end. Ushtrasana through kapotasana also were done altogether. The same went for eka pada sirsasana through yoganidrasana. The closing sequence included only mudrasana, padmasana, and tolasana, until the completion of the intermediate series when the remainder of the closing sequence was assigned. Urdhva dhanurasana and "drop-backs" were taught after the intermediate series. Gilgoff states that the original intermediate series included vrishchikasana after karandavasana and ended with gomukhasana. She also notes that Pattabhi Jois added supta urdhva pada vajrasana as well as the seven headstands when another yogi asked for more; these eight postures were not part of the intermediate series prior to this.[10]

Power yoga spinoffs

Power yoga began in the 1990s via a "nearly simultaneous invention" by two students of K. Pattabhi Jois and similar forms led by other yoga teachers.[43]

Beryl Bender Birch created what Yoga Journal calls "the original power yoga"[44] in 1995.[45][46]

Bryan Kest, who studied ashtanga yoga under K. Pattabhi Jois, and Baron Baptiste, a Bikram yoga enthusiast, separately put their own spins on the style and provided its branding. Neither Baptiste's power yoga nor Kest's power yoga are synonymous with ashtanga yoga. In 1995, Pattabhi Jois wrote a letter to Yoga Journal expressing his disappointment at the association between his ashtanga yoga and the newly-coined power yoga, referring to it as "ignorant bodybuilding".[47]

Risk of injury

In an article published by The Economist, it was reported that "a good number of Mr Jois's students seemed constantly to be limping around with injured knees or backs because they had received his "adjustments", yanking them into Lotus, the splits, or a backbend".[48] Tim Miller, one of Jois's students, indicates that "the adjustments were fairly ferocious".[49] Injuries related to Jois's ashtanga yoga have been the subject of discussion in a Huffington Post article.[50]

In 2008, yoga researchers in Europe published a survey of practitioners of ashtanga yoga that indicated that 62 percent of respondents had suffered at least one injury that lasted longer than one month. However, the survey lacked a control group (of similar people not subject to the treatment, such as people who had practised a different form of yoga), which limited its validity.[51][52]

References

  1. ^ "Ashtanga Yoga Background". Ashtanga Yoga. from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  2. ^ "Ashtanga Yoga". Yoga Journal. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
  3. ^ Lewis, Waylon (18 June 2009). "Pattabhi Jois, Founder of Ashtanga Yoga, Passes Away at Age 93". Huffington Post.
  4. ^ "Mysore Style". Jois Yoga. 17 February 2013. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
  5. ^ "Mysore Style". Mysorestyle.ie. 7 October 2011. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  6. ^ Anon (12 April 2017). "Style Profile: Ashtanga Yoga". Yoga Journal.
  7. ^ a b c d Swenson, David (2000). Ashtanga yoga : the practice manual. Ashtanga Yoga Productions. ISBN 978-1-891252-08-2. OCLC 46344188.[page needed]
  8. ^ "Ashtanga Primary Series list". Yogateket. Yogateket. Retrieved 1 June 2019.
  9. ^ "AYI.info - The International Ashtanga Yoga Information Page". Ashtangayoga.info. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  10. ^ a b c d "Articles by Nancy – House of Yoga and Zen". House of Yoga and Zen. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 December 2015. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  12. ^ a b c Jois 2013.
  13. ^ a b c Clark, Richard (7 February 2005). "Manju Jois" (PDF). Australian Yoga Life (12): 42–45.
  14. ^ "Manju Jois Mini Interview". Loveyogaanatomy.com. 24 October 2014. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  15. ^ "Ashtanga Yoga Shala NYC - Manju Jois - New York 2000". Aysnyc.org. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  16. ^ a b c d . sharathjois.com. Archived from the original on 21 February 2019. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  17. ^ a b Yoga Breathing for Stress Relief with Sharath Jois
  18. ^ a b c "Sharath Jois". Kpjayi.org. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  19. ^ Krishnamacharya 2006, p. 146.
  20. ^ Singleton 2010, pp. 176, 184–190.
  21. ^ Maehle, Gregor (2007). Ashtanga yoga : practice and philosophy : a comprehensive description of the primary series of Ashtanga yoga, following the traditional Vinyasa count, and an authentic explanation of the Yoga Sutra of Patanjali. New World Library. p. 294. ISBN 978-1-57731-606-0. OCLC 776703947. Sequential movement that interlinks postures to form a continuous flow. It creates a moving meditation that reveals all physical forms as impermanent.
  22. ^ "Vinyasa Yoga Sequences". Yoga Journal. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  23. ^ a b c d Jois 2002, p. 108.
  24. ^ a b Guy. "On Vinyasa". Ashtanga Yoga Shala NYC. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 February 2014. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  26. ^ "Conference Notes with Sharath Jois: KPJAYI, March 2013". Joyisyoga.com. 17 June 2013. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  27. ^ a b "Ashtanga.com Articles: Tim Miller Interview by Deborah Crooks". Ashtanga.com. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  28. ^ Anderson, Sandra. . Archived from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  29. ^ Guy. "Ashtanga Yoga Shala NYC - David Williams - Maui 2001". Aysnyc.org. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  30. ^ . Ashtangayogashala.net. Archived from the original on 26 November 2018. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  31. ^ a b "SHARATH JOIS". KPJAYI. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  32. ^ Eddie Sterne, Guruji: A Portrait of Sri K. Pattabhi Jois Through the Eyes of His Students
  33. ^ a b c d e Singleton 2010, pp. 175–210
  34. ^ . Ashtanga Yoga Shala. Archived from the original on 26 November 2018. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  35. ^ Krishnamacharya, T. Yoga Makaranda, 1934
  36. ^ Cushman, Anne. . Yoga Journal. Archived from the original on 9 July 2014. Retrieved 13 March 2008.
  37. ^ Scott, John. Ashtanga Yoga: The Definitive Step-by-Step Guide to Dynamic Yoga. New York: Three Rivers Press, 2000. pp. 14–17.
  38. ^ "Sharath Jois". KPJAYI. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  39. ^ a b "Who has done all of the Ashtanga series? Does it matter?". 5 January 2012. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  40. ^ . Ashtanga Yoga Shala. Archived from the original on 26 November 2018. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  41. ^ Lino Miele, Astanga Yoga Book - The Yoga of Breath
  42. ^ . Mind Medicine. 8 July 2012. Archived from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  43. ^ Pizer, Ann (8 January 2019). "Power Yoga History and Health Benefits". Very Well Fit. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
  44. ^ "Power Yoga". Yoga Journal. Retrieved 28 April 2019. The original power yoga was developed and founded by Beryl Bender Birch, but is now a term used to describe many vigorous "vinyasa flow" styles of yoga.
  45. ^ Singleton 2010, p. 176.
  46. ^ Birch, Beryl Bender (17 January 1995). Power yoga: The total strength and flexibility workout. ISBN 978-0-02-058351-6.
  47. ^ "A letter from Sri.K. Pattabhi Jois to Yoga Journal, Nov. 1995". Ashtanga Yoga Library. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
  48. ^ "Pattabhi Jois". The Economist. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  49. ^ McLean, Bethany (April 2012). . Vanity Fair. Archived from the original on 12 January 2013.
  50. ^ Cahn, Lauren (3 August 2009), , Huffington Post, archived from the original on 28 August 2012
  51. ^ Broad, William (2012). The Science of Yoga: The Risks and the Rewards. New York, USA: Simon & Schuster. pp. 133–134. ISBN 978-1451641424.
  52. ^ Mikkonen, Jani; Pederson, Palle; McCarthy, Peter William (2008). "A Survey of Musculoskeletal Injury among Ashtanga Yoga Practitioners". International Journal of Yoga Therapy (18): 59–64. doi:10.17761/ijyt.18.1.l0748p25k2558v77.

Sources

Further reading

  • Jois, Sri K. Pattabhi (2005). Sūryanamaskāra. New York: Ashtanga Yoga.
  • Maehle, Gregor (2006). Ashtanga Yoga: Practice and Philosophy. Doubleview, Western Australia: Kaivalya Publications. ISBN 978-0-9775126-0-7. OCLC 71245040.
  • Miele, Lino (1994). Astanga Yoga: Including the Benefits of Yoga Chikitsa; I & II Series. Rome, Italy: Lino Miele.
  • Scott, John (2000). Ashtanga Yoga: The Definitive Step-By-Step Guide to Dynamic Yoga. Stroud: Gaia Books. ISBN 978-1-85675-181-0. OCLC 44693722.
  • Swenson, David (1999). Ashtanga Yoga: The Practice Manual. Austin, Texas: Ashtanga Yoga Productions. ISBN 978-1-891252-08-2. OCLC 65221561.

External links

  • Ashtanga Yoga - Understanding the Method, Interview with Manju Pattabhi Jois, in English and German (2009)

ashtanga, vinyasa, yoga, this, article, about, style, yoga, consisting, series, founded, pattabhi, jois, eightfold, yoga, path, system, first, described, patañjali, yoga, sūtras, ashtanga, eight, limbs, yoga, style, yoga, exercise, popularised, pattabhi, jois,. This article is about a style of yoga consisting of six series founded by K Pattabhi Jois For the eightfold yoga path a system first described in Patanjali s Yoga Sutras see Ashtanga eight limbs of yoga Ashtanga vinyasa yoga is a style of yoga as exercise popularised by K Pattabhi Jois during the twentieth century often promoted as a modern day form of classical Indian yoga 1 Jois claimed to have learnt the system from his teacher Tirumalai Krishnamacharya The style is energetic synchronising breath with movements The individual poses asanas are linked by flowing movements vinyasas 2 Ashtanga yogaK Pattabhi Jois with Larry Schultz mid 1980sFounderK Pattabhi JoisEstablished1948Practice emphasesEmploys Vinyasas connecting movementsRelated schoolsIyengar yogaJois established his Ashtanga Yoga Research Institute in 1948 3 The current style of teaching is called Mysore style after the city in India where the practice was originally taught 4 Ashtanga vinyasa yoga has given rise to various spinoff styles of power yoga Contents 1 Approach 1 1 Sequences and series 1 2 Method of instruction 2 Principles 2 1 Tristhana 2 2 Vinyasa 2 2 1 Breath 2 2 2 Bandhas 2 3 Opening chant 3 History 3 1 Etymology 3 2 Tradition 4 Power yoga spinoffs 5 Risk of injury 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksApproach EditTraditionally ashtanga vinyasa yoga students memorised a sequence and practised it together without being led by a teacher Teacher led classes were introduced in K Pattabhi Jois s later years 5 6 Such classes are typically taught twice per week in place of Mysore style classes Teachers guide the practice adjusting and assisting with postures and leading the group of students through a series of postures all at the same time Sequences and series Edit Eka Pada Galavasana flying pigeon pose Ashtanga s advanced A Series An ashtanga vinyasa practice of asanas typically begins with five repetitions of surya namaskara A and B respectively followed by a standing sequence 7 The practitioner then progresses through one of six series of postures followed by a standard closing sequence 7 The six series are The primary series Yoga chikitsa yoga for health or yoga therapy 8 The intermediate series Nadishodhana the nerve purifier also called the second series The Advanced series Sthira bhaga centering of strengthAdvanced A or third series Advanced B or fourth series Advanced C or fifth series Advanced D or sixth series 7 9 There were originally four series on the ashtanga vinyasa syllabus primary intermediate advanced A and advanced B A fifth series was the Rishi series which Pattabhi Jois said could be performed once a practitioner had mastered the preceding four series 10 11 Method of instruction Edit Further information Mysore style According to Pattabhi Jois s grandson R Sharath Jois practictioners should master each pose separately attempting the others that follow 12 However Pattabhi Jois s son Manju Jois disagreed in his view students were occasionally allowed to practice the postures in a non linear format 13 14 15 Since the beginning of the twenty first century a new generation of ashtanga vinyasa yoga teachers have embraced Sharath s rules teaching in a linear style without variations Practice typically takes place in a strict Mysore style environment under the guidance of a Sharath approved teacher Workshops detailed alignment instructions and strength building exercises should not form part of the method neither for the practitioner nor for the teacher 12 However most teachers who claim to have been taught by Sharath do in practice employ the above methods exercises and postures in their teaching 12 THPrinciples EditAshtanga vinyasa yoga emphasizes certain key components namely tristhana three places of action or attention or the more physical aspects of poses and vinyasa which Sharath Jois defines as a system of breathing and movement 16 Tristhana Edit Tristhana means the three places of attention or action breathing system pranayama posture asana and looking place drishti These are considered core concepts for ashtanga yoga practice encompassing the three levels of purification the body nervous system and the mind They are supposed to be performed in conjunction with each other 16 Each asana in ashtanga yoga is part of a set sequence as described above The stated purpose of the asanas is to increase the strength and flexibility of the body 16 Officially the style is accompanied by very little alignment instruction 17 Breathing is ideally even and steady in terms of the length of the inhalations and exhalations 16 Drishti is the point where one focuses the eyes while practicing asana In the ashtanga yoga method there is a prescribed point of focus for every asana There are nine dristhis the nose between the eyebrows navel thumb hands feet up right side and left side 18 Vinyasa Edit Main article Vinyasa Vinyasas are flowing sequences of movements that connect each asana to the next 19 20 21 Additionally modern vinyasa yoga coordinates the breath with the vinyasa transition movements between the asanas 22 According to Sharath Jois the purpose of vinyasas is to purify the blood which is supposedly otherwise heated and contaminated by the practice of asanas 18 Breath Edit Further information Pranayama Although ashtanga yoga keeps a general principle of steady and even inhalations and exhalations the particulars of pranayama during the asana practice are debated In his book Yoga Mala Pattabhi Jois recommends remaining in each posture for five to eight breaths or else staying in each posture for as long as possible 23 Breathing instructions given are to do rechaka and puraka to exhale and inhale as much as possible 23 It is sufficient however to breathe in and out five to eight times in each posture 23 In an interview regarding the length of the breath Pattabhi Jois instructs practitioners to inhale for ten to fifteen seconds and to exhale for ten to fifteen seconds 24 He goes on to clarify if your breath strength is possibly ten second inhalations and exhalations you do ten fifteen seconds possible you do fifteen One hundred possible you perform one hundred Five is possible you do five 24 His son Manju Jois also recommends taking more breaths in difficult postures 13 Various influential figures have discussed the specific process of breathing in ashtanga yoga Pattabhi Jois recommended breathing fully and deeply with the mouth closed although he did not specifically term this as ujjayi breathing 23 However Manju Jois does referring to a breathing style called dirgha rechaka puraka meaning long deep slow exhalations and inhalations It should be dirgha long and like music The sound is very important You have to do the ujjayi pranayama 13 In late 2011 Sharath Jois stated that ujjayi breathing as such was not to be performed in the asana practice but that asanas should be accompanied merely by deep breathing with sound 25 He reiterated this notion in a conference in 2013 stating You do normal breath inhalation and exhalation with sound Ujjayi breath is a type of pranayama This is just normal breath with free flow 26 As far as other types of pranayama are concerned the consensus is that they should be practised after the asanas have been mastered Pattabhi Jois originally taught pranayama to those practicing the second series and later changed his mind teaching pranayama after the third series 27 28 29 Sharath Jois later produced a series of videos teaching alternate nostril breathing to beginners This pranayama practice was never taught to beginners by his grandfather and it is one of the many changes Sharath has made to the ashtanga yoga method of instruction 17 Bandhas Edit Bandhas are one of the three key elements of ashtanga vinyasa yoga alongside breath and drishti There are three principal bandhas which are considered internal body locks Mula bandha or root lock at the pelvic floor drawing in the perineum Uddiyana bandha drawing back the abdomen approximately two inches below the navel Jalandhara bandha throat lock achieved by lowering the chin slightly while raising the sternum Both Pattabhi Jois and Sharath Jois recommend practising mula and uddiyana bandha even when not practicing asanas Pattabhi Jois explains translated quote You completely exhale apply mula bandha and after inhaling you apply uddiyana bandha Both bandhas are very important After bandha practice take your attention to the location where they are applied and maintain that attention at all times while walking talking sleeping and when walk is finished Always you control mula bandha 30 Sharath Jois says Without bandhas breathing will not be correct and the asanas will give no benefit 18 Opening chant Edit Ashtanga practice is traditionally started with the following Sanskrit invocation to Patanjali 31 Sanskrit Translationvande guruṇaṁ caraṇaravindesaṁdarsita svatma sukhavabodheniḥsreyase jaṅ galikayamanesaṁsara halahala mohasantyai abahu puruṣakaraṁsaṅ kha cakrasi dhariṇamsahasra sirasaṁ svetampraṇamami patanjalim I bow to the lotus feet of the gurus The awakening happiness of one s own self revealed Beyond better acting like the jungle physician Pacifying delusion the poison of Samsara Taking the form of a man to the shoulders Holding a conch a discus and a sword One thousand heads white To Patanjali I salute and closes with the mangala mantra Lokaksema 31 Sanskrit Translationsvasti prajabhyaḥ paripalayantaṁ nyayena margeṇa mahiṁ mahisaḥgo brahmaṇebhyaḥ subham astu nityaṁ lokaḥ samastaḥ sukhino bhavantu May all be well with mankind May the leaders of the Earth protect in every way by keeping to the right path May there be goodness for those who know the Earth to be sacred May all the worlds be happy History EditPattabhi Jois claimed to have learned the system of ashtanga from Tirumalai Krishnamacharya who in turn claimed to have learned it from a supposed text called Yoga Kurunta by the otherwise unknown author Vamama Rishi 32 This text was imparted to Krishnamacharya in the early 1900s by his Guru Yogeshwara Ramamohana Brahmachari Jois insists that the text described all of the asanas and vinyasas of the sequences of the ashtanga system However the text is said to have been eaten by ants so it is impossible to verify his assertions Additionally it is unusual that the text is not mentioned as a source in either of the books by Krishnamacharya Yoga Makaranda 1934 and Yogasanagalu c 1941 33 According to Manju Jois the sequences of ashtanga yoga were created by Krishnamcharya 34 There is some evidence to support this in Yoga Makaranda which lists nearly all the postures of the Pattabhi Jois primary series and several postures from the intermediate and advanced series described with reference to vinyasa 35 There is also evidence that the ashtanga yoga series incorporates exercises used by Indian wrestlers and British gymnasts 36 Recent academic research details documentary evidence that physical journals in the early 20th century were full of the postural shapes that were very similar to Krishnamacharya s asana system 33 In particular the flowing surya namaskara which later became the basis of Krishnamacharya s Mysore style was in the 1930s considered as exercise and not part of yoga the two styles were at that time taught separately in adjacent halls of the Mysore palace 33 Etymology Edit Ashtanga yoga may owe its name to Ashtanga Namaskara a pose in an early form of Surya Namaskar rather than to any connection with Patanjali s eight limbed yoga 33 Further information Modern yoga Renaissance Jois elided any distinction between his sequences of asanas and the eight limbed ashtanga yoga Sanskrit अष ट ग asht anga eight limbs of Patanjali s Yoga Sutras The eight limbs of Patanjali s scheme are yama niyama asana pranayama pratyahara dharana dhyana and samadhi 37 It was Jois s belief that asana the third limb must be practiced first and only after that could one master the other seven limbs 38 However the name ashtanga in Jois s usage may as yoga scholar Mark Singleton suggests derive from the old name of surya namaskar in the system of dand gymnastic exercises which was named ashtang dand after one of the original postures in the sequence ashtanga namaskara now replaced by chaturanga dandasana in which eight body parts all touch the ground rather than Patanjali s yoga 33 Tradition Edit There has been much debate over the term traditional as applied to ashtanga yoga The founder s students noted that Jois freely modified the sequence to suit the practitioner 39 Some of the differences include the addition or subtraction of postures in the sequences 7 changes to the vinyasa full and half vinyasa 27 40 41 and specific practice prescriptions to specific people 39 42 Several changes to the practice have been made since its inception Nancy Gilgoff an early student describes many differences in the way she was taught ashtanga to the way it is taught now 10 According to her experiences some of the differences include Pattabhi Jois originally left out seven postures in the standing sequence but later assigned utthita hasta padangusthasana and ardha baddha padmottanasana before the intermediate series was given utkatasana virabhadrasana A and B parivritta trikonasana and parivritta parsvakonasana were not in the series at this point and Jois did not give a vinyasa between the same poses on the different sides of the body or between variations on a pose e g janu sirsasana A B and C were done together followed by a vinyasa Likewise baddha konasana upavishta konasana and supta konasana were also grouped together without a vinyasa between them as were ubhaya padangusthasana and urdhva mukha paschimottanasana 10 According to Gilgoff Pattabhi Jois prescribed practising twice a day primary and intermediate series with no vinyasa between sides in krounchasana bharadvajasana ardha matsyendrasana eka pada sirsasana parighasana and gomukhasana in the intermediate series Shalabhasana to parsva dhanurasana were done in a group with a vinyasa only performed at the end Ushtrasana through kapotasana also were done altogether The same went for eka pada sirsasana through yoganidrasana The closing sequence included only mudrasana padmasana and tolasana until the completion of the intermediate series when the remainder of the closing sequence was assigned Urdhva dhanurasana and drop backs were taught after the intermediate series Gilgoff states that the original intermediate series included vrishchikasana after karandavasana and ended with gomukhasana She also notes that Pattabhi Jois added supta urdhva pada vajrasana as well as the seven headstands when another yogi asked for more these eight postures were not part of the intermediate series prior to this 10 Power yoga spinoffs EditMain article Power Yoga Power yoga began in the 1990s via a nearly simultaneous invention by two students of K Pattabhi Jois and similar forms led by other yoga teachers 43 Beryl Bender Birch created what Yoga Journal calls the original power yoga 44 in 1995 45 46 Bryan Kest who studied ashtanga yoga under K Pattabhi Jois and Baron Baptiste a Bikram yoga enthusiast separately put their own spins on the style and provided its branding Neither Baptiste s power yoga nor Kest s power yoga are synonymous with ashtanga yoga In 1995 Pattabhi Jois wrote a letter to Yoga Journal expressing his disappointment at the association between his ashtanga yoga and the newly coined power yoga referring to it as ignorant bodybuilding 47 Risk of injury EditIn an article published by The Economist it was reported that a good number of Mr Jois s students seemed constantly to be limping around with injured knees or backs because they had received his adjustments yanking them into Lotus the splits or a backbend 48 Tim Miller one of Jois s students indicates that the adjustments were fairly ferocious 49 Injuries related to Jois s ashtanga yoga have been the subject of discussion in a Huffington Post article 50 In 2008 yoga researchers in Europe published a survey of practitioners of ashtanga yoga that indicated that 62 percent of respondents had suffered at least one injury that lasted longer than one month However the survey lacked a control group of similar people not subject to the treatment such as people who had practised a different form of yoga which limited its validity 51 52 References Edit Ashtanga Yoga Background Ashtanga Yoga Archived from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 20 August 2011 Ashtanga Yoga Yoga Journal Retrieved 19 May 2019 Lewis Waylon 18 June 2009 Pattabhi Jois Founder of Ashtanga Yoga Passes Away at Age 93 Huffington Post Mysore Style Jois Yoga 17 February 2013 Retrieved 7 March 2019 Mysore Style Mysorestyle ie 7 October 2011 Retrieved 26 November 2018 Anon 12 April 2017 Style Profile Ashtanga Yoga Yoga Journal a b c d Swenson David 2000 Ashtanga yoga the practice manual Ashtanga Yoga Productions ISBN 978 1 891252 08 2 OCLC 46344188 page needed Ashtanga Primary Series list Yogateket Yogateket Retrieved 1 June 2019 AYI info The International Ashtanga Yoga Information Page Ashtangayoga info Retrieved 26 November 2018 a b c d Articles by Nancy House of Yoga and Zen House of Yoga and Zen Retrieved 26 November 2018 Ashtanga Yoga Therapy Biography Archived from the original on 24 December 2015 Retrieved 24 May 2015 a b c Jois 2013 a b c Clark Richard 7 February 2005 Manju Jois PDF Australian Yoga Life 12 42 45 Manju Jois Mini Interview Loveyogaanatomy com 24 October 2014 Retrieved 26 November 2018 Ashtanga Yoga Shala NYC Manju Jois New York 2000 Aysnyc org Retrieved 26 November 2018 a b c d The Practice Sharath Jois sharathjois com Archived from the original on 21 February 2019 Retrieved 21 February 2019 a b Yoga Breathing for Stress Relief with Sharath Jois a b c Sharath Jois Kpjayi org Retrieved 26 November 2018 Krishnamacharya 2006 p 146 Singleton 2010 pp 176 184 190 Maehle Gregor 2007 Ashtanga yoga practice and philosophy a comprehensive description of the primary series of Ashtanga yoga following the traditional Vinyasa count and an authentic explanation of the Yoga Sutra of Patanjali New World Library p 294 ISBN 978 1 57731 606 0 OCLC 776703947 Sequential movement that interlinks postures to form a continuous flow It creates a moving meditation that reveals all physical forms as impermanent Vinyasa Yoga Sequences Yoga Journal Retrieved 20 February 2019 a b c d Jois 2002 p 108 a b Guy On Vinyasa Ashtanga Yoga Shala NYC Retrieved 26 November 2018 The long and the short of it On the Ashtanga breath which for the record is not ujjayi Archived from the original on 3 February 2014 Retrieved 1 February 2014 Conference Notes with Sharath Jois KPJAYI March 2013 Joyisyoga com 17 June 2013 Retrieved 26 November 2018 a b Ashtanga com Articles Tim Miller Interview by Deborah Crooks Ashtanga com Retrieved 26 November 2018 Anderson Sandra Interview with K Pattabhi Jois Practice Makes Perfect Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 24 May 2015 Guy Ashtanga Yoga Shala NYC David Williams Maui 2001 Aysnyc org Retrieved 26 November 2018 Ashtanga Yoga Shala NYC On Pranayama Bandha and Drishti Ashtangayogashala net Archived from the original on 26 November 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2018 a b SHARATH JOIS KPJAYI Retrieved 26 November 2018 Eddie Sterne Guruji A Portrait of Sri K Pattabhi Jois Through the Eyes of His Students a b c d e Singleton 2010 pp 175 210 Ashtanga Yoga Shala NYC Manju Jois New York 2000 Ashtanga Yoga Shala Archived from the original on 26 November 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2018 Krishnamacharya T Yoga Makaranda 1934 Cushman Anne New Light on Yoga Yoga Journal Archived from the original on 9 July 2014 Retrieved 13 March 2008 Scott John Ashtanga Yoga The Definitive Step by Step Guide to Dynamic Yoga New York Three Rivers Press 2000 pp 14 17 Sharath Jois KPJAYI Retrieved 26 November 2018 a b Who has done all of the Ashtanga series Does it matter 5 January 2012 Retrieved 26 November 2018 Ashtanga Yoga Shala NYC On Practice Ashtanga Yoga Shala Archived from the original on 26 November 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2018 Lino Miele Astanga Yoga Book The Yoga of Breath Reflections on Guruji A Portrait Interview with Elise Espat Part III Mind Medicine 8 July 2012 Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 24 May 2015 Pizer Ann 8 January 2019 Power Yoga History and Health Benefits Very Well Fit Retrieved 28 April 2019 Power Yoga Yoga Journal Retrieved 28 April 2019 The original power yoga was developed and founded by Beryl Bender Birch but is now a term used to describe many vigorous vinyasa flow styles of yoga Singleton 2010 p 176 Birch Beryl Bender 17 January 1995 Power yoga The total strength and flexibility workout ISBN 978 0 02 058351 6 A letter from Sri K Pattabhi Jois to Yoga Journal Nov 1995 Ashtanga Yoga Library Retrieved 9 October 2014 Pattabhi Jois The Economist Retrieved 28 December 2017 McLean Bethany April 2012 Yoga for Trophy Wives Fitness Fad That s Alienating Discipline Devotees Vanity Fair Archived from the original on 12 January 2013 Cahn Lauren 3 August 2009 Five Words That Do Not Belong in Yoga Huffington Post archived from the original on 28 August 2012 Broad William 2012 The Science of Yoga The Risks and the Rewards New York USA Simon amp Schuster pp 133 134 ISBN 978 1451641424 Mikkonen Jani Pederson Palle McCarthy Peter William 2008 A Survey of Musculoskeletal Injury among Ashtanga Yoga Practitioners International Journal of Yoga Therapy 18 59 64 doi 10 17761 ijyt 18 1 l0748p25k2558v77 Sources EditJois K Pattabhi 2002 1962 Yoga Mala in Kannada New York North Point Press ISBN 978 0 86547 662 2 OCLC 50567767 Jois R Sharath 2013 Aṣṭaṅga yoga anuṣṭhana Mysore India KPJAYI Mysore ISBN 978 93 5126 302 9 OCLC 883428674 Krishnamacharya Tirumalai 2006 1934 Yoga Makaranda Translated by Lakshmi Ranganathan Nandini Ranganathan Singleton Mark 2010 Yoga Body the origins of modern posture practice Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 539534 1 OCLC 318191988 Further reading EditJois Sri K Pattabhi 2005 Suryanamaskara New York Ashtanga Yoga Maehle Gregor 2006 Ashtanga Yoga Practice and Philosophy Doubleview Western Australia Kaivalya Publications ISBN 978 0 9775126 0 7 OCLC 71245040 Miele Lino 1994 Astanga Yoga Including the Benefits of Yoga Chikitsa I amp II Series Rome Italy Lino Miele Scott John 2000 Ashtanga Yoga The Definitive Step By Step Guide to Dynamic Yoga Stroud Gaia Books ISBN 978 1 85675 181 0 OCLC 44693722 Swenson David 1999 Ashtanga Yoga The Practice Manual Austin Texas Ashtanga Yoga Productions ISBN 978 1 891252 08 2 OCLC 65221561 External links EditAshtanga Yoga Understanding the Method Interview with Manju Pattabhi Jois in English and German 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ashtanga vinyasa yoga amp oldid 1129894460, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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