Friday, July 20, 2012

Finding Space

If you are a larger than average person, the idea of taking up space can be terrifying.  Even though I think that I am pretty good at taking up space....when I think of plane travel, I start to panic.  It doesn't help that there have been some very public cases of fat people being told to get off of the plane.  And I've had experiences where just seeing me come onto a plane people will immediately grab both of their arm rests and expand their body over their seat.  Imagine what a child does with using their body to cover their toys so that they don't have to share, and you will get the picture.

It's frustrating.

I don't spread over my seat in an airplane, and I actually try to make myself as small as possible.  I hug my arms across my chest, I always let the person next to me have the armrest (even when I am in the center seat), I will sit for longer periods of time because I don't want to inconvenience someone in having to get up.  I've dealt with glares, the eye rolls.  With people freaking out if the hem of my sweater happens to fall on the armrest, yet I don't get to complain when the same person keeps elbowing me (hard!) throughout the flight.  I've even dealt with someone putting their chair down all the way and refusing to pull up their seat when the food was delivered (a flight attendant ended up having to intervene on that one).

The situation isn't fair.

The seats are small for everyone...that is a fact.  That is unfair to everyone.  What is unfair to me and to countless others who are similar in size to me is the reaction of other people to our size.  And in my experience, those that seem to worry that I am going to take up their space end up taking up twice as much as I do in an attempt to make sure that I don't take over theirs.

We need to give ourselves a break.

A few years ago I had a size breakthrough on a plane.  I was coming back from a conference in India and I was sick.  The kinda of sick where your entire body hurts when you aren't stuck in the bathroom in even more pain from all that is passing through you.  In order to be in slightly less pain, I needed a pillow on my lower back.  Except I couldn't get the seatbelt on with the pillow at my back.  In fact, getting the seatbelt to connect had been a problem for a while, resulting in bruises on my body where I have literally stuffed myself in....hoping that if I just tried to take up less space all would be better. 

I was in agony. All I needed was two inches.

A flight attendant saw me struggling and discretely gave me a lapbelt extender.  First of all, I didn't know that they existed.  Then, I started to cry because I felt so humiliated that I needed one in the first place.  About an hour or two later, I realized that I was comfortable.  That my body hurt less.  I felt free.  All I needed was two inches and that beautiful, amazing, angelic flight attendant gave me the permission to take the two inches that would have made the difference between relief and agony.

So why am I telling you this story and what does it have to do with yoga?  Well, I was reminded of this story as I just came back from a trip to Kenya....and traveling always reminds me of the fact that I still need to give myself permission to take up my own space.  But also.... granting ourselves the permission to take two inches of space is also the essence of yoga modifications.  I use straps, blocks, the wall, etc all the time in my yoga practice because it enhances my practice.  A strap can give me the two inches that I need to get my leg up high enough to do Lord of the Dance pose.  A block can make the difference between a bad knee day and a good knee day in Triangle pose.  I've come across many students who feel awful when they use a prop...like it means that they have failed.  They haven't.  They have just listened to their body.  Then I'll tell them the lapbelt story....but even then I have still had those that are still resistant. 

Here's a secret....  Although it really isn't a secret because it is out in the open.

Your mat: that's a prop, a modification.
That's right!  There were no sticky mats when yoga was being developed!  There are no aesthetic yogis walking the Indian countryside with a pink gaiam mat strapped to their backs!  Pah-lease!

See?  This entire time you've already been practicing with help.  In western yoga classes we are constantly taught to find the space on our mat and treat it as a place of solace.  Give yourself permission to honor that space that you have already claimed....and then continue to give yourself the permission to enjoy every single one of those "two-inches" you need.


Much thanks to Rezwan for taking this photo of me teaching yoga while at my conference in Kenya.  If you can't tell, that's me in the white. :)

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Psst.....Can I tell you a secret?

I don't have a home practice.

Although I really want one.  I should have one.  And teaching is helping me develop one.

Is having a home yoga practice necessary?  It depends on who you talk to.  I am of the opinion that as long as I get on my mat on a regular basis that I feel better, calmer, and for some strange reason, my ankles won't swell. 

If you aren't able to come to my classes and practice regularly, I have decided to post the content of my classes here on this blog so that you can see what you missed, and maybe practice at home.  So here is what you missed last Sunday....


The theme of our class was transitions.  We have lots of new beginnings in our lives and we tend to focus on those beginnings rather than the importance of the transition from the old to the new.  After introducing ourselves and the philosophy of Curvy Yoga, I asked the class to close their eyes and think of a transition currently happening in their lives.  Imagine the best outcome of that transition, visualize it and then encapsulate that feeling or outcome with one word.  That one word will be your mantra for the rest of this practice.

You will need a bolster and a strap for this practice, all poses are designed to support the lower back...a part of our body which is often injured in many of the transition events of our lives.

Warm Up:
  • Neck openers- rotate your head from side to side drawing a crescent line as your chin moves from shoulder to shoulder
  • Hunch shoulders up to your ears, release, repeat
  • Roll shoulders forward 3x
  • Roll shoulders backwards 3x
  • Shoulder isolation: roll left shoulder forward and hold, roll right shoulder backward and hold. Then roll right shoulder to neutral, followed by rolling the left shoulder to neutral.  Repeat on the opposite sides.
  • Seated half crescent moon
  • Seated twist
  • Baby pigeon- this version is done by starting with your legs in butterfly pose.  The right leg stays in the pose while the left leg is extended straight and the bent so that the leg is point behind you.  A stretch can be felt here in the inner thigh and in the outside hip flexor.  I'll have to take a photo of this one eventually.  Repeat for the other side.
  • Ankle rolls with arch massage on the feet
  • Toes pose
  • transition to standing with the mindful standing technique

Standing Poses:
  • Tadasana --- Urdhva Hastasana ----forward fold-- roll up to standing, repeat 3x
  • Step backwards into Warrior 1, transition to Warrior 2, move to 5-pointed Star, and then into Goddess poses (2x), then return to 5-pointed Star, Warrior 2, and Warrior 1.  Include a slight backbend into warrior 1 before repeating on the opposite side.
  • Reverse mindful standing down to knees

Floor Flow:
  • kneeling cat/cow, child's pose, roll hips forward, roll hips backward to child's pose, dolphin, child's pose, kneeling cat/cow.  Repeat 5-6 times

Supine Poses:

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Welcome!

Thank you for visiting my yoga site, the Squishy Yogini!  

Why squishy?  Because while you could call me fat, plus size, rotund, chubby, heavy, thick, overweight, plump, roly-poly, zaftig, etc. etc. etc. I prefer to refer to myself as "squishy in the right places".



So what are we doing here?

Well, this squishy woman is beginning a new path in her life as a yoga teacher and you are all invited along!

When you think of what the average yoga student looks like, I am probably the last person that you would imagine.  Big and beautiful, curvy, plus-size, squishy in the right places, no matter what you call it....I'm fat.  I've never let my size hold me back from anything, least of all yoga.  I've been practicing yoga off and on for many years now, but it is only within the last two years that I have embraced my yoga practice with intensity.  When I practice yoga it is a time for me when I can turn off the noise from the outside world.  I don't care what I look like or if someone is watching me.  When I am on my mat everything is about honoring myself and the amazing things that my body can do. 

In the past, I've struggled with teachers who have dismissed me because of my size or been in classes where the focus is not on your practice but on how well you keep up with the crowd.  Yoga is not a popularity contest or a competition.  Yoga is a way of life that encompasses and supports all people.  Last year I visited a studio that offered a "Yoga for Bigger Bodies Class".  I was excited that such a class was offered but was horrified when I went to it.  The teacher wasn't supportive, didn't talk about how to use modifications, and obviously wasn't paying attention to the needs of her students.  It saddened me that there were women in that class who this was their first, and probably last, experience with yoga.  The next day I contacted Corena at Infusion Yoga and enrolled in the Yoga Teacher Training Course.  My goal in teacher training is to be able to offer an environment for students of all shapes and sizes to learn and fall in love with yoga.  In working towards this goal, I've also been certified in teaching Curvy Yoga.

So look out Utah, I'm starting to teach!

Where: Sunday afternoon at 4:00pm at Infusion Yoga
Starting: This Saturday, June 3rd!
Cost: Regular rates for Infusion Yoga Studio in Bountiful Utah.  They have so great summer deals!


Also, I will be teaching a FREE workshop on yoga modifications on Thursday June 14th at 7:30 pm!