Tuesday, April 30, 2013

2 days in travel. 2 days of practice

25 hours of traveling and my back was very tight.   I got to my hotel at 9:00PM  (Seoul time) or about 8:00 AM Pittsburgh time and did my normal warm up,  my core work and a Yin session.  It felt good to stretch my hips and lower back.     Spent the next day walking about the city (probably 5 miles of walking) and then did my normal Ashtanga flow.    Walking sure tightens the lower back and it was not the best practice session but at least I found the energy to practice.   Doing a complete forward fold flattening my hands on the floor was not going to happen. (not that it ever does but it was impossible)     After practicing on my regular mat  (Manduka Black Pro mat),   the travel Mat sure felt flimsy.     

Vegetarian food is hard to find especially when I cannot read Korean (though there are pictures of food in most places).    My hotel has a great Western/Asian buffet for breakfast so that was great.  I found a curry place next to my hotel so I was able to eat veggie curry there.   Getting protein will be hard.    Finding hogs blood in my food will be easy.



Saturday, April 27, 2013

Off to Asia for a few weeks

Bringing the travel mat,  jet lag and all.  Hope to find some suitable outdoor place to practice a few times.   Hunting for veggie dinners are going to be a challenge when I can't even read the menus..

Friday, April 26, 2013

The Yoga Guy in the class filled with Women.

Let me start by saying that my friend Rob taught me something.  He said "Don't sh*t in your own living room" .    More about that later.

In most of the classes that I go to,  I am the only guy amongst anywhere from 5 to 25 women.  There are a few guys to regularly go to my studio but I can count them on one hand (there is only one male teacher) and only one who I really see often.    Lets face it,  most Yoga practitioners are women and 99% of the classes that you will attend (based upon my experience of one class having a majority of  3 men to  2 women),  you will be a minority and for most of them, you will be alone.     I actually do enjoy talking to many of the women in my class  (at this point I have met husbands,  know about grand kids and kids and would consider some of them Yoga friends).   It is one of the reasons I do not have a 100% home practice,  I enjoy the chance to go into a class filled with women.  I enjoy their company.  Would I go if it was the opposite.   That I do not know.   

With so many women in a class,  I wonder what is thought about the single guy that is there.     I did some internet searches and some articles discuss how women feel about this with such subjects like

Guys who go to yoga classes alone. Are they creepy?

or

 Solo dude attending a yoga class, non-creepy style


I find this pretty funny but who knows. I am sure there are some guys who go to Yoga to meet women but I have not really seen it. As for being creepy, can we define what that is. You are in a class filled with generally healthy women from 20 - 60 in yoga pants with sleeveless shirts. I would be lying if I said I didn't look once and a while.

Once class starts, your focus needs to be on your Asanas and not on your neighbor's tight yoga pants. You are there for your physical and mental health. You mind may wander but it should go back to the task at hand.

Another point to make (and this is especially true when you start practicing), your strength (in reference to your body) and flexibility will not be on par with many of women in your classes. This is something that has to be let go. When I started, I was a bad back mess. I could have said, my ego won't let me do this, but I did not. I had to ignore the fact that my co-classmates were women. I focused on myself and my needs and put the time and effort into improving my practice. I still go to classes where there are many women who are "better" (bad term I know) than me in Yoga, but it does not bother me. I am there for me and only me. It is like you have to forget about your ego for your ego's sake .

So in a nutshell. Being surrounded by women is fun but it should not be the reason you are in class. You are there for your practice. And what does my friends Rob's advice mean in this situation. If you are a serious practitioner think hard before you date anyone in your yoga classes. If anything goes wrong and someone gets hurt, your practice may suffer as going to the studio becomes awkward. One or both of you may feel uncomfortable in the others' presence and we all know how gossip is.

 

 

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

On Vegetarianism and diet.

For nearly 3 year years I have been able to maintain a vegetarian diet that includes neither eggs nor fish nor meat.     It has  been surprisingly easy.   I think that this is mostly because I have always cooked flavorful meals and meat was never the center of my cooking.   Once in a while I miss a few things but there are non-meat substitutes that come close to that flavor.   (Buffalo wings for one) .  I even found veggie dogs at  Whole Foods that I swear are the real thing.     That sauerkraut on a bun with mustard and a dog (with a snap) is something I never thought I would miss. 

Being a vegetarian does not automatically make me a healthy eater.   There are many non meat ways of eating unhealthy and on the other side you can eat a healthy diet with meat and fish in it.    It is my belief, however,  that a well managed vegetarian diet is much better for you than a meat/fish eating one.     Unless you are strict with what types of fish and meat you eat,   a non-vegetarian diet will entail eating large amounts of animal fats,  and this is not a good fat to consume.  


The struggle with many vegetarians is to ensure that they consume enough protein, calcium, iron, zinc and B12.   Understanding the sources of these are important because they generally would come from meat.     I weigh 158 pounds,  and according to my sources  I need about 50-60 grams of protein a day.    In order to achieve this,  the following could be in my diet each day in order to satisfy my protein needs. 

Rice and or Pasta  (both white and whole wheat/brown)
Beans  (Black, White and Red)  -  make many home made veggie burgers.
Tofu
Soy based cereals
Peanut Butter  (in small quantities )
Cheese (in small quantities)
Nuts  (mostly almonds)
Lentils  (mostly in home made Dals)
Non-Fat Greek Yogurt
Chick or Garbanzo beans
Soy Milk
Whole Wheat bread
Oatmeal (Multi-Grain)
Avocado 


What I need to be careful is not to consume too much cheese as it does contain a large amount of animal based fats.    I would love to remove all dairy from my diet,  but that has not been easy to achieve.    I do love cheeses in small quantities and non-fat Greek yogurt is good in meals and as supplement for breakfast.

Today, for instance,   my today my diet consists of

Breakfast

1/2 cup oat meal
1 cup soy milk
1/2 cup mixed berries
1 tablespoon ground flax seeds
2 tablespoons Greek yogurt
Calcium enriched Orange Juice



Lunch
Mixed spinach based salad with broccoli, peas, carrots, peppers, tomatoes, cucumbers.  Vinegar based dressing.
2 cups homemade veggie black bean chili


Dinner
1/4 pound (dried) rigatoni  (will be mixed with tofu, tomatoes and Asparagus garlic and oil)
4 ounces tofu
2 tbs Olive Oil  (garlic fried in it) 
1 tablespoon Romano Cheese
Another (but larger) mixed salad broccoli, peas, carrots, peppers, tomatoes, cucumbers.  Vinegar based dressing.


While it is not easy to correctly calculate the exact amount of protein intake, 

Soy Milk    8
Oats   4
Greek Yogurt  4
Flax Seeds 1
Chili   10
Salad 1 - 2
Rigatoni - 7
Tofu - 10
Salad 2 - 4
Cheese 1
Spinach 6


Total - 57 grams  not including additional protein (small amounts from carrots,  tomatoes, asparagus etc)  from things I did not count.


So we see I have a low fat,  protein and vegetable rich diet without meat.    Only a few items are prepared before I used them (Soy, Yogurt,  Tofu and Pasta) but in this world and with my schedule,  I cannot see making my own tofu and making Yogurt and Pasta is time consuming.     What is also important to note is that I have replaced lettuce with raw spinach and for two meals have a very large raw vegetable salad.   1 cup of raw spinach has 6 grams of protein.   I cup of most lettuce have zero grams of protein.   I have also included some olive oil for fats in my meals  (it is the main source of all my fat) and use a bit on my salads as well.











Thursday, April 18, 2013

Another great double class combination (Heated Flow and Yin)

Had another double class again last night.    The heated flow was very strength oriented with lots of side planks and dolphin pushups.    The Yin class was real great and the hour was gone in a flash.    With the two classes plus my usual warm up,  I practiced close to three hours last night. 

Both Dolphin and Side Plank are real strength poses.   Side Plank stresses both the shoulder plus your core and the intensity can be increased by raising your upper hand and leg.   A good 10 breaths for Side Plank.

With Dolphin,  it is like Down Dog except that your forearms are on the ground.   You then can pull yourself forward over your arms (your nose almost touches the floor) and back.  It is a real workout for your shoulders as well.

In the Yin class we did a great spinal twist that really worked on the lower spine and Psoas.   You raise your hip and legs up on a bolster and then twist in the opposite direction.   3 minutes in that pose feels really great.    It is called "Our favorite twist"

 
Dolphin





Side Plank



Side Plank with raised arms and legs












Monday, April 15, 2013

No real excuse not to practice.

Drove my girls up to Maine on Saturday and then I came back last night.   1500 miles in 2 days.  No time to practice. Got in late last night  (2AM) and went to work on time this morning.   I did, however,  go to the Monday night class in the studio.    I felt pretty good considering how tired I was.   You have practice even if you are not in the mood.  One day leads to two which leads to a week etc.

My studio had this 30 classes in 30 day challenge in March and the classes were so full that no laying down twists could happen because the mats were too close together.  3 weeks ago, there were 25 people in the class.  The last two weeks there were 3.   I prefer somewhere in the middle but it is nice to have the space.


Friday, April 12, 2013

Yoga Milestones

Well.  Over the past month or so,  I am now able to move into Plow position  (Halasana).    This was a big milestone for me.   About a year ago,  I pulled a back muscle trying this early in the morning before stretching out  (dumb me) and I have been fearful for a long time to go back into the pose.     To get comfortable with the pose,  I would move to a wall and slide my feet down so I would not stretch myself too much.   Here I am in the pose.   I think I can have a straighter back but for now,  putting my toes on the ground is great.    I still do it very slowly and do fear going down too fast but I now know I can do it. 






One thing you can do from this pose is to move into Deaf Man's Pose  (Karnapidasana).
I am still a bit tight and hesitant to go all the way down but again,  I feel progress in the pose.






So, with perseverance, practice,  time and overcoming fear,   great milestones can be achieved.






Thanks to my daughter for taking the photos.   Every five minutes or so she would come in during my Yin sequence and take photos of me.

Older Exercise

When I lived in Switzerland,  I used to take very long hikes in the hills near Zurich.    The whole country is crisscrossed with marked hiking trails  that tell you the time to the next town or the next mountain top etc.    I met up with an older gentleman who proceeded to hike up a very steep trail with me.   We engaged in a lively conversation in a mixture of English and German and I had a real nice chat with him.   This man was 73 years old and he was hiking the same trail that  I was.  He was the same age as my father was at the time and he was easily keeping up with me (or was I keeping up with him) It is a culture where exercise is really stressed.   The diet much more vegetable friendly and packaged food unfriendly than ours is here in the states.  


So in a nutshell,  I hope to be able to conquer mountains at 73.     Just keep focused, keeping eating right and keep exercising.



Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Yoga on the Road

I spend a lot of my time for work traveling both domestically and internationally.     The best thing about having a home focused practice is that I can continue to practice even away from home. 

For traveling purposes I bought a Gaiam travel mat.  It is very light  and folds up to a little larger than a t-shirt.    It is not very thick  but it does work well on hotel room rugs and would work well on top of Yoga studio rental mats

http://blog.gaiam.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/05-52857.jpg
Gaiam Travel Mat





As long as I do not have any evening plans  (and sometimes I can fit in a practice session even with plans) I can practice in my room if it is large enough  (and most modern American hotels have enough space if you move the coffee table) or in the hotel gym.   The mat is a little thin to use on a hard floor but it works OK even that way.

Going away from home is no excuse for going away from your practice.





Sunday, April 7, 2013

Diet Rant

I was at the convention center here in Pittsburgh yesterday for the Annual Tekkoshocon Anime convention.    Somewhere in the middle I took my youngest to a birthday party at a bowling alley in the North Hills.    Guess what food was available for purchase in both places.   Hot dogs,  fries,  burgers,  pizza,  nachos with cheese and other assorted culinary treasures.   I am not averse to the periodic gastronomic dive into Pizza or fries but in neither place was there anything remotely healthy to eat (or drink for that matter).     This is how Americans eat,  and this is why we are by far the most obese people in the world.   According to one source (and we all know how much we can trust the internet),  30.6% of Americans are obese    Obesity Stats  and I am sure that this does not include the sort of pudgy overweight types.    I lived in Switzerland for two years and I do not remember ever seeing a heavily obese person in that whole time .   Go to any mall in the US and you won't have enough fingers and toes to count them.

I wonder why people get that way and I think  (and I have no empirical data to back this up) there are a number of reasons.

Too much processed sugar products  like packaged cakes and cookies
Too much fatty meats
Too little exercise
Too little time or energy or initiative to cook but rather an over-reliance on prepared foods
Salty Snacks  like potato chips and tortilla chips
Too much cheese
Not enough vegetables, fruits and legumes
Soda  (though I am amaze how many heavy people drink diet sodas)



Go to the supermarket and watch was is being check out.   How many people have their carts full of boxes and packages and how many have theirs full of bags of vegetables and fruits.     What we are eating is killing us.

What is our response to this.   Diet drinks,  diet fads,  binge dieting.     None of this goes to the core of what is wrong.   We need to take stock of what we put in our bodies and think about everything that goes into it.    Fries and pizza and cake can be on your diet but they should be few and far between.   We should eat 20x the number of bags of spinach than chips we eat  (there are 2000 calories and 91 grams of fat in one bag of popular tortilla chips ).  We should read every prepared box of food we buy to know how much sodium and saturated fats are in them.    Almost every meal needs to be mostly vegetables and should contain at least 2 cups of raw vegetables.    

Enough ranting..





Day off yesterday

My kids are in town and we spent a full nice day together.    My body was sure happy for the day off.   I did take the dog for an hour long walk so the day was not all sluggishness and I spent a lot of time walking with my daughters at an Anime convention in town this weekend.   It was good to give my body a day off from stretching and Asanas.   Now I just need the energy to practice today on a nice warm Sunday morning where there is tons of things to catch up on.   

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Struggling, Trying.. Ego..

There are a lot of poses I cannot do and many I cannot do well .   I struggle with head stands (I cannot do one in the middle of the room) for example but I continually try to work on getting there. Sometimes,  I wonder if it is a race between time (aging) and flexibility and strength.     I know I will get there some day  (though I periodically despair that I ever will) but I keep on trying.   It took me 1.5 years to balance more than 2 seconds in Crow pose  (see below) but now I can do it much easier.   I even look like the guy now that I have a goatee.  

When you are in class and you are 50+ and a male,  most of the time you are in your own demographic.   I am surrounded by women who generally are younger and/or more flexible than I am so they are able to do many poses better than I can.    This is where ego has to be let go.   You cannot compare  yourself to those around you but rather  you should focus on what you can do and what you are.   Everyone else in class is focusing on their own pose. They do not care how you look.

There are times when the the types of poses (generally new ones) get me a bit frustrated  (probably too strong of a word) and I feel that I am not getting all I can get out of the class.  Often I go back and review where I struggled and try those poses again. It is very important to work on what you have a hard time on more and less on the easier poses.  My hips are very open and I can do Lotus and Squat better than almost anyone in any of my classes.     I should practice those poses  but I should spend much less time on them than a wide angled forward fold  (which I really suck at but I can see I am improving with).  It is amazing to see (and I have never seen a guy do this) someone spread their legs out completely and then forward fold to the ground with the forward fold.   I can barely go forward 30 degrees. 






Crow




Wide Angle Forward Fold



Back to back classes last night

I did a hot Yinyasa flow followed by a Yin class last night  The first was 1.25 hours and the second 1 hour.    I like the contrast between the two and by the end I am pretty wiped.     We did some real deep lower back twists in Yin that I had never done before.   My Psoas was happy today.   

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Restorative (Yin) Yoga

Most of my practice revolves around an Ashtanga flow.   I do this for a number of reasons.   I find the physicality of it refreshing and challenging.   Combined with my breathing,  I can forget myself for the hour or so it takes me to work through the primary series poses that I can accomplish (some I cannot do).   Doing it at a continual pace allows me an aerobic workout and, finally,  it just makes me feel good.  

At my age I need a break from the daily challenges of 15 to 20 Sun Salutations plus the other poses that are part of the Ashtanga flow.   It is not an easy practice and there are days I just need to take off.    I do not, however, need to take a break from Yoga.   This is where Yin yoga helps my practice.  

Yin is a slow-paced style of yoga with postures or asanas that are held for comparatively long periods of time.   Depending if the pose is bi-lateral  (meaning you work each side separately) or uni-lateral,  I generally hold the poses either 3 or five minutes.  Most of the poses work ligaments and tendons and fascia (fibrous tissue) as well as general muscle groups.   The poses are almost exclusively done seated or laying down.   This is quite similar to the Yoga that I did in college and high school.

Many of the poses are focused on hips and lower back (as well as other areas) and when in position,  you control the intensity and the level of discomfort.    I find with the hips especially,   you can really feel the stretch and there is a level of discomfort  (I would not call it pain) that you  control.    For example.   The Pigeon or Swan Pose is held for at least 3 minutes and the level of discomfort in your hips can be very startling when you do the pose for the first time.  The goal of this pose is to make the bended leg as close to a 90 degree position as possible and to have the hip of that bended leg be flush on the floor.  The action of moving the lower leg forward and moving the hip flush to the floor can be felt very readily in the hip.   It is a great feeling once you surrender to the pose.


http://blog.timesunion.com/holistichealth/files/2012/12/pigeon-pose.jpg

A Yin session in class or home session is intense in the sense that you are in difficult poses for an extended period of time.    It is not a hot class and I find that is is a very mellow experience.   When I am done with a session,  I have a much greater feeling of relaxation that I do after a flow session.  I also have worked on areas of my body that are not normally addressed by a flow session.

I really love some of the poses.   I can sit for a long time in Baddhakonasana (Butterfly) where your feet are out in front of you touching  (and the distance closer works your abductors more and further works your hamstrings more) and you are bent forward.   It is a zen like experience after a time.  

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEglTLeg2tX2UN3RullFe5YUkoHIl48KsU4iYXRLRLwLKMxSL2Y5ApOpbwYrMu9IwGKNblBH-UO6qVXvRoPSnG43HOhEV-Wbwl1BeK-CrxEKr8s_9rKEyfPvnoz8iglJyTCIgX7ZBcTOBhLU/s400/Baddha_Konasana.gif





I use a book called  "The Complete Guide to Yin Yoga" by Bernie Clark.  It is a really good book. The link to the inside of the book on Amazon is below.

Complete Guide to Yin Yoga