Chroma Yoga – only the best studio in London!

If you have not yet tried Chroma Yoga you must! I was blessed to teach here over the summer  – the studio uses light and colour therapy techniques along with a soundscape and also specifically designed scents for each class.  The sequences are designed to correspond with the healing power of the particular class colour while the very special ‘Chromatic’ class moves through the spectral colours of sunrise or sunset.  The chromatic class is taught moving circular around your mat taking you on a very special journey.

As a student, the light in the classes at yoga give me an unabated sense of calm and focus – and the teachers are phenomenal.  As somebody who does not particularly connect with music being played in a yoga class – I thoroughly enjoyed the sounds offered at Chroma.  I found in the classes I was teaching and those I was attending, the sound was very special and not distracting in the way music can be for students.

Give Chroma Yoga a try – you can check out their website here.

I thoroughly recommend the teacher Letty Mitchell and Marta Masiero.  If you like a more grounded and slow practice – try the ‘pink’ classes with Roberto Rubalcava.  I am yet to try their new ‘super pink’ class which also combines acupuncture within the restorative class.  I can’t wait to try!

For your daily dose of colour, follow Chroma Yoga on Instagram here.

Anjos Yoga Festival

To celebrate the end of my time in Lisbon and to say goodbye to my students I created ‘Anjos Yoga Festival’ and invited friends to come and teach different styles of Yoga.

 

On the day we began with a (free) 30 minute meditation and then some pranayama exercises led by Arjuna.  As the festival took place as the same week International Yoga Day we also did 101 Sun Salutations to celebrate.

We then had classes in Sivananda, Vinyasa, Forrest Yoga and Jivamukti.  We had homemade vegetarian food for lunch and plenty of tea and about 50 different students all throughout the day.  Tickets were kept cheap to provide quality yoga to the local community and it was a real success! I would really like to create a yoga festival again one day…maybe in my new home of Amsterdam.

Yoga Retreat Açores

I was very lucky to join my teacher on a retreat he organises every year on São Miguel Island in the Açores the Portuguese islands lying in the middle of the Atlantic ocean.

We started every day with a silent walk at 7am, an outdoor meditation, a yoga session followed by breakfast.  We spent the other days swimming in the sea, a boat trip with whales and dolphins, hiking, swimming in the iron baths, and much more.  I highly recommend visiting São Miguel Island.

The yoga retreat was in the Sivananda tradition, so we could close each day with chanting, then a reading about the life of Swami Sivananda with other short prayers and offerings to the puja.

Thinking of becoming a yoga teacher?

advice for new yoga teachers

This week I celebrate a whole year of teaching yoga and to mark the occasion, I have put together some advice for people thinking of doing yoga teacher training or for newly qualified teachers.  Lots of people have been getting in touch to ask me questions, so I thought it best to put all my advice together and hopefully it will help.

I took the YTT200 hour training a year ago, and I set up my own ‘community’ style classes in Lisbon to gain experience and to teach all levels from beginners.  It was a real challenge and I learnt so much – I counted more than 300 teaching hours this past year.  I started these classes in a random space, with no props, having to buy all my mats and bits, advertise the classes, find students, organise the timetable, the mailing list, the admin and more.   As a first experience after training, I guess joining a studio would be a little easier and then you could focus just on the teaching ad getting the classes right.

I am about to move to Holland and start my physiotherapy degree in Amsterdam – I will try to find a studio to join, to become a part of a ‘family’ and to have the support of other teachers around.  I am looking forward to teaching in a totally different environment.

Here is the advice I wish somebody had given me just before or after I trained:

1. Don’t focus on the asanas

As you become stronger in your practice, and learn new movements, its very tempting to focus on the asanas only.  Keep this up but do not neglect practicing yoga in other areas of your life – learn all the rich teachings of yoga and begin a daily dedication.   Develop an ‘energetic awareness’ of yourself, learn all about the 8 ‘limbs’ of yoga, practice kriyas, mudras, karma yoga, meditation, mantra and pranayama.

Don’t get sucked into the world of yoga asanas on instagram – its unhealthy and doesn’t show the true magic of the practice.

2. Silence is golden

When you start teaching you want to always talk about everything you have just learnt in your training.  Sometimes less is more, give one or two key points and remember silence is very important for students.  Let them experience the postures properly, listening and tuning into their bodies.  Create and cultivate ‘the sound of silence’ to provide a space that is truly relaxing for the people attending your class.

Its a personal choice –  but it is why I really don’t like classes with music.  This is yoga – its important people can hear their breath and to switch off from distracting sounds or talk.

As a yoga teacher you have a poetic license – use it wisely.  Don’t say anything without meaning.  Be careful how you choose your words – the effect of what you say is very powerful.  Don’t forget to smile and laugh – laughing relaxes the body and is good for you!

Don’t be afraid to give a super quiet and long ‘savansana’.  There is nothing worse than a teacher just talking to fill the gaps of silence.  It’s not genuine and peace is necessary especially at the end of class.

3. Morning meditation and movement

If you do not have your own daily practice, your classes will be dry and without true energy.  There is no such thing as not enough time if you get up early.  Wake up early, meditate and move.  Even if you can only manage a short time, you need to get a good habit going of your own practice.  If you do not enjoy practicing alone – then go to classes.  I almost think the ratio is for every class you teach you should attend a class – but thats just my rhythm and something different may work for you.  Teaching yoga is a real commitment and will take up lots of your time – it deserves your full attention.

4. India is waiting for you

I have not yet been to India and I can feel the magic is missing.

5. Breathe and relax, breathe and relax

Do not forget the importance of learning how to properly instruct pranayama exercises.  Learn this fully and properly.  Learn the full mechanics of breathing and how the body creates this process. Do not skip this – it makes all the difference between a good class and a great class.

6. Go to loads of classes

If you are lucky enough to live in a place with lots of different types of classes – then go to as many as possible. Figure out what you like and don’t like, try some different styles and new postures, hear different teachers and ways of teaching.   Be open to learning as much as possible, and try to really ‘be’ in a class rather than think ‘oh I wouldn’t do it like that’ – enjoy the teachings of others and connect however you can.

7. Hands on, hand off

Its important to learn how to safely adjust – and if you feel like this was missing from your YTT then its something you need to learn soon.  If you are about to do your YTT then make sure its something you learn while there with real bodies to practice with before you have real students.

Make sure you have a good and continuous understanding of human anatomy within the postures, and make sure your adjustments and corrections are safe.  If you are unsure, then you need to do more learning.  Its also super important if you are unsure, to not touch the student.

Make sure your hands are clean and not cold before you touch any students, make sure you tell them you will touch them and not just approach from behind.  Perhaps it’s something you want to ask at the beginning of class – and if you do make sure to use the right language.

8.  Learn your students names

As you start teaching, things can be a little overwhelming.  Try if possible, to remember as many names of your students as possible.  Acknowledge them when they walk in, smile, use their name in class, figure out what they like and don’t like.  Remember important things about your students – injuries, postures they love, postures they are afraid to try.  Use this information to go easy on them, to challenge them when the time is right. Learning names when possible is a really nice way to begin a relationship with your students.  You may even make great friends with your students and this is such a special part of teaching.

9. Clean your feet and your clothes!

Your students will see a lot of them.  Make sure you have clean feet always, clean toes and well kept soles.  How do you think a student will feel if you come to adjust them and they can see dry crusty feet?! Moisture and care for your feet – its very important.

It is also important your whole body and clothes are presentable.  I really believe that this is really very important – it makes me sound picky and I am not however you should treat your yoga practice like a prayer – clean your body before you begin.  Also, students dont want to look at a teacher with a creased three day old t shirt.  Wear your clean clothes on your clean body with pride – you need to feel good yourself to give a good class.  It also shows you care and you didn’t just run in last minute to teach.

10. Sivananda

Before you even think about teaching, attend a Sivananda centre, and focus on the classes and style.  They have the highest quality of teachers and training in the world, taught by dedicated and committed ‘swamis’ who live in the centres while teaching.  In my opinion Sivananda is ‘pure’ yoga and has taught me much more than my teaching training ever could.  It is sometimes referred to as ‘classical’ yoga and its really important to become familiar with Sivananda as a proper foundation for your career as a yoga teacher.  The teachers are very properly trained, and if you are lucky enough to have the opportunity to stay in one of their ashrams you really should.  This is where yoga is a way of life, and you practice all paths of yoga.

Gong Bath Puja

 “The gong is a sacred threshold. It is the portal that links the finite and the infinite experience of the Self. As such, the gong is the most sublime instrument of the Yogi. It is a cauldron in which you can create alchemical blends of qualities that open and develop the Inner Self.’”

Guru Charan Singh

Here in Portugal, I was lucky enough to experience a true gong bath with an overnight puja where the players took it in turns to continuously play the six gongs while we slept.

We slept in a geometric dome which encapsulated the true sound yet gave you the sensation of being outdoors.  The ceremony started with the musicians using other instruments and various voice and singing techniques.  The gongs were played for seven and a half hours exactly and the sound has an intense therapeutic effect on the body and mind.

The ocean of sound was incredible, and the low frequencies are said to resonate with the low frequency energy of the physical body.    The sound is said to alter the flow of chemical messages in the brain – via the motor auditory pathway in the brain.  While the gongs are played, your brain signals to the adrenal glands to slow down the release of the stress hormones cortisol and adrenaline, your blood pressure falls and breathe is restored to its natural rhythm.  The effect of the gongs has an immediate powerful effect on the physical body.

The vibrations of the gong are profoundly relaxing by activating the parasympathetic nervous system.  The body is made up of almost 70% water and the gong sound means the body is physically vibrating inside.  The effect is powerfully detoxing and energising.

The next morning, myself and the others with whom I attended the puja – all reported a totally different experience of the night.   We felt relaxed and quiet as we walked to the breakfast served by the organisers.  The puja was held close to Mafra and the scenery was beautiful – the sun coming up over the hills, the wind turbines, the Portuguese countryside at its finest.  It was the perfect location to wake up in.  The breakfast was delicious and consisted of miso soup, oat porridge, barley porridge, chicory latte, tea, rye bread, salty butter, home made jams and much more.  We felt ok after breakfast but about an hour later an intense tiredness took over and it was time to nap on a local beach.

I highly recommend the team at Cosmic Gong who organised the event and run other baths and workshops through the summer.  You can also find them on Facebook.

 

New schedule and prices

The classes are in two different locations – both in Anjos.  The Classes are all drop in and there is no need to book.  The prices are supposed to be fair and affordable.  Please get in touch if you want to practice but you cannot afford to and perhaps we can work something out.

FIRST CLASS = €5

REGULAR DROP IN = €7

5 CLASS PASS = €30 (6/class)

10 CLASS PASS = €50 (5/class)

Reminder of schedule:

  • Mondays 7.30pm ESPACO
  • Tuesdays 7.30pm Arjuna Yoga Centre
  • Wednesdays 8.30am – 9.30am Arjuna Yoga Centre
  • Saturdays 11.15am ESPACO

Happy Diwali!

‘tamaso ma jyotirgamaya’ – lead me from darkness (tamas) to light (jyoti) – (Brihadaranyaka Upanishad)

Diwali is the perfect time to nuture our ‘inner light’ and use yoga as a tool to illuminate and brighten our lives.

How can we do this?

  •   Increasing our awareness through yoga practice

By meditation and asana practice we can learn to see problems in a ‘different’ light and we achieve more mental clarity.

  • Pranayama or ‘breath work’

By healthy pranayama exercise we can ‘declutter’ our minds and reveal an inner light.

BKS-Iyengar-Quote-Yoga-is-a-Light

Private Rooftop Classes

I have a rooftop at home where I can offer private classes for one or two people.  We can look at any sequence or poses you like, I can design a class to help with specific injury or needs, or we could simply do a regular yoga class with stunning views!

The fresh air and sunshine means you will feel more invigorated and alive! These warm evenings are excellent for practising yoga.  Long may they last!

I also have space at home to teach.  Please email me luzyogalisboa@gmail.com if you wish to book a private class or if you have any questions at all.