Showing posts with label The Yogi Coach Column. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Yogi Coach Column. Show all posts

Sunday, April 18, 2010

From Where i Sit...A SPIRITUAL WARNING TO ATHLETES:


Sunday night. WF Tribal H(om)e Zendo. looking down from within Swastikasana...one of my go-to Meditation Postures. an undertraffic'd asana, it seems. photo from phone, ilg.


the difference between a yogi and an athlete
is obvious to anyone wise enough to be both.

scintillating as well, is the fact that the obvious differences
are also their most intriguing and as yet unexplored similarities
which,



READ THE ENTIRE TEACHING PLUS COACH's SPIRITUAL WARNING TO ATHLETES AND A RARE OFFERING OF ONE OF COACH'S MOST VALUABLE MANTRA'S
today on DL Subscription Format; The Spiritual Workshop For Those Who Love To Sweat

Friday, March 19, 2010

Ashtanga Yoga is often Ouch-tanga Separation - Protecting Joint Beds during Asana; A Sample HP Yoga® Weekly Program



Jumping For Joy is not only a great classic rock climbing route first put up by Yvon Chouinard near the Nutcracker in Yosemite, it's only what Dewachen is doing as she grabs air on the tramp this morning. Joy feels Dewa's vicariously; that wonder-ful feeling of being as light as a feather. photo by ilg at Mason Center, Durango. click the pic to heighten your Heart...


Coach:

Re: Namaste~
thank you so much coach..i am following you on DL...

I have a question;
I was doing yoga everyday due to a hip injury and it was fixed then i started doing ashtanga yoga and increased it from 3 days to 5-6 days a week.

After that i had knee problems, never had a problem with my knee before for 38 years...since you have experience in different types of yoga, do you think asthtanga yoga is too risk since it has too much knee bending poses...

- Salim Pamukcu


Most Treasured Student on the Path of Wholeness,
my short answer: yes.

Ashtanga yoga even at 3x weekly is going to produce injury for most Americans...let alone 5-6 times per week! Such a Discipline-Specific Spike In The Graph of your 38 years is a huge WF no-no!

Ashtanga Yoga is now quickly replacing Ballet as the most injury-producing discipline in America...which is totally ironic, since the 6,000 year-old First Rule of Yoga is Ahimsa. Ahimsa has multiple meanings, like everything else in Yoga, however, first and foremost Ahimsa means; Do No Harm...Do Not Harm yourself or other Beings.

In my Teachings, i have warned new students to be VERY judicious about choosing which forms of Asana to pursue. One must study the Teacher of the style very deeply to make sure he or she reflects Wholeness across the physiologic spectrum; otherwise, like any sport or occupation, the asana will produce Imbalance and Injury instead of Healing and Wholeness. as in the Martial Arts, in Yoga-asana there are Hard forms and Soft forms. HP Yoga® - one of Wholistic Fitness®'s Five Noble Fitness Disciplines - enjoys the Middle Path; it is neither hard nor soft rather a beautiful interweaving of both. this i TAF, is optimal...especially since in WF, our Practice includes sports, fitness, and Meditation.

The founder of Ashtanga Asana was deeply influenced by Western gymnasts, hard-style martial artists, Southern Indian wrestlers, and other joint-intensive practices. The vinyasa's inherent to Ashtanga Asana are extremely joint-intensive as a result and certainly are not



READ THE REST OF COACH ILG's SURPRISING ANSWER TO STUDENT SALIM...
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THAT WON'T HURT YOU
ONLY HEIGHTEN YOUR SPIRIT OF WHOLENESS AND PERFORMANCE...


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Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Don't Waste Time




in my Zendo, prying deeeep into my pectineus/quadratus femoris/piriformus
with MahaBanda engaged and spraying Ujjayi Pranayam directly into this
most potent spiritual workplace; this type of deep asanic-prying
while in a variation of swastikasana is vital for endurance athletes
to free the energetics of the power chain musculature
within the hips...


ARE YOU CONFUSED ABOUT HOW TO FLIP
YOUR PASSION FOR FITNESS
INTO A VEHICLE TOWARD ENLIGHTENMENT?
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DON'T SCREW UP YOUR STILLNESS:
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Steve;

I will be ordering your new IRON TEMPLE DVD just before I head down to Sun Valley for skiing in December so I don't have to deal with Canada customs. It sounds like you are doing quite well and your family life sounds wonderful.

I turn 64 in 2 weeks and have to figure out what to do at 65 . At 60 I convinced a friend to climb the Grand Teton in Wyoming and who knows what is in store for me in a year ? Maybe you will play a role in that phase of my life . I still have great memories of the first time I met and worked out with you in Santa Fe and especially our few days in Durango.

I do want to get back into the fold and getting the new DVD should be inspiring . I'm still in the gym 3 -4 days / week.

Keep well;

J.


COACH RESPONDS...ONLY FOR DL SUBSCRIBERS BELOW:
Learn what the podium that
all spiritual athletes must attain by age 75 and start TRAINING FOR IT NOW!


coach responds:
Most Precious Warrior J!

always go(o)d to hear from you!

well, according to the science of Enlightenment,
you only have 11 more years to...


SUBSCRIBE TODAY and SAVE YOUR SWEAT AND STILLNESS
FOR YOUR HIGHEST SUMMIT!

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Questions and Answers from a rookie WF Online Student

only for DL Subscribers;
topic includes;
SUNRIDER Herb intake,
MAP Amino Acid intake,
beginning yoga question,
purification of Word Choice,
and more...

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Part Two; NOT ALL SARCOMERES ARE CREATED EQUAL; Why HP Yoga Is Vital For Tendon Health

Due to popular response to Part I; the complete Teaching is now available as a Pay-Per PDF in the WF Tribal Pro Shop:

Pay Per PDF's




Rachel Blievernicht, who just finished 4th at the World Bouldering Championships, knows a thing or two about the necessity of keeping her connective tissues strong. That's why she prioritizes HP Yoga® PROP WORKOUTS each week!






In Part One (DL; 6*27*08) i used my professional and direct experience of the exceptional torques, tweaks, and tensions associated with rock climbing to illustrate just how vital is taking wholistic care of our Connective Tissue (CT). The same Teaching lands true for all of however. Runners, cyclists, triathletes, strength athletes, skill athletes; we ALL need to understand how a wholistic training effect can take care of our CT over the course of our lives. Why would anyone NOT want to take wisdom care of their CT? Few really do, however. I know sport-specific cyclists and runners that are literally 'scared stiff' to come to my yoga classes in even the face of herniated disks, chronically inflamed hamstrings/lower back, pinched nerves and other associated dis-eases that are born from an addict's obsession with a single sport. "For Buddha's Sake," i try telling them, "just get into my yoga class - at LEAST during your off season - and let's start bringing some much needed elongation, suppleness, and physiologic/pranic fluid into your suffocated and tight tissues!"

Should be a no-brainer, right?

Let's erase the suffering by easing into an appreciation of our CT and how to care lovingly and wisely for it.


IF YOU WERE A DL SUBSCRIBER, you'd get this entire, important Teaching for your long-term health and performance for nothing!...SUBSCRIBE TODAY and hang out where the world class yogis gather!

Friday, June 27, 2008

Not All Sarcomeres Are Created Equal; Why HP Yoga Is Vital For Rock Climber's Tendon Health



leading Country Club Crack (rated 5.11 b/c back then), Boulder Canyon, Colorado, circa 1983. this was one of my last leads before attempting to free solo this route, as well as many other difficult rock climbs of the area, later in my climbing career. Photo by Richard Rossiter. This photo appears in Rossiter's guidebook, BOULDER CLIMBS NORTH, in which i also appear on the cover and wrote the Foreword.




Back (waaaay back) when i was a sponsored climber, i could crank 62 consecutive pull ups and 6 one-arm pullups. Only Pat Adams could beat me in pull ups. but, Pat was a freakin' alien from some other planet, so i don't count him. i'd spend so much time going up and down my self-designed climber-peg board at Farentinos Gym in Boulder, Colorado that a bivouac on the peg board was not out of my realm of thinking. i could hold a full-body front lever with nearly as much poise as John Gill and actually climb things other than out of my bed, which i can barely do these years. During that golden era, i used my position as America's top trainer of climbers to give considerable thought, research, and exploration of tendon and muscle strength. It paid off. Not once in the 15 years i spent climbing (rock, ice, or mixed) nearly every day during that era, did i ever suffer from inflammations of connective tissue or muscle maladies. Nor did my athletes*.

i recall being on a panel of experts at an American Alpine Club Annual Meeting in New York City with the other top climbers of the day like Ron Kauk and Lynn Hill to talk about training for climbers. One of the other experts, a famous rock climbing doctor, took particular debate with me about the value of strength training and yoga as viable training disciplines for rock climbers. He was against them. i was, of course, trying desperately as ever to convince athletes of a wholistic approach to training, including strength training and yoga. What was crazy about this guy going after me was that he was sitting there on the Panel, in front of hundreds, with his elbows all taped up due to extensive and chronic tissue damage!

Today, as i sloth about every now and then on local bouldering problems or in the climbing gym, i am surrounded by a young, explosive generation of climbers that are weaned on routes carrying technical ratings far beyond the 5.12 limits of my climbing career. However, like the taped-up doctor that ridiculed my wholistic approach to cyclic training for rock climbers, the price our young climbers are paying is sadly coming out of their irreclaimable connective tissue damage. If i had a dime for every story that comes across my ears about extremely talented but way too compulsive climbers that just climbed until their connective tissue injuries ruined their love or ability for climbing, i'd be a rich yoga teacher! i see this same injury-producing compulsiveness in runners, cyclists, golfers, you name the sport. Whenever we do anything like it's an addiction, there is bound to be imbalance. The only way out of imbalance is the balance of Wholstic Fitness®, which is really just yoga in the truest, most ancient definition of that word which is; 'sarvanga sadhana' or "multi-disciplined practices for spiritual growth."




Tendon Loving Care
Back to the loving care and feeding of our precious tendons and other connective tissues which lies within the root of my passion for teaching Wholistic Fitness® and, of course, one of its five intra-disciplines of fitness; High Performance Yoga®.

We are only as strong as our connective tissue. Take John Elway, the Hall of Fame quarterback who played for 'my' Denver Broncos as an example. When i was helping Dr. Farentinos and Coach James Radcliffe write the nation's first book on plyometrics - PLYOMETRICS; Fast-Twitch Muscle Fiber Development (Human Kinetics Publishers, 1985), i saw Elway naked. Yup. Dat's right...i saw him as nekked as a baby in the locker room. We were doing a plyometric workshop for a Broncos training camp. Now, you'd think a guy like Elway who could toss a football the length of a football field in the way i can toss a dart at my dartboard, would have arm and shoulder muscles the size of a Southern Californian boob job. At least. Nope. Nada. Nothing. In fact, my 9-month old daughter has better and more developed delts than did Elway.

Why? Tendons, baby. Not only tendons, but the L-word; Ligaments. Essentially; CT or Connective Tissue.

Another example; Bears. Once, while sleeping in my beloved sport-pick up truck with a camper shell in the parking lot of Yosemite Valley's "Camp 4" campground, i was literally shook wide awake by a bear lolling my pickup back and forth under the starlit sky. Bears are incredibly strong, let me tell you. Bears don't have muscles the size of boob jobs, do they? Why? Dat's right, bucko; CT! The bicep tendon of a typical bear inserts waaaay down by their wrist joint. Our humanoid version, inserts waaaay up high near the nest of the elbow. That's what strength is all about; tendon insertion. Elway has tendon insertions (well at least in his arm tendons) much lower on the lower arm bones then you or i. Ain't nuthin on God's great planet dat's gonna change that.

There is, however, something you and i and all who are not bears or Elway can do to strengthen and protect our CT. In a word? High Performance Yoga®. Ooops, that was three words. Oh well. What follows is just one of a myriad of important physiologic ways that HP Yoga, in the way i Teach it, conditions, strengthens, and protects all athlete's CT. Read on if you are interested in growing your brain cells as well as creating tendons with the strength of bears. If not, then, just remember this much:

Do HP Yoga!


Part Two of NOT ALL SARCOMERES ARE CREATED EQUAL coming up ONLY in DL!





* If they listened to me. And that is a pretty big "if." Climbers, even moreso than other more structured competitive athletes, have an anti-authority thing which tends to snakebite them in the long run when it comes to not being open to being coached.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

THE YOGI COACH: Barbed-Wire Dharma

THE YOGI COACH



A Column Where East Meets West

by steve "coach" ilg, ryt/uscf/cpt


the intent of this Column is to produce Practice Tips and Teachings that
serve to bring Westerners a clearer understanding of yogic principles and
to bring yogis an understanding of Western fitness training tenets.






click on photos to enlarge









"Putting effort toward something that has meaning and purpose never feels like work!"

-HP Yogini Katie, Receptionist at The Northern Arizona Yoga Center after i praised her for her hard work and devoted Practice. The well-taught yogi is trained to treat both praise and blame, applause and slander as does a raincoat treat raindrops.


i took these photos yesterday.

seeing this loop of barbed wire, caught in the spring runoff of Schultz Creek, shown below, across the street from my home,
reminded me that human life is naught but the "existence of successful pairings between body and soul," as Albert Bodde put it.

the hardwiring of our body/mind lies beneath several layers of astral sheaths, much like the ice over the barbed wire. as we deepen our Practice only two things are required to unveil Truth; sweat and spirit. Let me explain; through the tapas (yogic term for fiery, determined practice) and abhyasa (steadfast perseverance) of our Solo Practices (meditation, asana, cardio, strength, and nutritional integrity) the ice begins to melt, unveiling the true Reality or Atman. as we edge ever closer to the union of our individual self with the universal self (which is the working definition of 'yoga' or 'the yoking together'), we begin to see ourselves precisely for what we are...



DO NOT MISS THIS EXTREMELY POIGNANT DHARMA TEACHING...only for DL Subscribers!