1.) Tell me about your personal journey with yoga. Why is it important to you?
My personal journey with yoga happened organically. I feel like yoga found me at just the right time, it helped me connect to my breath when I felt like life was making it hard to do so. In the end, yoga has taken me on a greater journey than I could ever foreshadow. It brought me a greater connection to my body and it softened my heart. This softness allowed for so much abundance to enter, me shifting careers and love coming into my life. As yoga helped me heal my wounds, it brought light in, light that I know use to help others. I have clients that are dealing with Cancer, in remission from cancer or dealing with another disease, and my journey encourages me to grow and evolve so I can continue to heal others. It is all beautiful and mystical.
2.) When did you first begin teaching yoga? What made you transition into a leadership position?
I feel like my purpose in life has always been to teach. I was an elementary school teacher working overseas in several countries and even though I practiced yoga, I never imagined I would be teaching yoga, but you just never know what the universe has planned for you. It has been a whirlwind of transitions, but I have never felt so at home in my body, in my heart and in my life. I am where I need to be, helping people live pain-free more vital lives where there is joy in each day. This life, right now, has never felt so right.
3.) What makes your classes unique?
My classes are unique in that I bring in a spiritual theme and have a deep intention to help others connect to their emotional body. I get the themes from my meditations or reading, or from something that is happening in my life or the world. An example is when its Thanksgiving it is a full practice for gratitude from the postures, to the words, to the breathing or meditation activity at the end of the class. When horrific things happen in the world and we just cant make sense of it, and feelings of anger, frustration or helplessness arise within us, yoga is a powerful modality to help us process these emotions. So that theme would include a powerful flow where transitions may be unique which would keep the presence and focus, keeping the students engaged and being with what is happening within. I bring myself into the journey with them, we are on this journey together. We are here to help each other heal and thrive.
4.) How does music benefit your guidance in a yoga class?
Music is an essential part of my yoga class. I spend quite a bit of time creating a playlist that would evoke an emotion, and each part of the class is different so each part of the playlist is important.
5.) Tell me about your next event and where we can follow you online.
IG: yoginiella
FB: Ella Isakov
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1.) Tell me about your personal journey with yoga. Why is it important to you?
Yoga became instrumental in my life when I was in high school. I still remember being 16 and attending my first month of yoga at Soul of Yoga in Encinitas, I met some incredible teachers that inspired me to grow more each day, to return to my breath when I felt at a loss, and to always keep an open heart and mind to whatever came my way. After graduating high school I tried to keep up with my yoga practice, but felt my life was becoming full of excuses to why I couldn’t get on my mat. I began university and after a year, I realized I was not at a place in my life I wanted to be, so I packed up my bags, found a job at a yoga retreat center in Austria, and bought a one-way ticket. Through my months that I spent working and then later on moving to Milan and London, I kept yoga at the forefront; my breath became my daily practice. No matter where I was I could feel safe with yoga, I summited Trolltunga in Norway and found my yoga practice there as I did on my mat in a flat in London. I wanted to break away from any notion that you had to be on a mat, you had to wear a certain style of clothing, or be beyond flexible in anyway. I realized it became more about being flexible in my mind and I still am always seeking this. To continue to grow, to continue to breathe, and to always show up on my mat regardless of how I feel that is what is vital to me, that is how I define yoga. Have you breathed today
2.) When did you first begin teaching yoga? What made you transition into a leadership position?
After moving back from Europe a second time, I gained knowledge and my certification from Yoga Works in Santa Monica. I focused on teaching very one on one with family and friends at first. I have gone on now with my return back to university to taking a more in the moment approach as a teacher. I will get called to teach a class here and there. I have taught at my college to a class of young freshman as of recently and it inspired me to continue learning and practicing as a yogi and a teacher. I don’t think there will ever be a point in my life where I will have mastered, or stopped growing in any sense of what I feel yoga is.
3.) What makes your classes unique?
I want to be focused on each individual which is why when I have taught classes I feel I like to take it slow, to stop when I see someone struggling, I want everyone to feel seen and to feel that where they are in that moment is 100% magical to where they need to be.
4.) How does music benefit your guidance in a yoga class?
I find that music can help me in my own practice and in guidance of yoga class with an extra flow, with the magic of music and how certain yoga poses feel extra juicier to your muscles and body with that perfect sound in combination.
5.) Tell me about your next event and where we can follow you online.
I am always growing and learning. I am currently a student at Sarah Lawrence and am focusing on Psychology and Documentary work. I am mainly studying how Post Traumatic Stress and Traumas can find healing through yoga and mindfulness work. I maintain an all around healthy lifestyle and will forever be seeking moments where I am able to collaborate, create, practice yoga, and be a teacher that wishes to inspire and to give the understanding that wherever you are, however you are feeling if you breathe, if you are able to be in that moment that is all that anyone could ever ask of you. You are enough. Just breathe.
My instagram is @reedmylips18
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How many resolutions did you set this New Year? Throughout the years, how many resolutions have you promised yourself you would reach only to look back to find them manifesting into nothing other than cobwebs and self deprecating disappointment? Yeah, me too and 92% of others out there according to Forbes.
We make a whole slew of resolutions from losing weight, making more money, to meeting that higher love partner. Let’s take a deeper look into what’s really underneath these goals. What common theme do they all share? Drumroll please… the relationship with OURSELVES.
It is about you! You, you, and more you! It is about how you feel living inside your body, it is about how you feel while you’re working to make that income, and it is about giving yourself the love you desire from a partner.
When we love our bodies, we lose weight. When we focus on the weight we want to shed, the tummy bump or the chicken wings, what do you think happens? They grow! Instead when we love these challenge areas, when we love our bodies without exception, our bodies shift. How do we do it?
When we love our work, when we believe in the impact we are making, when we feel on purpose and are working from our divine flow, not only do the dollars roll in but the number in our account eventually becomes irrelevant. Success is a holistic 360-degree idea, rather than a singular focus on a silly number we call green paper. So if you are in a career that you don’t absolutely love, here are some questions to begin asking yourself. Inside the answers to these questions lies a pattern and a magic thread leading to your purposeful career. Here you go!:
When we love ourselves fully, and when we get crystal clear on the kind of partner we want to attract, the ideal partner appears. The clearer we get, and the more we show up as the version of ourselves who is a match to him/her coming through, the faster it happens. Here is a quick breakdown of the of manifesting an ideal partner:
The slim figure, the six figures, and the ideal partner are all possible, and in fact they are our birthright. However, first and foremost, we must love the bajesus out of ourselves. We must love our bodies just as they are, we must love ourselves enough to create work we love, and we must love ourselves enough to become our own ideal partners first.
Let’s say goodbye to the countless resolutions, and hello to JUST ONE: To love ourselves fully. From this place, and only from this place, we become abundant and our goals manifest like wildfire.
By Maggie Kay
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1.) Tell me about your personal journey with yoga. Why is it important to you?
I started practicing yoga as I got more competitive with soccer in high school. My tight muscles needed some sort of release besides massage and similar to most yoga journeys, the delicate aspects of my life needed release as well and I found that through my yoga practice. After tearing my meniscus my freshman year at the Naval Academy, I started taking Bikram Yoga to rehab. When things in my life went south, I always found my true north through yoga. My mind, body, and spirit found healing through my practice; it’s the only place where I really feel comfortable in my own skin. Upon being stationed in Okinawa, Japan, I felt like it was time for me to take my practice to the next level and I completed my 200HR RYT in February of 2014. When I returned to San Diego, I started Yoga Sculpt TT at CorePower Yoga in Encinitas and have been teaching since August. Yoga is everything to me. It’s probably the one thing I truly am passionate about. Being able to practice and teach in a safe, loving space has been so transformational for me; I truly am in love with this community of Yogi’s and look forward to spending time with my students on their mats!
2.) When did you first begin teaching yoga? What made you transition into a leadership position?
I first began teaching yoga while stationed in Okinawa, Japan. I was teaching to Marines, Sailors, Soldiers, and Civilians on base as well as a local CrossFit gym. The experience I gained teaching to a wide range of yoga abilities was instrumental in teaching to bodies, vice spewing out words based off of memory. I’ve found myself in many leadership positions throughout my life, but being in front of people who have the courage to shed layers on their mat has been the greatest role yet. I love seeing people who just start yoga and witnessing their transformation as well as being a part of a seasoned yogi’s journey, aiding in their growth on and off their mat. I learn the most from my students and am humbled by the opportunity to lead classes in this community.
3.) What makes your classes unique?
I come from a very athletic background (D1 College Athlete, Marine Corps Officer) and I try to bring in all aspects of my physical tool box to my mat. Whether I’m teaching Vinyasa or Sculpt, I try to cultivate a safe place for students to breathe, let go, and be challenged on their mats. My students are usually promised a lot of lower body work as well as core work!
4.) How does music benefit your guidance in a yoga class?
Creating my playlists for class is HUGE. I’m a big music freak & especially in Sculpt, a heavy beat is a must! However, silence is also really powerful in class. I try to give my students music that allows them to tweak their practice as needed. I love feel-good music, especially EDM in Sculpt.
5.) Tell me about your next event and where we can follow you online.
-Live DJ Sculpt with DJ DTO at CorePower Yoga in Del Mar at 6 PM on Friday 1/20
-Kwaay Paay Hike/Sunset Yoga with @parrotsandcarrots 1/22 at 2-5PM
-Instagram @stephanie_strine
-Facebook https://www.facebook.com/sstri
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DTO creates inspirational music. Recently released Album “Nameless Energy” perfectly depicts the class and skills of the artist. Dave is a devoted kind of person always in the mood of helping the other beings. If you listen to his music the words first come into mind will be sweet, peaceful and soothing. All tracks of his album are melodious and you can put them on when you are on a long drive or while having Yoga in the early morning or when you want to calm yourself.
1.) Tell me about your personal journey with yoga. Why is it important to you?
I found my yoga practice going on 22 years ago now! Within the first 6 months I knew that my life would be forever changed by this amazing practice. Yoga has essentially sculpted my entire adult life and helped me to become strong yet flexible, grounded yet uplifted, and helped me to heal from the inside out.
2.) When did you first begin teaching yoga? What made you transition into a leadership position?
I started teaching full time in 2009 and that has been my life moving forward. My dharma was laid out in front of me and I walk the path with deep gratitude and humility. I have always had a leadership mentality, so it was an easy roll for me to adopt. However, I consider myself more of a guide than a leader. I simply show my students a path that can change their life and I support them through that powerful process.
3.) What makes your classes unique?
My classes are an eclectic blend of movement, breath, stillness, and philosophy. My inspiration is derived from the many styles of yoga that I have either been certified in or simply love to practice on my own. I am also an energy worker and always infuse my classes with tons and tons of love and light!
4.) How does music benefit your guidance in a yoga class?
There is no doubt that sound and music heal the body, mind, and soul. And guess what? So does Yoga! It’s kind of like guacamole and chips…they just obviously belong together! A good music vibe during class truly allows the students to go on a journey!
5.) Tell me about your next event and where we can follow you online.
5Q Interview @ San_Diego_Yoga!
1.) Tell me about your personal journey with yoga. Why is it important to you?
Yoga is medicine: it is what I chose when I was anixious out of my mind and put on anti-depresants. It is the “pill” I pop now to keep my off the anit-depressants. I found it when I was desperate, and now I cherish it every day: It is not stretch pants and headstands: it is a life stye, something I do every second of my life: striving to be in the NOW grateful for the second that is the gift in which I get to live.
I thank the stars every day that the yoga has stood the test of time and has been passed down lifetime to lifetime and ended up in my life.
2.) When did you first begin teaching yoga? What made you transition into a leadership position?
I began teaching only about 6 years ago…the transition to leadership was without intention and happened immediately: I had an idea and that idea turned into this magical, peaceful protest of a movement: truly all I like to do is TEACH and be a spiritual activist: I never wanted to be a “leader” but we are ALL creators, and to be create something and to make change, we must LEAD. So I’ve come into this leadership roll truly because it was my destiny…and I’m working my hardest to lead from the only place that is real (a place that no business school can teach you): my heart.
3.) What makes your classes unique?
I talk about the REAL stuff: the rawness…what’s in my heart and soul flows out of my mouth.i find the yoga class a place to be able to use the words that we feel deep in our soul and share them to have a transformative experience: we talk about life, we get real and we evolve…every-class…..you get a more than poses…you get TRUTH and the inspiration to live that truth.
I always add in all the elements and healing from everything my heart and soul feels too: every compoent of my class is purposeful: physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually you will be stretched and (en)lightened… I call on sound healing, reiki, plant medicine, crsytals, oracle cards, and invite these magical presenes into the class as well to support the healing process…
4.) How does music benefit your guidance in a yoga class?
Sound is everything. They say if you want to cure all aligments all you need is sound: sound is the highest medicine. Why? Well we are vibration: everything is vibration, so sound and music can be used to bring us back in TUNE with our lives, allowing us to VIBE where we need to be. Our lives are songs: we make music with our words, vibrations and actions….when we are out of alignmet, our song becomes flat or out of tune (depression/aniexty make our way) I’ve studied sound healing and use it every day: there are beats, rythms, sounds corelating with all things and the right HZ will bring you right back to PEACE or LOVE where you need to be and you can do this any time: just AUM. The sound of peace is literally in our throats..
5.) Tell me about your next event and where we can follow you online.
San Diego Yoga Festival!!! I’m Namastoked, and I’m doing EXTRA yoga just so I can sleep at night. This festival came to me in a meditation, I asked a friend and colleague of mine to assit me with it, and now it’s turn into the most exciting thing: 4 days of nonstop yoga and holistic healing classes in San Diego, on the beach, the pier, and sunset cliffs, along with indoors at the coolest areas: we’re having virtuallye very style of yoga and healing class you can think of plus more!!! Beach bonfires, drum circles, partner yoga with your DOG, skateboard and yoga, surf lessons….we are holding space for 1008 yogis, Jan 27-30. Classes are filling but spots are still left and you have to be there: it truly is a peaceful protest: people coming together to work on being healthy…I’m stoked for the classes I’ll be leading: in my one class we are literally marrying ourself: that’s right: you will get down on bended knee and propose to yourself (we’ll even have a kombucha toast after). The class and the festival is about commiting to the LOVE for the self. I sure hope you all come. It’s going to be epic:
promo code: namastoked ($108 off)
Before getting into the world of green juice and Downward Dog I never thought twice about breath. As a former corporate American strapped to a cubicle, slugging vodka sodas on the weekends to numb my lack of fulfillment, for decades I thought breath was just something we are born with and had no advantages worth exploring.
That belief transformed when I entered my yoga teacher training. Here I had a whole paradigm shift through the Indian guru showering me with ancient wisdom about this sacred tool of breath living inside us. As I sat in the yoga hall in the mountains of Northern India, I learned what we should have been taught as a child: the importance of breath and its multitude of benefits.
“Breath is the hub round which the wheel of life revolves”- B.K.S. Iyengar. Our breath is the gateway opening the door to our emotional storage tank and to the temple of our bodies. It is the portal to our inner world, our sacred space, amongst the external chaos. So how do we begin to tap into this magical reserve?
Use breath to digest emotions: The primary cause of our unhappiness and discomfort is not our thoughts; it is our undigested emotional material. Without breath we keep our emotions suppressed, stagnant, and blocked. When we de-press our emotions we cause dis-ease in our minds and bodies–see what I did there?
We are wired to move in the direction of whatever animal inside of us roars the loudest. If the loudest animal is our emotions, roaring from a trigger touched by a lover or a core wound flare up of not being good enough, this animal will take the driver’s seat and oh what a wild ride it will be. Flooded with unresolved emotions and unexpressed truths, our monkey mind leaps from tree to tree, emoting from a place of unprocessed emotions, dancing in the utter chaos and confusion. When our emotions steer, our breath is completely forgotten, our mind is agitated, we are out of alignment, and completely disconnected.
On the other hand, when our breath roars the loudest, our mind is silenced and emotions are controlled. It’s that simple, all we have to do is have our breath roar louder than our emotions. Once the breath roar is the loudest, it becomes the travel guide to our emotional storage tank. Then from here we can begin to process and digest.
When we feel ourselves inside of an emotional spin, when our emotions are in the drivers seat, here is how we use our breath as to process:
Give yourself that love in which you just discovered that you need! Use breath to connect with our intuition by moving from our minds into our bodies: Breath silences our ego by bringing our mind into our body. This way we don’t exert energy over analyzing, processing, looping and instead we keep our energy reserve full for the things we really need and want to do! Excessive analysis perpetuates emotional paralysis.
Our breath is the elevator from our mind down to our bodies, back to physical sensation, a return to the present moment: Our bodies are our tuning forks, our internal compasses guiding us to our true north. When we find ourselves in a mental loop of chaos and confusion, aka mind masturbation, we need to do one thing: return to the body through our breath.
You see, it is impossible for our bodies to lie. We just need to learn how to read the internal compasses within, and we do so through our breath. Intuition is the physical sensation of truth in our bodies. Albert Einstein said, “The only real valuable thing is your intuition.” Through our breath we can tap into this truth detector within.
Here is how we do it: Feel where and how your “yes” and “no” feels in your body: If you feel sensations such as light, expanded, or free, your answer is yes. If you feel heavy, contracted, dark, uncomfortable, or smothered, your answer is no. Practice learning what your yes and no feels like and where you feel it in your body with easy questions first, like “my name is___.”
When we are seeking answers to life’s challenging questions, we break the spin of confusion by tapping into our body compass through this process:
Our breath is the elevator to our true selves, a direct flight to our evolution. ”Repressed emotions are unactualized spiritual lessons. In order to grow in our spirituality, we must bring our joy and our suffering through our emotional body until our lessons are birthed” – Jeff Brown. It’s alarmingly simple: All we have to do is breathe and have self awareness of when we are in our in emotional and mental loops. This way, our breath becomes our sacred medicine.
By Maggie Kay
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http://download.dtomusic.com/track/breath
5Q Interview with Melanie, @SanDiegoYogaFestival
1.) Tell me about your personal journey with yoga. Why is it important to you?
I limped into my first yoga class because my knees hurt too badly to run long distances like I used to. For a while I would only practice power vinyasa because I felt I had to “get a workout”. Years later I’m back at running because yoga saved my body and I’m skipping all my chaturangas because yoga saved my mind!
2.) When did you first begin teaching yoga? What made you transition into a leadership position? How has this translated to your hug project, the San Diego Yoga Festival?
I originally started teaching because I thought there must be a way to meditate, slow the mind and center the soul while at the same time get a butt kicking workout. As my practice deepens I’ve learned that the asanas do their work on the practitioner no matter how the instructor strings them together or how hot the room is. Eventually I started my own studio, TriPower, in an attempt to bring together the western focus in asana and physicality as well as the mind/soul connection. I became extremely compassionate toward the community where I live and teach, Ocean Beach. I worked hard to embed myself in the community to bring about positive transformation. When Shawna presented the idea of throwing a yoga festival here in San Diego with the intention of raising the positive vibrations of your city it fell right in line with my own heart’s desire for my local beach community in SD. As the vision took shape into reality it became clear that the perfect venue for SD Yoga Fest was not a venue at all but rather the beach, and what better beach than Ocean Beach!
3.) What makes your classes unique?
I ask a lot of my students. I bring in my background in fitness and athletics. I ask them to drop into their bodies and stay there. But then I ask them to show grace and compassion, so different from what I learned as a personal trainer and pro-athlete. Feeling how the body feels, asking what is best for the body and responding with dignity is a common theme in my teaching. I’m also silly and playful. I don’t believe in taking life to seriously, least of all on the mat.
4.) How does music benefit your guidance in a yoga class?
Music changes everything. I spend hours each week creating a new playlist. Some of my favorite playlists are for my “Cardi-Yoga” class (which I’m teaching at 8am on Saturday morning at the festival). This class is 1/3 vinyasa, 1/3 high-intensity-interval-
5.) Tell me about your next event and where we can follow you online.
I teach about 8 classes a week at my studio TriPower Yoga. Check it out: www.tripoweryoga.org and definitely come take Cardi-Yoga at San Diego Yoga Festival! www.sandiegoyogafestival.com