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The Importance Of Setting An Intention For Your Practice

If you’re like me, you attend yoga as much for the mental benefits as the physical ones. I’m a busy bee by nature. I spend most of the day devoting my time to someone or something other than myself. Yoga is my hour of freedom. One hour a day where I can truly relax.

Many yoga classes begin with the instructor giving you an invitation to set an intention for your practice. An intention can be anything you want. It can be a quote, to get yourself through the next sixty minutes, to send your positive energy to a loved one who needs it, to focus on stretch, strength, balance or your breathing, or even something like intentionally letting go of a situation that is worrying you. There is no “right” intention. Your intention is for you, and you alone.

When I first started doing yoga, I honestly wrote this part of class off. As I grew in my practice, however, I realized how rewarding setting an intention could be. Because I’m a worrier by nature, the hardest part of my practice is often shutting off my inner dialogue. Most often, my intention is to let go of all my worries for that hour. To “be a warrior, not a worrier.”


During my practice, every time the instructor says “return to your breath”, I repeat my intention. When it’s the toughest moment of the class, I repeat my intention. When my mind begins to stray from the task at hand, I repeat my intention. My intention keeps me in the present moment. It helps me hone in on what exactly it is I want to focus on during that hour.


Try setting a thoughtful intention and returning to it throughout your practice today. I promise, you’ll leave class feeling truly at peace.


Namaste y’all!


Kelly Hall

Studio South Social Media Guru

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Why consistency counts....



Why does it feel like I am living Ground Hog's Day with Bill Murray over and over again when I take Hot Yoga ???  Good news you are on the right path!  Our Studio South Hot Yoga sequence is therapeutically designed to take your body through it's full range of motion in a safe and extremely effective manner.  When students first come to practice on a regular basis they may begin to notice how similar the structure of Hot Yoga class is from one to teacher to the next .....

That's great news!  By keeping it consistent you can focus on the true intent of yoga which is to move inward, not outward.  If the poses are the same you are able to listen to your body, noticing the differences that each new day brings.  Are you tighter or more open on one side than the other.  You begin to bring a new awareness to each movement and before you know it that "same" pose begins to evolve and feel totally different.  This leads to growth both on the mat and off.

A consistent format can also help to avoid injury.  Think about your yoga practice like a science experiment....let me take you back to your grade school days of hypothesis, and variable, and constant....the physical postures are your constant.  By keeping your practice regular and steady you are able to form hypothesis about your body.

Take this little experiment for example:

Scenario:  You practice Hot Yoga on a regular basis (3 or more times a week).  You also enjoying gardening.  

Hypothesis:  Gardening causes my shoulders to tighten and decreases my range of motion.  By practicing Hot Yoga I can maintain my range of motion and avoid injury.

Constant:  Hot Yoga Practice.

Variable:  A day spent gardening

Result:  Since you practice yoga on a regular basis you know your body and it's full range of motion.  You also notice that the days following a gardening session, your right shoulder is tighter than normal.  Rather than continue to tighten the shoulder during yoga practice you focus on loosening it up, perhaps by adjusting your normal poses.  But you are able to work on your range of motion and prevent a tight shoulder from becoming an injured shoulder.  All because you were able to compare how you typically feel in a pose versus how you feel after gardening.   


Clearly....I am not a scientist...and Mr. Davis, my high school science teacher, may demand a retest, but you get the point, right?  Keeping your practice steady allows you to go deeper inward listening to your body....afterall isn't that the goal????

Namaste Y'all,
Katy




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Exploring the Root Chakra Quiz

Curious about the chakras? Starting THIS Sunday we will begin our series Journey through the Chakra System with Jennifer White.

We will meet at Studio South from 2-5pm and learn and discover through lecture, asana practice and meditation all about encouraging balance within our root chakra. Want to get you journey started?
                                      


Take this quiz below and reflect on how your root chakra is functioning:


Please rate the following questions on a scale of 1-4

1=No/Never/Poor 2=Seldom/Fair 3=Often/Good 4=Yes/Always/Excellent

Do you consider yourself well grounded?

How often do you walk in nature?

How often do you exercise?

How would you rate your self-confidence?

Are you comfortable in your physical body?

How often are you sick?

Do you feel a sense of belonging?

How would you rate your financial stability?

How would you rate your drive or ambition?

Do you achieve the goals you set for yourself?

Total your score:

Scores of 30-40 indicate a strong root chakra.
Scores of 15-30 indicate a stable root chakra with an average balance.
Scores of 1-15 indicate a weaker root chakra.

*These scores are here to give light to your reflection on this chakra and are in no way meant to "diagnose" an individual or their chakras.

Have these questions peaked your interest? Want to learn more? Join Jennifer White over at Studio South and register for the Root Chakra Workshop today! Discounts are available to members and for a limited time coupons are located on the front desk.

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