EDIT: Monster of a post. Mostly just me rambling about my own class, ask something specific if you want to know~
Originally Posted by Universal Mind
Yeah, thanks. What all does it do for you, short term and long term?
Mind you, this is the style of yoga that I take, which is different from others.
When we're here, we just sit. Stretching if we need too, usually in silence. Soft and very casual words, not much more. My instructor has a speaker set he brings, which he starts before class, usually just Indian strings, or monk-style humming. Mostly instrumental, with nothing but foreign languages being sung.
Starting with simple exercises should be obvious. He always starts with cat/cow/dog/plank/similar simple stretching sets.
From there, it's usually small things that change, but rarely the order. It's very methodical, doing the same beginning stretches.
Mid-class, there's usually a change-up, something different that we haven't done, or don't often do.
My instructor likes to keep the class all in one place. IE; if we start the after-warm-up class with standing, or in triangle pose, then he often goes through the variations on the pose a couple times before switching to something else. I never expect to go from standing up to sitting down more than twice in the same 10 minutes. (This might just be because everyone in my class is about 30 years older than me. )
By the end of the class, we're stretched, but by no means tired. No one breathes heavily, it's not a work-out. The class alays ends in corpse pose (savasana, if I recall the Sanskrit correctly), which involves simply lying on your back, face up, everything relaxed.
Never a morbid thing, the two minute body-nap we take here is often the highlight of my day. I can feel everything around me, vividly, clearly. Often one of the best feelings in the entire class.
What does it for me, is the warmness of my coach. I've had substitutes before, and even tried teaching others at one point, but it was hardly the same. He's very accomplished for his age, and always has a great way of saying everything. He talks about his poses in Sanskrit as well as English, rarely demonstrating a pose without telling us the Sanskrit version of it at the same time.
The most important part is my instructor, and the feeling around me. The background noise, most importantly. My class is held inside a Church, later in the day, so there's rarely any people walking by, let alone traffic.
I own my own mat, though I wish I had a size larger one. Check and see if your instructor provides mats in the class, or if you'll have to rent one, or most likely the best idea, to buy your own. Try them out first, if you can.
As for the spiritual side of it, my instructor is a Christian, with the philosophy of a Buddhist, and the personality of a neutral agnostic. I love his quips and quotes, the Sanskrit dialogue, and etc.
I can either reflect or cleanse, during the class. Whatever I need to do, it's always rejuvenating for me, a very personal thing.
As for the long term, I can touch my toes now, I know the correct way to bend myself without falling over, my balance has increased even more, and I'm always warmed up for fencing, as the classes are back to back with each other!
I wasn't able to reach my toes before I started, but after this and fencing, I can brush the soles of my feet
Jim, my instructor, says that you're not going to get very dramatic results from yoga, in any department. But I learned plenty from it all.
Yoga's always worth checking out, for me. Not for everyone, but if you find the right instructor, it can be perfect.
If I'm forgetting anything, or you want to ask anything specific, please do
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