Events: Workshop – “Jivamukti Chakra Balancing Workshop with Lizzie Reumont”

Heal your body, mind and spirit before Christmas chaos takes over, with this uplifting yoga practice. The Sanskrit word “chakra” means “wheel”. A wheel rolls, turns and, by means of cyclic or circular movement, takes one on a journey.

The human body has seven primary chakras that we can also think of as energetic centres. When these energy centres are open and healthy, so are we – physically, emotionally and in our relationships. However, when they are blocked through injury, illness or disconnection with others, we are blocked also, from being our best selves.Chakras are affected most directly through energetic movement and deeply held asanas, vibration and intention.

Sourced from ancient teachings, chakra yoga is perhaps more
relevant today than ever, at a time when so many feel disconnected from others and themselves. Chakra yoga can heal your body and free your heart to experience joy.

Lizzie will guide you through postures, mantras and the philosophy behind the chakra system that open and balance the energy
centres. You will feel your energy and life force flowing and
experience a new level of happiness, wholeness and peace.

Suitable for all levels except complete beginners

Date: Sunday, December4

Time: 2:00pm - 4:30pm

Place: Indaba Yoga, 18 Hayes Place, NW1 6UA London, United Kingdom

Website: http://www.indabayoga.com

Events: Yoga in the Park – “Kensington Palace Gardens”

yoga in the park

If you go down to the park this weekend, you’ll be sure of a big surprise! For every yogi will be practicing outside in the park with yoga teacher Liz. It’s not often we Londoners get to experience the joy of practicing yoga outside but it is a wonderful thing to do. And this way, you won’t feel silly doing it all by yourself. Curious passer-bys may stare but you can share the attention with the group!

Starting Saturday, May 14th, I will be teaching yoga every week on the lawn of Kensington Palace Gardens. There is nothing like practicing outside to reconnect with the earth and oneself, and practicing in a group to benefit the lives of others both extends the connection from the earth to all beings, and from the mat into daily life.

Find out more…

When?

Saturday’s, 9:00am-10:30am

Where?

Kensington palace gardens, south or palace, west of broad walk ( opposite and south of pond)

How much?

The class is a donation-based class with all proceeds going to a London- based organization called The Kids Company.

The Kids Company helps at risk kids from 0-23 years old in a variety of ways. They provide everything from in-school therapy to full live-in care for children to young adults, and a variety of programs in-between such as after school programs and mealtime programs, depending on the needs of the individual.

Visit Liz’s blog for more information: http://freeliz.com/2011/05/10/yoga-in-the-park/

 

 

Special Offer: Classes – “Amazing Offer from Jivamukti London”

Unlimited yoga for £108!

Jivamukti Yoga, one of the leading centres of traditional yet active yoga in London is giving you a great deal on yoga for April – only £108 for unlimited classes for the month. You can really make the most of those long weekends in London and fill your days with back bends, heart openers and glorious salutations to the sun (yes, the SUN!)

Offer only available until tomorrow (Thursday 7th April) so take the plunge and book now even (or especially) if you’ve never tried yoga before.

Call Jivamukti London or book online

Teacher Nomination: Jivamukti – “Lizzie Reumont”

Lizzie’s background as a restorative body therapist (thai yoga massage and craniosacral therapy) help support her nurturing yet challenging teaching style as a Jivamukti Yoga Teacher.

The use of pranayama and attention to body alignment and breath are integrated into a vinyasa-based fluid class that integrates yoga philosophy and classical yoga postures strung together with innovative sequencing. Her slightly longer breath count enables students to deepen their understanding each asana, rather than rushing through the practice that often result in injury.

Lizzie teaches twice a week at Alchemy in Camden, and will be teaching five classes a week at Indaba, a new studio opening in Marylebone in May. She also teaches privately throughout London.

When?

Tuesdays, 10am; Sundays 3.15pm

Style of yoga

Jivamukti

Where?

Alchemy, Indaba, privately

Events: Workshops – “Various with Stewart Gilchrist”

stewartgilchrist

Great news! One of London’s finest yoga teachers, Stewart Gilchrist is starting some new Saturday workshops and he has an Easter Retreat in England coming up…

Chakrise the Asana

saturday 2nd april | 2-5pm

In this workshop, you will learn how the seven major chakras are incorporated in a yogasana practice.

Following a severe back injury in his mid-twenties, Stewart Gilchrist experienced an amazing recovery through intensive Astanga Vinyasa Mysore yoga practice as taught by Sri K Patthabi Jois and Hamish Hendry in London, followed then by an extensive yoga education with teachers from around the world who have had a profound effect on his unique style of teaching.

Register: Please call evolve at 020 7581 4090 to reserve a space.

Price: £40

Alchemy Centre

In March April and May, Stewart will be running 3 hour workshops on Saturdays at 2pm at Alchemy centre, Camden

“the regulation of breath brings all happiness, material and spiritual, from the acquisitions of kingdoms to Supreme Bliss, therefore, O Rama! Study the science of breath.”
Vasishta Yoga Rishi

An introduction to breathwork and how to incorporate it into your asana practice and daily life.

Find out more from the Alchemy Yoga Centre

Easter Retreat

Also, he will be at the April easter retreat in the lovely west country! See http://yeotownyogaretreat.com/ for details/booking.  It’s a small group, lovely place, great food!

Yeogamukti Easter Long Weekend Retreat
April 22nd – 25th

Centre: South London – “Yoga Haven in Clapham Common”

 

Yoga Haven has branches in Brighton and Birmingham, and now London. They offer a wide variety of classes including several different Hot yoga classes – Hot Flow and Hot Express. They also offer yoga at normal temperatures – Flow, Jivamukti, One to One, Yin Yoga, Pregnancy and Yoga for Runners and Cyclists.

This place has a modern and “all-rounder”, open approach to yoga. It is purposefully welcoming for beginners and non-yogis. Which we love!

Address: 63 Wingate Square, Clapham Old Town, London, SW4 0AF

Timetable: http://www.yogahaven.co.uk/london/prices-schedule/

Telephone: 020 8617 0027

Email: clapham@yogahaven.co.uk

Website: http://www.yogahaven.co.uk/london

Nearest Tube: Clapham Common, Clapham Junction, Clapham High Street Rail

Prices: Drop-in (90mins) £15, Drop-in (60mins) £14, 10-class card (90 day expiry) £130, One month unlimited £149

Gold membership: £125 per month (direct debit) Unlimited yoga classes with two towels per class plus 15% off our shop and monthly workshops.

Silver membership: £99 per month (direct debit)  Unlimited yoga classes plus 10% off our shop and monthly workshops.

Bronze membership:  £ 79 per month (direct debit) Unlimited yoga off peak classes plus 5% off our shop and monthly workshops.

Special Offer: Introductory offer -10 days of unlimited yoga £25

View map of yoga centres

Add your own yoga centre

Centre: West London – “The Light Centre, Belgravia”

 

The Light Centre offers a great deal: courses, workshops and classes are all available in a myriad of subjects, from pilates, to tai chi and yoga.

They also offer various alternative therapies and also have their own healthy eating cafe, Crussh.

See the full list of all that’s offered below:

YogaPilatesRelaxationOsteopathyChiropracticPhysiotherapyAcupunctureCranio-SacralMassageReflexologyHypnotherapyGrinbergLife Coaching

Yoga wise, there’s a busy time table, full of classes various disciplines and levels.

If you haven’t done Yoga before (or only a few times) they have two beginners courses that are either 6 or 9 weeks long. After that you can continue with the same teacher in their ‘Improvers’ class.

For those with some experience we recommend our open classes and for early risers we recommend their Yoga Breakfast Club.

Popular Jivamukti teacher Stewart Gilchrist teaches here on a regular basis.

 
   
 
  Stewart Gilchrist
Jivamukti
 
   
 
  Fiona-Harding
Hatha Vinyasa
 
 
  Nicole Miller
Vinyasa
 
 
  nicole photo  
 
  Sophie Coats
Anusara Inspired
 
   
  kore  
 
  Kore Mason
Astanga Iyenger
 
 
  amanda lotus small  
 
  Amanda Denton
Vinyasa Flow
  Katie Courts
Ashtanga
 
 
  katie asana  
 
  Nathalie Hrayassi
Ashtanga Vinyasa
 
  nathalie hrayssi  
     
 
   

 

Address: 9 Eccleston Street, London SW1W 9LX

Telephone: 020 7881 0728

Nearest Tube: Victoria or Sloane Square

Webiste: http://www.lightcentrebelgravia.co.uk/

Special Offer: Click here to send your name and email to the light centre. In return, you will receive a voucher for a yoga class.  

Yoga Timetable

Yoga Beginners’ Courses Timetable:

Pilates – Beginners Course Timetable

 

 

View map of yoga centres

Add your own yoga centre

Events: Night Out – “Satsang, Bee the Change, Ladbroke Grove in West London”

Satsang is a way for yogis and yoginis to come together and deepen their sadhana (spiritual practice)…the evening can include chanting, meditation practice, readings, discussion, screenings, special guests… simply coming together as a community of like-minded individuals!

This month the theme is BEES!

Bee the Change

bee the change

The Future of the Human race is intrinsically linked with that of the Honey Bee. Since 2006, billions of bees worldwide have died from a disease, known as Colony Collapse Disorder. There are several theories for this disaster and they all stem from the environmental impact of Human farming methods. Bees play a vital role in pollinating many of the plants that produce the foods that we eat, fruits and vegetables – including apples, oranges, strawberries, onions and carrots – they pollinate nuts, sunflowers and oil-seed rape. Coffee, soya beans, clovers and even cotton are all dependent on honeybee pollination to increase yields. The contribution to the global economy of bee pollination is estimated at £26 billion.

On Sunday we’ll watch part of a film that explains what is happening: http://www.vimeo.com/16326005

We will also be handing out some seeds for flowers that bees find particularly yummy. Plant them in pots or in your gardens to turn London into one giant bee sweet shop.

Where?

Jivamukti Yoga Centre, Ladbroke Grove in West London

When?

Sunday 13th March, 6.45 pm

How much?

Free!

Find out more on Jivamukti Yoga Centre’s website

Yogi Lifestyle: Personal Experience – “Diaries of a Developing Yogi Londoner – The Long Road to Enlightenment….”

Ask an Western Ashtangi how they got hooked on yoga and generally they will say it was ‘the physical exertion of the practice’, had it been the stillness of Iyengar or the mystic chanting of mantras and strange pranayamic breathing involved in Kundalini, they would have walked away saying it was stupid hippy shit.

For me however, it was quite the other way round, my first yoga class was a Kundallini one that my mother dragged me to in Clapham aged 15. I remembering finding the experience quite cathartic and very sublime, though when the teacher in her heavy Italian accent said ‘flex your anal sex organ’…I do recall having to hold back immense amounts of laughter. Perhaps explaining – in less graphic terms – where the region was and what the chakra was called, the purposing of doing so etc,..and asking us to hold the ‘Mula Bandha’ might have been more beneficial.

So, though a little perplexed by the whole experience it certainly did not put me off when it was suggested to have yoga lessons at school. Not one who has ever liked intense amounts of exercise, I used to relish the hour and half with Anne a tiny Iyengar teacher, though rather top heavy teacher – who always completely dumbfounded us how she would be able to contort herself into such poses when some of us could barely touch our toes and she in every other respect looked like someone’s Granny. There were 3 of us in the class so it is the nearest to one to one yoga I personally have ever experienced, and since it was Iyengar for 3 stressed out A-level students, it was basically an hour and half of completely relaxation a week without the horror of a drop of sweat.

During the breaks between exams I used to practise at a studio near our house in Putney, the classes I suppose where some form of derivative of Sivananda yoga, however, since I used to always take the 11 o’clock class, I soon discovered it was in fact the pregnancy yoga one. So not only did I quickly learn the modifications whilst pregnant, but also enjoyed another very chilled class that was a welcome distraction from my exams….

I should perhaps at this point note, that though I had an absolute aversion to perspiration and basically any anaerobic exercise, since I had done quite a lot of ballet when small I had remained quite flexible (probably a contributing factor to not ), though from a mix of riding with an ill fitting saddle and adolescence had developed terrible posture and a back problem…

My next yogic encounter and probably my most significant was during my gap year when myself and friends were turtle saving on the Island of Koh Phra Thong off the Burmise coast in Thailand. Danny Paradise, who was formerly Madonna’s Ashtanga teacher was doing a retreat there, and since we had meals together he in his chilled out Hawaiian tones invited us to ‘check it out’. This was my first experience of anything that had resulted in more than a blush in my cheeks, we had all seen Geri Halliwell’s ashtanga workout video…but actually doing all the sun salutations and vinyasas was extremely hard work and exhausting. As being like most girls not having much upper body strength at first it seemed to be endless and by surya namaskar B, I was always completely out of breath and very flustered. However, Danny is certainly one of the most encouraging and inspiring teachers, that I have so far on this journey encountered- who did the most fantastic adjustments putting one into binds that as an Ashtanga beginner I never thought possible.

So, with a mixture of the satisfaction of achieving what I thought perviously unattainable and intrigue into the philosophies that went in tangent with this, that seem to align so closely to things which my mother had been saying for years, self awareness, the importance of nourishment of one’s body and soul and not always being reliant on the mass pharmaceuticals so easily in supply in the West, but rather looking to within to heal one-selves really seemed to fascinate me. I also adored the fact we’d have the most enormous breakfasts, of fruits, yoghurts and pancakes afterwards.

Therefore, I continued on mainly doing lead classes mainly at the Life Centre and Triyoga- only once taking a Mysore class in Edinburgh where the teacher in the very traditionalistic view would only allow me to do an hour and half of Surya Namaskas in order for me to get Ujjayi breathing right – an experience so horrendous and repetitive that I vowed never to do Mysore again. I continued on this path of dabbling – going to a few classes a week with months at a time off due to the busy London lifestyle, colds etc,…Until three years ago when missing two steps to the bar in killer heels resulted in a broken foot on New Year day and crutches for 5 months.

Once finally on my feet again, I quickly discovered that in order to gain any sort of balance yoga and lots of physio were the only things that helped. Ironically being on crutches for so long was the only thing that built up enough upper body strength to do my suyra namaskas and all the vinyasas need in the primary series without dropping down in exhaustion.

Thus due to this unforeseen limitation in movement, and in particular, the fact that they had had to put a pin in, I resolved that I wouldn’t spend the following winter in England, but would go instead to India and learn more about the other aspects of yoga – not simply the asana. So in November 2009, I did my 200 hours Yoga Alliance at the Himalayan Yoga Valley School in Goa, unlike some, my aim was not to become a teacher but rather to learn about all eight parts which form Raja yoga (Yama, Niyama, Asana, Pranayama, Pratyama, Dharana, Dhyana, Samadhi) and to give me a stronger foundation; being a dynamic practise to prepare for Mysore….

Having vowed never to to do Mysore again, I gradually realised that in order to actually improve ones practise in the ashtanga series or in fact any yoga you need to practice 6 days a week, and that the best place to learn Mysore was Mysore, where it had been founded by Sri Krishna Pattabhi Jois (his photo is in most yoga studios).
It wasn’t, however, until I was in Goa learning modifications, adjustments and aspects of hindu philosophy, that one of my teacher’s voiced the concern that unless I was very advanced on my primary series or in fact on series two I wouldn’t get much of a look in at the main shala as there are so many students, that the teachers tend to lean their focus towards the more advanced practioners, rather than improving the correct alignment of asanas in students developing in their practice. It was therefore suggested instead I try the shalas Sthalam 8, or Mandala Mysore.
The instruction at Mandala Mysore was fantastic, and the fact it offered drop in whilst you were deciding which 4-6 weeks courses you wanted to commit to whilst there was brilliant – this and the highly influencing factor that one of the drop-in options being at 3 pm rather than the conventional Mysore 6 am…Whilst there, I in my insanity, decided to undertake 6 week twice a day dynamic vinyasa, pranayama and back opening course with Vinay Kumar….the fact that the sun salutations are more similar to hatha in stepping/lunging back rather than the ashtanga and jiva jumping was a false sense of security and with each movement there was a bandha lock, meaning that you were absolutely exhausted, within 5 minutes in…so I was most relieved that after a week and half in to be struck with dreadful Mysore belly that wouldn’t go and have to make a hasty retreat home….

Since returning from my 5 month India experiment, I have tried when possible to get up for Ryan Spielmann’s Mysore at the Life Centre, however, having spent so long in India when you are made so aware of the importance of eating light, and sleeping early for the best practise this is pretty rare. I instead mainly try to go to Jivamukti with Stuart Gilchrist on Monday evenings at the Light Centre in Belgravia, and there after drop in to classes at the wonderful Jivamukti centre in Kensal Rise.

I am still doing Mysore once a week on Saturday’s with the fantastic Michaela Clarke – mainly because of her brilliant adjustments and the fact it starts at 8.15 rather than 6 am. I have moved more towards Jivamukti in the last year as I find it’s an all encompassing practice, I find that many of the drop in classes at other studios are now too easy, and all about the asana, where as Jiva incorporates mantras, and pranayama and also looks at reflection, and setting an intention in your practice. The asanas in Jivamukti are also much more directed toward the physical needs of women as though as intense as ashtanga which was incidentally devised as a distraction for novice monks to suppress their sexual energy, Jivamukti is much more about back openers, therefore holding a focus on emotion and your anahatha charka.

Finally, in consolation to anyone who has read the entirety of this and now thinks the only way to do yoga is 6 times a week, i would like to reassure them that all though this is always my intention I very rarely achieve this. And like the ideal 6 day a week practice there is all the underling veganism intertwined in yoga. It is argued that bar the many other environmental and moral reasons for not eating eggs and meat is because it makes your body more lean, and therefore the practice is made easier. I, however, follow the advice of my philosophy teacher Moorthy G in Goa who said that depending on the environment your in will, very much effects what your body requires to sustain itself and frankly, I find it too cold here, not to have the occasional shepherd’s pie and glass of red wine, where as in India it’s veggie all the way for fear of bugs and poisoning. To achieve my aim of doing yoga 6 times a week, I have started going on retreats a few times a year to really improve my practice, however, even then I am always thrilled to hear when it’s a Moon day (i.e a day off).

Personally, if there is anything I have learned in the last ten years of practice, it is to do the form of yoga that suits you, to meet your current needs in life, and to find a teacher that you like and inspires you. Years ago I once tried Bikram which I thought was horrible with all the heat and sweating and risk of over stretching. I really couldn’t understand the need for the external heat, which one can create with ujjai breath and vinyasa, however, since I am about to undertake a detox, I am thinking of including this once or twice a week for the next few months, to fully purify out the toxins.

Finally, I think Yoga London is the most fantastic forum, as it gives advice and directions in all aspects involved with Yoga, so in some respects avoids the trails and errors I had to go through to get to where I am currently.

I wish you all the happiness in the development of practice.

Nameste,

T

Centre: North London – “Alchemy Centre in Camden, North London”

About Us

The Alchemy Centre sits at the heart of Camden. It offers a great deal:

  

The types of yoga classes detailed in the busy timetable vary in style, from  Kundalini, Ashtanga, Hatha and Vinyasa to Jivamukti and meditation circles.

Popular teacher Stewart Gilchrist teaches here.

Website: www.alchemythecentre.co.uk

Address: Unit 101, Stables Market, Chalk Farm Road, London,  NW1 8AH

Telephone: 020 7267 6188

Email: info@thealchemycentre.co.uk

Nearest Tube: Camden Town

View map of yoga centres

Add your own yoga centre