Sunday 31 January 2016

Yoga Retreat April 2016




Join me for my 4-day yoga retreat in Sri Lanka this April 14th - 17th!
This retreat is for people who want to explore movement and yoga with fun and friends.
I will be teaching ways to use your internal power and energy to move gracefully and with ease, to move away from pain and towards free movement.
You will learn the importance of using active movements and how the key to better stability, mobility, and freedom is to learn how to firm parts that need to be firm and, significantly, relax what needs to be relaxed.  
In this retreat I hope to help you move closer to understanding and experiencing how this movement of energy will help every cell in your body to sing!
I have quite a bit of experience working with people with various injuries and I encourage you to contact me beforehand if you do have some sort of condition so that we can figure out if the retreat is appropriate for you at this time and how I might be able to help you.  
Because I am interested in you learning how to be your own best teacher, I will be offering sessions between the classes for questions and answers and for us to think deeply about particular issues or postures, so come along with some of your own ideas and questions and I can help make the retreat more personal for you. 
Check-in Thursday 14th April 1 pm - Depart Sunday 17th July after breakfast by Noon
Venue: Talalla Retreat  http://www.talallaretreat.com/
Classes: Six 2 hour classes. First yoga class starts on Thursday afternoon at 4.30pm.  From then we will have 2 classes on Friday, 2 on Saturday, and 1 on Sunday.  
Aside from the usual yoga there is the opportunity to relax by the pool or at the beach, surf, get a massage, or just hang out.
 Because there are limited rooms I am encouraging people to please consider sharing so that as many people can participate as possible.    Rooms need to be confirmed with full payment received by 13 March 2016.

The rate includes:
   All yoga classes
   Full board (tea/fruit before yoga; buffet style breakfast served at table; a la carte lunch (there is a menu to choose an item from), buffet style dinner)
   Accommodation
You need to pay for any extra drinks or snacks you might have if the mega breakfast and dinner and light lunch still leaves you hungry!  
Normal timetable is as follows
6.30am                     tea/fruit (if desired)
7.00-9.00am         yoga
9.00                     breakfast
RELAX                  (have massage, swim, surf, read, have lunch around 1 or 2ish depending on how full you are after brekkie)
4.30-6.30pm         yoga
7pm                     dinner
The prices quoted below are based on 3 nights per person.   You need to find a person to share with if you opt for double or triple and Tilak can put you in touch with other people who may also want to share.  
Payment
Full payment is required by 13th March.  You can make your booking directly with Tilak (tilak@antsglobal.lk +94-773-912-100) and pay  Tilak directly or he can provide a Sri Lankan or Australian bank account details for you to transfer to if that is easier.


Retreat Rates are as follows:
Sri Lankan citizens or with those with a Sri Lanka Resident visa:
Single 3 nights                   Rs. 55,000/-
Double (share) 3 nights     Rs. 43,000/- per person
Triple (share) 3 nights       Rs. 40,000/- per person
Non-Sri Lankan citizens without a Sri Lanka Resident visa
Single 3 nights                   USD670
Double (share) 3 nights     USD570- per person
Triple (share) 3 nights       USD540- per person




Look forward to seeing you!

Much metta,
Samantha


Monday 25 January 2016

Happy Australia Day

We made some human A's after our Australia Day class. 



The hardest A was the first but we had a lot of fun getting into it.




Happy Australia Day!

Sunday 17 January 2016

I Don't Love Yoga


May you practice with peace, love, and joy


I don’t love yoga.  I like practicing yoga, but yoga itself is not something to love.  

Love is a feeling that I have.  Love is something I can try my best to generate within myself and spread to others. 

So I practice yoga and do it with loving intentions. 

When I teach yoga, I try my best to teach with love.  Whether I am teaching myself (we are all our own teachers) or teaching to students in front of me is irrelevant; I make my best efforts to ensure it is all done with love.

When I practice/teach I try my best to impart feelings of happiness without any strings attached.  Without thought for what others may do for me. 

That is a not such a bad way to live life.

One of the barriers that can block the flow of love arises because it can be hard to let go of some of the strings—some of the expectations—we have when we do something.  This is especially so for some of the more subtle or hidden expectations we have when we practice. 

Like the expectation that the yoga will do something for me.  That the pose will do something for me.  That the breath will do something for me.  Or, as a student, that the teacher will do something for me (or, in life, that another person will do something for me). 

So, I try to remember the pose is a guide.  The practice is a guide.  The teacher is a guide.  But I, I am the one that does something for me. 

To help us on our way to a loving practice and loving interactions we can do something.  Perhaps start by practicing the art of listening and looking deeply?  That can help us understand what we do (and do not) need to do. 

Deep listening and deep looking don’t just happen, although we sometimes do get flashes of insight.  Deep listening and deep looking need to be practiced.

I try my best.  But people do sometimes walk away from me feeling unhappy so I need to practice more. I sometimes walk away from my yoga practice feeling a bit ‘off’ so I need to practice more. 

A piece of practical advice I was once given was to try to practice the art of letting go. 

The person who gave me this advice was an ordinary though exceptional person.  In fact he did not tell me to practice letting go as such, instead he said to me, “everyone has expectations but when you become attached to those expectations, especially when they are not met, this is where the difficulty and suffering arises” (he was a Buddhist and brought up surrounded by Buddhist teachings).

Those words were like seeds planted in my brain.  They hung around for a while until I started to nurture them a little. 

By practicing deep listening and looking I could see how many of my unhelpful or unhappy thoughts and feelings arose at times when I had expected something to happen but it did not. 

By practicing deep looking and listening I could then go a step further and see that the true source of my unhappiness was that I was still attached to the expected outcome.

It could be something as mundane as expecting a handstand in a sequence that never came.  And then feeling a little out of sorts for the rest of the class because it was not there.

It could be something like a person dying when you expected them to be alive.  It was only 20 years later that I realized that a lot of my suffering after the death of my mother when I was a girl was because I was clinging to the expectation that she should still be alive. 

The more I practice the more I sense that the most lovely (and loving) practices and interactions I have—the ones where I feel the most peace, love, and joy—are also the ones where I have expectations but where I am not attached to them. 

Of course I can (and generally do) expect that this pose, this breathing, this teacher, this person might do something.  It is hard for me not to have expectations (and the reality is the practice of yoga does do something—but not always what you expect).

But the more I practice deep looking and deep listening I realize that, among other things, attachment to those expectations, when they are unmet, blocks the feelings of love, of joy, of peace I feel (in life and in yoga). 

And the more I realize this, the easier it is to let go.

One of the best ways I have found to enhance the feelings of love, of joy, of peace, in my own practice (of yoga and of life) is when I come expecting something (even if I cannot articulate what it is) but open to the possibility of almost anything. 

The important thing, for me, seems to be that I just come.  That I am present.  That I am there.  That I am open to what may (or may not) happen.  And that when I come—open and present—it is with an attitude of love.  Towards myself and towards others. 

May your practice, in yoga and in life, be peaceful, loving, and happy.