When Is It Smart To Take A Sick Day From Class?

Today I took the day off from class. I hate to do that, but I was fighting a cold, jet lag, a sore hip, and I couldn’t stop coughing!  I needed the day to recover and rest so I could return to my practice strong and ready for action tomorrow. Let’s hope it works. I might have to wait another day or two with this cough… I guess it is that time of year.

I often waffle on whether or not to go to class when I am feeling under the weather. Obviously, if I have a fever or am contagious with something I don’t go, but what if I just feel a little bit sick. Will class help or hurt my prospects for a quick recovery? In my experience, it can go both ways.

Sometimes if I have a little bit of a head cold, the heat and the sweat just clean everything out and I have an almost miraculous recovery. Plus the compression postures help fire up my immune system, which has to help a little bit, right? I take the class a little easy and see how it goes. Usually I am happy I went.

But other times, going to class can be the kiss of death. My muscles are so sore I can’t really do the postures properly. I become dehydrated and weak, and my body just shuts down. I often spend those classes recovering on my mat. At least the heat usually feels good, but truthfully, I wish I was home in bed.

I have yet to find a full proof strategy, but maybe the difference is like the old saying — starve a fever, feed a cold. If it is just a cold, class will probably help, but if its something more severe, with aches and fever, it is best to stay home. For now, I usually just go with my gut. And this morning it was saying “Go back to bed!” So I did. Let’s hope tomorrow is a better day.

Fellow yogis, do you go to class when you are feeling under the weather?

Getting My Head on Straight

After five years of practice, I recently learned that I do not have my head on straight. The teachers always say “where your eyes go, your body will follow,” but apparently for me, where the eyes go, the neck follows. I have been over extending my neck, craning it up to the ceiling, especially in the spine strengthening series, but also in the forward bend to Standing Separate Leg Stretching Pose. No wonder my neck and shoulders hurt so much in these postures.

It is hard to explain, but this example may help. In Full Locust Post, when you raise your eyes to the sky to help guide your body higher, I was simply craning my neck up. Sure, I could see the ceiling because I was tilting my neck and my eyes came along for the ride. What I should have been doing was keeping my head straight while looking up with my eyes, and using my back strength to raise my body higher to better see the ceiling. Oops… I guess that is why they call it a practice.

This new awareness came out of my recent yoga retreat. I am sorry if you are sick of hearing about the retreat (my family definitely is!), but it has gotten me thinking about a lot of things. If you are not sick of hearing about it, you can read about it here and here. Anyway, I learned to get my head on straight at this retreat. It was not a Bikram retreat so the postures were different and one of the teacher’s favorite postures was called the forward fold. It is as simple as it sounds. You start from a standing position and fold your body forward from your hips while keeping your back straight. Your arms hang at your sides and glide down to touch the floor at the end. Well, simple or not, I was doing it wrong. My back was curved into a back bend rather than being straight and my neck was tilted up towards the sky.

As the retreat week went on, I learned to see my head as an extension of my spine, keeping it still and straight through the bend. I also learned to engage my abdominal muscles to better support my back and keep it straight too. This was a big change for me, although so obvious, now that I understand it.

I have been working to apply this new-found straightness to my Bikram postures this week, and it has made a big difference. My neck looks much more natural in the postures — not as tense, although I never really noticed the tension before. My spine strengthening series has also taken a turn for the better. I’m not sure why I get more height holding my head straight, but I do. It is also a lot less uncomfortable now that I am working the right muscles rather than just straining. My shoulders used to ache in these postures, but now they feel like they are opening up. I am very happy about that.

All of this has also helped me to get my head on straight in another way. I always believed that since Bikram yoga works all the muscle groups and systems in the body, it was all I needed to do for my yoga practice. But I now have a broader view. Mixing it up at the retreat helped me identify muscles I was underutilizing and highlighted a bad habit I had developed. I wouldn’t have seen this without the shift in perspective that came from trying a different form of yoga. I guess it is time to add some different styles into my yoga mix.

Fellow yogis, do you have your head on straight?

The Liebster Award – Hot Off the Mat!

I was recently nominated for a Liebster Award by both The Healthy Secret Identity and Yoga and Doughnuts! What an exciting week! Please check out their great blogs where they each share interesting ideas related to food, fun and their yoga practice, among other things. I really enjoy reading both blogs.

The Liebster award is a nomination given to bloggers by bloggers. The idea behind this award is to recognize new bloggers and help promote them! Thank you so much for the encouragement! My blog is only five months old, but it has become such an important part of my life. I appreciate the attention and support it is getting!

The Liebster Award Rules

  • Acknowledge and link back to the person who nominated you
  • Answer the 11 questions asked by the person who nominated you
  • Share 11 random facts about yourself
  • Nominate 11 bloggers with less than 200 followers.
  • Give your nominees 11 questions to answer on their blog when they post about the Liebster Award.

The Healthy Secret Identity’s 11 questions:

  1. Coffee or Tea?  Hazelnut decaf black.  Can’t get enough.
  2. Cat or Dog?  Cat
  3. What is your favourite quote?  Don’t yuck my yum. Everyone should get to enjoy what they like without criticism.
  4. What is your go-to comfort food?  Kind of a cliché, but chicken noodle soup.
  5. What did you have for breakfast today?  Scrambled eggs with zucchini.
  6. What book are you currently reading?  We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves by Karen Joy Fowler.  It is a fun read.
  7. Do you take your car to go to work or use public transport?  NYC subway.
  8. What was the last blog that you followed? Hot Room Confessions
  9. What is your favourite flower?  Pansies – they signal spring.
  10. What is your favourite season?  No question, summer.
  11. When is your birthday?  January 30 – the day Andrea nominated me for this award!  Happy Birthday to me!

Yoga and Doughnuts’ 11 questions:

  1. What made you want to start blogging? I loved my Bikram yoga practice so much and felt that I wanted to share it with others. It has been so much fun meeting fellow yogis through the blog.
  2. What to do you love about blogging? Anything you hate? I really enjoy the writing part of it — I find it relaxing and rewarding. I also very much enjoy reading people’s comments on my blog — I learn so much from them.
  3. What is your favorite thing about yourself? I am very honest.
  4. What do most people not know about you?  I have hearing loss and write a second blog on this topic at Living With Hearing Loss.
  5. What is the last book you read? The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt.  Couldn’t put it down.
  6. Where is your favorite vacation spot? St. John in the US Virgin Islands — beautiful beaches, lots of great hiking and fabulous restaurants. We go every year in December.
  7. What is your favorite food? There are so many, but I guess I will go with cheese as a category. I love all kinds.
  8. If you could do anything (occupation) what would you do? I would be a professional writer.
  9. What was your most proud moment? The births of my two children (technically two moments). I couldn’t believe that something so beautiful had entered our lives.
  10. What did you learn from your biggest regret? That I should continue to be honest with people, but that being honest doesn’t give me permission to say things in a mean way.
  11. What is your favorite post that you have written to date and why? (Please include link so we can read it). My favorite post is Mom, Please Go to Bikram So We Can All Have a Better Day, because it is just so true! The day is always better if I have been to class.

11 random facts:

  1. I love Bikram yoga. (duh!)
  2. I have hearing loss in both ears.
  3. I like when people speak with proper grammar. (my poor kids…)
  4. I love relaxing in a hot tub for hours – the heat doesn’t bother me.
  5. I love hiking, especially in new terrain.
  6. I hate being cold more than anything.
  7. I recently learned to meditate and am trying to keep it up.
  8. I love watching Shark Tank and have ordered many products from the show!  Some are great, and some are not.
  9. I am extremely organized — I even have packing lists saved on my computer for when I travel.
  10. I worked on Wall Street for 20 years before switching my focus to non-profit work and blogging. I don’t miss it.
  11. I love to travel and hope to practice Bikram yoga wherever I go in the world.

11 nominees:  I cheated here a little bit and included some of my favorite well-established blogs as well as some newer blogs. 

  1. Hot Room Confessions
  2. Travels With Slippers
  3. My Bikram Yoga Life
  4. CultFit
  5. Do The Posture
  6. Sia’s Place
  7. Confessions of a Yoga Princess
  8. Half Mooning
  9. Views From the Podium
  10. From the Ocean to the Mat
  11. Hearing Health Foundation

My questions for them:

  1. What is your secret desire?
  2. Where did you live when you were the happiest?
  3. What do you find most rewarding about blogging?
  4. What is your favorite color?
  5. What cause or causes are you passionate about?
  6. What did you want to be when you grew up when you were in grade school?
  7. What is your favorite TV show?
  8. What is your favorite vacation spot?
  9. When are you the happiest?
  10. What is your New Year’s Resolution for 2015 (if you have one)?
  11. What is your favorite post that you have written so far and why?  Please share it here so we can enjoy it.

Thank you to all my readers at Hot Off the Mat!

My First Yoga Retreat – Stretching the Mind More Than the Body

I am back from my first ever yoga retreat and it was amazing! But mostly in ways I never expected. I had pictured days filled with physical exploration — learning new postures, finding more space in my body, fine tuning my form. And some of that did happen. But mostly it was an internal exploration — finding better control of my breath, opening my mind through meditation, and finding a way to look inward and find peace and ease waiting there. Pretty heavy, huh? And in some ways it was, but in other ways I had never felt lighter.

At the start, I was like a fish out of water. The yoga was very different from my normal Bikram practice, with new postures and a flow style. This I expected. But it was also very different in texture and tone, which surprised me. For example, the lack of mirrors threw me. How could I know if I was properly aligned if I couldn’t see my body? There was also so much choice! In Bikram we all move together, doing the same postures for the same durations of time. But here, you could do a downward dog or a child’s pose at the end of a flow sequence. You could go through a vinyasa on the way to downward dog or not. And everyone was doing this at their own pace! How was I supposed to know which postures to do and how long to hold them? And the use of the props felt like cheating.

But I decided “when in Rome,” and so I did it their way. I tried to feel my alignment with my hands rather than see it. I sometimes chose the downward dog and other times the child’s pose depending on how I felt. I moved at my own pace or just copied the pace of whoever looked like they knew what they were doing. And I had no choice but to use the props, as some of the postures were inaccessible without them.

As the week went on, I got more comfortable with it all, and the soreness in my muscles told me I was getting the physical benefits of this new practice. In particular, I felt a big change in my ability to access and utilize the muscles in my core and shoulders. I am excited to apply that to my Bikram practice!

But the biggest transformation for me on this retreat came in the most surprising place — final savasna. These were not the final two-minute savasnas of my Bikram practice, but long and textured affairs with breath work and visualizations. True meditations. Fascinating and altering.

Of course I hated them at first. Laying on my back on a hard wood floor breathing in silence with twenty other people for up to 30 minutes was just not my idea of a good time. I felt AWKWARD! It was just SO quiet. My stomach started to gurgle. I started sweating. I could not find my breath. I kept having to swallow. I also felt lazy. Why had we stopped doing the “real” yoga only to lie here and do nothing? I could not quiet my thoughts so I could not pay attention to what the teacher was guiding us to do. That was the first night.

The next morning, I knew it was coming, so I was more mentally prepared. I set up a blanket on my mat like the other yogis had, so I was more comfortable. I forced myself to listen to the teacher’s words rather than my own panicked musings. I felt the breath moving in and out of my body more calmly. I tried to look inward and visualize the energy and light they were discussing. It didn’t work all that well, but I felt more relaxed at the end of it. That evening it went a little better. And then a little better the next morning. I remembered — it is a practice.

As my body stopped fighting it, my mind opened to it. I began to notice a new feeling of alertness and calm after the savasna/meditation. I started to actually like it and the more I liked it, the more open to it I became. By the end of the week, I looked forward to the final savasna and other meditation sessions at the retreat! My mind had been stretched. So much, in fact, that I plan to continue exploring meditation at home to see if I can incorporate it into my daily life.

Fellow yogis, is meditation an important part of your yoga practice?

Happy Birthday to Me – My First Yoga Retreat!

This week is my birthday – 46 years young. I always enjoy my birthday, and this year should be no exception, because I am going on my first ever yoga retreat! I tried to go on a Bikram yoga retreat, but unfortunately the timing and locations did not work well, so I am going on a more general yoga retreat instead. I am excited, but I must admit I am also a little bit nervous. While I have a regular Bikram yoga practice, I have not done much yoga other than Bikram. I know the names of some of the postures (i.e., downward dog, pigeon, etc), but I don’t know the specifics of the poses — the proper alignment or much of anything else. And the class will probably be different everyday!

Will I understand how to do the postures? In the few non-Bikram yoga classes I have attended (mostly at a hotel on vacation when there is no Bikram studio in town), the teachers have not typically provided specific directions for each posture. They say something like, “Push yourself up through plank and back into downward dog.” That is fine, but I’m not sure exactly what that means. How far apart should my feet be? Where should I be feeling the stretch? Should my gaze be between my feet or my hands or somewhere else? I don’t know. I am hoping I will get many more details in class during the retreat. If not, I will be sure to ask after class.

Can I maintain my composure? In Bikram class, I know the postures well and use class to work on my form and depth. At the retreat, I will be starting from scratch, which could be a bit humbling. I hope to approach it like I advise others to approach their first Bikram yoga class — with no expectations and with the composure to just take the practice as it comes. Easier said than done, but a great lesson for me in humility and mindfulness.

How strenuous will the yoga be? I am ashamed of myself for thinking that, because it is such a typical stereotype of yoga – that it is not a vigorous workout. Obviously, I know this to be completely false from my Bikram practice. Yet, here I am worrying that the yoga might not be vigorous enough. Kind of ironic. I bet it knocks me on my back.

Despite my worries, I am very much looking forward to the retreat! At the very least, it will be a good opportunity to challenge myself and learn something new. My hope is that it will not only deepen my love of the practice of yoga, but also take me a little farther down the road of self-exploration that I have begun with my Bikram yoga practice. I will let you know how it goes!

Fellow yogis, have you ever attended a yoga retreat?