IF YOU REGULARLY PRACTICE PRIMARY SERIES AND YOU’RE INTERESTED IN LEARNING MORE ABOUT INTERMEDIATE SERIES, CONNECT WITH WITH MARLENE AND KRISTIN ABOUT THE POSSIBILITY OF PRACTICING INTERMEDIATE SERIES ON THURSDAY AFTERNOONS!
Intermediate Series in Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga is a sequence of postures that cleanse the nervous system through a dynamic combination of back-bending, twisting, and hip-opening. Intermediate Series is best learned after a practitioner has an intuitive feel for and regular practice of the postures in Primary Series.
Because Primary Series is so heavily focused on forward folding, practitioners may greatly benefit from the counter action of backbending in the Intermediate Series. Intermediate Series can also be incredibly helpful to re-inspire a practitioner’s connection to asana practice and their body by exploring something new. Intermediate Series can also be invigorating to the nervous system and help to shift settled patterns, shake up stuckness, and grow insight.
We recommend wearing comfortable layered clothing to help regulate preferred body temperature. If you have postural practice supports like mats, blankets, bolsters, blocks, and straps, please bring them with you. We have community practice supports for you to use as well. Feel free to borrow any community practice support to facilitate and enhance your practice. We also suggest bringing water to maintain hydration after practice.
WE ARE BUILT ON GIVING
Our practice opportunities are provided solely through voluntary giving. The giving of many is what allows the practice opportunities to be offered so freely. Anyone who’s experienced benefit from our offerings is invited to give for the benefit of others. There are many ways to give beyond financial contributions. Giving includes all types of altruistic service, inside or outside our yoga community. Giving also includes generously sharing yoga and consistently practicing yoga with honesty and love. This kind of perpetual giving makes living yoga possible.
In giving, we loosen the grip of our greatest source of suffering - self-absorption. We expand our hearts in a way that recognizes we are not actually separate from others. Giving is a letting go of a sense of separateness that’s based in ignorance. When we practice giving, we feel into how we all depend on one another - how we are all part of the whole. In this way, giving is the natural response of the awakened heart.
You’re invited to give according to your volition and means - in whatever ways resonate with you. You might like to make monetary donations, contribute to our collective resources, or dedicate your time and skill to assist the community.
A NOTE ON THE ORIGINS OF ASHTANGA VINYASA YOGA
Ashtanga vinyasa yoga originated from a sequence of poses created by Tirumalai Krishnamacharya based on what he learned from Rama Mohan Brahmachari in the early 1900s. Krishna Pattabhi Jois, a student of Krishnamacharya, began teaching the sequence in led classes that emphasized synchronized group movement. Jois coined the term “ashtanga yoga” to describe his sharing of postural practice in this way. The practice spread through the efforts of many of Jois’ early students, including David Swenson and Richard Freeman, and influenced many current styles of postural practice, including all types of vinyasa flow and power yoga practices. Over time, this style of yoga has evolved, leading to various interpretations of the practice.