Bendy like Beckham

September 9th, 2009

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Yoga Baby

March 15th, 2009

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Cairns Yoga Academy Goes Social

March 11th, 2009

yoga community

Terms like web 2.0 and social networking have been buzz words for some time. As 70% of our new students come from referrals we have decided to improve our web presence and start using some of these wonderful cutting edge web technologies that are becoming so popular.

We look forward to socializing with you in class and online.

Namaste

Susi.

So now you can click on any image and …

Follow us on Twitter

Follow us on Twitter

Become a fan on face book

Become a fan on our facebook page

read our daily muses on our blog

read our daily muses on the very popular cairns yoga academy blog

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38 Tips for a better life

March 11th, 2009
  1. Take a 10-30 minutes walk every day. And while you walk, smile.
  2. Sit in silence for at least 10 minutes each day.
  3. Sleep for 7 hours.
  4. Live with the 3 E’s — Energy, Enthusiasm, and Empathy.
  5. Play more games.
  6. Read more books than you did the previous year.
  7. Make time to practice meditation, yoga, and prayer. They provide us with daily fuel for our busy lives.
  8. Spend time with people over the age of 70 & under the age of 6.
  9. Dream more while you are awake.
  10. Eat more foods that grow on trees and plants and eat less food that is manufactured in plants.  Read the rest of this entry »

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Tibets 50th Anniversary

March 10th, 2009

The Dalai Lama has launched a fierce attack on Chinese rule in his Tibetan homeland, describing its people’s lives as “hell on Earth”.

Five decades of Chinese rule had caused “untold suffering”, Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader said, accusing Beijing of creating a climate of fear.

He also repeated his demand for Tibet’s “legitimate and meaningful autonomy”.

His words came on the 50th anniversary of a failed uprising against Chinese troops which led to his exile.

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The Sound of Om

March 9th, 2009

om2Om–the ancient sacred syllable–may be the only mantra you’ll ever need.

By Richard Rosen

Mantras, sacred chants, come in all shapes and sizes. They can be composed of sentences, single words, or even single syllables; they can be perfectly intelligible or completely mystifying (at least to the uninitiated).

Single-syllable mantras, known as bija (seed) mantras, are the easiest to remember and recite; they’re also the most powerful. It’s believed that, just as a tiny seed contains a majestic tree, each bija contains vast amounts of spiritual wisdom and creative force. One of the oldest and most widely known of these seeds is om.

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Anti Gravity Yoga

March 9th, 2009

Downward-facing dog has been given a whole new meaning with the latest incarnation of yoga for New York’s fashion-conscious. A hammock suspended from the ceiling is the contraption which allows people to stretch in entirely new directions, including upside-down.

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Super Brain Yoga

March 7th, 2009

You be the judge…

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Malaysia clerics issue yoga fatwa

March 7th, 2009

Millions of people in Malaysia have been banned from doing yoga because of fears it could corrupt Muslims.

The Islamic authorities have issued a ruling, known as a fatwa, instructing the country’s Muslims to avoid yoga because of its Hindu roots.

Ubudiah Mosque

To most people yoga is simply a sport – a stress-busting start to the day.

Malaysia’s National Fatwa Council said it goes further than that and that elements of the Indian religion are inherent in yoga.

Announcing the decision, the council chairman Abdul Shukor Husin said practices like chanting and what he called worshipping were inappropriate and they could “destroy the faith of a Muslim”.

The ruling is not legally binding but many of Malaysia’s Muslims abide by fatwas.

Yoga classes here are filled with mostly non-Muslim Malaysians of Chinese or Indian descent, but in the major cities it is not uncommon to see several Muslim women at classes.

Prayers and gym

For Muslims across Malaysia the day starts at 5.30 in the morning, as the call to prayer goes out.

A handful of the most devout arrive at a mosque in the western outskirts of Kuala Lumpur.

Over the other side of the road, in the shadow of the Mosque’s golden dome, a few others start arriving to start their day – at the gym.

Each is carrying a yoga mat, slung over their shoulder.

Adam Junid is a Muslim Malaysian who does both – prayers and gym, specifically yoga.

An engineer in his 30s, he goes to a weekly class for about 30 people.

“I don’t think it interferes with the religion at all,” he says.

“In fact it helps you, makes you healthy and more aligned and it helps you become self aware,” he adds.

Adam is a rarity because it is mostly women and not many Muslims who do this.

Islam is able to cater to the needs of Muslims – spiritual needs, intellectual needs and other needs, material needs – there is no need to bring in elements from outside

Professor Osman Bakar

Masjid Putra in, Putrajaya

Masjid Putra in, Putrajaya

“The yoga masters repeat that it actually can be quite compatible with religion,” he said. “It makes you a better person.”

Yoga comes in many forms. For some it is a stress-busting sport. For others a serious bit of soul searching.

What Adam does once a week is the serious stuff. The class I sat in on was two hours long.

Spiritual experience

It included breathing exercises, with the help of the tick-tock of a metronome.

There was meditation, then half an hour of darkness for intense relaxation.

Before that some of the class managed a very stable headstand. Others could touch the back of their head with their foot.

“It can go with any religion,” instructor Mani Sekaran told me.

“Or it can go with those who don’t believe in any religion, because it’s purely sports,” he added.

He is also founder of the Malaysian Yoga Society. A bald and very fit man, he once did martial arts.

“If I want to train for an Olympic gold medal… whether I believe in a religion or not doesn’t matter. I just keep on training.”

“Based on that we can use yoga to enhance whatever we are doing, whether it is religion or whether it’s spirituality… but it [yoga] is stand alone.”

During the class I sat in on, yoga’s Hindu roots were mentioned, albeit briefly. A spiritual experience was on offer for those who wanted it.

This is the point where some Muslims in Malaysia worry about yoga. They think it is encroaching on their way of life.

One Muslim student told me that she combined yoga techniques with prayers. That concerns some Islamic experts.

“If people want to practice yoga, the physical exercise, I think that is no problem,” Professor Osman Bakar, from Malaysia’s Institute of Advanced Islamic Studies, told me.

“Many Muslims would say fine. But they would object to the mixing of the two things.”

“Islam is a complete way of life. Islam is able to cater to the needs of Muslims; spiritual needs, intellectual needs and other needs, material needs. So there is no need to bring in elements from outside,” he added.

Adam’s yoga class ended with a quick discussion about self-awareness, concentration and why people do yoga. I was not sure if this was a weekly occurrence or for my benefit.

He told me that yoga has made him a better person. He has no plans to stop.

By Robin Brant

BBC News, Kuala Lumpur

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/7743312.stm

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Yoga is a laughing matter

March 5th, 2009

A Laughing Yoga workshop and teacher training will be held at the Cairns Yoga Academy on March 21&22. Details to follow soon.

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