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Monday, January 12, 2009

YOGITOES Yoga Tube Sling Bag


YOGITOES yoga tube sling bag long canvas tube yoga mat bag eco friendly all cotton designer yoga attire yoga clothes. The perfect bag for your yoga mat and practice essential. Your yoga mat easily slides into the Yogitoes tube bag carrier from either side. Both ends are open and contents are protected securely by a thick webbed strap. Areas on the bag are open to keep air circulating on the mat inside. Machine wash and dryable gentle cycles. Large roomy exterior zip pocket to hold all your essentials. Yoga mat tube bag measures about 26 long x 8 inches diameter. Fits a 3 to 5 mm size standard yoga mat rolled. The exterior zip pocket measures about 20 L x 5 W inches. See other small Yogitoes items this store. Hair band Skidless mat and many more yoga products by Yogitoes at unbeatable prices. All natural cotton heavy twill canvas construction. Long adjustable cotton web strap. Silver hardware. Guaranteed authentic. Comes rolled inside a sleeper storage bag.

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SKU : DLA08YT04X12TUBE
Retail Price : $38.00
Our Price : $25.00
Sale Price :
$ 24
Your Saving : 37%

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Friday, April 4, 2008

Let's Talk About Yoga Some More

Tree Pose = Vrksasana
Photo courtesy of Yoga Journal


from Not Quite Sure


This is the summer of tree pose. Everywhere I go--A's yard, the deck, the crazy hot/power yoga class--I am the tallest, strongest, steadiest tree I have ever been. It could mean something about my physical and mental state, or it could just be a matter of good floors.

I realized, on my birthday, when I went to the crazy hot/power yoga class, that every yoga class I've ever taken had been taught by a woman. I realized this, of course, because a man taught the class.

The big yoga gurus, the Rodney Yees and Baron Baptistes, are all men.

Do with that what you will.

My ideal yoga teacher remains my first yoga teacher, in some kind of classic the-first-is-always-the-best kind of way. But she was. It was prenatal yoga and she would walk around the room adjusting us, making the most minute corrections that transformed the poses. I never worried about whether I was doing things right, because I always knew she was watching and would catch me if I wasn't and, most importantly, help me to learn. Also, she wasn't so into the clap-trap side of yoga (and here I betray my yoga priorities). I'm sure that class is why I survived ten hours of induced labor without an epidural and walked a mile a week after M was born by c-section.

In Red State Capital City Suburb, my yoga teacher read us passages from gurus and led us through visualizations and I waited impatiently for actual poses. She didn't correct us much either, but she did do the yoga along with us, and when I was pregnant with E, she adapted all her poses and series for me, and it was Red State Capital City Suburb where there weren't many yoga options, so I got used to her.

I haven't found many yoga teachers who truly help you, the individual you, not just the group you, to get your poses right. But most of the yoga teachers I've had in Town do the poses with us, so we can feel one with them and watch what it is to be right (OK, I know, "right" is not the goal of yoga, and in fact undercuts the yoganess of the yoga , but I'm talking about doing poses effectively, not perfectly, or competitively) (shh, we won't talk about the competitiveness of yoga, because we do not participate in such a thing, ever) (besides, our yoga clothes are nowhere near hip enough to even approach the level of competition).

The yoga teacher at the crazy hot/power yoga class did not do the yoga with us. He corrected maybe two or three students during the entire class. He walked around the room spouting clap-trap, when he wasn't mumbling mumbo-jumbo.

The students all had perfect yoga outfits and much yoga paraphernalia.

I'm actually not such a slouch myself on the yoga outfits and paraphernalia front--I was wearing shorts, because who wants to wear black yoga pants when it's 90 degrees outside and 100 inside? oh yeah, the hip yoga students do; but I did have my regulation tight sleeveless top and my very own yoga mat and my bottle of water and my ponytail. But I was old, so much older than those hip yoga students, and I was OK with coming down from my half moon into child's pose because my leg was tired, and I was OK with doing bridge instead of wheel, though then I did do one triumphant five-breath wheel, my longest ever (not that that matters...).

But here's the thing: I had a great class. The clap-trap, mumbo-jumbo though it was, reached me, occasionally. I mean, it really is true that brave people are scared too, they just move forward anyway. That explains why everyone says I'm brave when I know that really I'm terrified. And if you hold on and push through, you can stay in half moon on the other side and do wheel for five whole breaths. And while I wouldn't do crazy hot/power yoga every day--I'm nowhere near hip enough--it's definitely worth visiting the land of hip yoga every once in a while.

And you should have seen my killer tree pose.

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Monday, March 10, 2008

The Hatha yoga poses incorporated by Bikram.


from Yoga-Videos.com
Standing Deep Breathing
Half Moon Pose
Awkward Pose
Eagle Pose
Standing Head to Knee Pose
Standing Bow Pulling Pose
Balancing Stick Pose
Balancing Separate Leg Stretching Pose
Triangle Pose
Standing Separate Leg Head to Knee Pose
Tree Pose
Toe Stand Pose
Dead Body Pose
Wind Removing Pose
Sit-Up
Cobra Pose
Locust Pose
Full Locust Pose
Bow Pose
Fixed Firm Pose
Half Tortoise Pose
Camel Pose
Rabbit Pose
Head to Knee / Stretching Pose
Spine Twisting Pose
Blowing in Firm Pose

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