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Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue March 18, 2014 4:54 pm
by Strat
I wonder what kind of board drama would happen if Alex took the reigns on that. Or split off a contingent of running bro's to initiate a half marathon in Alabama.
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue March 18, 2014 5:04 pm
by Alex
i'd only organize a race in alabama if we could all crash at lenny's frownhouse
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue March 18, 2014 5:24 pm
by Strat
Holdin this for 15 minutes:
Was one of the more demanding things ive done physically. Good lord.
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue March 18, 2014 5:26 pm
by Strat
Man, that is so gay looking.
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue March 18, 2014 6:03 pm
by Alex
well, it prepares one for visits from nah
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Wed April 02, 2014 7:50 pm
by warehouse
Strat wrote:Holdin this for 15 minutes:
Was one of the more demanding things ive done physically. Good lord.
do they at least let you used lube?
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Mon August 04, 2014 2:04 am
by Strat
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue September 16, 2014 2:20 pm
by Strat
Ill get you all signed copies if you'd like
Start a conversation with Kyle Weiger about yoga, and it may turn him upside down.
“Handstand is how I trick guys into coming into yoga for the first time,” Weiger said. “When they say they think that yoga is all stretching and woo woo stuff, I’m like, ‘No man, check this out,’ and I’ll go into a handstand and then say, ‘I teach that in class.’ The guys will show up and I do teach handstands, along with about 55 other poses.”
Weiger is a yoga instructor based in Denver, but he has come up to the valley to lead several workshops, which have mostly been based on the art of inverting the body through arm balancing. Weiger didn’t grow up doing yoga or even practicing gymnastics (which he currently does); he played baseball through two years of college and “lived and died in the weight room.”
When his girlfriend in college suggested he attend a yoga class, he responded, “I don’t do yoga. … Yoga is for chicks,” and went back to pumping iron.
“When I look back at it now, I didn’t go to yoga because I didn’t want to be bad at something,” Weiger said. “I was very comfortable in the weight room.’”
“Yoga brought me the opposite of what most men are looking for — yoga brought me a balance to my personality; that real softness that I needed.’
Jim Keegan
Yoga instructor
When he finally attended his first class, Weiger said he thought it was going to be easy —it was just stretching, right?
“Then I got in there and was like, ‘Holy crap, there is something else going on here.’ I remember looking down at my forearm in my first yoga class, and there had never been that much sweat on my arm before,” he said.
First time’s the charm
Eagle-Vail resident Tom Kiddoo said he finally ran out of excuses as to why he couldn’t try yoga. His wife, Julie Kiddoo, had been doing yoga since 2007, and she started Revolution Power Yoga in Eagle-Vail with her business partner, Rachel Nelson, in 2012.
“When Julie and Rachel opened up the studio, I finally went for the first time, and I walked out with such a rush,” he said. “I felt great physically and mentally, and I knew I’d be back.”
A year after he began taking yoga, Kiddoo went to his first teacher training.
“All of a sudden, I was teaching yoga, and signing up for Baptist Level Two training to become certified,” he said. “It was really quick. ... When I finally put my pride aside, and just went and did it to see what it was like, I really enjoyed how physical the practice was, as well as how it made me feel mentally. I think a lot of men internalize their stress, and it provided a great outlet for me to really deal with stress.”
Kiddoo grew up swimming competitively, which he said continued halfway through his college career. Later years brought on physical work in construction, as well as his three-year stint on Vail Ski Patrol. For the past 15 years, Kiddoo got back in the pool to swim a few times a week. He said he feels better in the pool since he’s been doing yoga and is stronger all around.
“I used to think yoga was just stretching, but the strengthening that I have found through yoga has blown me away,” he said. “I have found that it has increased my strength and flexibility in the pool, which you always strive for with swimming.”
Physical benefits and beyond
What many men don’t realize, Kiddoo explained, is that a lot of professional male athletes do yoga to complement their sports.
“It’s a part of their regimen because it makes them stronger, makes them faster and (helps them) perform,” he said.
Brian Dahlen, of East Vail, was a hockey player through college and picked up running post-college — sports that resulted in surgery on both knees. His curiosity about yoga led him to his mat for the first time, seeking what he thought might be a safe and joint-rejuvenating activity.
“I thought yoga would be good for my knees, for stretching and for strengthening, so I tried it and quickly found all the other benefits as well,” he said. “It’s amazing how much strength you can build by working with your own body weight.”
Dahlen has been doing yoga now for about four years and is just finishing up his first yoga teacher-training program. He said while yoga can be humbling, especially at first, the physicality of it is “fun and super engaging, as well as difficult and rewarding.”
Beginning Thursday, Dahlen will join six other male instructors to lead the You & Me Expansion Project, a program to build strength, confidence and connection in teenage boys, who will attend the program with a parent or mentor in their lives.
The group will meet every Thursday in Avon for six weeks from 5:30 to 7 p.m. for yoga, meditation and group activity.
“I taught yoga to the seventh and eighth grade during P.E. last year, and the boys seemed to love it,” said Amy Archer, founder of the You & Me Expansion Project. “I would run into their parents later and they said the kids had really enjoyed it.”
Men in the movement
Walter Mugwe is from Nairobi, Kenya, where he has been a yoga instructor for five years since his training through the Africa Yoga Project (AYP). He said that a lot of men attend his power yoga classes, as they are drawn to the rigorous movement, as well as the peace of mind.
“The students enjoy the whole practice, especially the pushups and the abs, because it’s a full-body workout,” he said in a recent phone interview while on tour with AYP in New York. “My experience with yoga as a male has given me more compassion to everyone else. I am able to express compassion and realize my purpose through the practice. I think a lot of men can feel that through yoga.”
While Mugwe heads to Estes Park on the AYP tour this month, male AYP teacher Kevin “Acha” Owino will be one of two instructors teaching a class at Revolution Power Yoga on Monday from 5:45 to 7:45 p.m.
Arizona yoga teacher and studio owner Jim Keegan said he has been teaching for 15 years and practicing for 20. Keegan is a featured instructor for the second annual Eagle Yoga Fest, held the first weekend of October in Eagle.
Keegan said on average, his classes are filled with half male, half female practitioners. He said people come into the practice, to “feel their tissues and their issues,” and to lighten their load both physically and mentally.
“I used to be 210 pounds and would lift weights every day,” Keegan said. “I trained as a hockey player and body building type of guy, and I needed to soften. Yoga brought me the opposite of what most men are looking for — yoga brought me a balance to my personality; that real softness that I needed. My heart was hard, as I had gone through a lot of emotional things with my family.”
Changing perceptions
Weiger explained that because yoga is low-impact, men often see it as not challenging — at least those who have not tried it yet.
“You’re not hitting each other like you do in football or boxing, and you’re not lifting heavy weight like you do in CrossFit, so because it’s low-impact and has a softer nature, there’s resistance around it,” he said.
The humbling nature of the practice is what makes it so powerful, he said.
“I think it’s fun to go from the state of not being able to do something to being able to do it,” he said. “For me that’s handstand — when I first started I couldn’t do it, and I practiced and practiced, and something that was out of my control is now in my control, which feels like some level of mastery over my body.”
Dahlen said programs like the You & Me Expansion Project are a perfect way to change the perception of what yoga can be for males, especially for teenage boys, who are at a time in their lives when they can really use the guidance and support.
“Yoga can be fun, as well as an opportunity to do some real work,” he said. “With how much it has changed my life, I want to plant the same seed into the lives of these kids. Even if it doesn’t take right now, maybe later in their lives they will be able to come back to it.”
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Wed September 17, 2014 10:47 pm
by Sgt. Crackpot
tl;dr: Start fucking doing yoga now, and you'll pick up hot yoga mums.
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Mon September 29, 2014 6:08 pm
by Strat
Hi, Im Brian (Strat) and I am a Power Yoga Leader
lol.
Ok you fat music fans, lets do this.
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue September 30, 2014 7:29 am
by knee tunes
Strat wrote:
OMG! WHAT ARE THOSE THINGS ON YOUR LEGS?!?!? ..................................oh, they're your feet
......love the book. fuckin Sally wrote it
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue September 30, 2014 8:18 am
by Dev
I reckon I can meditate a thousand times better than Strat.
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue September 30, 2014 8:25 am
by knee tunes
a thousand four hundred and...............what fourteen
I mean seventeen.
a thousand FOUR THOUSAND and fourteen. seventeen
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue September 30, 2014 5:29 pm
by Strat
Dev wrote:I reckon I can meditate a thousand times better than Strat.
You've already lost, my friend.
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue September 30, 2014 5:33 pm
by Alex
Strat wrote:Dev wrote:I reckon I can meditate a thousand times better than Strat.
You've already lost, my friend.
dev's cup is full; he will never know the way
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Thu November 06, 2014 4:24 pm
by Strat
Taught my first full class last night to a bunch of teenage girls. Lol. Teaching kids yoga is a riot.
Carry on.
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Thu November 06, 2014 10:56 pm
by Sgt. Crackpot
How did you go about disguising your erection in tight yoga shorts?
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue December 30, 2014 4:43 pm
by NaiveAndTrue
How do I build up my arm strength better so I don't fall on my face as much? LOL
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue December 30, 2014 4:55 pm
by E.H. Ruddock
Strat wrote:Taught my first full class last night to a bunch of teenage girls. Lol. Teaching kids yoga is a riot.
Carry on.
http://forums.theskyiscrape.com/viewtop ... human+bass
Re: Yoga aka The Official Strat Thread
Posted: Tue December 30, 2014 5:46 pm
by Strat
Grow up ruddo! geez!
Round 2 is coming up January 7th. Hopefully its a bigger class this time! I need some new ideas for yoga activites for kids. Should I PM the Human Bass?
Also, NaT - Engage your core more and it will take some of the pressure off the arms! Also, more and more chaturangas!