Tuesday, July 13th, 9:15 AM- Sara and Cheryl Angela are two yoginis who have come together to create a unique yogic experience with live harp, gentle yoga, pranayama and mantra. They open the class with devotional Celtic songs. Sara guides the class through the yoga asanas while Cheryl plays the harp spontaneously for the energy of the group. This music is created in the moment according to the group resonance present and flows according to the movement of energy and vibration being generated. Special class fee: $15. SIgn up at Breathing Room Yoga, Livingston.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Monday, June 21, 2010
PRENATAL YOGA in Livingston

5 week series PRENATAL YOGA CLASS starts Wednesday June 30th at 12:15 at Breathing Room Yoga Studio.
The benefits of prenatal yoga
Prenatal yoga classes are more popular than ever. When paired with walking , swimming or hiking, yoga can be an ideal way to stay in shape during your pregnancy. This age-old practice keeps you limber, tones your muscles, and improves your balance and circulation, with little, if any, impact on your joints.
Yoga is also beneficial because it helps you learn to breathe deeply and relax, which will come in handy as you face the physical demands of labor, birth, and motherhood. In fact, one of the first things you learn in a yoga class is how to breathe fully. The breathing technique known as ujjayi requires you to take in air slowly through your nose, filling your lungs, and exhale completely.
Learning how to do ujjayi breathing, OCEAN BREATH, prepares you for labor and childbirth by training you to stay calm when you need it most. A regular yoga practice will help you fight the urge to tighten up when you feel pain, and show you how to relax instead.
Along these same lines, according to a report in the April 2009 issue of theHarvard Mental Health Letter, rigorous studies have found scientific proof that yoga helps the body deal with stress by slowing heart and breathing rates and lowering blood pressure -- which can benefit new moms after the baby's born, too.
The benefits of yoga aren't limited to your physical well-being. Taking a prenatal yoga class is a great way to meet other pregnant women — to become part of a community. Being in a positive, supportive environment with others like you can give you a regular emotional boost and keep you motivated to continue exercising.
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Day 2- INITIATION INTO HEARTSOURCING
INITIATION INTO HEARTSOURCING
Today's session is close to 20 minutes. The following sessions are shorter, around 10 minutes each. Please plan these meditations and reflections into your day. We grow in skill in any valuable practice by the importance we give it and by repetition.
"There is a force within which gives you life - seek that.
In your body lies a priceless gem-seek that.
If you want to find the greatest treasure don't look outside,
look inside, and seek that."
Rumi
PS: Give this Gift of Love to the People you Love:
Friday, June 18, 2010
Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras – I.33 A Gift of Grace

Interpretive translation by Joseph Le Page:
Kindness, compassion, joy and equanimity (in relation to pleasure and pain, good and evil) are naturally cultivated through glad acceptance of all life offers as a gift of grace.
A Gift of Grace
Live lightly, for every grain of earth, water, sun, wind and space is truly a gift of grace.
Be grateful, for this body of a million miracles per moment offers vistas of infinite beauty.
Look deeply, for every flower holds a blueprint for unfolding your own inner beauty.
Play freely, for joy is the natural language in this sandbox of earth, sea and sky.
Witness wisely, for the roller coaster ride is much less stressful when watching from outside.
Breathe deeply, for air is the language that makes you one with everything under the sun.
Sit silently, for meditation is the science of unwrapping the secret gift of your own soul.
Love tenderly, for the beating heart of the whole universe is held in your soul mate's hands.
Let go completely, for every belief that binds you is that much less space to receive the gift of grace.
Serve selflessly, for loving kindness is the thread that weaves as one the entire web of life.
Dance life’s seasons softly, for every change is another face of the ever flowing river of grace.
Live gracefully, for every moment of everyday and each new path, and every face are all a gift of grace.
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
This summer, keep cool with ayurveda techniques
This summer, try these pitta-pacifying techniques to keep your cool.
Of the three doshas, pitta has the most in common with summer. Imagine a bubbling pot of steaming hot, sour, and spicy soup—that's the nature of pitta. Made up of the primal elements fire (mainly) and water (secondarily), pitta has hot, oily, sharp, light, sour, fluid, and pungent attributes—many of the same sensory qualities that summer surrounds us with.
It's a fundamental principle of Ayurveda that like increases like. In Ayurveda: Secrets of Healing (South Asia Books, 1998), Ayurvedic teacher and author Maya Tiwari writes, "The doshas are not simply the dynamic energy within the body; rather, they are influenced primarily by seasonal variations." As summer heats up, we become prone to accumulating excess pitta. If we already possess a pitta prakriti (nature), we're at an even higher risk of becoming out of balance.
Signs of pitta imbalance include diarrhea, burning sensations, skin irritations, odorous sweating, fever, inflammation, and a hypercritical or intense mental outlook. Pitta governs digestion and metabolism, so the fire may flare first in the small intestine and the stomach—pitta's main seats in the body—with excesses of digestive acid and bile.
What to do when pitta's boiling over? Keep in mind that doshic imbalances can vary in manifestation and severity, depending on many factors. If you suspect any health problems, seek a qualified practitioner. But if you're simply a touch overheated, tune in to your senses and try applying opposing qualities to maintain balance in the midst of summer's swelter.
TASTE Bitter, sweet, and astringent tastes calm pitta, so eat more foods like apples, grapes, zucchini, lettuce, cucumbers, cilantro, and fresh organic dairy. Eliminate or reduce your intake of alcohol, heavy meats, and fried, oily, salty, spicy, and sour foods. Instead of salt, use fennel seeds, coriander, fenugreek, and fresh lime juice for seasoning.
TOUCH Wear breathable natural fibers that have a cooling effect, such as cotton and linen.
SMELL Treat yourself to a fresh bouquet of tuberose, gardenia, or freesia. Or dab on a diluted essential oil: Try rose, jasmine, geranium, vetiver, or ylang ylang.
SIGHT Take a break from work that requires intense visual focus. Gaze at summer's verdant trees and meadows. Surround yourself with cooling hues of pearl white, blue, green, silver, and gray.
SOUND Listen to flute music and devotional songs to calm your heart and soothe your spirit.
PRANAYAMA Try cooling pranayama techniques, like Sitali and Sitkari, which are done by inhaling through the mouth and exhaling through the nose.
To do Sitali, sit in a comfortable position, make an O shape with your mouth, and curl the tongue lengthwise. Then, as B.K.S. Iyengar instructs in Light on Pranayama (Crossroad, 1998), "draw in air...as if drinking with a straw and fill the lungs completely." Withdraw the tongue, close the mouth, and hold the breath for five to 10 seconds. Exhale through the nose. Repeat this cycle for five to 10 minutes and then rest in Savasana (Corpse Pose).
If you can't curl your tongue, try Sitkari, which is similar to Sitali except that the tongue is kept flat. Part the lips and allow the tip of the tongue to protrude slightly. Practice gently and without intensity early or late in the day, when the air is cool.
Friday, June 11, 2010
SUMMER SOLSTICE CELEBRATION CLASS

MONDAY JUNE 21st, 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm at Breathing Room Studio, 122 N. Main St.-$12 fee
Solstice is a time for letting go of old stagnation, while inviting new openness within. Join Sara as you celebrate the longest day of the year by releasing your sadness, fear, pain, and suffering into the light of the summer solstice.Take this opportunity for solar healing, receiving the sun’s warmth, joy, and energy at its fullest capacity. Because the summer solstice offers direct and sustained sunlight, we will set our intentions to illuminate our dark places by letting in the light and applying nature’s rhythms and laws to our yoga practice.
