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The Importance Of Savasana And Why To Stay After Namaste

Whether you have visited our studio a few times or are a seasoned yogi, you already know that we start and end every class with a pose called Savasana. This posture is often thought of as the hardest of the Modo series. In todays society, there is a large focus on always moving, going, getting to the next task as fast and proficiently as possible. What we are missing is a focus on the importance of taking time, creating space, and connecting with breath.

In coming to a yoga class, we always have the best intentions, but often end up cursing our way through traffic and rushing in the door just in the nick of time. In Savasana, we are forced to just be, if only for a moment before moving into the practice of yoga. This posture, also referred to as corpse pose, allows the release of everything that happened in the day leading up a yoga practice. It allows space where it is ok not to be constantly on the go. Most importantly, it provides an opportunity to connect to breath. Breath is the fuel of life and practice. Breath can also be used as a tool to calm the body and mind. The practice of Savasana should take a mimimim of ten minutes, but most don’t allow themselves that.

In our traditional Modo series, we also have a space for Savasana built into the practice, right in the middle, separating the standing from the floor series. It gives students an opportunity to separate both portions. In the North American culture, we have a tendency to be so hard on ourselves, always striving for perfection. This ego also pops its ugly head up in our practice. The mid-Savasana gives students the chance to let go of all of the judgement or attachment that may have popped up in the first half of their practice. It also gives students an opportunity to come back to the roots of the yoga practice, their breath.

The end of class is the final chance to practice the pose Savasana. Consider this as what you have worked for throughout your practice. This is the chance to just sink into the mat, letting everything go. This posture allows the body to return back to “normal”. It allows the heart rate to lower, muscles to let go and the body temperature to begin lowering. It also allows the student to absorb the peace and the space they created in their body. This is the posture that connects everything in practice together, without it, practice is incomplete.

About the Author:

Tara Hansen-Rix is a Yoga Teacher at Modo Yoga Hamilton as well as being one of the co-owners. Tara is a Mother to 3 amazing kids, a lover of animals, books and the outdoors.

(Originally published June 20, 2017)

Modo Music and Modo Live Music – Follow the Yogi

There is a space — a space that only quiet can create — that you can fill with your own degree of depth. Modo Music and Modo Live Music classes aren’t silent: they are accompanied by a live musician or a carefully created playlist, but they don’t feature the same constant cues and themes. Recently, I’ve found myself drawn to the Music classes more, and I’ve noticed a few subtle differences. I could feel myself taking a little longer to get into and out of poses. I can feel myself taking a few extra movements, experimenting in a pose differently than I would in a regular Modo.

Modo Live Music is an animal unto itself. Joel, the talented musician who plays in our Dundas Moksha Music classes, does a wonderful job of reading the energy or the room and intensifying or quieting the music when needed. It also helps that Joel is a yogi too, so he is very familiar with the Modo sequence, with what certain poses feel like, and to a listeners perspective, it certainly feels like he does a great job marrying music to the yoga.

amanda in upward dogThis is not to say that Modo Music without live music isn’t worth going to. Quite the contrary. Finding a teacher who can curate a playlist that speaks to you is a treasure, and I know that all of our teachers slave over their playlists to make sure that the tunes they bring you are fresh, that they fit their sequence, and that they set the tone of the class. I recently went to one of Annie’s Modo Music classes, and her playlist truly speaks to my own sensibilities: I have since followed her on Spotify. Find your own music soul mate amongst our talented and diverse roster of teachers. The only way to know who’s playlist is the best is to test them all.

You’ll see Modo Music – Follow the Yogi and Modo Live Music all over our schedule. Hope to catch you there, jamming out!

About The Author:

Nicole Doro is a tree hugging, book loving yogi who you’ll see behind the desk at MYH. For more tree hugging, book loving, and yoga, catch her at @nicoledoro on IG.

(Originally published June 13, 2017)