[personal profile] tamaranth
Have survived first yoga class here. The middle-aged, sleekly blonde lady in charge of the class looked at me pityingly when I said I'd done Iyengar yoga. "Ah yes, I've moved on from there," she said. "Far too regimented."

Class was quite restful -- and it was nice to be in a pastel-coloured, mirror-walled studio instead of some of the more dubious venues of the Deptford class. The nice lady did not bully me once, nor mock my efforts. Ah, Cedric, where are you now? [Answer: India, learning new torture techniques.]

Would be ever so much more tempted to go on a regular basis if the pool was open immediately after: as it is, there's a half-hour wait, and nothing much to do.

I can feel the backs of my knees. And something twinging in the small of .... oh, it's the cat.

Date: Monday, September 12th, 2005 11:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] purpletigron.livejournal.com
A book? :-)

If you find out more about the differences between these styles of yoga, I'd be interested, as I believe our local class is that 'regimented' one.

Date: Monday, September 12th, 2005 11:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tamaranth.livejournal.com
Not a very restful atmosphere for reading, to be honest. May see if I can find a quiet corner next week, when I'm not pushed for time.

Iyengar yoga focusses on stretching, holding postures, muscle-strengthening work. Can hurt quite a bit. Is probably the reason I don't have back problems any more (apart from occasional slight ache when I overdo walking-on-hard-pavements). Apparently more popular in the UK because it's much easier to train.

Hatha yoga (I think this is the other named one) is more focused on movement and breathing. Generally gentler. I think if it doesn't say it's Iyengar, it's Hatha -- though today's had a lot of familiar moves ...

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