This seems so California... and American

See the following news clip. This sounds so California. And here, those that are practicing it will say they're getting in touch with their Eastern-Spiritual side

News:
RISHIKESH, India (AFP) – The blonde Californian in her 40s writhed rhythmically in low-cut white trousers as she performed her "power flow yoga", to the shock of traditionalists.

By the time Shiva Rea, famed for inventing the high-energy Yoga Trance Dance, had completed her demonstration at a yoga festival in northern India, some 20 people had left the room.

"This is not yoga, it's just a show, but to succeed in California, this is what they have to do," griped Austrian yoga teacher Florian Palzinsky, 42, as he watched the Santa Monican.

For thousands of years, yoga has been expressed through gradual control of the body, breath and mind.

But criticism of Rea's spirited show at the week-long International Yoga Festival in Rishikesh underscored the growing and sometimes acrimonious split between purists and practitioners of new, innovative forms of the art.

Rishikesh, nestled in the Himalayan foothills, shot to world prominence when the Beatles visited in 1968 to learn about transcendental meditation from Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, helping to popularise ideas about Indian spirituality.

Now hundreds of visitors, most of them foreigners, come each year to the festival from dozens of countries, bringing their yoga mats to learn about breathing, posture, chanting and nutrition from experts in all types of yoga.

The classes start at 4:00 am and go on until sunset.

"Yoga doesn't flow in our veins like it does in Indians so I came here to go back to basics," said French yoga teacher Juliette Allard, 38, who has been coming to the festival for the past three years.

German nutritionist Daniela Wolff, 50, said that she felt happiest with the festival's tradition-minded Indian teachers, such as the spry 103-year-old Indian guru Swami Yogananda who gave his course every morning at 6:00 am sharp.

"They are genuine, do not use fancy words, there is no music. Most importantly, they don't need to prove anything to anyone," Wolff said.

For Japanese yoga teacher Hikaru Hashimoto, the Americans "are very gifted at making yoga evolve -- at changing and inventing new styles that will spread throughout the world".

"But India is the first country of yoga. The basis of yoga is here," he insisted.

Nevertheless, the more unconventional practitioners succeeded in drawing the spotlight at the festival, such as white-robed American Gurmukh Kaur Khalsa -- born May Mary Gibson but now a devout Sikh.

Khalsa has given private lessons to stars such as Madonna, Cindy Crawford and Courtney Love, teaching Kundalini Yoga -- a meditative form of stretching -- and urging people to find the sunshine "in your hearts".

What really matters is that people "want to feel better, be closer to ourselves", she said. "That's what yoga is."

But Khalsa scandalised some festival-goers when her group held hands and chanted the word "Hallelujah" for 10 minutes, waving their bodies.

Tears poured down some faces of the group and others looked ecstatic after the session, but their emotional response did not impress critics.

"I've practised yoga for 20 years. To me, it's superficial, there's no depth -- it's like playing sports," said Indian yoga teacher Kamal Deep Ohlan, 35.

"Today, yoga has become a business when it should be a discovery of one's inner self, a philosophy."
There are many paths to one destination.

I didn't like Greek non fat plain yogurt like I do now...I started w/ Dannon fruit, which now I wouldn't THINK of eating...

I had to work TOWARDS where I am--- my point is, like so many things it's a process..

especially spirituality many paths all leading to one road.
My journey might not be yours
This sort of gimmicky bastardization of yoga has been going on for years. Hot Yoga. Power Yoga. Billy Blank's Tai-Byoga.*

It's kind of like what happened to the Martini--it was too exotic for modern Americans, so they watered down part of it here, jazzed up part of it there, and bingo! You've got something that has the name and cache of the original, giving it a nice, trendy mass-appeal, but that has little else in common.

Spiritual enlightenment via six-pack abs.

- Jeff


* I made that last one up. I think...
I believe it's Billy Blanks Tai-Bogus

And I'd argue with N'cat's "many paths, one road" line. I don't think there's one road.

I guess what I like about the article is ... it's right and wrong. The creative destruction of dynamics.

how about Many Paths/ One Journey?


many paths to the same mountain?

This Way Up...

To seek is divine

Tai Chi Bo

Bo a deer a female deer
I'm from California if you count Fresno. Yogi Berra's my Guru.
How about N'cat: one mountain, many streams of conciousness

If Bard were still around he'd suggest twin peaks instead of one mountain. I'd never think that.
Already a LVA subscriber?
To continue reading, choose an option below:
Diamond Membership
$3 per month
Unlimited access to LVA website
Exclusive subscriber-only content
Limited Member Rewards Online
Join Now
or
Platinum Membership
$50 per year
Unlimited access to LVA website
Exclusive subscriber-only content
Exclusive Member Rewards Book
Join Now