Arjuna invites you to learn about his approach to Ashtanga and Vinyasa Yoga
(click to enlarge)
Table of Qualifications:
- fully licensed medical doctor
- health insurance accredited yoga teacher
- authoriced to teach by Sri K. Pattabhi Jois
HI, I'm Arjuna, a Yoga teacher and a Medical Doctor. Some say I'm one of the most dedicated Ashtanga Yoga practitioners Here you can read a bit about me and my approach to Yoga.
After I learned Yoga form from my mother at early age, I restarted Yoga on my own with a daily practice in 1990. In 1999 I discovered Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga. At that time, there weren't many people doing Ashtanga Yoga in Germany, my home country and place of resicence. My first contacts with Ashtanga Yoga were at workshops. I travelled to nearly every Ashtanga Yoga workshop within about 500 km from my home city, Nurenberg. I was lucky enough to meet and learn from some of the most well-known Ashtanga Yoga teachers, such as Lieno Miele, John Scott and David Svenson.
I'm fascinated by the grace, power and elegance
of the Ashtanga Yoga practice. But to a greater
extent I am enthralled by its ancient tradition;
each movement, breath and direction of
gazing has been practiced for thousands of years, just as it is done today.
Being part of a tradition of generations of Yogis
that have already practiced all these techniques is a
magic thought for me.
Some people claim that Ashtanga
Yoga has no tradition at all. They say: "Ashtanga Yoga
is just a modern invention". It's true that there are many
assertions about Ashtanga Yoga which are
difficult, if not impossible to prove. But do we
always need evidence?
Somehow life is like a kaleidoscope.
If you look through it, you see beautiful colours and
amazing geometrical paterns. If you are only
concerned with physical reality, you can destroy the
kaleidoscope and you will come to the conclusion that
all the beauty you saw was mere splinters of
odd coloured glass. You will be disillusioned and the
dream of the kaleidoscope will be dead.
For me, it feels good to be practising
Ashtanga Yoga in what I understand to be the most traditional method.
I used to
be a bit confused about the differences between
different teaching approaches. To get in direct
contact with the roots of Ashtanga Yoga I travelled to
India to study with Sri K. Pattabhi Jois. All
other Ashtanga Yoga teachers alive
have either learned directly from him or from his
students. I hoped - a hope that has been justified by my experience of him -
that he was the one who could teach me the most traditional way of
Ashtanga Yoga. He always confirms the method he teacjes today is exactly the one he learned from his
teacher Sri Tirumali Krishnamacharya.
But it seems that he wasn't very exact in his
teaching, because there are a few slight differences between the practices
(and therefore teachings) of the various people that have studied with
Patabhi Jois at different times.
My Ashtanga Yoga practice represents what I learned from Pattabhi Jois.
In the places where I noticed differences, I asked him or his grandson Sharath
for the correct method of counting, breathing and moving.
However, because I only did the primary and intermediate series under Pattabhis
guidance, when I practice the advanced series I use the counting and method I
have learned from some senior students of Pattabhi Jois.
I teach what I practise.
For me,
teaching feels more like sharing my personal practice
- I just forward what I have experienced. Hence, I
teach Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga in a way I believe to be
the most traditional. Nevertheless, the "most
traditional" form of Ashtanga Yoga still differs quite
a bit from teacher to teacher.
Maybe Ashtanga Yoga is like yeast. If you put a bit of
curd in milk, the yeast will transform the milk into
curd. You can take your curd to any country, put
it into milk and it will happen. - But the curd will
always taste a bit different. The yeast is the same,
but the milk changes. Likewise, Ashtanga Yoga has a different
flavour everywhere, but it is still Ashtanga Yoga.