Monday, February 15, 2010

OM in the Heart of Texas - Texas Yoga Conference 2010


Texas Yoga Conference
Unity Church, 2929 Unity Drive, Houston, TX
February 19-21, 2010

I'm excited about attending
  • Freedom Yoga with Carrie Garrett
  • Cultivating Extreme with Robert Boustany
  • Functional Yoga for Athletes with Julie Downey
  • Tracie Brace's Five Effective Qualities of a Yoga Teacher
  • Hips, Knees, Ankles & Toes Lotus Workshop with Ricky Tran
  • Yoga for Seniors with Gudran Danburg
  • Also, Rainbow Kids & Family Yoga with Gopala Yaffe Amir
  • and then either American Power Yoga or Anusara Yoga....can't decide

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Yoga Kit for Kids -- Cards, Music and Booklet

Yoga Kit for Kids. A set of cards, Music for Yoga in two tracks of 20 minutes. A handbook telling about the poses, the benefit of yoga for kids. This Kit is setup for one to take to a school environment.

I tell you, Grace and I had fun with this. Can't believe she is only 3 years and 10 months old. Take a look!




Here is grace doing Shark Pose (like in the yoga card demo).





And another in Frog Pose...
Then another in Lion.....
And here are a few other poses that Grace enjoyed!!

Butterfly, Candle, Cat, Fish, Cat with raised leg, Flower, but looks like Turtle and Down Dog!


Monday, February 1, 2010

Discover how to: lose weight, eliminate your stress, increase your flexibility, build your strength through Yoga with Gaileee

Discover how to: lose weight, eliminate your stress, increase your flexibility, build your strength using Yoga
  • Help you lose weight: Many forms of yoga raise the heart rate into the aerobic range. But you don’t need to exert yourself to lose weight with yoga. Some studies show even gentle yoga and breathing techniques rev up your tired metabolism so you can lose weight.


    A study at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle linked yoga and weight loss. This study of over 15,000 men and women showed people who did yoga lost weight while the control group gained weight.

    Another study presented last year at the America Heart Association found yoga helped overweight high school students lose weight while the control group gained weight.

    And the famed Dr. Dean Ornish encourages his patients to practice yoga to help ensure weight loss. When you do yoga and make it part of your lifestyle, you’ll soon discover it’s power for weight loss.

    Yoga helps you to lose the weight in varied ways. It helps you build muscle mass. When you increase your muscle mass, you boost your resting metabolism -- and that makes your body burn more calories. You strengthen your body from tip to toe with a regular practice. The thyroid gland normalizes your weight without you having to be in the gym 4-6 days a week. There are a number of factors involved in the normalizing of the weight. Some of the poses in a practice stimulate sluggish glands to increase their hormonal secretions. The thyroid gland, especially, has a big effect on our weight because it affects body metabolism.

    Yoga goes even deeper by changing the relationship of mind to body, and eventually to food and eating which can have tremendous impact on weight loss.


  • Eliminate your stress: Yoga reduces the physical effects of stress on the body. By encouraging relaxation, you help on lowering your levels of the stress hormone cortisol. Cortisol is the chemical that is linked to increased belly fat. Big bellies are linked to insulin resistance-a precursor to Type 2 (adult-onset) diabetes - and heart disease. By combating stress, yoga helps to normalize cortisol levels and keep belly fat to a minimum.

    Related benefits include lowering blood pressure and heart rate, improving digestion and boosting the immune system as well as easing symptoms of conditions such as anxiety, depression, fatigue, asthma and insomnia. Your lung capacity will improve, and so will the quality and depth of the breath. People who practice on a regular basis, will notice that they will have less upper respiratory infections, this is thought to be because of the quality of your breath one practices in a yoga practice.
  • Improve your flexibility: Yoga helps to improve flexibility and mobility, increasing range of movement and reducing aches and pains. Many people can’t touch their toes during their first yoga class. Gradually they begin to use the correct muscles. Over time, the ligaments, tendons and muscles lengthen, increasing elasticity, making more poses possible. Yoga also helps to improve body alignment resulting in and helping to relieve back, neck, joint and muscle problems. Many people think that they need to be flexible or need to be able to touch their toes to do yoga. Not so! You come to yoga with however your body is at the moment, and with working through your practice, work towards a more flexible body!

  • Build your strength: Yoga postures use every muscle in the body, helping to increase strength literally from head to toe. When I restarting taking yoga about 8 years ago, I could only do one pushup. After being in a regular practice for three months, I could at the end of those three months do 19 pushups! I was truely amazed at this feat, and was hooked on yoga from that point on.

    While the different poses in a practice can strengthen the body, they also provide an additional benefit of helping to relieve muscular tension. Lots of people have upper body tension, due to being at a desk or car or at the computer for a lot of the day. Coming to a session, helps to build the upper body strength, and to relieve tension being held in the body, so you get benefit of increasing strength and easing body tension.
Remember, you don't have to be flexible, or in shape to do yoga. If you can breathe you can do some form of yoga. The more out of shape that you are, the more you'll see immediate results in a regular practice.

Please join me in a gentle beginning yoga class. What happens in a class is for the first time, you'll register and sign in, I'll discuss with you any body issues that you may have (back, carpel tunnel syndrome, balance, surgeries, high blood pressure, etc.), Class is typically 60 minutes in length. Each class will begin with warm-up and stretching. The warm-up is then followed by focused breathing, then a series of poses that gently work the entire body. After the exercises there is a period of physical and mental relaxation and reflection.

Participants do not need any prior experience (I love beginners!!) to attend. All skill levels are welcomed. You may borrow a yoga mat, but I encourage you to purchase a yoga mat of your own. Blankets, blocks, straps are provided for you to use during your practice.

Where? At Wesley United Methodist Church in Nederland, Texas on Monday & Thursday nights at 6:30 p.m. and childcare is provided (with 24 hour notice please). More questions? Please email YogaWithGaileee@gmail.com or call at 409.727.3177.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Start or Re-Start your Yoga Practice --- It Does a Body GOOD!

Count on Yoga. Looking for a reason to start practicing (or restart your practice)?

1. Flex Time.
Improved flexibility is one of the most obvious benefits of yoga. During your first class, you probably won't be able to touch your toes, never mind do a back bend. But if you stick with it, you'll notice a gradual loosening, and eventually, seemingly impossible poses will become possible. You'll probably notice that aches and pains start to disappear. That's no coincidence. Tight hips can strain the knee joint due to improper alignment of the thigh and shinbones. Tight hamstrings can lead to a flattening of the lumbar spine, which can cause back pain. And inflexibility in muscles and connective tissues, such as fascia and ligaments, can cause poor posture.
2. Bone Zone.
It's well documented that weight-bearing exercise strengthens bones and helps ward off osteoporosis. Many postures in yoga require that you lift your own weight. And some, like Downward- and Upward-Facing Dog, help strengthen the arm bones, which are particularly vulnerable to osteoporosis fractures. In an unpublished study conducted at California State University, Los Angeles, yoga practice increased bone density in the vertrebrae. Yoga's ability to lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol may help keep calcium in the bones.
3. Worry Thwarts.
Yoga lowers cortisol levels. If that doesn't sound like much, consider these facts. Normally, the adrenal glands secrete cortisol in response to an acute crisis, which temporarily boosts immune function. If your cortisol levels stay high even after the crisis, they can compromise the immune system. Temporary boosts of cortisol help with long-term memory, but chronically high levels undermine memory and may lead to permanent changes in the brain. Plus, excessive cortisol has been linked with major depression, osteoporosis (it extracts calcium and other minerals from bones and interferes with the laying down of new bone), high blood pressure, and insulin resistance. In rats, high cortisol levels lead to what researchers call "food-seeking behavior" (the kind that drives you to eat when you're upset, angry, or stressed). The body takes those extra calories and distributes them as fat in the abdomen, contributing to weight gain and the risk of diabetes and heart attack.
4. Breathing Room.
Yogis tend to take fewer breaths of greater volume, which is both calming and more efficient. A 1998 study published in The Lancet taught a yogic technique known as "complete breathing" to people with lung problems due to congestive heart failure. After one month, their average respiratory rate decreased from 13.4 breaths per minute to 7.6. Meanwhile, their exercise capacity increased significantly, as did the oxygen saturation of their blood. In addition, yoga has been shown to improve various measures of lung function, including the maximum volume of the breath and the efficiency of the exhalation.
5. Pain Drain.
Yoga can ease your pain. According to several studies, yoga postures (asana), meditiation, or a combination of the two, reduced pain in people with arthritis, back pain, fibromyalgia, carpal tunnel syndrome, and other chronic conditions. When you relieve your pain, your mood improves, you're more inclined to be active, and you don't need as much medication.
6. Connective Tissue.
As you read all the ways yoga improves your health, you probably notice a lot of overlap. That's because they are intensely interwoven. Change your posture and you change the way you breathe. Change your breathing and you change you nervous system. This is one of the great lessons of yoga: Everything is connected - your hipbone to your anklebone, you to your community, your community to the world. Such interconnection is vital to yoga. This holistic system simultaneously taps into many mechanisms that have self-perpetuating and even multiplicative effects. Synergy may be the most important way of all that yoga heals.
7. Joint Account.
Each time you practice yoga, you take your joints through their full range of motion. This can help prevent degenerative arthritis or mitigate disability by "squeezing and soaking" areas of cartilage that normally aren't used. Joint cartilage is like sponge; it receives fresh nutrients only when its fluid is squeezed out and a new supply can be soaked up. Without proper sustenance, neglected cartilage can eventually wear out like worn-out brake pads, exposing the underlying bone.
8. Flow Chart.
Yoga gets your blood flowing. More specifically, the relaxation exercises you learn in yoga can help your circulation, especially in your hands and feet. Yoga also gets more oxygen to your cells, which function better as a result. Twisting poses are thought to wring out venous blood from internal organs and allow oxygenated blood to flow in once the twist is released. Inverted poses, such as Down Ward Facing Dog, Standing Straddle Splits, Headstand, Handstand and Shoulderstand, encourages venous blood from the legs and pelvis to flow back to the heart, where it can be pumped to the lungs to be freshly oxygenated. Yoga also boosts levels of hemoglobin and red blood cells, which carry oxygen to the tissues. And it thins the blood by making platelets less sticky and by cutting the level of clot-promoting proteins in the blood. This can lead to a decrease in heart attacks and strokes since blood clots are often the cause of these killers.
9. Heart Start.
When you regularly get your heart rate into the aerobic range, you can lower your risk of heart attack and relieve depression. While not all yoga is aerobic, if you do it vigorously or take flow or Ashtanga classes, it can boost your heart rate into the aerobic range. But even yoga exercises that don't get your heart rate up that high can improve cardiovascular conditioning. Studies have found that yoga practice lowers the resting heart rate, increases endurance, and can improve your maximum uptake of oxygen during exercise - all reflections of improving aerobic conditioning.
10. Strength Test.
Strong muscles do more than look good. They also protect us from such conditions as arthritis and back pain, and help prevent falls. And when you build strength through yoga, you balance it with flexibility. If you just lifted weights, you might build strength at the expense of flexibility.
11. Spinal Rap.
Spinal disks - the shock absorbers between the vertebrae that can herniate and compress nerves - crave movement. That's the only way they get their nutrients. If you've got a well-balanced asana practice with plently of backbends, forward bends, and twists, you'll help keep your disks supple.
12. Standing Orders.
Your head is like a bowling ball - big, round, and heavy. When it's balanced directly over an erect spine, it take much less work for your neck and back muscles to support it. Move it several inches forward, however, and you start to strain those muscles. Hold up that forward-leaning bowling ball for 8 or 12 hours a day and it's no wonder you're tired. And fatigue might not be your only problem. Poor posture can cause back, neck, and other muscle and joint problems. As you slump, your body may compensate by flattening the normal inward curves in your neck and lower back. This can cause pain and degenerative arthritis of the spine.
13. Sugar Show.
Yoga lowers blood sugar and LDL ("bad") cholesterol and boosts HDL ("good") cholesterol. In people wit diabetes, yoga has been found to lower blood sugar in several ways: by lowering cortisol and adrenaline levels, encouraging weight loss, and improving sensitivity to the effects of insulin. Get your blood sugar levels down, and you decrease your risk of diabetic complications such as heart attack, kidney failure and blindness.
14. Space Place.
Regularly practicing yoga increases proprioception (the ability to feel what your body is doing and where it is in space) and improves balance. People with bad posture or dysfunctional movement patterns usually have poor proprioception, which has been linked to knee problems and back pain. Better balance could mean fewer falls. For the elderly, this translates into more independence and delayed admission to a nursing home or never entering one at all.
15. Loose Limbs.
Do you ever notice yourself holding the telephone or a steering wheel with a death grip or scrunching your face when staring at a computer screen? These unconscious habits can lead to chronic tension, muscle fatigue, and soreness in the wrists, arms, shoulders, neck, and face, which can increase stress and worsen your mood. As you practice yoga, you begin to notice where you hold tension: It might be in your tongue, your eyes, or the muscles of your face and neck. If you simple tune in and pay more attention to these areas, you may be able to relieve some tension.
To see all 38 ways yoga can improve your health and well-being click on over to the Yoga Journal Website. http://www.yogajournal.com/health/1634

Gentle Beginning Yoga at Wesley United Methodist Church in Nederland, Texas, 3515 Helena Avenue on Monday and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. Come early if it is your first time! See you in 2010!

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Dr. Oz's Seven Minute Yoga Workout

So what exactly is Dr Oz's 7 minute Yoga plan? Here is the youtube demonstration and then, I've listed the yoga pose breakdown of what he is doing!
Enjoy your seven minutes! Gaileee

Dr. Oz's Seven-Minute Workout





Celebrity Trainer, Joel Harper (Come help me Mr. Harper!) and Dr Oz on their Seven Minute Yoga Plan.
  • Deep Inhale and Exhale Breath
  • Mountain
  • Forward Fold
  • Plank, one left leg lift, then 10 push ups
  • Updog (Cobra)
  • Down Dog
  • Three Legged Dog - Left Leg
  • Swing Left Leg into Warrior I
  • Transition into Warrior II
  • Windmill arms to floor, into Pyramid Pose
  • Move from Pyramid Pose into Triangle Pose
  • Square the body into Airplane Pose, arms out to the sides of the body
  • Back to Plank, one right leg lift, then 10 push ups
  • Updog (Cobra)
  • Down Dog
  • Three Legged Dog - Right Leg
  • Swing Right Leg into Warrior I
  • Transition into Warrior II
  • Windmill arms to floor into Pyramid Pose
  • Move body into Triangle
  • Square the hips into Airplane Pose
  • Back to Plank, left leg lift, then 10 push ups
  • Updog (Cobra)
  • Down Dog
  • Three Legged Dog - Left Leg
  • Warrior I
  • Warrior III
  • Standing Splits
  • Transition into Half Balanced Moon
  • Forward Fold
  • Then back to Plank, Right Leg lift, with a set of 10 push ups
  • Updog (Cobra)
  • Down Dog
  • Three Legged Dog with Right Leg
  • Swing leg into Warrior I
  • Shift into Warrior III
  • Standing Splits
  • Transition into Half Balanced Moon
  • Forward Fold
  • Back to Plank, Left Leg lift into 10 push ups
  • Updog (Cobra)
  • Down Dog
  • From Down Dog, bring legs to floor easy seated, then immediately transition to
  • Boat Pose, alternatively, do 20 jack knives (a Pilates move)
  • Boat again,
  • Cross arms, lower extended legs to hover the floor, along with upper back /chest hovering for 10 breaths.
The ending comment was to "Get to work!" along with Joel Harpers website of www.fitpackdvd.com

Enjoy!
Gaileee

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Yoga Classes by Gaileee

Yoga Classes from Gaileee - 2010 - Find Upward Bliss with Downward Dog
New Yoga Class Schedule Starting January 2010

  • Mondays at 6:30 p.m. at Wesley United Methodist Church, 3515 Helena Avenue, Nederland, Texas. Gentle Beginning Yoga. Excellent for easing back pain, losing weight, building strength and balance. $5 for Members (Methodists), $8 for non-members.
  • Tuesdays at 11:00 a.m. at Port Arthur YMCA. Hatha Flow Yoga Class. Beginners Welcomed! Free for members, $10 drop in fee. Mention Gail Pickens-Barger to attend the class.
  • Thursdays at 6:30 p.m. at Wesley United Methodist Church, 3515 Helena Avenue, Nederland, Texas. Gentle Beginning Yoga. Excellent for easing back pain, losing weight, building strength and balance. $5 for Members (Methodists), $8 for non-members.