Yoga Teacher Training Material - Fall 2018
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Yoga Teacher Training Material - Fall 2018
Yoga Teacher Training Material - Fall 2018
124 Videos
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A.1.1 Uplifted Yoga Introduction
35m
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A.1.4 Yoga Insurance for YTT Trainees (USA only)
4m 48s
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B.1.1 Welcome Video + Coming Together: Anatomical & Energetic Reasons to Chant
21m
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B.1.2. Individuality + The Pose is Not the Goal
16m
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B.1.3 The Big Picture
9m 39s
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B.1.4 Yoga is a Sweet, Steady Seat
6m 11s
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B.1.5 Troubleshooting Vinyasa
18m
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B.1.6 Meet Your Bones
22m
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B.1.7 Anatomical Position & Terms
6m 26s
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B.1.8 Planes of Movement
11m
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B.1.9 Joint Structure
35m
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B.1.10 Muscles - Do they Matter?
15m
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C.3 Intro to the Yoga Sutras
13m
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C.4 Yoga Sutras: Pada I
1h 2m
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B.2.1 The Spine and its Curves
14m
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B.2.2 The Vertebrae Up Close & Personal
20m
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B.2.3 The Spine: Section by Section
17m
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B.2.4 Muscles of the Back and Torso
21m
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B.2.5 Strengthening the Low Back
22m
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[Members-Only] Allison Low Back Class
22m
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Foam Roller - Ultimate Low Back Stretch
9m 49s
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B.2.6 Alignment of the Head and Neck
13m
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Easy Stretches for Text Neck & Neck Pain Yoga for Greatist - Yoga for Neck Pain
15m
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B.3.1 Meet Your Pelvic Bowl
9m 37s
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B.3.2 Male vs Female Pelvis
12m
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B.3.3 To Tuck or Not to Tuck?
6m 2s
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B.3.4 The Oh-So-Special Psoas
6m 33s
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How to Do Triangle Pose | Yoga Alignment | Trikonasana
1m 25s
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Beginner Morning Yoga Sequence for Greatist (15-min)
16m
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Yoga for Better Posture - ALL LEVELS | Open Shoulders & Back | Collab w/ Lesley
32m
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C.1 Uplifted Yoga Alignment: Body Reading Module
1h 12m
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[Member Only] Chaturanga Workshop (15-min)
12m
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C.2 Sanskrit: An Instrument of Yoga
16m
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B.3.5 Firing the Correct Glute
7m 7s
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B.3.6 Imbalanced Actions of the Hips, in Life and Yoga
12m
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B.3.7 What You Need to Know About Your Knees
14m
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B.3.8 Focus on the Feet
15m
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B.3.9 The Sciatic Nerve & Injury Management
12m
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B.4.1 The Shoulder Girdle
5m 18s
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B.4.2 The Shoulders in Movement
17m
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B.4.3 The Arms and External Rotation
9m 37s
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B.4.4 The Secret is Your Serratus
7m 14s
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B.4.5 The Elbow
4m 58s
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B.5.1 Let’s Take a Breath
10m
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B.5.2 The Anatomy of the Breath & Diaphragm
12m
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B.5.3 The Anatomy of the Breath & Diaphragm
14m
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B.5.6 Diaphragms within the Body
21m
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E.1.1 Prana and the Bandhas
25m
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E.1.2 Pranayama Techniques and Teaching
45m
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C.7 Tantra, Nadis & the Gunas
27m
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B.5.4 Mula-Bhanda-Wa
15m
You'll receive the following videos
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A.1.1 Uplifted Yoga Introduction
35m
-
A.1.4 Yoga Insurance for YTT Trainees (USA only)
4m 48s
-
B.1.1 Welcome Video + Coming Together: Anatomical & Energetic Reasons to Chant
21m
More than any other video in the training, please watch this video in a quiet space where you can sit alone, undisturbed. This is our opening ceremony. We’ll be connecting to a lineage of teachers through a beautiful opening exercise. Have cushions (and props as needed) nearby to take a comfortable meditation seat.
Covered in 1.1:
-Guru Chant, Meaning + Grounding Meditation
- Anatomical reasons to chant
-Creates vasopressin
-Sti... -
B.1.2. Individuality + The Pose is Not the Goal
16m
Sutra 1.1 Atha Yoga Anusasanam
Only in “the moment of now” can Yoga beginCovered in 1.2:
-Most injuries occur when we are entering or exiting a pose
-We are all vastly different, down to our bones
-Demonstration of the differences in femur length between two specimens
-Demonstration of how the femur connects to the pelvic bowl
-Our goal is not the posture, but presence inside the posture
-Our true aim in yoga is to experience... -
B.1.3 The Big Picture
9m 39s
Sutra 2.1 Tapah Svadhyaya Ishvara Pranidhana Kriya Yogah
Yoga is the balance of discipline and surrender through the study of the selfCovered in 1.3
- Our aim is to balance effort/muscular energy (tapah) and softening/surrender (ishvara pranidhana)
- This tight rope walk is navigated through the study of yourself (svadhyaya)
- Anatomy may seem overwhelming at first, but keep in mind it’s just a tool to help your students navigate this bal... -
B.1.4 Yoga is a Sweet, Steady Seat
6m 11s
Sutra 2.46 Sthira Sukham Asanam
Translation: Yoga is a comfortable steady seatCovered in 1.4:
-One of the very few sutras that deals directly with how asana should be performed
-“Asanam” defined as how do you “sit” in relationship to the postures (and everything else in your life)
-We’re seeking the balance between sweetness and stability, flexibility and strength, openness and structure -
B.1.5 Troubleshooting Vinyasa
18m
Covered in 1.5:
-Why perform yoga asana? Where do these poses come from?
-Why too many vinyasa “flows” can be dangerous for students
-How flexibility is often overly emphasized is modern yoga
-We live in a world where more is always better, but this is not always the case in our asana practice
-Pitfalls of fancier postures and overly creative sequencing -
B.1.6 Meet Your Bones
22m
Covered in 1.6:
-How bones are living tissue
-Names of all the major bones in the body
-Axial versus appendicular skeleton -
B.1.7 Anatomical Position & Terms
6m 26s
Covered in 1.7:
-What is anatomical neutral?
-Key terms to orient ourselves when talking about the body
-superior/inferior
-anterior/posterior
-lateral/medial
-superficial/deep
-proximal/distal -
B.1.8 Planes of Movement
11m
Covered in 1.8:
-Sagittal Plane: Flexion and Extension
-Coronal Plane: Abduction and adduction
-Transverse Plane: Internal and external rotation -
B.1.9 Joint Structure
35m
Covered in 1.9:
-Properties of the knee joint: bones, ligaments, joint capsule, synovial fluid
-Fibro and articular cartilage
-Why your knees are like grandma’s fine china
-How to protect the knee in pigeon and pigeon variations -
B.1.10 Muscles - Do they Matter?
15m
Covered in 1.10:
-What are muscles, tendons, fascia, ligaments and bursa
-Concentric, eccentric and isometric contraction
-Prime movers, antagonists and synergists -
C.3 Intro to the Yoga Sutras
13m
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C.4 Yoga Sutras: Pada I
1h 2m
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B.2.1 The Spine and its Curves
14m
Covered in 2.1
-Introduction to the 24 vertebrae and 4 sections of the spine
-How the spinal curves develop from infancy to adolescence (primary and secondary curves)
-Lordosis and kyphosis
-How the curves of the spine work sympathetically -
B.2.2 The Vertebrae Up Close & Personal
20m
Covered in 2.2
-What your vertebrae look like
-The parts that make up each vertebra (vertebral body, spinous and transverse processes, and pedicles of the thoracic spine)
-What happens to the intervertebral discs of the spine in flexion, extension, and rotation
-How twists compress the spine (but why it’s okay)
-Injury terminology: the difference between a herniated and bulging disc -
B.2.3 The Spine: Section by Section
17m
Covered in 2.3:
What the lumbar vertebrae are good at (and not so good at)
Why the lumbar vertebrae are better at extension than the thoracic vertebrae
What’s special about T6, T11 and T12
Why the thoracic vertebrae work best as a team
Atlas and axis and why they’re unique
Inversions and the cervical spine
Rotation and extension in the cervical spine (and the danger in twisting) -
B.2.4 Muscles of the Back and Torso
21m
Covered in 2.4
-The erector spinae
-Quadratus Lumborum (QL)
-The abdominal muscles: rectus abdominis, internal and external obliques, and the transverse abdominis
-Scalenes and the SCM
-The intelligence of the breath and the muscles involved -
B.2.5 Strengthening the Low Back
22m
Covered in 2.5:
-80% of new students are referred to yoga because of low back pain
-Most of us have weak low back muscles that are also often asymmetrical
-Therapeutic exercises to strengthen the low back:
-Salabhasana variation (opposite arm and leg extend with hands returning to the low back)
-Bali Seal (Child’s Pose to kneeling)
-Uttanasana variation with hands sliding up and down the backs of the legs
-Ardha Uttan... -
[Members-Only] Allison Low Back Class
22m
Most of us have low back pain because our low back's are not as STRONG as they need to be. Let's revisit Allison's low back strengthening class. These kind of exercises are SO needed! Especially for those of us that tend to overarch in our lumbar spine.
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Foam Roller - Ultimate Low Back Stretch
9m 49s
It's low back week! This whole last week of February is dedicated to our low backs. I have SO many low pain focused classes, so feel free to also pick your own. But these are some of my favorites. We kick it off with a brand NEW class in which I show my favorite way to foam roll my low back. This was life changing for me. I hope you like it too! A foam roller and a bolster (or pillows) are required.
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B.2.6 Alignment of the Head and Neck
13m
Covered in 2.6:
-Sitting up straight may feel like leaning slightly back in space and dipping the chin slightly
-By pressing the pec below the collarbone and turning the head, we can feel a fascial shearing of the the scalenes, SCM and pectoralis
-How the bones of the neck are not a “ball-and-socket” joint
-Neck rolls should be performed with caution; the safest position to perform them is on all fours
-Keeping the head and neck in alignmen... -
Easy Stretches for Text Neck & Neck Pain Yoga for Greatist - Yoga for Neck Pain
15m
Neck pain? Texting too much? This seated class of easy neck stretches is for you!
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B.3.1 Meet Your Pelvic Bowl
9m 37s
Covered in 3.1:
-3 key bones make up your pelvic bowl:
-Sides: The Ilium
-Location of the ASIS (hip points)
-Location of the iliac crest
-Location of the SI joint (connection to the sacrum)
-Back: The two Ischium bones
-Location of the sits bones (ischial tuberosity)
-We don’t want to sit directly ON the sits bones, but find a balance between the public bone, sits bones and tailbone
-Front: The Pubic bone
... -
B.3.2 Male vs Female Pelvis
12m
Covered in 3.2:
-Anatomical difference between female pelvis and male pelvis
-The female pelvis has:
-A wider flared ilium
-A pubic arch that is wider than 90 degrees
-An acetabulum (hip socket) that is more anterior and medial (more forward and in)
-A wider sacrum and sacroiliac joint that articulates at two segments (while the male pelvis articulates at three)
-The female pelvis has more mobility and less stability
-... -
B.3.3 To Tuck or Not to Tuck?
6m 2s
Covered in 3.3:
-Location of coccyx (tailbone)
-Why the cue “tuck your tailbone” is not appropriate for everyone
-“Booty poppers” and “pelvic thrusters” -
B.3.4 The Oh-So-Special Psoas
6m 33s
Covered in 3.4:
-The location of the psoas
-The key actions of the psoas -
How to Do Triangle Pose | Yoga Alignment | Trikonasana
1m 25s
Triangle pose is insanely therapeutic, as it stretches your hamstrings, your groin and your hips.
And at the same time, it's strengthening your legs and core.
When done correctly, it's also a half spinal twist.
Fix 1
Make sure your back foot is at 45 degrees or 11 o'clock on a clock, and not towards 9 o'clock or 6 o'clock.
Fix 2
Don't just hang out in your legs. Pull up through the soles of your feet and feel your kneecaps lift...
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Beginner Morning Yoga Sequence for Greatist (15-min)
16m
Beginner Yoga Training Guide => https://drive.google.com/file/d/0Bytvohjjd1tlT1JDajl5Sng5WUU/view?usp=sharing
Start the day right with this 15-min Beginner Yoga Sequence designed to center you, keep your body in balance and wake you up to start your day. *No prior yoga experience is needed* to do this sequence with me.
Do the Beginner Yoga Training Guide => https://brettlarkinyoga.vhx.tv/beginner-yoga-training-guide-download-pdf
Download ...
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Yoga for Better Posture - ALL LEVELS | Open Shoulders & Back | Collab w/ Lesley
32m
No prior yoga experience is required to do this, I tried to keep it as accessible as possible while still getting into some deep dynamic movements to open your shoulders and strengthen your back.
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C.1 Uplifted Yoga Alignment: Body Reading Module
1h 12m
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[Member Only] Chaturanga Workshop (15-min)
12m
This video goes deep into this very challenging pose. Please warm-up before coming to this workshop and have your blocks (and strap) handy. You will definitely be working hard!!
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C.2 Sanskrit: An Instrument of Yoga
16m
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B.3.5 Firing the Correct Glute
7m 7s
Covered in 3.5:
-The location of gluteus maximus, gluteus medius and gluteus minimus
-Gluteus maximus
-The largest muscle in the body by square inch
-The prime mover of hip extension
-The antagonist of the psoas
-Also externally rotates the hip
-Why over-engaging gluteus maximus in bridge pose endangers the knees and sacroiliac joint -
B.3.6 Imbalanced Actions of the Hips, in Life and Yoga
12m
Covered in 3.6:
-The quadrants of the thigh
-How both yoga and life favor hip flexion, abduction and external rotation -
B.3.7 What You Need to Know About Your Knees
14m
Covered in 3.7:
-The knee performs flexion and extension
-It does not like to rotate
-Many yoga poses ask for external rotation at the hip and flexion at the knee
-Pending students’ anatomy, the knee may find itself in a compromising position in which it’s attempting to externally rotate - even though this is not its function
-The knee is a sympathetic friend that will try to rotate, attempting to continue where the hip left off, but this c... -
B.3.8 Focus on the Feet
15m
Covered in 3.8:
-The 3 arches of the feet: medial, lateral and transverse arches
-Since we’re always wearing shoes, doing yoga barefoot is an opportunity to reawaken and reconnect with the muscles of the feet
-Demonstration of theraband exercises that wake up the muscles of the feet
-Demonstration of additional at-home exercises to improve foot dexterity
-Common misalignments in the foot, looking at Tadasana -
B.3.9 The Sciatic Nerve & Injury Management
12m
Covered in 3.9:
-The sciatic nerve is a bundle of nerves originating from the sacrum (low back) traveling under the pelvis, and running all the way down the back of the thighs and calves to the soles of the feet
-Because it is so long, “sciatica” can have many different causes, depending on what is pressing on the nerve and where
-“Sciatica” could be caused by:
-a herniated disc
-muscle tightness
-sacroiliac dysfunction
... -
B.4.1 The Shoulder Girdle
5m 18s
Covered in 4.1:
-The bones of the shoulder girdle:
-The clavicle
-The scapula
-The humerus
-The main joint in the shoulder girdle is the glenohumeral joint, which is a ball-and-socket joint
-The ball-and-socket joint of the hip is like an orange sitting inside a coffee cup
-The ball and socket joint of the shoulder is more like an orange sitting on a coffee cup saucer
-The hip joint has more stability and less mobility
-T... -
B.4.2 The Shoulders in Movement
17m
Covered in 4.2:
-Recap of the bones of the shoulder girdle: clavicle, scapula, humerus
-The sternoclavicular joint is where your collar bones attach on your sternum
-The acromioclavicular joint is the junction between the acromion (part of the scapula that forms the highest point of the shoulder) and the clavicle
-The shape and knobby bumps on your acromion process affect how much the humerus can extend overhead (how high you can lift your ar... -
B.4.3 The Arms and External Rotation
9m 37s
Covered in 4.3:
-Many yoga postures involve external rotation of the humerus and pronation of the forearm and palm
-The 4 muscles of the rotator cuff:
-Supraspinatus: above the spine of the scapula
-Infraspinatus: below the spine of the scapula
-Subscapularis: underneath on the rib side of the scapula
-Teres Minor: axillary border of the scapula to the humerus
-These muscles are not designed to bear weight!
-Al... -
B.4.4 The Secret is Your Serratus
7m 14s
Covered in 4.4:
-When your scapulae are muscularly glued onto your back, you are stronger and better able to support your body weight in yoga
-A muscle called serratus anterior attaches to the medial border of the scapulae and performs this stabilizing action
-Demonstration of “Serratus Push-Ups” to find this muscle and begin stabilizing the scapulae
-How lowering all the way to the floor (instead of of halfway down via Chaturanga) is safer ... -
B.4.5 The Elbow
4m 58s
Covered in 4.5:
-A nerve in your elbow creates the shooting pain you feel when you hit your “funny bone”
-180 degrees of extension between the ulna and the humerus is what’s considered “normal”
-People with hyperextension can extend more than 180 degrees between the ulna and humerus
-This is dangerous if you’re putting weight on your hands and arms (because it creates bone-on-bone contact)
-More women than men will have hyperextension of th... -
B.5.1 Let’s Take a Breath
10m
Please come to this video prepared to simply rest -- and breathe. Set aside some quiet time for yourself (10 minutes or so) and lie down in a space where you can rest fully. Just absorb, and relax.
Enjoy!
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B.5.2 The Anatomy of the Breath & Diaphragm
12m
Covered in 5.2:
-The diaphragm separates the thoracic cavity (your heart) and the abdominal cavity (your organs)
-The diaphragm has attachments on the lumbar spine AND the psoas
-The superior side of the diaphragm attaches the to fascia of the heart (the pericardium) and the lungs (the two plura)
-The inferior side of the diaphragm attaches to the fascia of the abdominal organs (the peritoneal sac)
-As you breathe in, the diaphragm contract... -
B.5.3 The Anatomy of the Breath & Diaphragm
14m
Please come to this video prepared to simply rest -- and breathe. Set aside some quiet time for yourself (10 minutes or so) and lie down in a space where you can rest fully.
Covered in 5.3:
-Full complete breath exercise on the floor
-The breath has many dimensions, we want to explore them all
-How often the breath gets short and trapped in the collarbones, chest or upper ribs
-Overview of Vata, Pitta and Kapha styles of breathing
-How ... -
B.5.6 Diaphragms within the Body
21m
Please come to this video prepared to rest and breathe in a space where you can relax fully. We do a supine breathing exercise together at the end of this lecture.
Covered in 5.6:There are multiple diaphragms within the body
The “Throat Diaphragm” lives in our vocal folds (this is relevant to our ujjayi pranayama or style of breathing)
The “Brain Diaphragm” is composed of 3 fascial sheaths called meninges
Like our main diaphragm, these ... -
E.1.1 Prana and the Bandhas
25m
Link for Kundalini podcast: https://soundcloud.com/brett-larkin/episode-43-can-kundalini-yoga-make-you-crazy?in=brett-larkin/sets/yoga-hacks-podcast
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E.1.2 Pranayama Techniques and Teaching
45m
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C.7 Tantra, Nadis & the Gunas
27m
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B.5.4 Mula-Bhanda-Wa
15m
AND MORE!