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DateTitreDurée
24 Nov 202252 Nitric Oxide: Research Roundup00:53:57

Nitric Oxide (NO) has been on people’s minds for a few years now in the yoga and wellness worlds. It is such a potent gas in the body and it has so many different effects, so today hosts Tiffany and Katja are here to help you to understand more of the recent research. In this episode, Tiffany and Katja talk about the effect that increased nitric oxide production has on blood flow and blood pressure as well as the nervous and immune systems. They also break down the physiology of nitric oxide in the body and discuss how certain yoga practices may foster nitric oxide production.

Listen to this episode to learn the benefits that nitric oxide can have on our body, if more nitric oxide is always better and how different lifestyle factors can boost nitric oxide production.

Show Notes:

  • The history of nitric oxide research [3:48]
  • NO as regulator of blood pressure and blood flow [8:06]
  • NO and racial differences, heart disease and erectile dysfunction [10:44]
  • Effects of nitric oxide on the nervous system [14:55]
  • NO and the immune system [18:37]
  • COVID-19, nasal breathing and nitric oxide research [19:43]
  • Relationship between nitric oxide levels and humming [25:15]
  • Congestion relief tools [31:18]
  • Shear stress on blood vessels and its effect on nitric oxide production [36:47]
  • Myofascial release and increased nitric oxide production [38:16]
  • Is more nitric oxide in the body always better? [43:38]
  • Early findings on mediation and NO levels [45:26]
  • How nutrition can affect nitric oxide levels [46:20]

Links Mentioned:

          Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga | Yoga Medicine® Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-52.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

04 Nov 202103 The Placebo Effect with Katja Bartsch, Part 200:37:17

Today we are continuing our discussion on the Placebo Effect. In the first half we talked about what the Placebo Effect is, why it is so important, and how it applies to the work we do. In this episode we dive into the many ways that placebo effects relate to lifestyle, movement, and yoga.

In this episode, you'll learn how your mindset affects your relationship to exercise, why meditation is the groundwork for what yoga teachers do, why our language matters and why exercise you enjoy is so important.

Show Notes:

  • How does stress & mindset influence the immune system [2:00]
  • Is yoga a cure all? [4:00]
  • How does your support system affect healing [5:25]
  • How does marketing affect your relationship with exercise & food [8:20]
  • Importance of exercise you enjoy [16:18]
  • Belief in self & influences capacity [23:08]
  • How our expectations shape us & the Rosenthal Effect [26:50]
  • How expectations influence our teaching [28:50]
  • Limitations of the Placebo Effect [32:00]
  • Harnessing the power of the mind & our intention [35:02]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga | YMO Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-03.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

21 Jul 202239 MFR Applications & Research01:10:43

Today hosts Tiffany and Katja are focusing in on myofascial release (MFR) applications and the current MFR research. In this episode, we talk about what the research suggests at this time regarding the duration and frequency of MFR, the speed and intensity of its application, and ways of combining MFR with yoga and other stretches for both athletes and non-athletes alike. As always, keep in mind that, with the application of MFR, there are plenty of individual variables to consider from person to person, so this episode is more of a general overview than a personalized plan.

Listen in to learn about tips for athletes, recommended tools for MFR, and some of the intricacies of current MFR research.

Show Notes:

  • What is SMFR [1:48]
  • Duration and frequency of MFR [2:45]
  • Effects of MFR on pain are transient, yet cumulative [6:03]
  • MFR duration and range of motion [8:28]
  • MFR duration and sports performance [12:02]
  • Looking at study protocols matters [14:50]
  • MFR, tissue stiffness, and blood perfusion [16:22]
  • Rolling fast or rolling slowly? [20:00]
  • Review on the chronic effects of rolling [24:57]
  • Recommended intensity for MFR [26:08]
  • Tools for MFR [35:14]
  • Benefits of vibrating tools for MFR [44:33]
  • Combining movement and stretching with MFR [50:23]
  • Individual exploration matters [1:05:19]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-39.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

27 Feb 2025130 When Should You NOT Teach? Teacher's Series00:38:50

Conversations on how to secure opportunities to teach yoga are much more common than those on when we should NOT teach, so today hosts Tiffany and Rachel explore a handful of scenarios where you may need to step back from the role of teacher—whether that is just for today or over the longer term. 

In this episode, we discuss whether it’s ever ok for a teacher to simply “go through the motions” and what it means to truly show up for students. We also talk about schedule sustainability and the value of teaching what is meaningful to you.

Listen in to learn when yoga teachers should not teach.

Show Notes:

  • Recognizing privilege in the choice to not work [1:54]
  • When you’re contagious [3:01]
  • When you can’t reliably stay in the room [5:28]
  • When you can’t truly show up for your students [8:58]
  • Is there a time to permanently stop teaching a person or class [18:44]
  • Energy management and sustainable teaching schedules [21:27]
  • Moving on when you’ve taught all you can [31:22]
  • When ethical limits are breached [34:55]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-130.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

18 Jul 2024114 Yoga & Religion: Expert Insights with Firdose Moonda MA01:00:07

“Is Yoga a religion?” is an often-asked question, and the deeper we delve into the historical and philosophical underpinnings of the practice, the less simple and straightforward the answer becomes.

Here to guide us on that complex conversational journey is returning guest Firdose Moonda, who holds an MA in the Traditions of Yoga and Meditation from the School of Oriental and African Studies and is undertaking doctoral work into the politics of yoga.

Listen in to unpack yoga’s historical and present-day entanglements with South Asian religions, and explore the responsibilities of modern yoga teachers in the West.

Show Notes:

  • Defining religion [3:44]
  • Can you be spiritual but not religious [7:02]
  • Evolution of yoga: the Vedic period [10:58]
  • Emergence of Buddhism and Jainism [15:51]
  • Hatha yoga, and separation of yoga from religion [19:30]
  • Is yoga even more entangled with religion today [23:55]
  • Contributions from Tantra & South Asian Islam [24:55]
  • Implications of the International Day of Yoga [29:44]
  • Can yoga teachers avoid politics, history, religion, and philosophy entirely [34:40]
  • Finding your place as a teacher in the modern yoga world [43:50]
  • We are also creating yoga history [48:18]
  • More resources, and a final word of caution [54:49]

Links Mentioned:

         Instagram | YMO Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-114.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

24 Mar 202222 Fascia, Hormones & Training with Laura Philipp00:58:56

Today’s guest Laura Philipp is a world-class professional athlete who has won 16 Ironman 70.3 races, 3 Ironman races and boasts the fastest Ironman debut time of all time for any woman. Laura was even invited to and participated in the legendary Hawaii Ironman, placing fourth at her first participation. She also has a very special way of training: she bases her training around her menstrual cycle and female physiology.

In this episode, Laura talks with host Katja Bartsch about the benefits of having a natural menstrual cycle without hormonal interference as well as how she first got interested in menstrual cycle-based training and how she implemented certain changes to her lifestyle and training routines to maximize her performance. The two also discuss the ways that hormones fluctuate, how that can relate to training, and the effects of stress on the menstrual cycle.

Listen in as Laura opens up about the research she says is still missing on hormones and training, why she gets most of her injuries in the second half of her menstrual cycle, and how to see your cycle as a gift to work with.

Show Notes:

  • History of sports science and female physiology [4:05]
  • The motivation behind menstrual cycle-based training [6:10]
  • Tracking and understanding the menstrual cycle [11:01]
  • Surprises with fasted training [12:41]
  • Looking for environmental hormonal disruptors [13:56]
  • Popularity of menstrual cycle-based training [16:14]
  • Breaking down the phases of training around the menstrual cycle [23:14]
  • Training considerations during the first phase of the menstrual cycle [24:41]
  • Ovulation and its effects on fascia, balance, and injury [27:28]
  • Physical effects of the second half of the menstrual cycle [34:45]
  • Nutrition in the second half of the menstrual cycle [39:03]
  • Effects of stress on the menstrual cycle [42:27]
  • Combatting stressors that affect the menstrual cycle [44:35]
  • The future of training based on female physiology [52:55]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-22.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

19 Oct 202392 Right Brain Skills for Yoga Teachers: Community Conversations with Sandy Raper01:01:01

Yoga teachers love a good training. When in doubt, many of us tend to look for more technical skills – more evidence, more information, more protocols and strategies. But what if the true magic of the teacher-student relationship lies elsewhere: not in perfection, but in presence.

Today’s episode hones in on right brain or relational teaching skills, which are less about WHAT we teach and more about HOW we teach it. Our guest, Sandy Raper, is a long-time yoga teacher, teacher trainer, author and mentor. In this episode, she shares her right-brain teaching tips for both new and experienced yoga teachers with host Rachel.

Listen to this episode to learn the difference between left brain and right brain skills, why you should let go of your plan to leave space for next time, how to build trust with your students, and the vital importance of remembering your “why.”

Show Notes:

  • Our tendency to lean into left brain teaching skills [3:05]
  • Left versus right brain skills [4:51]
  • Tips for new teachers: leave room for “next time” [8:35]
  • Build trust with students: presence and progress, not perfection [14:37]
  • One-on-one versus group teaching skills [23:13]
  • What keeps students coming back? [33:28]
  • Supporting longevity as a teacher [37:22]
  • How to develop right brain skills [45:40]
  • Final reflections [53:46]

Links Mentioned:

          Sandy Raper | Beyond Yoga Teacher Training Podcast | Facebook | Instagram

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-92.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

02 Jan 2025126 Best of 202401:11:01

In this special best-of episode for 2024, we feature clips from some of our favorite episodes, highlight common threads that weave different guests and topics together, and feature some of the gems you might have missed during the year.

Show Notes:

  • Fascia science behind the benefits of movement [1:17]
  • Reframing tension: moderation over extremes [4:03]
  • How yoga helps regulate the nervous system [7:12]
  • Are we handling stress as well as we think? [9:38]
  • Safe practice spaces as a refuge from overwhelm [12:21]
  • The causes, components, and symptoms of burnout [14:11]
  • Perpetual optimization of physical health at the expense of mental health [16:29]
  • The “new stigma” of menopause [22:07]
  • Yoga as self-discovery for survivors of sexual and gender-based violence [26:49]
  • Body awareness and self-agency for persistent pain care [31:15]
  • How yoga teachers help keep students “safe” [35:46]
  • Is there one perfect breath rhythm or duration? [38:33]
  • Answering student questions [42:22]
  • Human complexity; we are more than machines [44:35]
  • The power of truly listening [46:47]
  • How to integrate new approaches, tools & techniques [51:33]
  • Cultural relevance and appropriation [55:12]
  • Can we separate yoga from its historical, philosophical, and religious influences? [59:28]
  • Who is yoga for and who should be teaching it? [1:04:02]
  • Is it less about what we do, and more about how we do it? [1:07:10]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-126.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

17 Aug 202384 Yoga Philosophy, Focus & Performance with Dr. Daya Grant00:53:05

Whether we are athletes or not, we all have areas in our lives where we want to perform well. Today host Rachel speaks with returning guest Dr. Daya Grant about how aspects of yoga philosophy can help us do that - by improving our focus and concentration. 

Dr. Grant helps athletes and other high performers train their brains with the same care they invest in training their bodies. She draws heavily on the yoga techniques of Pratyahara and Dharana to help athletes focus on what they CAN control, cultivate intuition and prevent burnout. In this episode, she shares practical ways you can connect to these techniques.

Listen in to hear how simply connecting to your feet or choosing where to rest your gaze can completely change your response to a heightened situation, why Dr. Grant encourages athletes to journal, and a range of other yoga tools that you can harness to improve your performance, whatever your ambition.

Show Notes:

  • Improved performance isn’t just for elite athletes [2:21]
  • Fresh definitions of Pratyahara and Dharana [3:38]
  • Practical examples of Pratyahara and its benefits [6:21]
  • “Self One” and “Self Two” [12:13]
  • More tools to “reverse the flow” [15:35]
  • Training the brain is as important as training the body [21:36]
  • Understanding Dharana [25:38]
  • Using breath work for improved focus: challenges and tips [30:48]
  • Self-talk, and finding strength in self-compassion [34:23]
  • Communicating helpful concepts like surrender to athletes [40:10]
  • The power of practice [43:41]
  • Harnessing the tool of imagery [45:55]
  • Final takeaways [51:14]

Links Mentioned:

          Instagram | Daya Grant

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-84.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

 

 

24 Aug 202385 Research Roundup: A Stroll Through the Breathwork Landscape00:50:36

Today hosts Tiffany and Katja take you on a stroll through the breathwork landscape. In this episode, the pair gives an overview of the origins of different breathing practices - covering Eastern traditions from India to China, techniques founded by "psychedelic" transformational and scientific communities as well as practices stemming from Eastern Europe.

If you've ever wanted an overview of where Conscious Connected Breathing, Tummo, Resonant Frequency breathing, and Buteyoko came from - this is the episode you've been waiting for.

We also discuss the bigger picture of breathwork as a whole and how Pranayama as a very multi-faceted practice fits into it. 

Show Notes:

  • Indian breathwork traditions [2:21]
  • Tibetan breathwork traditions [7:57]
  • Chinese breathwork traditions [15:55]
  • Transformational, “psychedelic” breathwork origins [21:06]
  • Scientific origins – Resonant frequency breathing [32:54]
  • Eastern European breathwork traditions [38:34]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga | Yoga Medicine® Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-85.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

17 Feb 202217 Empower Yourself & Your Community with Nicole Calhoun, PhD00:53:51

If you have ever felt unwelcome, unheard, or disempowered, you will relate to the content of today’s conversation between Rachel and Nicole Calhoun, PhD. Nicole has an undergraduate degree in Biology, a PhD in molecular genetics, and years of experience as a post-doctoral researcher, but has pivoted to working as a yoga teacher and studio owner.

After being told she “didn’t belong” in a yoga studio, Nicole was inspired to open her own space, becoming the change she wanted to see in her community. She shares her experience with racism in the yoga world and explains why she has decided to put diversity and inclusion in yoga at the forefront of her career.

Listen in as Nicole talks about how she uses a physically challenging yoga practice to support herself and her community and offers concrete actions we can take all address the lack of diversity in yoga.

Show Notes:

  • Defining molecular genetics [4:06]
  • Nicole’s early relationship with yoga [8:43]
  • Using a challenging physical yoga practice therapeutically [11:02]
  • What inspired Nicole to teach despite an established career in science [12:09]
  • Feeling “othered” – Nicole’s experience with racism in yoga [15:35]
  • Practicing yoga while Black [18:33]
  • Opening her own yoga studio [24:57]
  • Finding the courage to share uncomfortable truths [26:06]
  • Diversity and inclusion in yoga [30:02]
  • A physically demanding yoga practice can teach us how to handle adversity in life [35:02]
  • How Nicole tailors her practice to support strength and confidence [36:56]
  • Committing to diversity & inclusion 365 days a year [40:14]
  • Actions we can take to make yoga more welcoming to all [44:19]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-17.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

31 Mar 202223 Yoga & Injury, Part 100:46:26

Injuries are, to some extent, inevitable in life. So when injuries do occur, when should we rest and when is the right time to reintroduce challenge? Today we explore this important question in the first of two episodes on the topic of yoga and injury.

In today’s episode, Tiffany and Rachel provide context for the conversation by offering some interesting statistics on yoga and injury, then unpack the three phases of connective tissue healing as well as what to bear in mind at each stage of the process.

Listen in as we discuss the importance of appropriate load to encourage injured tissues to heal fully, common mistakes made during the healing process, and the role that therapeutic yoga can play in support of other treatments.

Show Notes:

  • Context on the conversation around yoga and injury [1:39]
  • Interesting statistics on yoga and injuries [4:33]
  • Inflammation, circulation, and the healing process as it relates to fascia [10:31]
  • Three phases of healing: Inflammation, Proliferation, and Remodeling [13:22]
  • The importance of appropriately loading an area to facilitate full healing [16:47]
  • A fine line between insufficient load (and incomplete healing) and overload [19:26]
  • How important is rest after an injury? [20:46]
  • The timeframe of healing [24:59]
  • Common mistakes during the healing process [26:02]
  • The roles of physical therapy and therapeutic yoga in healing [34:43]
  • Instilling accountability in yoga students [41:44]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-23.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

09 Jun 202233 Age Well with Yoga, with Mark Hunter Dip. RM.00:59:35

Today’s guest Mark Hunter took a long road to teaching yoga, including almost 3 decades of working in (and instructing) massage and remedial therapy. He has been passionate about fascia since long before it was mainstream. He shares this passion with his students, many of whom are over 60 years old, in group classes, one-on-ones, and senior’s balance sessions.

Whether you’ve thought about it or not, we are all aging. So in this episode, Mark and host Rachel explore what we can learn about aging from working with older adults. Mark shares his key areas for focus, including soft-tissue mobility, balance and coordination, and better breathing. He also reminds us of the (perhaps underestimated) power of using community and camaraderie to give students the courage to explore new challenges and new movement patterns.

Listen in as Mark shares what he has learned about himself while working with older adults and how that shapes the wellness practices he prioritizes today.

Show Notes:

  • Mark Hunter’s back story [3:22]
  • Learning from “the godfather of fascia” Dr. Robert Schleip [7:09]
  • Shifting from massage therapist and yoga student to teacher [8:25]
  • Grappling with the philosophical side of yoga [11:24]
  • Bringing a therapeutic approach to teaching [13:18]
  • Breaking down stereotypes of older yoga students [17:45]
  • Key areas of focus when teaching older students [20:56]
  • How our fascia changes as we age [23:32]
  • Fun ways to challenge coordination in yoga classes for older students [28:26]
  • Relating balance work to real-life obstacles to prevent falls [30:40]
  • Cognitive ability is associated with one-legged balance in mid and later life [33:17]
  • The importance of community connection as we age [36:09]
  • Breath mechanics, the relationship with posture, and application during life stressors [38:27]
  • Breathing with ease: the three pillars of breath and noticing the pause [46:24]
  • Lessons learned from working with older adults: the power of “little and often” [50:16]
  • Bringing yoga into daily life by emphasizing functionality over form [53:25]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-33.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

20 Jul 202380 Common Challenges of Yin Yoga: Community Conversations with Shannon Stephens01:09:42

The practice of Yin yoga is unusual in that it asks us to do the opposite of what we do in the rest of our lives. That contrast is powerful, but adjusting to it can bring up challenges.

In this episode, returning guest Shannon Stephens is back to talk to host Rachel about the common challenges of Yin Yoga for both students and teachers and shares her tips on how we can navigate them skillfully to get the most out of our practice.

Listen to this episode to learn how to embrace the contrast between Yin yoga and daily life to create a more fulfilling, and ultimately revealing practice.

Show Notes:

  • Student challenges in Yin Yoga: dealing with discomfort [2:59]
  • Discerning between different types of discomfort [4:32]
  • Difficulty letting go in Yin [8:46]
  • Managing the spectrum of mobility in a Yin yoga class [14:05]
  • Noticing phasic changes within a Yin pose [19:49]
  • Adjusting to the slow pace of Yin compared to the fast pace of life [20:35]
  • Practical ways to attune to the subtle body in Yin [27:21]
  • Yin can feel messy compared to other yoga styles [32:52]
  • Challenges of teaching Yin Yoga [37:34]
  • Pros and cons of moving around the room when teaching [39:10]
  • How to leave more space for quiet [41:17]
  • Strategies for keeping time [43:17]
  • Guiding students out of poses and managing the “rebound” [46:12]
  • Preparing to teach Yin [48:08]
  • Tips for teaching Yin without props [50:45]
  • Creating a safe, supportive space for students [53:36]
  • Overall tips for managing the challenges of Yin: intention and compassion [57:41]
  • Being prepared to teach and practice; show up authentically [1:00:32]
  • Learning the impermanence of feelings and sensations [1:03:50]
  • Final takeaways: every practice teaches us something [1:07:50]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | This Land Yoga

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-80.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

06 Jul 202378 Pain Science Insights on Performance: Expert Insights with Marnie Hartman01:07:04

We don’t all strive for elite physical performance, but we do all place demands on our bodies. Some of the internal signals that we receive as a result could be interpreted as pain, so how do we know when we should push through and when we should pull back?

We have talked in previous episodes about the complex phenomenon of pain, and how deeply enmeshed our perception of pain is with our beliefs and previous experiences. Today that conversation continues with host Rachel and returning guest and Doctor of Physical Therapy Marnie Hartman.

In this episode, Marnie and host Rachel explore what neuroscience can teach us about physical performance. Listen in as we discuss the importance of bringing curiosity and playfulness into our physical pursuits, choosing to question our assumptions, and learning to listen deeply – but with discernment – to our internal signals.

Show Notes:

  • Defining physical performance as how our bodies interact with the environment [4:56]
  • Athletes’ relationship to pain [7:38]
  • Sensory science 101: perception, interoception, nociception [9:38]
  • Nociceptive signals in physical performance [13:56]
  • The magic of training: creating a gap between signal and response [17:49]
  • Recognizing and reframing less desirable experiences in the past [22:59]
  • A case study in context and the impact of stress [27:35]
  • Learning to discern our internal signals [31:35]
  • Choosing to bring that awareness into physical challenges [36:31]
  • Having our assumptions reflected back to us [40:12]
  • Playfulness unloads our stress cup [48:22]
  • Exploring the role of yoga practice [49:55]
  • How our “patterning” can become an obstacle to overcome [58:42]
  • Final thoughts and resources [1:02:21]

Links Mentioned:

Body IQ PT | LinkedIn | Email | Yoga Medicine® Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-78.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

10 Aug 202383 Research Roundup: Updates on Polyvagal Theory00:52:43

Today’s topic is an interesting one that comes up a lot in the yoga world. In this episode, hosts Tiffany and Katja talk about the latest research and newest findings on the Polyvagal Theory. They discuss the evolutionary biology that Polyvagal Theory is based around, the neuroanatomy that’s involved, and assumptions that have been made about this complex aspect of the body.

Listen in to learn about the anatomy of the vagus nerve and how Polyvagal Theory is applied in yoga and therapeutic settings.

Show Notes:

  • The emergence of Polyvagal Theory [2:58]
  • Evolutionary biology and dorsal vagus [5:50]
  • Sympathetic nervous system [10:35]
  • Ventral vagus [13:40]
  • Nuances of ventral and dorsal vagus, combinations [15:03]
  • Anatomy of the vagus nerve [17:38]
  • Afferent parts of the vagus nerve (from body to brain) [21:24]
  • Efferent components of vagus (from brain to body) [26:50]
  • How researchers look at cardiac function and Polyvagal Theory [33:01]
  • The role of Polyvagal Theory in yoga and therapeutic settings [37:29]
  • Hypotheses about ventral vagus evolution [43:33]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga | Yoga Medicine® Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-83.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

09 Nov 202395 Smarter Not Harder: Creative Sequencing01:13:59

Feel pressured to make your classes new and exciting? More complex? More demanding? Today hosts Tiffany and Rachel offer tips for yoga teachers who are ready to work smarter, not harder, when crafting class sequences.

In this episode, we talk about the importance of starting with a clear focal point and a base class template, and the benefits of reusing past sequences. We also discuss the two parts of the creative process and what to do when you are sapped of inspiration.

Listen in to learn how to save time and energy with a simple and systematic sequencing process that brings your ideas to life.

Show Notes:

  • Pressure to craft the “perfect” sequence for every class [1:10]
  • Tip 1: Start with a clear focal point or intention [4:30]
  • Thoughts on Peak Pose sequencing [15:40]
  • Tip 2: Plan your classes, but hold your plan loosely [17:43]
  • Thoughts on building a curriculum over time [21:10]
  • Tip 3: Use a base class template [24:23]
  • Leaving space in your sequence [27:05]
  • Tip 4: Use a systematic sequencing process [32:17]
  • Tip 5: Keep and reuse your sequences [38:23]
  • Fear our focal point won’t be relevant to every student [42:36]
  • How we record sequences and ideas [48:44]
  • Working with the two phases of the creative process [53:40]
  • Sources of inspiration when you’re out of ideas [55:32]
  • Learning to sequence versus using a set sequence [1:01:41]
  • Key takeaways, being of service [1:05:44]
  • Upcoming Yoga Medicine Sequencing Teacher Training [1:08:55]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-95.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

12 Jan 202356 Controversial Cues Unpacked: Community Conversation with Dana Diament and Valerie Knopik PhD01:09:42

Today’s episode is a lively conversation between host Rachel, Dana Diament, and Valerie Knopik Ph.D. – teacher trainers on the brand-new online version of the Yoga Medicine 200hr Teacher Training.

We unpack the meaning and intention behind several controversial verbal cues, debate their accuracy, offer scenarios where they might be more or less relevant to students, and provide some alternatives.

Listen in to hear why we were all drawn to training with Yoga Medicine and hear us discuss a central challenge of teaching: balancing the need to cue quickly and efficiently with the desire to communicate more nuance and complexity.

Show Notes:

  • “Navel to Spine” and other anterior core cues [2:53]
  • Establishing key cues at the beginning of class [6:46]
  • Other possible core cues [7:47]
  • “Flat back” [8:52]
  • Alternative cues for a neutral spine [11:26]
  • Potential problems with the “flat back” cue [12:23]
  • “Swan dive forward” [16:20]
  • The challenge of cueing fast, complex or habitual transitions [18:34]
  • “Tuck your tail” [23:06]
  • When “tuck your tail” may or may not apply, and alternatives [26:09]
  • Vivid cues could be more helpful for beginners than more experienced students [30:13]
  • “Lift your sit bones” [32:16]
  • “Square your hips” and alternatives [38:51]
  • The ultimate test of cueing: watch your students [42:45]
  • “Knees stack over toes” [45:33]
  • “Knees track with toes” [51:14]
  • Cues as options for exploration, not makers of right or wrong alignment [55:20]
  • “Micro-bend your knees” or elbows [56:12]
  • Has overuse of “micro-bend” encouraged self-diagnosis of hypermobility? [59:30]
  • What initially drew these teachers to Yoga Medicine [1:01:38]
  • The new online Yoga Medicine 200-hour teacher training [1:07:45]


Links Mentioned:

20 Jun 2024112 Autoimmune Conditions & Yoga: Expert Insights with Dr. Nikki Tugnet00:55:21

As yoga teachers, most of us will either have an autoimmune condition, or teach students who do. Yoga is uniquely suited to work alongside conventional medical treatment to help manage these disorders and address the symptoms that impact most on quality of life.

Today host Rachel speaks with Dr. Nikki Tugnet - a UK-trained physician, board-certified in Rheumatology and Internal Medicine, and Yoga Medicine® Therapeutic Specialist - about yoga and autoimmune conditions. 

Listen to this episode as we unpack the common denominators of autoimmune conditions, the importance of normalizing prop use, and the power of taking it slow.

Show Notes:

  • What is rheumatology? [2:57]
  • Are autoimmune disorders becoming more prevalent? [4:28]
  • What drives Nikki’s passion for rheumatology [6:04]
  • Common denominators in autoimmune conditions [10:05]
  • What drove a rheumatologist to seek answers in yoga [13:55]
  • Autoimmune uncertainty; mental health impacts of long-term disease [18:02]
  • How yoga can support autoimmune conditions [23:30]
  • The underutilized power of propped yoga poses [28:10]
  • A surprising yoga tool [33:28]
  • Daily Yoga Nidra to improve energy and sleep quality [35:14]
  • Are we handling chronic stress as well as we think? [37:22]
  • Tips for teaching yoga for autoimmune conditions – group classes [39:51]
  • Tips for teaching yoga for autoimmune conditions – one-on-one [43:38]
  • Final tips & takeaways [49:11]

Links Mentioned:

         Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn | Nikki Tugnet

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-112.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

13 Jul 202379 The Neuroscience of Resilience: Expert Insights with Valerie Knopik PhD01:00:34

After traumatic life events, some people experience negative mental and physical health outcomes, while others not only survive but thrive. 

There’s a growing body of research on the strategies that prime our potential for resilience to adverse events, but less understanding of the neural pathways that underpin them. Today guest Valerie Knopik Ph.D. returns to explore three of these pathways with host Rachel, sharing a recent review article on the neuroscience of resilience in adults. 

In this episode, Valerie unpacks how three key neutral pathways could interact to influence our capacity to successfully handle stress and trauma. She suggests a range of strategies we can employ to down-regulate the negative, up-regulate the positive, and retain overall perspective. 

Listen to this episode to learn about three proposed pathways to resilience and how we can, and should, work with all of them to prime our potential to learn, grow and thrive in the face of adversity.

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-79.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

Show Notes:

  • A key review article on the neuroscience of resilience in adults [4:41]
  • Defining resilience [6:29]
  • A tripartite model: key neural pathways for resilience [9:11]
    • 1: Fear and distress network, the amygdala, and HPA axis [11:44]
    • 2: Reward pathways, the mid-brain, and the role of Dopamine [17:25]
    • 3: The default mode network and the role of rumination [23:21]
  • Some strategies influence more than one pathway [30:10]
  • Reframing the stress response [32:16]
  • Down-regulating the negative: therapy, journalling, affect labeling [34:11]
  • The power of the breath [39:07]
  • Up-regulating the positive: optimism, humor, social connection, gratitude [42:24]
  • Finding joy in required tasks [45:28]
  • Transcending the self: finding meaning and purpose, nature, flow state [50:17]
  • Final takeaways and further resources [55:03]

Links Mentioned:

Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Yoga Medicine Online Teacher

28 Mar 2024106 Exercise Oncology, Yoga, and Fascia with Dr. Stephanie Otto00:34:12

Today host Katja talks with Dr. Stephanie Otto about exercise oncology, exercise, and fascia. We discuss the biological foundations of cancer and the research link between fascia and cancer.  We also talk about therapeutic interventions related to cancer exercise and fascia and explain what distinguishes healthy tissue from cancerous tissue.

Listen in to learn how important effective exercise can be for our oncology and how exercise oncology interventions relate to fascial tissues.

Show Notes:

  • What makes cancer develop [3:47]
  • Can we affect cells that become cancerous [6:45]
  • Exercises to target biometrics of tissues [8:18]
  • Optional treatment paths for exercise for oncology [11:37]
  • Breathing and nervous system approaches [19:26]
  • What is next for the field of exercise oncology research [25:32]

 

Links Mentioned:

         LinkedIn | Twitter | ResearchGate

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-106.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

09 Dec 202108 Ready to Research with Katja Bartsch, Part 100:44:37

Today we are diving into the many reasons research is important both for clinicians and yoga teachers -- and we are very happy to have Katja Bartsch back with us to do it. Katja also joined us for our recent episodes on the Placebo Effect and she focuses a lot of her energy on doing her own research and combing through the research that others are doing on the topic of yoga.

There is a lot of research currently being done that relates to the yoga world, but how do we sift through and find high-quality research? How can we analyze it and apply it to our own lives? In this episode, Katja and Tiffany talk about how to evaluate research and apply a critical lens to find high quality research.

They'll talk on the limitations of specific types of research and discuss the strengths & limitations of different types of studies. They also talk about the way that information application is evolving with time and how to make the most of the research we do by blending it with all that we've learned through our own experiences.

Listen in as Katja and Tiffany discuss why research is so valuable, where to look for the good stuff, and how to filter through this information with a critical eye.

Show Notes:

  • Why it is so important to consider research [4:04]
  • Research limitations [6:57]
  • Sources for good quality research [12:02]
  • Pros of using PubMed [13:50]
  • The importance of peer-review in articles [15:07]
  • How to know if an article has been peer reviewed [16:45]
  • What are the components of a typical study [21:17]
  • What is a case study [28:54]
  • What is a cohort study [32:04]
  • Benefits of cohort studies [36:58]
  • Important aspects of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) [38:10]
  • How to do a double-blind test [42:42]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga | YM Online Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-08.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

21 Sep 202388 Social Media Marketing Made Easy: Community Conversations with Dana Diament01:03:32

Most of us have a complicated relationship with social media, but it can be a powerful business tool if we learn how to harness it effectively.

Today host Rachel talks social media marketing with returning guest Dana Diament, a yoga teacher and graphic designer with years of experience in branding. Dana creates clarity around social media communication by prompting us all to ask ourselves exactly who are we talking to, and what key themes we aim to convey. Whether your challenge is to identify your student niche or shift to a new one, or find an easier way to determine what to post and when, Dana has simple, practical advice for you.

Listen in to learn how to build an effective online community, whether you are a new yoga teacher or a veteran still searching for your groove.

Show Notes:

  • The insatiable pressure to post [3:05]
  • Niche: who are you talking to? [4:01]
  • How a need-driven niche helps [7:40]
  • Why you need a niche (hint: you aren’t actually for everyone) [14:33]
  • Advice for new yoga teachers: finding a niche or changing niche [17:23]
  • When in doubt, ask your students [28:04]
  • Content pillars: a framework for social media content [35:33]
  • Practical examples of content pillars [39:05]
  • How content pillars facilitate a marketing schedule [46:40]
  • Tips for getting started [58:54]

Links Mentioned:

          Facebook | Instagram | Yoga Medicine Online | Raia Collective

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-88.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

02 Jun 202232 Harness Your Potential, Yoga for Athletes with Jenni Tarma & Alison Heilig01:19:34

How do we as yoga instructors help athletes train to stay healthy, durable, resilient, and at peak performance? Tiffany chats on these big questions with two coaches and Yoga Medicine Therapeutic Specialists - Jenni Tarma and Alison Heilig. Jenni is a Yoga Medicine Online instructor, endurance athlete, and CrossFit trainer who works with weight lifters and athletes at all skill levels. Alison is an accomplished ultra-marathon runner and weightlifter as well as a strength and endurance coach and certified running coach, corrective exercise specialist, and certified nutritional coach. In this episode, we discuss flexibility versus stiffness, recovery, cross-training, myofascial release for athletes, and our favorite takeaways for athletes and their trainers and yoga teachers.

Listen in to learn yoga tips for athletes and yoga teachers, why many athletes often struggle with yoga and how to use that as an asset, and how to redefine what recovery looks like for athletes.

Show Notes:

  • Flexibility misconceptions among athletes [5:31]
  • Why athletes often struggle with yoga [7:13]
  • Flexibility issues versus poor mobility issues [11:02]
  • Benefits of yoga classes aimed at athletes [13:27]
  • Yoga as a recovery modality for athletes [19:05]
  • Tips for teaching yoga to athletes [23:58]
  • Redefining what recovery looks like for athletes [29:33]
  • Using myofascial release with yoga for athletes [31:23]
  • Cross training benefits for athletes [46:32]
  • Takeaways for yoga teachers and athletes [56:20]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-32.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

16 Nov 202396 Creating Change: Community Conversations with Alison Heilig01:14:16

Most of us have experienced the all-too-familiar gap between wanting to change something in our lives and actually doing it. In today’s episode, returning guest Alison Heilig breaks down the most common barriers to behaviour change with host Rachel.

Alison shares how behaviour change is not about self-control or lack of, and is instead a set of learnable skills. We discuss the importance of setting realistic expectations and explain why habit initiation is more important than habit completion.

Listen in to learn how to turn a fixed mindset into a growth mindset, and how to create systems to support your goals for lasting change.

Show Notes:

  • Motivating people with a different approach to change or challenge [2:57]
  • Barrier #1 to follow-through: is it really lack of self-control? [7:19]
  • Recognizing a fixed mindset [11:20]
  • Discerning between fixed mindset and acceptance [14:55]
  • Growth mindset eases perceived time pressure [18:00]
  • Where can yoga teachers intervene with a fixed mindset [20:28]
  • Emphasizing effort over outcome to empower students [25:21]
  • Barrier #2 to follow through: Behaviour change skills [28:32]
  • How your “future self” helps you learn to tolerate discomfort [31:49]
  • Just get started: how habit initiation is more important than completion [38:06]
  • Managing overwhelm with intentional prioritization [41:49]
  • Barrier #3 to follow through: No system [46:44]
  • Barrier #4 to follow through: Unsupportive environment [52:35]
  • Barrier #4 to follow through: Unrealistic expectations [1:02:30]
  • Final takeaways [1:10:04]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Alison Heilig | Yoga Medicine Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-96.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

14 Jul 202238 Yoga and Medication with Dr Mariya Farooqi Pharm.D.00:55:50

Optimal health sometimes requires the support of both western science and other interventions — like diet and lifestyle changes and mindfulness practices including yoga.

Today’s guest is perfectly placed to talk about both sides of the equation. Dr. Mariya Farooqi is a clinical pharmacist, functional medicine specialist, and registered yoga teacher. Along with her initial work as a nutritionist, these experiences have shaped her philosophy of “food and movement first, drugs second”.

In this episode, Dr. Farooqi speaks with host Rachel about how common medications can interact with our yoga practice, offering her advice as a pharmacist on how we might manage common side effects by tailoring what, when and how we practice. She shares her thoughts on pain management, unpacks the vital link between gut health and overall health, and explores how even small changes to our diet, routine, movement, and mindfulness practices can have far-reaching impacts. She also talks about more personal experiences, like that of completing yoga teacher training as a Muslim woman, and the personal meaning the work of the Yoga Medicine Seva Foundation holds for her.

Show Notes:

  • Early perceptions of yoga from a Muslim Indian family background [2:45]
  • Challenges and growth opportunities: yoga teacher training as a Muslim woman [9:08]
  • The growth of Mariya’s interest in functional medicine [15:04]
  • Strengths and weaknesses of western medicine for chronic illness [20:20]
  • Complexities in discussing medication in the context of yoga practice [25:05]
  • Relevant potential side-effects of common medications:
    • Anti-depressants [26:20]
    • Lithium [28.18]
    • Diuretics (water pills) [29:27]
    • Sleep medications [30:05]
    • Allergy medications [31:58]
    • Anti-anxiety medications [32:22]
    • Antibiotics [33:05]
  • A pharmacist’s advice for yoga teachers working with students one-on-one [34:00]
  • Approaches to pain management [37:44]
  • Medications can affect gut health [41:18]
  • Actions steps for people whose medication is affecting gut health [46:00]
  • The wide-reaching impact of regulating the central nervous system [47:55]
  • The Seva Foundation’s work has personal meaning to Mariya [50:03]

Links Mentioned:

Instagram | YouTube | LinkedIn | PharmToTable

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-38.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

28 Sep 202389 "Core" Myths and Misconceptions: Community Conversations with Jenni Tarma01:07:01

Most of us have loaded beliefs related to the core and core strength. While most hold a grain of truth, plenty of these preconceptions are inaccurate, incomplete, or just plain unhelpful when it comes to our individual yoga and movement practices. 

Today host Rachel and returning guest Jenni Tarma unpack the most common core myths and misconceptions. In this episode, we explore the anatomy and function of the core, talk about what core stability really looks like, and examine the complex relationship between the core and low back pain.  

Listen in to learn how to define a healthy core, explore the wide range of poses and practices you could use to bring awareness to this area, and how you might teach a core-focused practice to groups or individuals.

Show Notes:

  • Exploring basic beliefs about the core [5:01]
  • Myth #1 Core = abs; difficulty defining the core [6:24]
  • Myth #2 Only crunches and planks strengthen your core [13:13]
  • Myth #3 Core stability means bracing [22:54]
  • Defining stability [30:35]
  • Myth #4 A strong core is tight and “ripped” [32:31]
  • Myth #5 A strong core is the solution to low back pain [37:53]
  • Tips for teaching individual and group yoga classes focused on the core [47:45]
  • More on the core: Yoga Medicine resources [57:24]
  • Final takeaways; moving toward unconscious competence [1:00:53]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Jenni Tarma Instagram | Kaari Prehab Instagram | Kaari Prehab | LinkedIn | Yoga Medicine Online Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-89.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

09 Feb 202360 Strength Training Myths Debunked: Expert Insights with Jenni Tarma01:03:48

The benefits of strength training for muscle and bone strength as well as metabolic, cognitive and mental health are now very well established. But there’s so much, often conflicting, information out there; it can be challenging to know where to focus your time and effort to reap those benefits.

Today’s guest Jenni Tarma —- yoga teacher, RRCA Endurance Coach and CrossFit Level 1 trainer—is back on the show to help us clear up that confusion. Jenni overviews some of the key benefits of regular strength training before unpacking several common myths and misconceptions that could be holding you back. She offers her advice on where regular yoga practitioners and strength training beginners could start, and highlights the power of the recovery phase.

Listen to this episode to learn the benefits of strength training and get tips for incorporating effective strength work into your life.

Show Notes: 

  • The many benefits of strength training [3:56]
  • Myths and misconceptions about strength training abound [12:22]
  • Can strength and flexibility coexist? [13:02]
  • The myths of becoming “accidentally ripped” or permanently stiff [20:07]
  • Is bodyweight training sufficient? Is external load “safe”? [26:47]
  • Does holding yoga poses for longer make you stronger? [32:18]
  • Training to make daily life feel easier [35:00]
  • Strength training suggestions for yoga students [37:52]
  • Getting started: embrace the basics & expert support [42:55]
  • Yoga Medicine Online resources [48:42]
  • The vital role of recovery & the optimal window to train again [50:58]
  • How much weight is enough? [57:05]
  • Final takeaways on strength training for yoga students [59:02]

Links Mentioned:

  • Connect with Jenni Tarma:

          Facebook | Jenni Tarma Instagram | Kaari Prehab Instagram | Kaari Prehab | LinkedIn | Yoga Medicine Online Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-60.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

29 Feb 2024104 Safe or Fun? Teacher’s Series00:44:53

Today hosts Tiffany and Rachel discuss a question many yoga teachers grapple with: should we aim to make our classes safe or fun? Is it possible to do both?

In this episode, we talk about the challenges teachers face when balancing these two aims in all-levels classes. We offer tips on how to keep safety in mind as you plan and teach yoga classes, and dissect what fun could actually mean for your students. 

Listen in as we talk about the pressure to teach appropriate and engaging classes to all-levels and share tips for encouraging your yoga students to become their own teachers.

Show Notes:

  • Is this the biggest question yoga teachers face? [1:03]
  • Challenges teaching to the stated class level and description [2:26]
  • Options are key [10:02]
  • Empower students to be their own best teacher [12:22]
  • Safe in the short-term isn’t always safe in the long-term [15:28]
  • Curiosity over assumption; the importance of language [19:02]
  • What actually makes a yoga class fun? [25:28]
  • Countering the pressure for novelty and creativity [30:53]
  • Big takeaways [36:20]
  • Invest in in the students who come back, and your own ongoing inspiration [39:27]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-104.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

08 Dec 202254 Love Those Hips! All About the Hip Labrum01:15:45

Today hosts Tiffany and Rachel delve into a sometimes controversial topic in the medical and yoga worlds: the hip labrum.

In this episode, you will learn what the hip labrum is and how it acts as a crucial source of stability and durability for the hip joint. We discuss common injuries that we see in that part of the body, and how they are diagnosed and treated by healthcare professionals.

Listen to this episode as we explore why labrum injuries seem so common in yoga practitioners, share a wide range of yoga practices to help support the hip labrum whether injured or not, and discuss why it might pay to be a little less “greedy” when exploring our hip range of motion.

Show Notes:

  • The hip labrum as a relatively recent topic for medical study, diagnosis and treatment [3:29]
  • What is the acetabular or hip labrum and what does it do? [8:48]
  • What kind of events, acute or chronic, are associated with hip labrum injury? [12:33]
  • Potential symptoms [20:41]
  • Averages and outliers; the challenge of diagnosis [24:54]
  • When to refer students out for medical assessment [27:04]
  • Medical diagnosis and treatment of hip labrum injury [32:25]
  • Can the labrum heal? Recent changes in understanding of hip labrum vascularization [34:07]
  • Helpful practices before and after treatment for hip labrum injury [34:56]
    • Awareness of lower body posture patterns [35:38]
    • Glute and abdominal strength [38:32]
    • Balance hip mobility deficits [40:12]
    • Using myofascial release to tune into the quality of hip tissues [41:12]
    • Active loading in hip rotation [42:04]
    • Lower load hip rotation practices [43:56]
    • Eccentric psoas work [45:09]
    • The need for control during loaded hip internal rotation [47:04]
    • Tiffany’s All About the Hips class playlist on Yoga Medicine Online [49:32]
  • Why does hip labrum injury seem so common in the yoga world? [51:25]
  • “More isn’t better”: tips for more mobile students [56:59]
  • The long-term importance of good standing stability [1:02:36]
  • Big takeaways [1:03:53]
  • Gaining the best outcomes from hip labrum treatment or surgery [1:07:00]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-54.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

17 Mar 202221 South Asian Teacher Panel with Rashmi Bismark MD MPH, Ashish Arora, Monisha Bhanote MD FCAP ABOIM and Pooja Virani01:18:05

In today’s episode, we bring together four yoga teachers with personal or family roots in different parts of India to talk about their experiences with yoga, while growing up and now. They offer their unique perspectives on practicing and teaching yoga in the modern context.

Previous podcast guest Rashmi Bismark facilitates the conversation. Rashmi is a U.S.-trained physician, board-certified in both preventative medicine and public health, who blends eastern and western traditions in her medical practice. Ashish Arora was born in Delhi and moved to the U.S. 21 years ago. After a career as an engineer in the computer and video game industry, Ashish now teaches yoga full-time. Monisha Bhanote was born in Punjab and emigrated to the UK, then the U.S., with her family. A quintuple board-certified physician with more than 20 years of experience in health care, she is the founder of the Holistic Wellbeing Collective. Pooja Virani grew up in New York City and relates memorable childhood experiences of attending the Iyengar Institute in Pune with her mother and grandmother. Now based outside of Washington D.C., Pooja is a pain-free movement specialist and social justice consultant, specializing in rehabilitative yoga, LGBTQ+ and BIPOC yoga, and social justice education.

Listen in to learn how our guests define what yoga is (and is not), discuss cultural appropriation versus cultural appreciation, and share their thoughts on how we can all practice yoga with more reverence and respect.

Show Notes:

  • Earliest experiences of yoga, and the central position of philosophy and ceremony [10:26]
  • What is yoga? Eastern vs Western practices [24:00]
  • Common questions: use of the word namaste, and the Sanskrit language [28:11]
  • Perspectives on cultural appropriation in yoga [32:48]
  • Use of the word yogi [39:21]
  • The experience of Indian students in international yoga studios [41:05]
  • Playing music in yoga asana classes [43:45]
  • Statues of deities in yoga studios [47:31]
  • Contrasts between westernized yoga mantra and traditional Indian raga [49:34]
  • The relationship between yoga, religion, and spirituality [58:10]
  • Treating yoga texts with respect [1:07:05]
  • Ways to practice and teach yoga with more mindfulness and respect [1:09:03]
  • Where to from here? More resources [1:16:47]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-21.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

01 Jun 202374 Yoga for All: Community Conversations with Elena Cheung01:04:26

Often it’s the details that make our experience; in the context of a yoga class, it’s not just about the poses and practices we teach but the WAY we teach them that determines whether our class feels welcoming.

Today host Rachel speaks with Yoga Medicine therapeutic specialist Elena Cheung. Elena shares her tips for creating impactful all-level classes that welcome the wide range of people who attend them. We discuss the little things that shape and color the student experience and yet are easily overlooked or forgotten – including how to kickstart class in a welcoming way, make your focal point relevant to everyone present, use inclusive language and props, and harness the power of simplicity and silence.

Listen in to learn how to make your classes more accessible to all, and let go of the pressure to reinvent the wheel every time you teach.

Show Notes:

  • The challenge of making all-level classes welcoming and relevant to all [2:23]
  • Advice around yoga inclusivity is often framed in the negative [5:00]
  • Truly inclusive classes empower each student [6:50]
  • Preparing ahead for all-levels classes that welcome all [13:06]
  • First impressions: acknowledging each arriving student [14:15]
  • Tips for starting all-levels classes [18:03]
  • Be patient and trust the process [23:22]
  • It’s possible to be too welcoming [27:41]
  • Keep it simple: make even complex concepts accessible to all [30:45]
  • The pressure on yoga teachers to constantly reinvent the wheel [39:19]
  • Tips for more inclusive language when cueing [43:45]
  • Integrating props into practice as tools rather than “training wheels” [48:36]
  • Tips to “tie the bow” when closing yoga classes [52:31]
  • More on Elena, including the course: The Art of Teaching Impactful Group Classes [57:00]
  • A final tip: how can yoga students make other students feel welcome? [1:02:03]

Links Mentioned:

          Instagram | Elena Shapeshifts | Yoga Medicine® Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-74.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

13 Oct 202246 Expert Insights: Addiction Recovery & Yoga with Lara Ederer00:53:05

Today we discuss a topic that affects many people in our communities whether we know it or not. Host Rachel speaks with Lara Ederer, a yoga teacher, Yoga Medicine Therapeutic Specialist, and Chemical Dependency Professional with both personal and professional experience with addiction.

In this episode, Lara talks with Rachel about how she defines addiction, what withdrawal and recovery can look and feel like, how yoga contributed to her own sobriety, and the many ways it can support the recovery of others.

Listen to this episode to explore how yoga can ignite a student’s awareness of and appreciation for their body, perhaps for the first time, as well as the importance of a supportive group environment, the potential for symbolism and storytelling to plant powerful philosophical seeds, and other advice on how to incorporate yoga and meditation practices into addiction recovery.


Show Notes:

  • Lara’s background in yoga and addiction recovery [3:10]
  • Difficulty defining the scope of this growing problem [4:56]
  • Recent changes in addiction perception [7:30]
  • Defining addiction [8:51]
  • Potential withdrawal symptoms [11:26]
  • The role of yoga in Lara’s recovery [15:11]
  • Social support is key in the recovery process [20:24]
  • Yoga can interrupt – even replace – the urge to use addictive substances [23:09]
  • Tips for teaching yoga to those in addiction recovery [29:41]
  • Advice on teaching meditation during recovery [36:02]
  • Incorporating yoga philosophy into recovery [39:12]
  • Sprinkling seeds of philosophy: the power of symbolism and story [41:53]
  • Boundaries matter when teaching in recovery settings [44.40]
  • Suggestions to address financial barriers to yoga for people in recovery [45:25]

Links Mentioned:

Instagram | Lara Ederer YogaYM Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-46.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

 

26 Jan 202358 Supercharge Your Practice with Lymphatics: Expert Insights with Tiffany Cruikshank L.Ac, MAOM00:50:12

Today Tiffany shares her passion for one of the body’s lesser-known and appreciated organ systems, the lymphatic system. We've known about the system for over 400 years and yet our understanding of its function and contribution to health has a long way to go. However, given what we do know about this vital system, there is potential for yoga practice to provide significant support for its healthy function.

Tiffany unpacks how the lymphatics act as both a “clean-up crew” for the circulatory system and an “information highway” for the immune system, along with other key roles, and shares implications of recent lymphatics research.

Listen to this episode to learn what the lymphatic system is, the many ways we can support the lymphatic system through yoga practice, and why it is so important to maintain good lymphatic flow.

Show Notes:

  • While vital, the lymphatic system is not widely well-known or understood [1:49]
  • The lymphatic system as both a “clean-up crew” and “information highway” [4:42]
  • The brand new Yoga Medicine Lymphatics course [10:35]
  • Roles in fluid regulation, fluid metabolism and tissue pressure [11:34]
  • Roles in assimilation of dietary fat and fat-soluble vitamins [12:44] 
  • Key drivers of lymph flow [13:25]
  • Highlighting the importance of the lymphatic system; implications for detoxification, cancer and lymphedema, inflammatory bowel diseases [14:14]
  • Touching on glymphatics, the lymphatics of the brain [20:22] 
  • Cautions on using yoga as a lymphatics intervention for cancer and lymphedema [21:42]
  • Implications of breath-work and diaphragmatic movement on lymph flow [24:45]
  • Yoga as support for lymphatic health: inversions, whole-body movement, changing pressure around lymph node clusters, increasing blood circulation [30:55]
  • Other helpful techniques: brushing, tapping, arm lifts, fist pumps, bouncing, rocking [35:52]
  • Gentle myofascial release to stimulate lymphatics [39:07]
  • Supporting general lymphatic health versus specific support for conditions with lymphatic dysfunction [40:21]
  • Resources on Yoga Medicine Online [42:11]
  • Details on the new Yoga Medicine Lymphatics course [45:52]
  • Key takeaways [47:55]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-58.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

20 Jan 202213 Setback to Success with Megan Kearney00:52:34

Most of us will run into unexpected setbacks in life. Today's guest Megan Kearney knows plenty about using those situations as opportunities to learn and grow stronger. An admitted type-a personality and “recovering triathlete”, Megan has been in the health and wellness industry for more than 20 years. She is a Yoga Medicine therapeutic specialist with additional trainings in mental health and traumatic brain injury resilience and iRest Yoga Nidra.

When COVID-19 hit, Megan’s previously successful yoga studios closed, and her marriage ended. In this episode, she talks with Rachel Land about turning these, and other, setbacks into success by practicing relentless realistic optimism. She also talks about the importance of self-care rituals, movement, getting outdoors, gratitude, relationships, journalling, therapy, and other practical ways to make space to feel and process both good and bad experiences until we feel ready to move on.

Listen in to learn how to pull yourself out of 'the suck’, and how to turn what we learn in that struggle into the source of our future success.

Show Notes:

  • Megan’s journey to yoga starts with meditation [4:13]
  • From Bikram yoga, through sports injuries, to yoga as a source of healing [6:29]
  • The transition from practicing to teaching yoga [14:32]
  • Opening two yoga studios [18:29]
  • The professional and personal impact of the pandemic [19:58]
  • Key self care techniques to create space to feel in times of crisis [23:08] and [31:51]
  • The power of gratitude and ‘Five Things Friday’ [33:05]
  • The importance of connection and relationship and Megan’s ‘Areas of Inquiry’ [35:40]
  • Journalling, therapy and movement in nature to help us process our experiences and shift perspective [39:09]
  • Megan’s Yoga Rx program and honest consideration of readiness to change [42:56]
  • Final thoughts for anyone currently in ‘the suck’ [48:43]

Links Mentioned:

LinkedIn | Instagram | Pinterest | Reset With Megan | YM Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.yogamedicine.com/podcast-13.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.yogamedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

22 Sep 202243 Research Roundup: Pitfalls of Mindfulness Research00:47:55

There is so much research and information out there about mindfulness, so today hosts Tiffany and Katja tackle this big and important topic from a different angle. In this episode, the pair takes a critical lens and unpacks the pitfalls of mindfulness research. Tiffany and Katja discuss how mindfulness is defined in the research, why self-selection of study participants may be of importance, and what the field of Contemplative Neuroscience is all about. They also touch on contraindications and adverse events of mindful meditation, as well as considerations surrounding mindfulness practices and mental health.

Listen in to learn more about both the important takeaways and the challenges of recent mindfulness research.

Show Notes:

  • The background of mindfulness research [3:06]
  • The challenge of defining mindfulness [6:26]
  • MBSR as intervention for many research studies [13:05]
  • Unpacking social desirability and self-selection in mindfulness research [18:42]
  • Are we asking the right questions? Validity in mindfulness research [21:56]
  • On Contemplative Neuroscience and fMRI [23:55]
  • Contraindications of mindfulness practices [27:55]
  • Adverse events of mindful meditation [33:23]
  • Idea of capacity building & titration [37:55]
  • Mindfulness research takeaways [42:24]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-43.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

13 Mar 2025131 Female Health Gems01:07:48

Female health is something we are passionate about at Yoga Medicine — exactly why we have dedicated several episodes to the topic. Today we are distilling the best tidbits of information and advice from multiple episodes into this one.

Show Notes:

  • The female hormonal cycle, starting with menstruation [1:28]
  • The follicular phase and ovulation [6:33]
  • The luteal phase [14:20]
  • Major effects of estrogen on muscle mass, strength, and recovery [18:00]
  • The female hormone cycle: impact on athletic performance and other goals [26:06]
  • Does our movement practice need to change during menstruation [36:07]
  • Yoga during perimenopause and menopause [51:39]
  • The current state of research on female health [1:03:09]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-131.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

09 Mar 202364 Impactful Pain Strategies01:06:37

Today hosts Tiffany and Rachel hone in on a topic of interest for both yoga students and teachers: strategies to address persistent pain. While persistent pain is dismayingly common, the journey to recovery is a personal one, requiring an individual understanding of our physical state, along with our feelings and beliefs. 

In this episode, we discuss the effect of language on pain-related fear and how pain education can have a surprising impact on pain perception. We also explore sneaky yet effective ways to work with persistent pain as a yoga teacher, and how to help students in pain regain feelings of confidence and control.

Listen in to learn the importance of long-term partnership in pain management and how gradual graded exposure has the potential to change our perception of pain completely.

Show Notes: 

  • The impact of pain education in recovery [3:48]
  • Pain as a warning signal to initiate conversation [5:45]
  • Perceived vulnerability and pain: the Fit for Purpose and Predictive Coding models [8:45]
  • Pain is complex and pain-related fear is natural [12:33] 
  • Potential “bleed over” of persistent pain: Double Crush Syndrome [14:51]
  • Emotions and beliefs influence pain perception [17:13]
  • Effects of language on pain-related fear; the weight of words from medical professionals [23:09]
  • A partnership approach for working with students in pain [31:16]
  • Start by creating a feeling of safety [35:50]
  • Gradual graded exposure as pain re-education [38:16]
  • Myofascial release as a tool for pain re-education [45:29]
  • Changing our relationship to pain [48:23]
  • Persistent pain can’t always be completely eradicated [50:26]
  • Considering the potential for flareups [54:55]
  • Communicating through demeanor [59:31]
  • Key takeaways [1:00:28]
  • The power of putting students in control [1:02:50]

Links Mentioned: 

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-64.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes, or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5-star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

16 Jan 2025127 Your 200hr TT Questions Answered: Community Conversations with Dana Diament01:05:11
It is a new year—the perfect time to commit to a new path or project. Each year, for some, that means diving into yoga teacher training.
 
In this episode, returning guest and lead teacher of the Yoga Medicine 200hr teacher training, Dana Diament, sits down with host Rachel Land to explore all your 200hr teacher training questions. We explain how you know if you are ready to take that journey and what to consider before signing up. We also unpack the realities of fitting the training schedule into your life and what hurdles you can face transitioning to teaching afterward.
 
Listen to this episode to learn if yoga teacher training is right for you, and to hear about the upcoming Yoga Medicine 200hr Online Teacher Training, kicking off between February and June.

Show Notes:

  • How do I know I’m ready? [2:10]
  • Do I have to want to teach? [7:48]
  • Which yoga teacher training should I choose? [11:09]
  • In-person locally, retreat/ immersion format, or online? [14:14]
  • Considering the style of yoga [23:43]
  • Is Yoga Alliance registration important? [29:18]
  • Recap: considerations discussed so far [31:32]
  • Prerequisites for YTT: your own practice [32:42]
  • Prerequisites for YTT: sufficient time [35:20]
  • Prerequisites for YTT: passion for learning [36:57]
  • Things that aren’t required before YTT [39:58]
  • How should I prepare? [41:02]
  • Will I be ready to teach right after YTT? [45:36]
  • Will I be taught to craft my own sequences? [47:28]
  • Recap: major takeaways [54:15]
  • Yoga Medicine 200hr Teacher Training for 2025 (& early bird rate!) [56:39]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-127.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

13 Feb 2025129 New Teacher Panel: Community Conversations00:36:10

Usually, this podcast features seasoned yoga instructors, so today we are doing something different: exploring the perspectives of those early in the experience of holding the role of a teacher. 

In this episode, we connect with three guests who completed 200-hour teacher training at the end of 2023. We discuss their expectations of the training, which areas of study best prepared them for the work they hoped to do afterward, how they secured their first teaching opportunities, and what advice they would share with those considering yoga teacher training now.

If you are a newer teacher yourself, or contemplating yoga teacher training, listen in to learn about the reality of yoga teacher training, as well as the joys and challenges new teachers tend to experience.

Show Notes:

  • Is teacher training only for people who want to teach [3:05]
  • Hopes and expectations prior to teacher training [6:23]
  • Most and least enjoyed areas of study [10:24]
  • What did you feel most and least prepared for after teacher training [14:26]
  • Challenges that arise for new teachers [18:42]
  • How to find the first opportunities to teach [21:36]
  • Next steps, including how to know you’re ready for ongoing study [26:36]
  • Advice for future yoga teachers [30:34]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-129.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

20 Oct 202247 Expert Insights: Concussion Care with Dr. Daya Grant00:46:56

Concussions are very different for different people, which makes them easily missed, misunderstood, or misdiagnosed. Today, host Rachel talks with Dr. Daya Grant about concussions and how yoga practices can support the recovery process.

Dr. Grant is a certified mental performance consultant, neuroscientist, and yoga teacher. In this episode, she outlines what injuries can cause concussions, how they are diagnosed, the wide range of physical, emotional, and cognitive symptoms that can be experienced, and – most importantly – how yoga can help.

Listen to this episode to learn which yoga practices help at each stage of recovery, tips for teaching students post-concussion, and general contraindications to bear in mind.

Show Notes:

  • What ignited Daya’s interest in concussions [3:03]
  • What is a concussion and what causes it [5:50]
  • An “invisible illness”: the challenge of diagnosis [8:00]
  • Somatic symptoms of concussion [12:09]
  • Emotional symptoms of concussion [13:19]
  • Cognitive symptoms of concussion [14:36]
  • Daya’s personal experience of concussion [15:25]
  • Gradual return to activity after concussion; when yoga can help [19:05]
  • Returning to group yoga classes after concussion [22:02]
  • Breath work during concussion recovery [24:28]
  • The value of Yoga Nidra and Restorative yoga to support healing [26:06]
  • General contraindications for yoga during concussion recovery [28:16]
  • Approaching balance poses with humility [30:25]
  • The importance of minimal, simple cueing [31:09]
  • Tips for teaching one-on-one yoga during concussion recovery [32:37]
  • Why it’s difficult to predict concussion healing timetables [35:16]
  • Key takeaways and common misunderstandings about concussions [40:01]
  • Maximizing our potential to heal from repeat concussions [42:23]

Links Mentioned:

Instagram | Daya Grant

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-47.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

23 Jun 202235 Fascia & the Autonomic Nervous System01:01:17

Today hosts Tiffany and Katja continue the discussion on fascia and more specifically how our fascia is connected to the autonomic nervous system. This relationship reminds us that movement has a profound effect on our minds and emotions and that the inverse is also true. In this discussion, Tiffany and Katja explain different pathways how the fascial system is related to the autonomic nervous system. They share more reasons to incorporate some myofascial release work into our yoga practice and elaborate why working with the abdomen can have a powerful effect on the whole autonomic nervous system. They also discuss how stress may relate to low back pain and how the fascia may be influenced by major depressive disorder.

Listen in to learn about the relationship between fascia and the autonomic nervous system, why myofascial release is so valuable, and ways to engage your autonomic nervous system through yoga.

Show Notes:

  • What is the autonomic nervous system [1:46]
  • How is fascia connected to the autonomic nervous system (ANS) [3:32]
  • The importance of fascia as sensory organ [7:47]
  • How Ruffini endings relate to the ANS [9:08]
  • Sense of relaxation after MFR or yoga [11:16]
  • Influence of interstitial receptors on the ANS [14:53]
  • Does any kind of yoga influence Ruffini and interstitial receptors? [16:01]
  • Different types of bodywork and the ANS [18:01]
  • Working with the abdomen, advocating for abdominal massage [19:07]
  • Interstitial receptors and local fluid dynamics [24:19]
  • Vagal innervation [25:52]
  • The thoracolumbar fascia: innervation, low back pain, and stress [32:17]
  • Inflammation and sympathetic innervation [37:36]
  • Areas of the body that affect the sympathetic nervous system [40:20]
  • Changes in fascial tone – fascial contractility under stress [41:57]
  • The relationship between depression disorders and fascial stiffness [48:59]
  • Ph levels, their potential effect on fascial tonicity, and breath work [51:11]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | InstagramKalamana Yoga | YM Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-35.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

24 Feb 202218 Optimize Stress to Boost Focus with Eding Mvilongo MScE, MD, FRCPC00:58:22

Today we are reframing stress with Eding Mvilongo, an Anesthesiologist and Clinical Professor from Montreal Canada. Eding’s work is defined by the need to maintain focus under extreme pressure. She understands from both theoretical and practical standpoints which tools and techniques we can employ to help us maintain our attention despite distraction, even under duress.

In this episode, Eding shares her favorite short- and longer-term tools for managing stress and maintaining focus – some of which may surprise you. Rachel and Eding also discuss how attention is linked to the stress response, how the brain allocates attention, and the importance of sleep. Eding also weighs in on the value of Black History Month and her experience of micro-aggressions in the medical world.

Listen in to learn how the right balance of practices around movement, breath, meditation, hydration and sleep can help us optimize our stress levels, and to hear Eding’s hopes for the future.

Show Notes:

  • What drew Eding to the study of science and her career in medicine [5:06]
  • Yoga as stress relief and an opportunity to focus purely on herself [8:40]
  • Curiosity leads Eding to yoga teacher training [10.45]
  • What we should know about the pandemic [12:40]
  • An anesthesiologist’s experience during COVID-19 [14:44]
  • Focus under pressure – the break down of an anesthesiologist’s role [18:10]
  • How the brain allocates attention [21:16]
  • The link between attention and the stress response [25:20]
  • Tips to help focus your attention where you want it [29:35]
  • How REM sleep supports attention by resetting the Locus Coeruleus [32:25]
  • Using yoga practice to manage stress, improve sleep and support attention [33:44]
  • Meditation and mantra – release attachment and expectation to manage stress [37:43]
  • Final suggestions – use self-compassion to capitalize on your reward pathways [43:02]
  • Eding’s thoughts on Black History Month [46:57]
  • Hopes for the future – knowledge as power [53:15]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-18.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.
To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

06 Apr 202368 Approaches for Anxiety: Community Conversations with Caroline Wybar00:54:58

Anxiety tends to go under-recognized and under-treated, and yet is one of the most common mental health challenges faced today. It is also a key reason many students are drawn to yoga practice.

Today host Rachel speaks with Yoga Medicine Therapeutic Specialist Caroline Wybar about how those factors inspired the capstone project of her 1000-Hour Teacher Training qualification: a pilot study on individual therapeutic yoga approaches for anxiety.

Caroline shares the details of her pilot study, offers her tips for building trusting relationships with one-on-one students, and highlights the takeaways that most surprised her. Listen in to hear how the yoga approaches she found the most useful were as unique and individual as the students themselves.

Show Notes: 

  • What piqued Caroline’s interest in therapeutic yoga for anxiety [2:47]
  • Key findings from recent research on anxiety [3:52]
  • Therapeutic benefits of mindfulness interventions can be long-lasting [6:28]
  • Potential use of stimulating pranayama (Bhastrika) on anxiety [8:17]
  • Three hypotheses that informed Caroline's pilot study on yoga for anxiety [10:37]
  • The structure of Caroline’s pilot study: student diversity was key [15:14]
  • The wide range of yoga practices Caroline utilized for anxiety [19:12]
  • Building trusting relationships with students [21:50]
  • Key project takeaways and case study highlights [28:22]
  • Implications of improved motion function on anxiety, especially in older students [33:08]
  • Differing experiences of anxiety in different life stages [37:07]
  • Surprising takeaways from the study, including the value of mastering challenges [39:42]
  • The unexpected potency of Yoga Nidra (after the right precursors) [45:10]
  • Final takeaways [51:07]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Caroline Wybar Yoga | Yoga Medicine® Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-68.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

05 Oct 202390 Leadership in Yoga00:59:03

Today’s media landscape - which equates leadership with certainty of opinion, popularity, or charisma - can be challenging for yoga teachers to navigate. So today, hosts Tiffany and Rachel explore what leadership can look like in the yoga world. 

We discuss the importance of humility and vulnerability, the challenge of balancing evidence-based with more traditional inputs, and whether there are different expectations of yoga teachers than there are of other roles in our communities.

Listen in as we explore the kind of leadership that lifts everyone up. 

Show Notes:

  • Confusing certainty or popularity for true leadership [2:57]
  • Humility as a central quality of good leadership [13:06]
  • The kind of leadership we need can change over time [20:53]
  • Balancing evidence-based with traditional inputs [22:49]
  • Finding your compass as a leader [25:54]
  • Service & Ego: expectations of yoga teachers versus other occupations [33:58]
  • Pressure for yoga teachers to project perfection [39:46]
  • Balancing leadership and vulnerability [51:32]
  • Key takeaways [54:42]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-90.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

 

07 Dec 202398 The Pros & Cons of Using Anatomy in Yoga00:48:08

There is no shortage of strong opinions on what areas of study are appropriate for yoga teachers and students. The study of anatomy is one that, at times, inspires controversy - so today hosts Tiffany and Rachel dive into the pros and cons of using anatomy in yoga. 

We discuss the challenges of using anatomical language and the risk that a simplified model might be confused with reality. We also debate whether emphasizing the physical could detract from more subtle aspects of yoga practice, as well as how it might provide a shared experience to more deeply connect us to life, each other, and ourselves.

Listen in to explore some of the drawbacks and advantages of studying and teaching anatomy in the yoga world.

Show Notes:

  • Does anatomy study limit the concept of yoga to the purely physical? [2:31]
  • Anatomy is a simplified model of a complex and individual reality [7:55]
  • Anatomical language is not familiar to most students [13:26]
  • Recapping the main drawbacks of studying & teaching anatomy [19:56]
  • We all experience life through our physical body; why not learn about it? [21:07]
  • Anatomy study is one lens through which we can know ourselves better [25:52]
  • Anatomical language can be learned and is shared with medical/ movement professionals [28:36]
  • Anatomy study supports intelligent and effective teaching [32:03]
  • Anatomy study can inspire curiosity, reverence, gratitude, and wonder [39:42]
  • Final thoughts, a reminder of the big picture, and Yoga Medicine resources [43:18]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-98.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

11 Apr 2024107 Beat Burnout00:37:25

Burnout is becoming a more common experience than ever, in the yoga world and beyond, so today hosts Tiffany and Rachel dive into the varied experiences of and solutions to this problem.

We discuss three common precursors to burnout and how challenging it can be to generate the energy required to recognize and resolve it. We also share the role yoga practice can play in helping us build long-term physical and mental resilience as an antidote to burnout.

Listen to this episode to learn what burnout is, what causes contribute, and the intangible game-changers you could be overlooking when trying to overcome burnout.

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Show Notes:

 

  • The three key symptoms of burnout [3:50]
  • Perfectionism, imposter syndrome, and a potential up-side of burnout [5:10]
  • Difficulty generating the energy to find a way out [7:30]
  • Is restorative yoga the solution to burnout? [9:17]
  • Burnout as a long-term imbalance between inputs and outputs [13:08]
  • Individuality in burnout, emotional labour, and the role yoga can play [17:11]
  • Training long-term resilience to burnout [23:59]
  • A three-part approach: nervous system, connective tissue & mental resilience [27:00]
  • Where to start [32.28]
  • The Yoga Medicine Resilience Retreat and other resources [35:38]

---

Links Mentioned:

 

 

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-107.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

07 Apr 202224 Yoga & Injury, Part 200:46:53

Last week we opened a conversation about yoga and injury. Tiffany and Rachel talked about the three main phases of healing, common mistakes made during the healing process, and what role therapeutic yoga can play. This week we continue the conversation, with Tiffany and Rachel now focusing on how teachers and students can reduce the potential for yoga injuries.

In this episode, Tiffany and Rachel discuss whether or not to ask about injuries before class, poses and transitions they avoid or approach with caution, and practical tips to create a yoga practice that focuses on variety, curiosity, and resilience.

Listen in to learn why it’s important to respect the power and potency of the practice, and how to use it to explore the owner’s manual to your own body.

Show Notes:

  • Whether or not to ask students about injuries before class [3:11]
  • Yoga poses and transitions we avoid or approach with caution [6:38]
  • Thoughts on headstand and shoulderstand [9:20]
  • The impact of repetition: Chaturanga and jumping forward or through transitions [12:50]
  • Acute versus chronic injuries [15:24]
  • Top tip to reduce the likelihood of injury [18:32]
  • “Correct” form and “incorrect” form [20:25]
  • Different approaches for injury management in one-on-one versus group classes [23:30]
  • Setting aside the ego [25:27]
  • More suggestions to decrease the potential for yoga injury [28:00]
  • Speaking mindfully: nociceptive or fear-based language [33:44]
  • The therapeutic power of vividly visualizing challenging yoga poses pain-free [37:42]
  • Key take-away points [40:55]
  • Defining therapeutic yoga [44:29]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-24.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

21 Apr 202226 Support the Low Back with Tiffany Cruikshank and Jenni Tarma01:16:13

We have an instinctive understanding of the importance of the spine, especially the weight-bearing structures of the low back. But given that the majority of us will have some experience of low back pain during our lives, perhaps we need a little help figuring out how to best support it during yoga practice and in daily activities.

In this episode, hosts Tiffany and Rachel explore the low back with Yoga Medicine teacher Jenni Tarma. Jenni co-teaches the Yoga Medicine Spine Anatomy, Disfunction, and Application Yoga Teacher Training. As an RRCA endurance coach, CrossFit Level 1 Trainer, and lifelong athlete, she specializes in mobility, movement, and injury prevention. She is also the Founder and Head Coach at Kaari Prehab, a company that provides customized mobility, recovery and injury prevention, and rehab services for athletes and other active people.

Listen in as we unpack the role and resilience of the low back and discuss the prevalence of (and possible contributors to) low back pain. We talk about the impact of posture, the need for both strength and mobility, and offer a wide range of yoga practices that yoga students and teachers can call on to support the low back. Throughout, you’ll hear the crucial impact our individual differences and circumstances play in determining which practices are helpful, and which are not.

Show Notes:

  • The role of the low back and the importance of caring for it [3:25]
  • The staggering prevalence of low back pain and its potential causes [6:28]
  • Isolated versus full-body movement practices for low back pain [9:45]
  • Analgesic effects of isometric strength work, even for skilled athletes [13:57]
  • The role of fear in low back pain or dysfunction and a TCM perspective [17:18]
  • The impact of posture on the health of the spine [20:55]
  • Disk loading in different body positions [23:30]
  • “Bad posture” versus “good posture” and acknowledging individual variation [27:27]
  • The importance of thoracic mobility [35:35]
  • Tapping into deep, subtle core support for the low back [36:37]
  • Yoga poses and transitions that require more thought or care [44:55]
  • Opinions on yoga backbends [51:54]
  • Finding the right amount of challenge [57:20]
  • Recruiting the power of the feet and legs to support the low back [1:01:51]
  • More supportive practices: gentle off-loaded movement, myofascial release, slowing down, and more [1:04:14]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-26.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

19 May 202230 Trauma Informed Yoga with Dr. Ann Bortz00:42:00

Nowadays the phrase “trauma informed yoga” is familiar to most of us. But if you’ve heard the term and assume it doesn’t represent the students you teach or practice alongside, you may be surprised to hear in this episode that up to 90% of adults will experience a traumatic event in their lives.

Today’s guest, Dr. Ann Bortz, is a licensed clinical psychologist with almost 30 years in the field. Host Rachel speaks with Dr. Bortz about her specialty working with those who are impacted by trauma. She explains how yoga gave her the tools to help recognize and respond to what she was encountering with her patients and realized that it could also be a helpful tool for them, too.

Listen in to learn what trauma is, who it most commonly affects, how it changes the brain and body, and which yoga practices can help.

Show Notes:

  • Dr Ann Bortz’ professional background and introduction to yoga practice [3:01]
  • The catalyst for becoming a yoga teacher [5:40]
  • Traumatic stress versus general life stress [8:16]
  • The new phenomenon of pandemic-related trauma [10:00]
  • Trauma in pandemic first responders [14:00]
  • How trauma changes the brain and body [16:06]
  • Polyvagal theory and the lesser known “Freeze Response” [18:07]
  • The impact of mindfulness on varied stress states [21:48]
  • Breath practices for trauma informed yoga [24:08]
  • The quality of movement is more impactful than the pose we choose [24:56]
  • Quiet and stillness can be triggering for students with unresolved trauma [26:19]
  • Student self-agency can be healing, bringing the thinking brain back online [27:43]
  • Playing music in trauma informed yoga sessions [33:10]
  • Authenticity is key for students with a history of trauma [34:34]
  • How to avoid inadvertently re-traumatizing students or respond if it occurs [35:58]
  • A reminder of the value of compassion [38:43]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-30.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

27 Mar 2025132 Interoception Research & Yoga: Expert Insights with Valerie Knopik PhD00:47:22

Today host Rachel and returning guest and Yoga Medicine Teacher Valerie Knopik PhD explore a recent research paper on the topic of interoception (Voss et al: Mind-body practices, interoception and pain: a scoping review of behavioral and neural correlates). 

In this episode, we discuss the many ways yoga teachers can guide students to becoming more informed inhabitants of their body, and how honing that skill of interoception seems to help manage all kinds of pain. Listen in to learn more.

Show Notes:

  • Overview of the scoping review paper [5:02]
  • Limitations of the study [9:36]
  • Defining interception [13:11]
  • Challenges of studying yoga interventions [16:45]
  • Interesting takeaways: interoception as a trainable skill [20:02]
  • Yoga tools help pain management (whether used deliberately or not) [29:06]
  • Guiding students in the experience of being their bodies [38:19]
  • Other takeaways [40:59]

Links Mentioned:

Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Yoga Medicine Online Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-132.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

21 Nov 2024123 Sequencing Pitfalls (and How to Avoid Them)00:52:15

Today’s topic is one of our favorites. Hosts Tiffany and Rachel dive deep into sequencing to unpack common pitfalls for yoga teachers and how they can be avoided.

Is there such a thing as too much of a good thing? How can we choose a class focal point or theme that resonates with students? Are we teaching from a place of thinking rather than feeling? In this episode, we talk about the most important aspects of sequencing, what to add to or trim out of your class, and how to shorten or elongate students’ perception of time.

Listen in to learn how to create a balanced and intention-based yoga class sequence.

Show Notes:

  • The pressure of the “perfect” sequence [1:26]
  • Pitfall #1: Timing, timing, timing [5:09]
  • Pitfall #2: No central theme to create clarity & cohesion [15:30]
  • Pitfall #3: Too much of a good thing [21:18]
  • Pitfall #4: Picking the wrong theme for your students [26:32]
  • Pitfall #5: Unintentional overload [30:15]
  • Pitfall #6: Sequencing purely for novelty or complexity [36:03]
  • More rapid-fire sequencing tips [41:00]
  • Yoga Medicine® Sequencing with Purpose online training [49:12]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-123.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

19 Dec 2024125 Teaching Yoga in Changing Times01:09:27

Change is constant and inevitable, but the sheer speed of recent changes in the yoga world leaves many of us confused about what it actually looks like and means to be a yoga teacher right now.

Today hosts Rachel and Tiffany look back over the massive changes that have occurred in the yoga world over the past few decades, and what they might signal for the years ahead. We debate the pros and cons of boom times, the rise of social media, and the ever-evolving needs of students. 

Listen to this episode to learn how yoga teachers can continue to adapt to better serve our communities. 

Show Notes: 

  • Looking back can help us move forward with more clarity [1:18]
  • Early days of yoga in the West: underground, no-frills, “anti-influencer” [3:53]
  • Big changes in the early 2000s [11:00]
  • The first commercial teacher trainings and new yoga brands [15:35]
  • Yoga celebrities, yoga fashion, and growing competition [16:46]
  • Credibility from yoga lineage overtaken by social media following? [21:45]
  • Yoga Medicine and explosive growth in YTT [27:38]
  • The 2010s: The yoga boom and growing pains [31:35]
  • Covid challenges and opportunities: meeting people where they’re at [33:56]
  • Post-COVID era: options versus overwhelm [37:35]
  • Takeaways: find your niche with patience, persistence, and presence [40:03]
  • Takeaways: What feeds you changes over time [48:04]
  • Takeaways: Know what you bring to the table [53:55]
  • Takeaways: Be purpose-driven [58:45]
  • Final thoughts [1:02:33]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-125.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

04 Jan 2024100 Yoga, Politics & History: Expert Insights with Firdose Moonda, MA00:58:07

Many yoga students and teachers feel part of a culture and tradition we don't fully understand, leading to the necessity for open, honest, and potentially uncomfortable conversations about the wider context our practice exists within - including its long and complicated history and its intersections with culture, commerce, and politics.

Today host Rachel is joined by Firdose Moonda - a journalist, academic, yoga teacher, and researcher - to explore some of these intersecting issues, and offer an introduction to important definitions and common misunderstandings about the practice. 

Listen in to learn about the historical and cultural context of yoga and its contributions to our unique and individual in-body experiences.

Show Notes: 

  • Firdose’s early experience with yoga; the drive to deeper study [3:22]
  • The inspiration for Firdose’s new Yoga Medicine course [6:40]
  • Definition and geographical origins of yoga [9:38]
  • Politics and privilege in yoga [12:21]
  • Is yoga actually intended to make us feel good? [17:10]
  • Is yoga really for everyone? [21:59]
  • Chakras, and other concepts we misconstrue as part of yoga tradition [24:52]
  • Acknowledging varied individual embodied experiences of yoga [29:11]
  • Yoga’s origin and religious association; implications for appropriation [36:47]
  • Valuing ongoing education for its own sake [41:19]
  • Yoga’s relationship to colonization [47:15]
  • Details on Firdose's new Yoga Medicine course [49:24]
  • The most powerful three words yoga teachers can say [52:29]

Links Mentioned:

          Instagram | Souldier Yoga

 

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-100.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

02 Mar 202363 Yoga and Osteoporosis: Community Conversations with Michaela Smith00:52:38

In this episode, we are talking about a hidden aspect of health: bone density. Decreased bone mineral density, osteoporosis, is surprisingly common – impacting on average one in five women over 50 and a smaller proportion of men.

The diagnosis can bring with it a fear of frailty, but today host Rachel talks with Michaela Smith, a Yoga Medicine® Therapeutic Specialist, and NASM-certified personal trainer, about the wide range of positive actions we can take to maintain or rebuild bone mineral density, and confidence along with it.

In this episode, we unpack the vital importance of loading our bones and discuss how yoga can help address rounded posture, improve balance and body awareness, and provide crucial community support. Also, tune in for tips on teaching yoga to populations with a higher incidence of osteoporosis.

Show Notes:

  • Defining osteoporosis and osteopenia [2:39]
  • Diagnosing osteoporosis and osteopenia [03:43]
  • Mindful use of language when speaking about bone health [6:39]
  • Groups at higher risk of bone density loss and the protective role of estrogen [8:28]
  • Why it’s crucial to consider osteoporosis in the yoga population [9:55]
  • Physical loading to build or maintain bone mineral density [11:34]
  • Understanding compression fractures [18:23]
  • Yoga tips to address rounded posture: from the feet to the head [20:27]
  • Training balance and coordination for fall prevention [24:55]
  • Specifics on safe, progressive loading [29:50]
  • Can yoga alone build bone mineral density? Dr. Loren Fishman’s survey [30:44]
  • Implications from the LIFTMOR study [33:36]
  • Confidence and community: yoga and the mental/ emotional side of osteoporosis [35:53]
  • Yoga as stress management; implications for bone health [37:35]
  • Teaching yoga in populations with a higher incidence of osteoporosis [39:11]
  • Dos and don’ts when using myofascial release [45:28]
  • Key takeaways and further resources [48:15]

Links Mentioned:

                   Instagram | In Motion Integrative PT | Michaela Moves Well

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-63.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

28 Oct 202102 The Placebo Effect with Katja Bartsch, Part 100:42:35

This episode is the first part of the conversation with Tiffany Cruikshank and Katja Barsch on the Placebo Effect and how it relates to yoga.

Katja is a Yoga Medicine instructor and a researcher with a focus on fascia. She runs anatomy and fascia physiology yoga teacher trainings around Europe and contributes research roundups to several Yoga Medicine trainings. She is currently working on her PhD under the skillful guidance of Dr Robert Schleip and is a Board-Certified Structural Integration Practitioner (BCSI; ATSI) trained by Tom Myers and his Anatomy Trains school. We are honored to have her researchers eye for our research focused episodes.

Together, we dive into the history of the Placebo Effect, how it can be used for the treatment of pain and chronic pain, and how that relates to its function in yoga classes. We also discuss how the Placebo Effect relates to expectation and why, as teachers, our words matter so much.

Listen and learn about some possible positive effects that the Placebo Effect can have, how genetics affect the Placebo Effect, and how to use the Placebo Effect in yoga.

Show Notes:

  • What is a placebo [0:45]
  • What is the Placebo Effect [2:00]
  • What are some possible positive effects that the Placebo Effect can have [3:45]
  • What is the Nocebo Effect [4:45]
  • What is the history of the Placebo Effect [6:45]
  • How to use the Placebo Effect in yoga [14:00]
  • How is the Placebo Effect used in medicine [16:00]
  • Which external factors can effect a placebo study [17:00]
  • What are open placebos used for [19:00]
  • How do genetics affect the Placebo Effect [32:30]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-02.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

02 Feb 202359 Explore the Dark Side: Community Conversations with Steph Wall00:53:29

“Love and light” is a popular sentiment in the yoga world, but today’s guest would have us give equal weight to supposedly negative emotions like grief and anger. 

Today host Rachel ventures into the dark side with yoga teacher and studio owner Steph Wall. Steph explains how the Hindu goddess Kali has encouraged her to explore the power of the dark feminine by embracing messiness, complexity, and duality in her practice, her life, and as a guiding principle in her unique yoga studio. She believes that opening to the full range of our experiences, not just those perceived as positive, allows us to connect more deeply to ourselves, and to others.

Listen in to learn why it’s important to acknowledge that yoga can be confronting and uncomfortable, how awkward conversations can facilitate more authentic connections, and hear Steph’s advice for other small independent business owners in the yoga sphere.

Show Notes: 

  • Steph's studio, the goddess Kali and the “dark feminine” [2:57]
  • Thoughts on cultural appropriation [11:37]
  • Acknowledging that yoga practice can be confronting and uncomfortable [14:44]
  • Working through dark or “negative” emotions awakens the fullness of life [19:29]
  • Embracing the complex whole [23:53]
  • Making space for authenticity and vulnerability in our practice and life [27:57]
  • Asana practice can connect us with the honesty of our bodies [31:18]
  • Allowing for complexity and imperfection in our studios and communities [35:20]
  • Advice for small businesses: Live your values, find your people [43:05]
  • Advice for small businesses: Is this truly needed in your community? [45:01]
  • Advice for small businesses: Take time to craft something unique and creative [46:31]
  • Sneak peek into Steph's upcoming Yoga Medicine Online classes [49:32]


Links Mentioned:

                 Instagram | The Kali Collective | Facebook | Yoga Medicine Online

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-59.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

11 Nov 202104 Find Ease in Uncertainty with Diane Malaspina PhD00:56:42

Today's guest gives us a masterclass in how yoga can help us navigate life’s uncertainty with a little more grace. Diane Malaspina is an Applied Psychologist and yoga teacher with over 15 years of experience in the health and wellness field. Diane has a B.S. in Psychology, a Master of Education, and a PhD in Educational and Developmental Psychology.

Rachel and Diane discuss why she was drawn to psychology as an area of study, how yoga and meditation turned out to be exactly what she needed as a stressed-out grad student, and how she started teaching yoga almost by accident when her favorite teacher called in sick. Diane also talks about how the pandemic forced her, as it did many of us, to completely change her professional plans but also allowed her the time and space to reconsider how to best spend her energy and time.

Listen in to find out why the expression "no news is good news" doesn't actually ring true for many of us and how yoga and meditation can help us shift our baseline to change our relationship with stress and uncertainty.

Show Notes:

  • What drew Diane to the study of psychology [2:40]
  • Diane’s discovery of yoga practice and introduction to teaching [4:44]
  • Why are we so afraid of uncertainty [22:07]
  • How the stress response can help us shift into problem-solving mode [22:45]
  • What the Yerkes–Dodson law teaches us about optimal stress levels [24:54]
  • The physiological effects of prolonged stress [26:18]
  • The power of trained awareness [26:46]
  • Three options in the face of stress and uncertainty [27:57]
  • Cultivating acceptance in situations we can’t change [30:41]
  • Practices Diane uses to support mental health through the pandemic [33:45]
  • Training your brain to react more positively to uncertainty [39:28]
  • Practicing resilience on the yoga mat [43:23]
  • How to bias ourselves toward growth [47:03]
  • The power of the pause [53:13]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Diane MalaspinaYM Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-04.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

01 Aug 2024115 Who is Yin Yoga NOT For?00:58:43

Any potent practice carries the potential for adverse effects, and yoga - while comparatively gentle - is no exception. 

Yin yoga seems to generate especially polarized views, so today hosts Tiffany and Rachel unpack its common cautions and contraindications.

Listen in as we explore who Yin yoga is best for versus who might invest their time elsewhere, and share our tips on how we can all approach this nourishing practice to minimize risks and maximize benefits.

Show Notes:

  • Polarized views of Yin yoga [3:33]
  • Yin and hypermobility [6:09]
  • Approaching Yin when you don’t need more range of motion [10:17]
  • Yin during pregnancy [16:00]
  • Yin during spinal injury: disc injury, osteoporosis [17:17]
  • Yin for older populations: osteoarthritis, joint replacement [25:34]
  • Ongoing themes: more isn’t better, take an individual approach [32:43]
  • Yin for sedentary people & desk workers [36:01]
  • Yin for athletes [38:25]
  • Recap: It’s about HOW you approach Yin yoga [45:57]
  • Tips for Yin yoga teachers [48:51]
  • Final takeaways & resources [52:09]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-115.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

06 Jan 202211 Motivation & Identity with Kirsten Beverley-Waters01:03:10

When was the last time you asked yourself: what do I truly want? Today we are talking about motivation and identity with someone who asks themselves that question multiple times a day. Author, yoga teacher, and fitness coach Kirsten Beverley-Waters holds a B.S. from Kent State University along with multiple qualifications from the American College of Sports Medicine, CrossFit, and Precision Nutrition.

No stranger to struggle, Kirsten teaches movement through the lens of mental wellness, setting her clients up for success when facing the inevitable challenges of life. In this episode Kirsten shares that, to keep up motivation in the long term, we need to choose goals that speak to us personally then find joy in the repetition of the little things that get us closer to our goals. She talks with Rachel about her plans to break a world record in 2022 in support of The Trevor Project and LGBTQ youth, and the importance of all of us understanding our own identity in order to show up more authentically in our lives.

Listen in to learn how to choose goals that excite and inspire, how to manage unavoidable ebbs and flows in motivation, and the importance of making friends with struggle.

Show Notes:

  • What inspired Kirsten’s interest in sports performance and coaching [3:18]
  • Running as an escape from early struggles [5:46]
  • Beginning yoga practice during cancer treatment [9:17]
  • Accepting the call to teach yoga [12:13]
  • Kirsten’s world record goal for 2022, supporting the Trevor Project and LGBTQ youth [14:07]
  • Finding life goals that inspire and excite us [21:40]
  • Journalling as a tool to help us clarify our thoughts and intentions [26:51]
  • How to keep showing up once we’ve chosen a goal [29:49]
  • The power of repetition [32:30]
  • Reframing struggle [36:10]
  • Lessons from strength training: failure as a prompt for growth [41:05]
  • More tips to sustain motivation longterm [44:19]
  • The importance of rest and recovery [46:45]
  • Why consideration of personal identity is important for all of us to show up authentically [52:28]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | K B Waters | YM Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-11.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

05 May 202228 Yoga Tools for Anxiety with Aisha Fakhro01:07:10

Anxiety is a normal response to life stress — until it isn’t. Today, host Rachel talks with Aisha Fakhro, a Bahrain-based UK-licensed psychotherapist and yoga teacher who specializes in working with anxiety, trauma, grief, stress management, and personal growth. In this episode, we learn more about anxiety and how yoga can help.

Aisha jokes that she could have a PhD in personal experience with anxiety. She shares how practicing and teaching yoga inspired her to study psychotherapy, by changing the way she, and her students, responded to stressors in their lives.

Aisha explains how the natural experience of anxiety can snowball, by both increasing our perception of danger in a given situation, and decreasing our belief in our capacity to handle it.
She unpacks a wide range of yoga tools and techniques that can help, and some of them may surprise you.

Listen in to learn what anxiety is, how the experience varies by person and situation, and the wide range of tools yoga practice offers to help us feel more empowered to manage it.

Show Notes:

  • What initially drew Aisha to the field of psychotherapy [3:25]
  • Aisha’s journey from “chasing shapes” to teaching yoga [5:40]
  • Defining anxiety [11:56]
  • Aisha’s personal experience of anxiety, including prenatal trauma [17:26]
  • Mindfulness breaks the negative feedback loop anxiety can create [18:34]
  • The role of psychotherapy versus other mental health professions [23:42]
  • Play as an antidote to anxiety [26:18]
  • Pranayama and tactile feedback for anxiety [31:29]
  • Movement as an outlet for anxiety [39:46]
  • Empowering students to take charge of their practice [42:07]
  • Balance poses and the capacity to handle wobbles in life [47:51]
  • Varied mindfulness techniques for anxiety [49:59]
  • Completing the stress cycle [54:41]
  • Aisha’s fake yawn trick [56:53]
  • Philosophical antidotes to anxiety [58:16]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-28.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

14 Apr 202225 Pelvic Health with Melissa Oleson, DPT, CDNT, INHC00:45:41

These days we all understand the importance of a strong and supple core, but sometimes forget that the pelvic floor is an integral part of that support system.

Today, we explore pelvic health with guest Melissa Oleson – a doctor of physical therapy and an Integrative Nutritional Health Coach as well as a registered yoga teacher. She is the founder of MSunn Yoga & Wellness, a mobile and virtual concierge physical therapy and wellness practice focused on helping people relieve pain, build strength, and gain mobility.

Melissa became passionate about pelvic health when she found that it was often the “missing link” that enabled her clients to fully recover from niggling injuries. In this episode, she provides a Pelvic Health 101, helping us to better understand pelvic floor function and disfunction. Melissa and host Rachel discuss how the chest, abdomen, and pelvis work together in harmony, and how we can benefit from building trust in our body’s inherent capacity to meet the demands that life offers.

Listen in to hear common pelvic health myths and misconceptions busted, why Kegel’s aren’t a cure-all, and all the ways that pelvic health relates to our overall wellbeing.

Show Notes:

  • Active aging as initial inspiration for a career in physical therapy [2:39]
  • Adding yoga to the picture [4:28]
  • The draw to a speciality in pelvic health [6:21]
  • The challenge of making pelvic health approachable [7:35]
  • Tips for yoga teachers starting out on YouTube [9:03]
  • Pelvic health and the relationship with the core and respiratory diaphragm [11:19]
  • Experiences of pelvic disfunction, including back paining hip pain [13:30]
  • Describing the pelvic floor and its many roles [15:41]
  • The surprising relationship between pelvic health and relaxation [17:24]
  • Favorite releases for the pelvic floor [20:10]
  • The link between the pelvic floor, stress and jaw clenching [21:01]
  • Busting common pelvic floor myths and misconceptions around the core [22:29]
  • Misconceptions around posture and the glutes [27:16]
  • Misconceptions around Kegels [30:31]
  • Favorite practices to connect with pelvic floor engagement [33.20]
  • Misconceptions around the pelvic floor and bladder control [35:34]
  • Thoughts on yoga cues that relate to the pelvic floor [37:23]
  • Upcoming classes on Yoga Medicine Online – including the link between the feet and pelvic floor [40.30]
  • The male pelvic floor [42:35]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-25.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

30 Jun 202236 Shoulder IQ: What, Why & How01:07:54

Our shoulders are something of an underdog, but just because the joints and muscles of the shoulders are less familiar than those of the hips or spine doesn’t mean they are less important. These under-appreciated joints have massive impact on our yoga practices and beyond.

Today hosts Tiffany and Rachel talk about the importance of the shoulders and share favorite practices for both mobility and stability. They explore how shoulder work can be key to unpacking neck and upper back issues, plus improving posture and breathing. They even discuss the more subtle impact of shoulders on confidence and self-esteem.

Listen in to learn how we can all benefit from being more aware of our shoulders, and more skillful in how we use them in yoga and daily life.

Show Notes:

  • The overall importance of the shoulder [3:22]
  • The challenge of learning to stabilize the shoulders for weight-bearing [5:29]
  • Shoulder work as a “side door” to neck and upper-back issues [8:15]
  • The impact of shoulder strength and mobility for older adults [16:20]
  • Shoulders: self-esteem, self-worth, emotion and connection [17:58]
  • Biomechanical impacts of the shoulders on breathing [22:09]
  • “Shoulders back and down” is not the answer for these mobile joints [25:12]
  • The nuanced issue of posture [29:05]
  • Curiosity around limited or challenging movements or positions [32:48]
  • How the shoulder shows up in yoga practice [36:33]
  • Chaturanga Dandasana: pros and cons, variations and alternatives [39:05]
  • Using the shoulders to create the “heart-opening” of backbends [48:35]
  • Favorite tools for active shoulder mobility [53:04]
  • Passive shoulder mobility work, including MFR and Yin [55:19]
  • Favorite shoulder strength and stability options [57:45]
  • Final considerations and key takeaways [1:02:23]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-36.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

13 Apr 202369 Yoga to End Human Trafficking: The Yoga Medicine Seva Foundation - Past, Present & Future01:07:26

Today host Tiffany talks with Amanda B. Cunningham, director of Yoga Medicine Seva Foundation, about human trafficking and the work of the Seva Foundation. This episode is a more personal, conversational chat about the nonprofit and what is important to us as yoga teachers. In this episode, we discuss the many ways that the organization has evolved over the years and the ins and outs of human trafficking.

Listen in to learn about our main projects, our favorite parts, and how you can support the cause.

Show Notes:

  • How the Yoga Medicine Seva Foundation (YMSF) began [1:46]
  • The evolution of YMSF [8:06]
  • What’s important to Yoga Medicine [19:00]
  • Understanding human trafficking [26:24]
  • Seva trips [38:11]
  • Ways to get involved with YMSF [47:10]
  • Breaking down black market professions [55:10]
  • Book recommendations on human trafficking [1:01:57]

Links Mentioned:

          Instagram | Her Future Coalition | Yoga Medicine Seva | Amanda B Cunningham

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-69.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5-star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

20 Apr 202370 Yoga & MFR: Fundamentals to Get the Most Out of Your Practice01:01:06

We've gone in depth in previous episodes on the topic of myofascial release or MFR, so today hosts Tiffany and Rachel take a step back to focus on the basics. In this episode, we give tips for implementing MFR in your practice, what to pay attention to, why we love it, how we use it, and how our practices have changed over the years. 

Listen in to learn what we love about myofascial release, common pitfalls, and tips for practicing MFR before, during, and after more traditional yoga practices.

Show Notes:

  • Tiffany’s background in MFR [3:49]
  • What’s to love about MFR [5:17]
  • Cultivating interoception and assess soft-tissue tension with MFR [7:08]
  • A tool for empowerment: self-regulation and self-soothing [10:56]
  • How our own MFR practice and teaching have changed over time [14:40]
  • Exploratory, invitational language is key for teachers of MFR [14:57]
  • Therapeutic use of MFR benefits from a one-on-one approach [18:16]
  • Tips for teachers introducing MFR [21:59]
  • MFR as a bridge to self-practice [23:13]
  • MFR as preparation for active yoga or movement practice [25:10]
  • MFR during active yoga practice [29:54]
  • MFR to down-regulate after active yoga practice [35:14]
  • MFR paired with Yin yoga [38:02]
  • Touching on acupressure points and MFR [40:41]
  • The impact of intention on MFR outcomes [43:10]
  • Favorite parts of the body for MFR [45:00]
  • Common pitfalls and cautions [49:41]
  • Key takeaways [56:45]
  • Further resources [58:39]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-70.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

28 Apr 202227 Fascia & Yoga - Research Update with Dr. Robert Schleip00:58:37

If you have been listening to this podcast, the chances are very high that you’ve heard a mention or two of today’s guest, Dr. Robert Schleip, the fascia research legend. His background in biology and psychology makes him the perfect person to speak with about his vast knowledge as it relates to yoga. In this episode, Dr. Schleip talks about the value of traditional yoga practices in the modern world, discusses how our connective tissue plays a role in different elements of the yoga practice, and takes you on a tour through current fascia research highlights.

Listen in to find out what kinds of movements make your fascial tissues happy and how your genetics may influence how mobile you are.

Show Notes:

  • Dr. Robert Schleip’s background [1:31]
  • Value of traditional yoga practice today [3:03]
  • Effects of long slow stretching on fascia and wound healing [9:41]
  • What types of movement the modern mover should incorporate into their yoga practice [13:14]
  • Fascia’s elastic recoil capacity [15:12]
  • Benefits of compressive loading and cardio-vascular input [17:20]
  • Why yoga may not be a perfect fit for some [19:32]
  • Genetic and female hormonal aspects of fascial tissue stiffness [23:44]
  • Effects of hot yoga on fascial tissue [28:50]
  • Yoga as a whole-system approach [34:00]
  • Recent studies on fascia relevant for yoga [36:35]
  • The importance of mindful attention in yoga [41:23]
  • Recent studies on fascia and nerves [43:37]
  • Dr. Robert Schleip’s current inspirations [52:26]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-27.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

07 Nov 2024122 Estrogen Effects on Muscle: Research Roundup00:40:45

Today hosts Tiffany and Katja discuss recent research on estrogen’s effects on muscle. This is a hot topic at the moment, so in this episode, we share the importance of understanding the background of our hormones and the effect of estrogen on areas like muscle mass, neuromuscular activation, and recovery.

Listen in to learn how the effects of estrogen are being studied in research and the different ways that estrogen impacts our muscular tissues.

Show Notes:

  • Background on estrogen’s relationship with fascia and tissue [1:59]
  • How is the effect of estrogen on muscle being studied [3:31]
  • Different types of estrogen [8:38]
  • Impact of estrogen on muscles specifically [9:43]
  • Importance of individuality when working with women’s bodies [16:29]
  • Impact of estrogen on strength on a molecular level [19:03]
  • Ways that estrogen impacts recovery [24:26]
  • Takeaways [33:41]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga | Yoga Medicine® Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-122.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

13 Jan 202212 Hip Mobility, how much is enough?01:03:02

Hip mobility is a hot topic on social media and in the movement world, seeming to generate strong opinions as to whether extreme range of motion is good or bad for us. So in today’s episode, Tiffany and Rachel unpack what is considered “normal” range of motion for the hip joint and its application in daily activities. They discuss the potential implications of significant limitations in hip mobility, as well as those of extreme mobility. They cover the difference between muscle tension and bony end range, and explore the roles of passive versus active range of motion.

Listen in to hear how gaining neurologic control of your mobility, and perhaps even losing some of your end range, could help you feel better in your body, and the value of viewing hip mobility not as an end goal, but through the context of how you would like your hips to function in a yoga context and beyond.

Show Notes:

  • What is considered “normal” range of motion in hip flexion [3:15]
  • Functional range of motion will differ for each of us [8:10]
  • Implications of significant limitations in hip flexion [8:43]
  • “Normal” range of motion in hip extension [11.02]
  • The role of individual bony structure in range of motion [13:11]
  • Hip extension in daily life, and implications of significant limitations in hip extension [13:51]
  • Extreme hip range of motion after hip replacement [15:33]
  • Hip abduction [16:45]
  • Hip adduction [18:19]
  • Stability is key for the IT band, the Yin & Yang of yoga and running [18:51]
  • Hip external rotation [23:06]
  • How our fascia adapts to repeated loading; implications for mobility [25:20]
  • Hip internal rotation [28:01]
  • Differentiating bony limitations from muscle tension at end range [29:06]
  • Control over our mobility: passive versus active range of motion [31:13]
  • Active range of motion and improved neurologic control, and the value of cross-training [35:14]
  • Implications of big gaps between active and passive range [36:47]
  • Can there be value in decreasing our passive range of motion? [40:42]
  • Assessing hip mobility in the context of the demands of our individual lives [47:01]
  • Suggestions from research on extremes in hip range of motion [53:50]
  • Conclusions and take-away points [56:47]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-12.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

17 Nov 202251 Breast Cancer & Yoga: Expert Insights with Breast Cancer Surgeon Doreen Wiggins MD00:48:34

Today host Rachel talks to Breast Cancer Surgeon Doreen Wiggins MD about yoga and breast cancer. In this episode, Dr. Wiggins helps us to better understand our breast cancer risk and shares some simple actions that we can take to reduce that risk. She also explains what steps we can take to improve the potential outcome of cancer treatment if we are diagnosed with cancer and shares how we can modify our yoga practice to better suit our needs both before and during cancer treatment.

Listen to this episode to learn how yoga can reduce your risk of cancer, tips for identifying lymphedema warning signs in yoga students, and how the lymphatic system is like the Cinderella system of the body.

Show Notes:

  • Current statistics on breast cancer [3:33]
  • Risk levels for breast cancer [4:47]
  • Preventing breast cancer [8:33]
  • Defining hormone-positive breast cancers [12:50]
  • Exercises to ward off breast cancer [15:40]
  • How can yoga reduce the risk of cancer [17:47]
  • Yoga during cancer treatment [20:24]
  • Asana during cancer treatment [25:50]
  • Tips for yoga practice before and after radiation therapy [32:26]
  • Managing the fear of cancer recurrence with yoga [34:33]
  • Understanding lymphodema [38:59]
  • Tips for yoga teachers identifying lymphedema warning signs [41:13]
  • Doreen’s takeaways [44:04]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-51.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

22 Jun 202377 Restorative Yoga Essentials00:57:03

In our busy lives, it can be challenging to allow ourselves to truly rest, but there are potent benefits to be gained when we do. So today hosts Tiffany and Rachel dive into the stillness and quiet of restorative yoga.

In this episode, we outline the key characteristics of restorative yoga and how they work to soothe the nervous system and offer an antidote to stress. We discuss who restorative yoga is for, how to navigate its most common challenges, and how it compares to Yin yoga.

Listen in to hear about the unique benefits of restorative yoga inversions and our tips on how to get started in a restorative yoga practice.

Show Notes:

  • Common elements of restorative yoga: nervous system focus, long holds, supportive props [2:39]
  • Common elements of restorative yoga: low levels of sensation [5:55]
  • Restorative yoga as an antidote to stress [7:51]
  • A flexible definition of restorative yoga [10:14]
  • Savasana as our most familiar restorative posture [12:36]
  • Who is restorative yoga for? [14:02]
  • Restorative yoga for better sleep [18:38]
  • Comparing restorative and Yin yoga [22:51]
  • Challenges of restorative yoga: adjusting to less stimulus [26:46]
  • Challenges of restorative yoga: making peace with imperfection [28:33]
  • Tips for restorative yoga beginners [31:17]
  • In a busy life, restorative yoga can feel inefficient [36:08]
  • Is there such a thing as too much restorative yoga? [39:33]
  • The benefits of restorative inversions [43:33]
  • Home substitutions for common restorative yoga props [45:57]
  • How to get started with restorative yoga and Yoga Medicine resources [50:44]
  • Reaping the benefits: frequency over duration [53:48]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-77.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

03 Aug 202382 Building a Healthy Relationship with Social Media01:07:11

Today hosts Tiffany and Rachel talk about building a healthy relationship with social media. These platforms have become a ubiquitous facet of our lives, so in this episode, we examine the way we use social media as yoga students and teachers.

We discuss the pros of social media, like its capacity to help us connect with other people, the sense of community it can create, and the resource-sharing capabilities it allows for. We also talk about some of social media’s trickier topics like dealing with negativity, the futility of chasing the algorithm, and engaging with misinformation.

Listen in as we explain how we can better balance our time on social media and find ways to embrace its benefits.

Show Notes:

  • Is there a secret to social media success that you’re missing? [1:25]
  • Do you need a large social media following to support your teaching? [3:43]
  • Deciding what to post [6:07]
  • The futility of chasing the algorithm [16:33]
  • Deciding who to follow and engage with [18:41]
  • Negative experiences with social media [23:34]
  • Balancing time on social media and engaging with misinformation [32:01]
  • Social media tips for yoga teachers [39:40]
  • Is it still possible to build a teaching business through social media? [53:35]
  • Tiffany’s start on social media, and playing the long game [56:00]
  • Social media as a global community builder [59:01]
  • The upcoming Yoga Medicine Innovation Conference [1:00:00]
  • Final takeaways on building a healthy relationship with social media [1:03:02]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-82.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

29 Sep 202244 Expert Insights: Eat Breathe Thrive - Yoga and Eating Disorders with Chelsea Roff01:08:29

Messages around “clean” eating and ideal body shape or size are ubiquitous, even in the yoga world, with potentially devastating impact for those who experience disordered eating.

Today host Rachel speaks with Chelsea Roff, who found her way to yoga early in her recovery from a serious eating disorder. Chelsea went on to become a scientific researcher and yoga teacher, eventually bringing her skills and experience together to become the Founder and Director of Eat Breathe Thrive: a non-profit organization aiming to prevent and help people recover from eating disorders.

Today Chelsea shares her definition of eating disorders and describes the wide range of people who can experience them. We discuss the process of redefining your relationship with food, debunk the myth that there is a single way that a healthy body should look, and unpack how yoga practice can help us learn how to truly feel what we feel.

Listen in to learn what constitutes disordered eating and how yoga can help with both prevention and recovery.

Show Notes:

  • Chelsea’s professional background in scientific research [4:20]
  • Chelsea’s own recovery from an eating disorder [7:43]
  • The start of Chelsea’s relationship with yoga [9:58]
  • Pivoting from researcher to yoga teacher [12:08]
  • Defining disordered eating on a spectrum [16:13]
  • Eating disorder recovery and yoga [20:51]
  • The learned skill of interoception [25:44]
  • Appreciating the body for more than its appearance [28:24]
  • Regulating our internal state [30:48]
  • Lessons from yoga philosophy [37:17]
  • An unorthodox start for the non-profit Eat Breathe Thrive [41:27]
  • The power of sharing our stories [49:38]
  • Advice for yoga teachers working within our scope on eating disorders [51:11]
  • Yoga as a double-edged sword in eating disorder recovery [55:40]
  • A final takeaway from Chelsea: celebrate impermanence [1:02:06]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-44.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

26 Sep 2024119 Body Image in Yoga: Community Conversations with Alison Heilig01:11:35

We all deserve to feel good in our bodies, but when we have negative perceptions of how our body looks, feels, or functions that experience can seem impossible.

Today host Rachel talks with returning guest Alison Heilig about the sometimes sneaky ways body image manifests in yoga. In this episode, we discuss how body image forms and the different ways negative body image can show up - including the perpetual optimization of health and demonization of the aging process. We also touch on implications for gender conformity and advocate normalizing diversity in ability and appearance in yoga classes. We share our tips on how yoga teachers can provide positive embodiment experiences, ensuring that body image isn’t what stops our students practicing.

Listen in as we talk about the good, the bad, and the ugly of body image.

Show Notes:

  • Defining body image, and why it matters more in yoga than you think [3:05]
  • How does body image form [7:33]
  • Personal experiences of poor body image [8:58}
  • The added impacts of social media, photoshop, filters & AI [12:50]
  • Body image challenges through life; perceptions of aging [14:39]
  • The surprising ways poor body image can manifest [16:40]
  • Orthorexia, perpetual optimization & the medicalization of body image [20:00]
  • Implications in yoga [24:59]
  • How yoga teachers can foster more positive body awareness [30:58]
  • Tips on teaching groups [39:45]
  • Advice for individuals & the slow journey to positive body image [53:33]
  • The conversation continues: Fit Bottomed Girls [1:02:26]
  • Final thoughts & key takeaways [1:08:04]

Links Mentioned:

         Facebook | Instagram | Alison Heilig | Yoga Medicine Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-119.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

08 Sep 202241 Community Conversations: The Hidden Benefits of Yin Yoga with Shannon Stephens00:56:38

We have mentioned Yin yoga in previous episodes of this podcast within the context of flexibility and fascial health. Today host Rachel talks with yoga teacher and educator Shannon Stephens about the more hidden or secret benefits of Yin yoga that can transform our lives.

In this episode, Shannon shares how the Yin practice creates the quiet space and time lacking in modern life — inviting us to get to know ourselves, recalibrating our senses to more subtle settings, and forcing us to sit and stay with whatever comes up, including boredom.

Listen in as Shannon explores the many ways Yin can teach us how to respond rather than react — both in yoga and in our daily lives.

Show Notes:

  • Shannon’s early experience with Yin replenishing depletion [3:30]
  • An observer’s seat for changing sensation [5:50]
  • Sharpening our inner awareness [8:30]
  • Teaching interoception with open-ended questions [12:26]
  • The “Goldilocks zone” of sitting in conversation with discomfort [16:09]
  • Highlighting the individual nature of a Yin practice [19:12]
  • The magic ingredient of time and the power to stay [22:42]
  • Holding space for surrender [26:25]
  • A gateway to and container for meditation [28:42]
  • Tactile experience of impermanence [30:12]
  • Feeling the subtle body: TCM meridian lines and elements [32:11]
  • Opening to self-care and self-compassion [36:52]
  • Yin as a connecting force [39:29]
  • Finding sacredness in the mundane and the privilege of boredom [43:19]
  • Learning to respond rather than react [47:42]
  • Final thoughts and favorite YMO practices from Shannon [51:42]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | This Land YogaYM Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-41.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

12 May 202229 Stretching: The Myths & the Research01:07:29

When it comes to stretching, many things have gone in and out of style. There are still plenty of myths and misconceptions out there and there is still a lot we don’t know. To complicate matters even further, stretching is one of the more confusing areas of research because the terminology, application, and even results in stretching studies vary greatly.

In this episode, hosts Tiffany and Katja talk about the myths and the research on stretching, different types of stretching, using stretching before or after exercise or yoga, and how stretching really is a whole body affair.

Listen in to learn when to incorporate stretching into your fitness routine, how to better analyze new research on stretching, what tissues are actually targeted when we stretch, and how our nerve tissues can limit range of motion.

Show Notes:

  • Major types of stretching [3:19]
  • Tips for analyzing stretching research [5:31]
  • The lingering debate over benefits of static stretching [9:38]
  • Frequency and volume of stretching and range of motion [13:12]
  • Static stretching duration and sports performance [20:47]
  • What tissues do actually give us the sensation of a stretch? [28:01]
  • How nerve tissues can limit range of motion [37:49]
  • Aspects of aging and stretching [40:00]
  • Longer stretches, inflammation, and hydration of tissues [45:00]
  • Myofascial release as it relates to range of motion [46:45]
  • How to support athletes [53:04]
  • Stretching and arterial stiffness [56:39]
  • Stretching as a whole-system affair [62:10]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-29.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

25 Apr 2024108 Integrating New Tools in your Teaching: Teacher's Series00:35:36

Coming home from another yoga teacher training, full of new information and techniques to utilize, can be exciting…and also overwhelming.

In today’s episode, hosts Tiffany and Rachel talk about how to integrate all the tools you learn in training in a way that is meaningful for your students. In this episode, we stress the importance of a slow and steady approach guided by clarity of purpose for each class.

Listen in to learn how to incorporate new material and when to use which teaching tools in both group classes and when working with students one-on-one.

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Show Notes:

 

  • The challenge of integrating new information into classes in a meaningful way [1:33]
  • Focus on one area of content at a time, in practice and teaching [4:31]
  • The importance of setting and meeting student expectations [9:30]
  • “Drip-feed” new content or techniques into your teaching [12:10]
  • Creating classes for the students who come back [16:41]
  • Using a class series to introduce new content gradually [18:36]
  • Combining techniques in group classes versus one-to-one [22:05]
  • A real-world example [28:58]
  • Summing up: simplicity, clarity, repetition, patience, and individuality [31:26]

---

Links Mentioned:

 

 

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-108.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

01 Dec 202253 Favorite Takeaways & Recaps – Our One Year Celebration00:43:47

As the year comes to a close, hosts Tiffany, Rachel, and Katja take a look back at some of their top takeaways from the first year of the Yoga Medicine Podcast.

After 52 episodes—sharing information at the intersection of science and research, individual experience, and traditional practices that have stood the test of time—the three hosts share their favorite topics, guests, and episodes, as well as their thoughts on repeated themes that have emerged.

Show Notes:

  • Opportunities to connect with our community and receive feedback [3:18]
  • The joy of researching to prepare for each topic [4:55]
  • Debunking myths and misconceptions [6:39]
  • Favorite episodes of the podcast so far [9:38]
  • Curating a balance of evidence-based and personal or experiential approaches [17:31]
  • Curiosity as the most central repeated theme of the podcast so far [21:21]
  • Frequency over duration: the power of consistency [25:27]
  • Key areas where small changes lead to big outcomes eg sleep, stress management [29:31]
  • Simple is potent [31:41]
  • The power of perception, intention and the language we use [32:23]
  • Individual variation and the magic of listening [34:57]
  • “From one rabbit hole to another”: final thoughts and future episodes [39:24]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-53.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

15 Feb 2024103 Teacher Training Myths: Community Conversations with Dana Diament00:58:02

The mention of yoga teacher training conjures up a bundle of images and ideas, many of which are inaccurate or at least incomplete. So today host Rachel talks with returning guest Dana Diament, lead teacher of the Yoga Medicine 200hr Teacher Training, about common misconceptions and misunderstandings about yoga training.

In this episode, we discuss what personal qualities are (and aren’t) important for aspiring yoga teachers and unpack the realities of the training experience and how you might feel afterward.

If you have been wondering if you should embark on yoga teacher training, this episode is for you.

Show Notes:

  • Myth #1: All yoga teachers must be… (pick your adjective) [2:21]
  • Who should do a yoga teacher training? [2:22]
  • Being yourself when teaching yoga [5:31]
  • Charisma and comfort speaking to a group [12:07]
  • Myth #2: Yoga must be all you do and care about [17:51]
  • Myth #3: There’s only one pathway to teaching yoga [20:13]
  • Myth #4: Yoga training is all about personal transformation [25:46]
  • Myth #5: All yoga teacher trainings are the same [31:30]
  • Myth #6: Yoga teacher training is fun and easy [35:48]
  • Myth #7: You won’t be nervous to teach after teacher training [41:19]
  • Myth #8: You’ll know everything about yoga [44:16]
  • Myth #9: You’ll feel confident and complete as a teacher [48:02]
  • Key takeaways [52:34]
  • Yoga Medicine 200hr Teacher Training options for 2024 [55:27]

Links Mentioned:

         Facebook | Instagram | Yoga Medicine Online | Raia Collective

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-103.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

30 Mar 202367 Hyaluronan, Fascia & Yoga: Research Roundup00:58:14

Today hosts Tiffany and Katja are back for another research roundup, this time on hyaluronic acid or hyaluronan. This molecule is not only used in face creams but also helps to create tissue properties related to the slide and glide between tissue layers. In this episode, we talk about where it is found in the body, how it is produced, and how it is affected by bodily movement. 

Listen in to learn how hyaluronan works, how it relates to the yoga practice, and why it's important for our lives.

Show Notes:

  • Main attributes of hyaluronan [3:24]
  • Fasciacytes and other cells that produce hyaluronan [9:21]
  • The many functions of hyaluronan [14:46]
  • The process of recycling hyaluronic acid in the body [16:12]
  • How the length and weight of hyaluronan molecules affect function [17:29]
  • Self-aggregation/densification of hyaluronan [21:05]
  • Factors affecting self-aggregation: mechanical force and temperature [24:05]
  • How movement affects hyaluronan [25:34]
  • Understanding hyaluronan as a yoga teacher [33:16]
  • Biochemical milieu (local pH) and hyaluronan [38:05]
  • Densification, fibrosis, and hyaluronan [43:27]
  • Diagnostic challenges with hyaluronan [46:32]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga | Yoga Medicine® Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-67.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

03 Mar 202219 Fascia and Pain00:56:52

Today Tiffany and Katja take a look at the cutting-edge new topic of fascia and pain. Pain is complex and recent research is showing just how relevant the fascial tissue is when we’re looking at pain. In this episode, Katja shares the findings of the latest research on changes in fascia that can contribute to pain.

The pair discuss the difference between pain in the fascia versus pain in muscle tissues and potential causes of fascial pain. They also touch on how other aspects such as the lymphatic system and lifestyle factors relate to inflammation, pain, and the fascial system.

Listen in to learn about the anatomy and physiology of fascia and pain, how it happens, and ways you can potentially intervene.

Show Notes:

  • Why it’s important to differentiate pain in fascia versus muscle [3:37]
  • Unpacking delayed onset muscle soreness pain [8:45]
  • The complexity of pain [9:52]
  • Causes of fascial pain [12:49]
  • Macroscopic changes in fascia that can contribute to pain [13:37]
  • Microscopic changes in fascia that can contribute to pain [17:42]
  • Role of innervation in fascial pain [24:38]
  • Innervation of fascia and low back pain [25:18]
  • How innervation changes with inflammation [28:37]
  • Vascular and lymphatic system and their role in inflammation and pain [31:40]
  • Causes of hypersensitivity to pain [35:28]
  • Changes in the tension of the fascial system as it relates to pain [38:48]
  • How psychology and lifestyle may affect inflammation [47:51]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-19.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

16 Jun 202234 Live YOUR Life with Kathryn Budig. Bravery, Balance, Body Positivity and Celebrating Pride Month!00:56:10

Many of us feel the weight of others’ expectations to look, speak, or feel a certain way. But perhaps if we were able to be more fully ourselves, as yoga teachers we could then create spaces that welcome our students to do the same.

Today’s episode is a warm and heartfelt conversation between Tiffany and long-time friend, Kathryn Budig. Kathryn is a shining example of following her own compass in work and in life. Building on almost two decades as an internationally recognized yoga teacher, author, and podcaster, Kathryn has created a unique online community that celebrates shared passions for yoga and meditation, inclusion and representation, rituals, recipes, and diving deep into a great book.

Tiffany and Kathryn explore how things can change through the course of a long friendship—like our definition of success, the nature of our physical practice, and our ever-changing relationship with our bodies. The conversation dives into the nuance behind hashtags like “body positivity” and “self love”, celebrates the value of wisdom over short-term relevance, and weighs the pros and cons of social media given its power as a tool to reach marginalized communities.

Reflecting on Pride month, Kathryn shares her thoughts on queer representation in yoga and reminds us of the power of stepping outside our comfort zone into curiosity.

Show Notes:

  • What it means to truly create community in the yoga world [03:11]
  • Releasing external metrics to craft a personal definition of success [06:09]
  • Reinvention in the face of others’ expectations [11:25]
  • Celebrating wisdom versus the pressure to “stay relevant” [14:01]
  • Pros and cons of the Covid era for yoga teachers [18:25]
  • The evolution of Kathryn’s yoga practice [21:44]
  • Complex conversations around body positivity in yoga [24:04]
  • The illusion of constant “self love” [33:38]
  • Loving and hating social media [37:14]
  • Queer representation matters [41:20]
  • What Pride Month means to Kathryn [46:20]
  • Being an ally to the LGBTQ+ community [50:01]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-34.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

30 Jan 2025128 Personal Practice Tips00:47:46

Many of us kick off the new year ready to commit (or recommit) to a dedicated personal yoga practice. But as the days and weeks pass, this commitment can start to run out of steam. So today hosts Tiffany and Rachel share their personal practice tips as well as things that have been particularly helpful in keeping their practice going over the years. We emphasize the importance of flexibility of mind and how we can change our lens to turn needs into likes. 

Listen in to learn how to build a realistic personal practice that supports you. 

Show Notes:

  • Why personal practice matters, for teachers and students [3:07]
  • What constitutes a personal practice? [12:37]
  • Being honest with yourself about what is and isn’t yoga practice [23:19]
  • Does frequency on the mat matter? [27:28]
  • Should we prioritize needs or wants? [33:20]
  • Does your personal practice have to be self-guided? [37:38]
  • Takeaways & more tips [38:51]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-128.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

11 May 202372 Counter Compassion Fatigue: Expert Insights with Rashmi Bismark, MD MPH00:56:10

Compassion itself is vast and inexhaustible but for those who care for others, systemic factors, secondary traumatic stress and cumulative overwhelm can become barriers to being able to express it fully and freely. 

Today host Rachel talks about compassion fatigue with returning guest Rashmi Bismark. In this episode, we discuss the importance of preventative self-care for caregivers and how even simple rituals can create structured ways to acknowledge the burdens of care. We also talk about the value of being in community with others and why we should be reminding ourselves of the ways in which we are all connected.

Listen in to this episode as we explore what compassion fatigue is, who it impacts, how it differs from regular burnout, and what we can do to counter its effects.

Show Notes:

  • Secondary trauma and the role of detachment in health professionals [4:50]
  • Defining compassion and compassion fatigue [7:33]
  • Compassion fatigue versus burnout [11:26]
  • Compassion fatigue is not a failure or lack of compassion [14:40]
  • Summing up who is most commonly impacted [16:45]
  • Signs and symptoms of compassion fatigue [17:41]
  • Recognizing compassion fatigue in ourselves [19:40]
  • Don’t wait for systemic issues to be resolved [21:47]
  • Addressing compassion fatigue: a three-part approach [23:27]
  • Finding structured ways to recognize and acknowledge grief and other burdens [28:19]
  • Tools from yoga and mindfulness traditions [30:35]
  • The power of acting in community [34:50]
  • Fierce compassion and creating sustainable boundaries [37:27]
  • “What will nourish me?”: the power of explicit kindness to ourselves [40:29]
  • Clarifying your intentions as a helper or healer and exploring “compassion satisfaction” [42:37]
  • Summing up with the metaphor of a ghee lamp [46:02]
  • Further resources [51:58]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | R S Bismark MD | Yoga Medicine Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-72.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

04 Jul 2024113 Tissue Stiffness - Friend or Foe?00:51:41

Today hosts Tiffany and Katja discuss a topic near and dear to Katja: tissue stiffness. Claims about terms like stiffness and tension in the body can be confusing, so our goal with this episode is to clear up some of that confusion as well as leave some space for what we do not know yet. In this episode, we talk about terminology and physiology around tissue stiffness. We also talk about factors that influence stiffness and if stiffness is a friend or foe when it comes to athletic performance, injury risk, and disease of the musculoskeletal system.

Listen in to learn more about common tissue stiffness misconceptions, potential applications, and future learning.

Show Notes:

  • Common misconceptions [2:27]
  • Stiffness terminology [4:22]
  • Factors that influence stiffness [12:40]
  • The role of the nervous system in tissue stiffness [16:21]
  • Athletic performance and stiffness [19:09]
  • Is more stiffness always better? [25:07]
  • Assessing stiffness [30:50]
  • Range of motion versus tissue stiffness [44:51]
  • Takeaways [48:26]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga | Yoga Medicine® Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-113.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

04 May 202371 More Controversial Yoga Cues01:02:10

Today hosts Rachel and Tiffany continue the conversation we started in Episode 56, exploring controversial yoga cues. There is so much to say on the topic, so we are back with a second episode to unpack when these familiar cues are useful (and when they aren’t), the potential downside of protective cues, and the one yoga cue that Rachel hates.

Show Notes:

  • Even the best cues don’t always translate across cultures [2:42]
  • “Shoulders back and down” [4:05]
  • Cueing based on specific intention instead of a laundry list approach [12:30]
  • “Soften your glutes” versus “Squeeze your glutes” in backbends [14:19]
  • “Turn your back foot out 45 degrees” and alternatives [25:35]
  • “Wrap your elbows in” versus taking elbows wide for wheel pose [31:12]
  • “Hug your elbows against your sides” in Chaturanga [38:02]
  • “Stack your elbows over your wrists”: mechanical disadvantage in Chaturanga [40:25]
  • Tips for teaching Chaturanga in group classes [43:10]
  • “Flex your foot to protect your knee” and the pros and cons of protective cues [46:39]
  • “Full expression of the pose” and “If you can’t…” cues [52:39]
  • “Breathe into your belly” or “Diaphragmatic breath” [54:27]
  • “Breathe loud enough your neighbor can hear you” or “Darth Vader breath”: cueing Ujjayi breath [56:54]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-71.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes, or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5-star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

10 Mar 202220 Health & Healing with Aisa Locsin00:56:09

Have you ever stopped to consider what health is or what it truly means to be healthy in the context of your own life? Thanks to the upheaval of the pandemic, plus a recent injury, today’s guest Aisa Locsin has been forced to.

Aisa’s lifelong love of moving, especially outdoors, lead to her challenging her body in a wide variety of athletic pursuits. She brought the same attitude to her yoga practice and her teaching.

In this episode, she talks with Rachel about the challenges she has faced during the pandemic, including a serious foot injury that forced her to reassess her perception of health and healing in despite years of experience working one-on-one with individuals experiencing joint dysfunction and pain.

In sharing her personal story, Aisa also shares how she was able to turn a difficult time into one of growth, learning through her injury the true power of treating herself and others with deeper compassion. Listen in to learn why movement is medicine, but how slowing down allows us to also learn from moments of stillness and silence.

Show Notes:

  • Aisa’s introduction to yoga practice, and opening a studio [3:43]
  • Teaching yoga and Aisa’s introduction to Yoga Medicine [10:33]
  • The importance of outdoor movement [16:23]
  • The impact of the pandemic [19:30]
  • An athlete’s mindset helps Aisa through the pandemic [24:05]
  • Derailed by injury [32:21]
  • Starting from scratch – a humbling new perspective of healing [38:37]
  • Helping those healing: the value of clear communication and compassion [42:12]
  • Healing the body also asks us to heal the heart and mind [45:33]
  • Learning from nature: healing in your hometown [47:24]
  • Aisa’s advice for health and healing [51:20]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-20.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

24 Oct 2024121 Yoga Sutras for Modern Life: Community Conversations with Diane Malaspina PhD00:54:34

We all know that yoga is much more than a physical practice; it is underpinned by a framework of philosophy that is centuries old. But as a yoga teacher, you may or may not have incorporated this theoretical understanding into daily action - or helped your students do so. 

So today we talk about the practical application of some key yoga sutras with returning guest Diane Malaspina PhD. In this episode, Diane helps host Rachel appreciate how three of Patanjali's sutras apply to the challenges we face in daily modern life. 

Listen in as we discuss the balancing act we must manage to realize any important long term goals, and how self-compassion can be a powerful tool for connection.

Show Notes:

  • Defining the yoga sutras [3:16]
  • What yoga philosophy teaches us about the nature of life [6:58]
  • Committed practice (abhyasa) & non-attachment (vairagya) [10:54]
  • Rolf Gates’ definition of abhyasa [14:35]
  • Another definition of sutras 1:12-1:16 – “Trust the Process” [19:42]
  • Ahimsa as a counter to fear & polarization [30:36]
  • The change begins with us; self-compassion leads to connection [35:07]
  • Boundaries as a sustainable balance to Ahimsa [48:15]
  • More resources & Diane’s Yoga Medicine courses [51:02]

Links Mentioned:

         Facebook | Instagram | Diane Malaspina

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-121.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

05 Dec 2024124 Yoga Studio Owner Panel: Community Conversations00:54:55

Despite several years of upheaval and uncertainty, grassroots yoga studios are still the beating heart of many communities world-wide, so today Rachel hosts a panel of yoga studio owners to discuss the current state of studio life across the globe.

In this episode, we explore what has changed over the past few years, what studios are struggling with today, and what seems to be working well. Common themes emerge around the difficulty of finding a class schedule and pricing strategy that work for everyone, maximizing teacher fulfillment and consistency, balancing regular classes with special events, and building lasting relationships with the wider community.

Listen in to this episode to hear what has changed in yoga studios since the pandemic, and what to look forward to in the future. Things don’t have to be the way they were before.

Show Notes:

  • How things have changed: online vs in-person, classes vs other offerings [2:46]
  • Biggest struggles: teacher consistency, scheduling, managing special events [10:38]
  • What’s working well: variety & choice, price packages, community relationships [19:19]
  • Looking to the future: things don’t have to be the way they were before [42:41]
  • Final thoughts [51:49]

Links Mentioned:

Instagram | Facebook | Bubble Yoga

    • Ashley Gudknecht:

Instagram | Facebook | Gud Yoga

    • Dana Diament:

Instagram | Facebook | Lennox Yoga

    • Lisa Hamre:

Instagram | Facebook | My Yoga Room

    • Rachel Workman:

Instagram | Facebook | Longview Yoga Wellness

    • Shannon Stephens:

Instagram | Facebook | This Land Yoga

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-124.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

27 Oct 202248 Research Roundup: Female Hormones01:00:24

Today hosts Katja and Tiffany discuss the empowerment that comes with an understanding of female hormones and their fluctuation through the menstrual cycle. Yoga encourages this deeper personal investigation and can also provide support and relief to the body as it moves through the phases of the menstrual cycle and life. In this episode, Katja and Tiffany talk about the various factors that affect the menstrual cycle, how this cycle affects our physical and cognitive function, and what happens during each phase.

Listen in to learn about how female hormones influence our muscles and fascial tissues, how yoga can provide relief for menstrual discomfort, and why education surrounding this topic is sorely lacking and yet, so valuable.

Show Notes:

  • The status quo of the discussion around female hormones [2:15]
  • The period as start of the cycle [7:00]
  • Yoga relief and exercises for menstrual cramps [10:30]
  • What happens during the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle [13:11]
  • How follicles produce estrogen [15:54]
  • Implications of the higher estrogen phase for muscle tissue [17:54]
  • Female reproductive hormones and fascial tissues [20:15]
  • The menstrual cycle and cognitive function [27:15]
  • Life phases when cycle tracking can be tricky [28:15]
  • What happens around ovulation [33:33]
  • Overview of the second part of the cycle [37:10]
  • TCM, sports science and the menstrual cycle [40:27]
  • Why progesterone is a brilliant hormone [44:46]
  • Education surrounding the menstrual cycle [48:09]
  • Exercises for hormonal shifts [54:50]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga | YM Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-48.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

10 Feb 202216 Improve Your Sleep with Amy Sedgwick, MD, FACEP01:03:58

Let’s dive into the world of sleep and its effects on our physical and mental health. Today’s guest, Dr. Amy Sedgwick, is a board-certified and practicing emergency physician and a yoga and meditation teacher – putting her in the perfect position to help us unpack the importance of sleep duration and quality from varied perspectives.

In this episode, Amy and Rachel talk about how she found her calling and how both her colleagues and her patients benefit from healthy stress relief outlets like yoga and meditation. Amy shares tips for falling asleep, staying asleep, and getting high-quality sleep even when your personal life is hectic. She also talks about how to find the tools that work for you and why we should trust our “earth suits” over the latest trends in sleep science.

Listen in to learn the negative effects of poor sleep quality or duration over the long-term, why Amy sleeps in the cold, and ways to honor your natural sleep rhythms.

Show Notes:

  • How Amy found her way to emergency medicine [6:26]
  • Processing the stress and tragedy of emergency medical work [7:52]
  • The Yin & Yang of Amy’s yoga journey [9:07]
  • The underrated impact of recovery [11:55]
  • Self-care for health workers [12:37]
  • The call to teach yoga [14:35]
  • Navigating a career in the ER with being a yoga teacher and studio owner [19:02]
  • Effects of insufficient sleep quality or duration over the long-term [24:10]
  • Honoring natural, seasonal rhythms [30:12]
  • Human sleep cycles and REM vs non-REM sleep [31:55]
  • How do we know if we have slept well? [33:13]
  • Tips for better sleep duration and quality [35:45]
  • How alcohol and late meals affect sleep [37:23]
  • Evening wind-down routines, electronics and blue light [39:30]
  • Blue light and sleep – evening vs morning practices [43:24]
  • Morning routines also impact sleep quality and duration [44:13]
  • Tips for people who wake up in the middle of the night [49:20]
  • Mitigating the impact of periods of low sleep quality [53:01]
  • Final thoughts, including sleep trackers [57:57]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-16.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

28 Oct 202101 Welcome to the Yoga Medicine Podcast!00:19:11

Welcome to the very first episode of Yoga Medicine! In this inaugural episode, Tiffany Cruikshank and Rachel Land discuss why they started this journey together, what to expect from the Yoga Medicine podcast, and how to get the most out of your yoga practice and your life.

Both women train yoga teachers to really understand the body and, with this podcast, they hope to dive deeper into topics that you can’t cover in a traditional yoga class. This podcast is really about the intersection of science and research with traditional practices and our personal experiences.

Show Notes:

  • What to expect from the Yoga Medicine podcast [1:00]
  • Our mission and who this podcast is for [2:00]
  • Some benefits & perks of yoga [7:30]
  • Preview of what’s to come [9:45]
  • What are our plans for the Yoga Medicine Podcast [15:30]
  • How often Yoga Medicine will air [16:30]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-01.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

03 Feb 202215 Shifting Persistent Pain with Marnie Hartman, DPT, CSCS01:12:22

In today’s episode, we unpack persistent pain with Marnie Hartman. Marnie has a doctorate in physical therapy and is a certified strength and conditioning coach as well as being a yoga teacher, putting her in a unique position to help us understand pain, particularly lasting or persistent pain, from varied perspectives.

Marnie talks to Rachel about some of the myths and misconceptions around pain. She explains how the experience of pain is an output of the nervous system rather than an input, making it highly individual, and how that knowledge can inform the yoga techniques we use in pain care. She offers a range of suggestions on how we can work with pain in a more caring and compassionate way, whether it’s our own or that of others, by harnessing the power of curiosity and playfulness.

Listen in to learn how pain works and how we can work with it.

Show Notes:

  • Marnie’s journey from physical therapist to yoga teacher [3:43]
  • Defining pain and common misconceptions about pain [7:26]
  • Is pain a reliable indicator of tissue damage? [11:14]
  • Our tendency to frame pain as an unpleasant experience [13:19]
  • Environmental influences on pain perception [14:45]
  • The relationship between pain and stress, the first and second dart [17:27]
  • Yoga in pain care and the pain mandala model [23:52]
  • The power of simple practices, including listening, when working with someone in pain [30:02]
  • Teasing out the details of the pain experience to shift our neurologic maps [34:21]
  • Body scanning to invite curiosity around sensation, “and this too” [38:49]
  • Other yoga applications for people with persistent pain [42:10]
  • The importance of language in pain care [58:35]

Links Mentioned:

Body IQ PT | LinkedIn | Email | Pain Science Yoga Life | YM Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-15.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

23 May 2024110 Fascia Science Meets Acupuncture00:41:25

Today hosts Tiffany and Katja are looking at where the fascia and acupuncture worlds collide.

There is a lot of info out there on possible mechanisms behind acupuncture, and while research is great, we really need to look into the details for answers. In this episode, we talk about the relationship between fascia and Traditional Chinese Medicine. We also talk about acupuncture and how it can affect the connective tissue matrix.

Listen to this episode to learn what we know so far about current research that points to fascia as a potential substrate for energy flow and how to absorb new research while leaving room for the mystery of the unknown.

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Show Notes:

  • Meridians and fascia and acupuncture [2:41]
  • How research brings fascia and acupuncture together [5:47]
  • Anatomical correlations between acupuncture and fascia [6:28]
  • Concept of needle grasp in acupuncture [23:14]
  • How fascia can contribute to acupuncture mechanisms of action [23:28]
  • The importance of the fluid component of fascia [30:57]
  • Current fascia and acupuncture research trends [33:20]

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Links Mentioned:

         Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga | Yoga Medicine® Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-110.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

09 May 2024109 Teaching Yoga One-on-One: Community Conversations with Dana Diament00:57:46

If you haven’t had or taught a one-on-one yoga session, it might feel like a secret club that you’re locked out of. Today host Rachel demystifies the whole process with returning guest and Yoga Medicine Therapeutic Specialist Dana Diament.

In this episode, we talk about the therapeutic benefits of being seen and heard and the importance of helping people clarify their felt experience through both objective and subjective assessment tools.

Listen in to learn tips for teaching private yoga sessions, how to get and prepare for the first session with a new client, and how to manage the challenges that could arise.

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Show Notes:

  • Dana and Rachel’s first experience teaching yoga one-to-one [2:10]
  • Take the stress out of teaching one-on-one: minimum number of sessions [7:41]
  • Establish area of focus beforehand [10:12]
  • The initial session with a new client: the power of listening [13:12]
  • Using initial intake assessment tools [18:23]
  • Ending the first session constructively [22:52]
  • Developing a working hypothesis between initial and follow-up sessions [25:08]
  • Choosing homework for your student [29:08]
  • When your strategy needs to pivot [33:23]
  • What happens when you hit a wall with a student [41:58]
  • When you are no longer the right teacher for this student [45:00]
  • How to find students for one-on-one yoga instruction [48:58]
  • Final takeaways and resources [53:38]

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Links Mentioned:

         Facebook | Instagram | Yoga Medicine Online | Raia Collective

 

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-109.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

 

02 Nov 202394 The Magic of Mythology: Community Conversations with Steph Wall00:40:47

In communication, stories and symbols have the capacity to reach us in ways that facts and figures do not. So today host Rachel dips her toes into Hindu mythology with returning guest Steph Wall.

In this episode, we talk about the importance of mythology and its links to many of the poses we know and practice. Steph also offers advice on how to introduce symbolic stories into classes where students have varied beliefs and experiences.

Listen in to learn what mythology can teach us and how to incorporate it into your yoga classes.

Show Notes:

  • Steph’s first introduction to mythology [4:01]
  • Steph shares one of her favorite Hindu myths [7:05]
  • Stories offer us insight into ourselves [14:58]
  • The challenge of sharing stories about gods and goddesses [18:45]
  • How to start sharing mythology in your teaching [22:02]
  • Tips for sharing Hindu mythology with students of varied faiths [26:41]
  • Mythology and mystery versus an evidence-based approach [31:02]
  • Final takeaways and Steph’s upcoming classes on Yoga Medicine Online [36:08]

Links Mentioned:

         Instagram | The Kali Collective | Facebook | Yoga Medicine Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-94.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

02 Dec 202107 Navigating Burnout with Tiffany Cruikshank & Rachel Land00:52:44

We’ve all experienced burnout, whether in our work or our home lives, and it can leave us feeling so overwhelmed that we don’t know how to start finding our way out of it.

Today Tiffany and Rachel talk about what burnout is — what it looks and feels like, including some signals that can help us recognize it early. We share our personal experiences of burnout and offer a range strategies to explore (some of which may surprise you). We build a simple three-step plan to navigate out of burnout, and emphasize the importance of each of us tailoring that plan to our individual needs.

Listen in to find out how to get through burnout without losing your way.

Show Notes:

  • What does burnout look and feel like; early warning signs to look out for [2:40]
  • “Languishing” as a subtle version of burnout [8:32]
  • A range of strategies to help manage burnout [12:14]
  • Going deeper than the cliche of “self-care” [17:22]
  • Why it can be tough to improve sleep quality during times of stress [21:19]
  • Viewing burnout through the lens of Traditional Chinese Medicine [23:02]
  • The preciousness of rest to rebuild resilience [25:42]
  • Recharging through curiosity and creativity [29:20]
  • Counter negativity with a gratitude practice [32:33]
  • Can we avoid burnout if our job is our passion? [38:39]
  • Which burnout strategy will be most effective for you? [42:55]
  • The characteristics of an actionable burnout management plan [45:02]

Links Mentioned:

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at www.YogaMedicine.com/podcast-07.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at www.YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

18 Jan 2024101 Comfort, Challenge & Compassion: Community Conversations with Aisha Fakhro00:31:57

In the yoga world, as elsewhere, opinions seem more polarized than ever. Today we’re making space to explore one popular all-or-nothing topic in the wellness sphere: whether our practice is intended to create comfort or offer challenge.

Host Rachel explores the delicate balance yoga teachers seek between challenge and comfort and the compassion required to do so with returning guest Aisha Fakhro LAPHP, LNRPC, a licensed psychotherapist and yoga teacher who specializes in working with anxiety, trauma, grief, relationships, stress management and personal growth.

Listen in as we compare, and perhaps reconcile, the case for the comfort of safe and welcoming practice spaces with the growth we might experience from venturing outside our comfort zones.

Show Notes:

  • Do we even need to know what students need? [3:58]
  • The case for comfort: who we become in welcoming & inclusive spaces [5:53]
  • The case for courage: challenging our comfort zones [12:15]
  • The need for safety with the challenge [16:19]
  • Empowering students to choose what they need: it starts with us [20:33]
  • Compassion as the thread drawing extremes toward each other [25:46]

Links Mentioned:

          Instagram | Soft Strength Podcast | Aisha Fakhro

 

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-101.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

14 Mar 2024105 Tackling Sacroiliac Joint Pain: Community Conversations with Kelsea Wright01:05:34

It’s common knowledge that the vast majority of us will experience low back pain at some point in our lives. Today we hone in on an aspect of low back pain that is less commonly considered and discussed: pain in or around the sacroiliac joints.

Rachel Land hosts yoga studio owner, YACEP, Yoga Medicine Therapeutic Specialist, and 1000-hour teacher Kelsea Wright, whose capstone research project was a comparison of two interventions for long-term SI joint pain.

In this episode, we share key practices for strength, stability, and body awareness as well as tips for postural and positional awareness off the yoga mat. We also unpack the importance of detailed student intake interviews and their usefulness in pain education and student empowerment.

Listen in to hear key takeaways from Kelsea’s 1000-hour project on SI joint pain.

 

Show Notes:

  • Kelsey’s own experience: persistent SI joint pain & fear of flare-ups [3:03]
  • Outlining Kelsey’s 1000-hour research project [6:38]
  • Pain education as a key component of care [9:46]
  • The impact of detailed intake interviews [16:39]
  • Strength and stability practices for SI joint pain [20:31]
  • Key myofascial release practices and approaches [30:37]
  • MFR as a novel tool to improve mind-body connection [40:00]
  • Key learnings from the results of Kelsey’s intervention [45:45]
  • The under-estimated importance of keeping good notes [56:01]
  • Cultivating a “glass half full” attitude [58:12]
  • Final takeaways and the benefit of immediate relief [1:00:06]

 

Links Mentioned:

         Instagram | Limitless Yoga Studio

 

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-105.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

15 Aug 2024116 Yoga for Menopause & Beyond: Community Conversations with Niamh Daly01:10:51

Perhaps you’ve heard that menopause is having a moment. But while menopause is more present in the media, there’s still a lack of balanced, nuanced, and honest information around this stage of life.

In this episode, host Rachel talks with yoga and Pilates teacher and teacher-trainer Niamh Daly about her passion project: yoga for the late reproductive stage, perimenopause, menopause, and beyond.

We discuss the lesser-known physical and mental implications of this menopause, and how we can fine-tune our yoga practice to support our changing needs.

Show Notes:

  • The challenges of measuring the effects of yoga with research [3:00]
  • What inspired Niamh’s fascination with this life stage [5:14]
  • The new stigma around menopause [10:28]
  • Perimenopause can trigger existential angst [14:57]
  • Less discussed impacts of menopause: changes in perceived capacity [19:48]
  • Rage and menopause [24:54]
  • Changes in self esteem [28:47]
  • The medicalization of menopause & health worries [31:01]
  • Shifts in purpose, career, relationships & libido [33:35]
  • Yoga asana through late reproductive stage, perimenopause & menopause [38:32]
  • Differences in approach: perimenopause vs menopause [47:58]
  • The vital importance of Satya in media coverage & in our teaching [51:58]
  • Research on menopause and pranayama [58:00]
  • Meditation, self-judgement, CBT & Pratipaksha Bhavana [1:02:46]
  • Wrap up & more resources [1:05:07]

Links Mentioned:

         Facebook | Instagram | YouTube | Yinstinct Yoga

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-116.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

30 Nov 202397 New Perspective on Athletic Performance in the Menstrual Cycle: Research Roundup00:37:57

Today hosts Tiffany and Katja talk about a topic that always draws a lot of interest: the female menstrual cycle. The pair discuss new research around athletic performance throughout the cycle, offering new angles that go beyond the fluctuations of female sex hormones. They focus on new findings that consider the importance of psychological aspects in this context.

Listen in to learn some new perspectives on athletic performance and the female cycle and ways to use yoga to support your menstrual cycle.

Show Notes:

  • Assumptions of menstrual cycle-based training [3:51]
  • New research on performance during menstrual cycle (MC) [6:52]
  • Who participated in the study [10:44]
  • What was tested for in the experiment [14:18]
  • Results of the latest research [16:19]
  • Further considerations on inclusion criteria [18:57]
  • The complexity of studying the female cycle [21:24]
  • Performance vs. training [23:38]
  • How yoga can help to work with the MC [25:42]
  • Importance of the nervous system in training [27:12]
  • Limitations of current research [30:43]
  • Individual experience “versus” research [33:03]

Links Mentioned:

Facebook | Instagram | Kalamana Yoga | Yoga Medicine® Online Guest Teacher

You can learn more about this episode, and see the full show notes at YogaMedicine.com/podcast-97.

And you can find out more about insider tips, online classes or information on our teacher trainings at YogaMedicine.com.

To support our work, please leave us a 5 star review with your feedback on iTunes/Apple Podcasts.

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