Drawing on her extensive training in yoga therapy, dance, and meditation, Bija Bennett has created a groundbreaking yoga program that takes full advantage of the body-mind connection.
Based on the classical eightfold path of yoga, Emotional Yoga offers a broad range of simple body-mind techniques that can positively affect our emotional well-being, including the dynamic interplay of movements, breathing exercises, meditations, lifestyle skills, rituals, gestures, and healing sounds. Each technique is presented in a way that is true to Bennett's background in the tradition of Viniyoga, which allows the reader to adapt the program to his or her specific needs.
In no other time in recent history have emotions been so respected. We are beginning to appreciate that emotions are not just annoying vestiges of our animal heritage. Instead, emotions can clue us into our sources of anxiety. Listening to emotions can turn out to be healing and beneficial. The problem is that too often we judge our emotions, and quickly squash them into ourselves, suppressing the body's natural response to our circumstances. Yoga as a practice helps individuals become more aware of their bodies. As a vinyasa yoga instructor in Portland, Oregon, I am seeking frameworks for emotional yoga therapy-- ways yoga teachers can specialize around helping people "overcome," re-frame, and re-wire their emotional responses.
I am loving Ms. Bennett's approach to healing. She organizes her writing around the 8 limbs of yoga. This is wonderful because it fits in with the yogic philosophy Vedic sages developed over 4,000 years ago. So far I am reading about the first limb, awareness/allowing. In this case, Ms. Bennett writes about becoming aware of one's emotional state, and accepting it as it is.
It was a pretty good book, but I experienced an odd level of discomfiture the entire time I was reading. This was neither an entirely practical book (to be used as a practice guide) nor a fully mental book (to be read as a preparation for or supplement to any practice, but apart from the practice itself). For that reason, I always felt like I was in the wrong clothes... Can't wear jeans, what if I want to practice something she suggests? And let's face it, reading a book while lounging on the couch in yoga pants just feels wrong!
I started reading this book months ago but I had to stop for a while. It's funny because I was past the halfway point of the book when I decided to give it a rest. It's not necessarily a bad book but I personally felt that it was containing a bi tof toxic positivity? I wanted to finish it though because I'm interested in the emotional aspect of yoga but this book just didn't do it for me.