If anyone has any suggestions on how to continue using both yoga and meditation (together) for beginners please leave me your words of guidance.
Really good suggestions there, Levitating Cat and Sakura Blossom.
Breath Work
My suggestion is to find a teacher who understands the role of breath work in yoga. As yoga was taught in India, each
asana might contain three components (which, and to what degree, depends on the
asana itself, and the skill level of the student as determined by the teacher): the incoming breath (
puraka), the outgoing breath (
rechaka), and holding the breath (
kumbaka). For instance, "opening" movements require an in-breath, while "closing" type movements (folding down over the legs, for example) naturally require an exhaling breath. Most DVDs don't even mention any of this, though some do. And if you ask most yoga teachers in America what any of these Sanskrit words mean, you'll probably get a "deer in the headlights" stare, lol. But a teacher who's been trained properly could teach you how to incorporate these things into your practice.
When done properly, good breath work during yoga practice can lead to a meditative state, as L. Cat and Sakura mentioned. Deep breathing stimulates the "vagus nerve," a nerve that runs throughout the body and which causes a constellation of physiological responses that have the collective effect of pleasantly calming down a person. Breath work should be incorporated during the entire yoga session, and at the end as one relaxes in the corpse pose (
savasana), as you mention in your OP. Personally, I also like to start a session meditating in the corpse pose.
And sometimes I will do so in the middle of the session a couple of times too, depending on how fatigued I get as I work, because despite what "hot yoga" and "power yoga" enthusiasts might have us believe, the point of
asana work is not to get all sweaty and worn out doing a bunch of repetitive yoga motions, etc. That was a bastardization of
asana practice invented by early 20th century yoga instructors from India who, quite wisely, wanted to make yoga appealing to the Western psychological palette, which tends to favor an obsession with hardship and competitive behavior. That bit of tweaking proved to be a
very lucrative move on their part, indeed.
Adjustments
Another reason I suggest working with a teacher on a regular basis is because of the issue with your spine and hips. DVDs do not take into account injuries or other conditions. They are made for the mainstream, not tailored toward the needs of particular individuals. You might further injure yourself using DVDs. There are what are called "adjustments" that need to be made for each individual, esp if health conditions and past injuries are involved. Mainstream videos do not teach adjustments. As you mentioned, they go really fast. They are basically created as sales products, nothing more. They do not contain good quality yoga instruction, instruction which ideally should be individualized.
Only yoga teachers who have studied and been properly trained in what's called, "yoga therapy," will know how to assist you with the correct adjustments so that you will get the most out of each
asana. Otherwise, you really could hurt yourself, seriously. Learning adjustment work is a whole separate field of yoga instruction, believe it or not. There are whole workshops and seminars soley on adjustments. That's how important they are.
Some teachers take the time and effort to train themselves in adjustments, breath work, etc. Some don't. It's probably not required for most yoga instructor licensing, so most teachers probably don't bother to learn it. Most yoga instructors simply pay a few hundred (or thousand) dollars to some local yoga studio to effectively buy their "certification" as yoga instructors, and go to work, regardless of their abilities or (lack of) knowledge as yoga teachers.
Manifestation
So, it's a lot of mundane work to locate a good teacher. They should be interviewed to see if he or she has been trained in adjustmentand breath work (called
pranayama) and how to incoporate
pranayama into
yogasana. Don't feel you're being intrusive when you pick a potential teacher's brain for what they know and don't know. Our health is at stake, so this is important. If they don't understand that, they're in the wrong profession for the wrong reasons, as far as I'm concerned.
As you do that, also do the spiritual work to back up those efforts. It wouldn't hurt to utilize some spell work to ensure that you find a good teacher, and that you manifest the resources needed to be taught by him or her, so that proper compensation could be arranged. Let the gods of your chosen spiritual path, and your own ancestors, know that this is very, very important to you, that it means a lot to your health and to your well-being and affects your path and life purpose. Especially emphasize this to the healing spirits around you. Then, the right doors will open, and more than enough resources needed for your efforts will appear.
Good luck.
Also would it be appropriate to heat oil or light a scented candle during yoga?
I do not think it would be inappropriate.
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