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Hendersonville, Tennessee, United States
“I believe in the power of yoga,” says MPC YOGA FOR ALL founder Michele Priddy. “I have seen lives change, including my own, in deep, transformative and real ways.” Michele, who holds a Master’s degree in Special Education from Middle Tennessee State University and certification as a RYT-500 from Yoga Alliance, has more than two decades of experience helping adults and children of all ages and abilities reach their maximum potential. Her highly-individualized yoga classes, workshops and in-service training programs are more than just opportunities to for her students to move: they are transformational experiences made even richer by Michele’s deep understanding of yoga movement, breath work and philosophy coupled with an encyclopedic knowledge of anatomy and physiology. In addition to teaching yoga at Middle Tennessee’s most respected yoga schools, Michele has led workshops for children with disabilities, teachers, social service workers, parents and others on a variety of topics including Yoga for Children, Yin Yoga, Mindfulness, Adaptive Yoga and Vinyasa Flow.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Adaptive Yoga Teacher Training Reflections

Affirmed… that is the word I used to sum up my experience with Matthew Sanford’s Adaptive Yoga Teacher Training with Mind Body Solutions in Minnesota. Matthew Sanford, author of Waking and a paraplegic himself was every bit as genuine as his memoir suggested. The program he has created sprouting out of his own life experience with disability, our Western medical system, and yoga along with his practical application is exactly what the disability community is in need of and the able bodied community can learn so much from in ways more than any physical asana practice can accomplish. Together with Andy and Julie a finely crafted training has emerged based on a practical experience of “making s@#* up” (within the principles of alignment of course). Thank you…

What can those living in the midst to disability teach the rest of us as we power through asana (physical poses) practice? I believe a sense of total connectedness by utilizing the flow of prana (breath). “Prana follows consciousness,” Matthew continued to remind us. What does that mean? To me the able bodied practitioner, it is cultivating the ability to be fully present in my body and all the sensations of body and mind with complete acceptance and full awareness. Matthew has managed to give a language to what happens if we are fully present and paying attention in our yoga practice, able bodied or not, “Prana follows consciousness.”

Take any asana, Tadasana for example, as we are rooted in Tadasana a new sense of grounding and being connected to our base is realized. A connection I had previously felt sometimes but often ignored. To be connected with completed awareness allowed me to fully feel the inner sensations of pushing down to lift up. As my awareness to my base became a focal point for my mind, the realization of prana flowing up through my legs through my spine and straight up toward the heavens was experienced. It was like a light shining bright traveling both up and down. Push down to lift up. The spine is an amazing prana line. Through the awareness of the prana traveling along the vertical line of the spine, a sensation of prana spreading throughout the container we call the human body is realized.

How to create this prana filled container for those whose bodies have experienced breaks in the line or unnatural twists and turns because of trauma, genetic condition, illness, or lack of body awareness, that was the focus of this teacher training and in that purpose I was not disappointed. The principles of yoga are universal regardless of the container people show up with. I will be forever grateful to Matthew, Andy, Julie, Mind Body Solutions and more importantly those students who showed up to the practice to allow us to observe, touch, move, and even gawk at them in their practice. I now understand in new ways the concept of being fully embodied.

2 comments:

Kathy Plourde said...

Beautiful writing & when I was read Waking, I would ask Tommy, my quadraplegic friend what his experience with energy was & he to indicated that he could feel/sense the energy im his body that did not move. An amazing reality that caused me to pay more attention to my own body & I wonder if it might be one of those realities that because I have a body that can feel that I need to be even more aware than s person without movement. Just a thought.

Michele Priddy said...

I think that having all the feelings of a body can be distracting, we often tune them out, maybe out of necessity as if we felt everything we might explode with sensation...