Category Archives: Yoga Articles

All about yoga

Easter in Jamaica 2012

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to travel to an exotic location and enjoying your most favourite activity? Well you can do that and much more on my yoga holiday at Negril Yoga Centre in Jamaica.
www.negrilyoga.com

I will be teaching over a period of 2 weeks a guided meditation and an in depth journey into yogAsana and it’s relationship to spiritual awakening and self understanding.

We will be practicing 2 sessions a day both including guided meditation and asana – the morning session more vigorous and the evening a more quieting session.

Dates: Saturday 7th – Saturday 21st April 2012.
Cost: £195 for 1 week and £350 for 2 weeks

Travel from the UK:
Flights are direct from London Gatwick to Montego Bay with Virgin Atlantic.

Check out this holiday on my Website: Easter in Jamaica 2012

Peace and Love,
Granville x

yogAsana in the HEAT

Tony Wilmot adjustingHi Yogis and Yoginis,

Thank you for attending our first yogAsana in the HEAT workshop at yoga haven yesterday on Saturday 21st January 2012. Tony and myself are very pleased with the response and feedback to this our first workshop of this kind. I especially liked meeting new yoga practitioners and presenting yogAsana to this new audience. Tony has a lovely voice for chanting. I hope he keeps it for the yoga and is not tempted to diverge into the commercial market. What a lovely experience to chant Mantra together, to still the mind and then to enjoy a lovely sequence of yoga postures in that perfectly heated room.

Please feel free to comment on any part of the session that you felt had special value for you or you would like us to elaborate on in our future workshops at yoga haven.

Namaste,

Tony and Granville X

Tribute to Local Yoga Teacher Mathew Godebski

Mathew Godebski Yoga TeacherHi Yogis and Yoginis, we recently lost local yoga teacher Mathew Godebski after his fight with an ongoing illness. I visited Mathew during his time in hospital and he was very positive about recovering from his illness and very keen on getting back to the helm of his flourishing yoga studio in Chorlton, Manchester. He relayed to me the medical tests he had undergone and his then recent operation. I had not seen Mathew for a few years and I was very pleased to have visited him at this time. What came to me when I met him was his concern for his health in the concept of him being able to continue with his passion in life – his yoga practice and yoga studio. It is amazing how purpose is such a motivator in life, and what struck me with Mathew was his motivation for getting better, his will to carry on with his work and for his yoga community.

I suppose there are many points that could go through our minds if we were faced with an unexpected and foreshortened lifespan. As with Mathew his concerns were more for those who he contacted through his passion and work – his yoga friends. What more can we ask of our life if not the wish to be of benefit to others through our own understanding of the mysteries of life and life’s twists and turns?

This feeling of Mathew’s concerns for others was again reflected at the church on the day of Mathew’s funeral on Friday morning last week. Listening to the accounts of Mathew’s life read out in the church,  gave me a much more fuller view of the Mathew Godebski I had no idea of. His involvement with hikeing groups during his University years and the friends he made during those years. He left us a colourful impression of his exploits and the manner of how he dealt with adversity in his life.

The feelings of those who knew him and the genuine loss we felt at Mathew’s passing was very well shared between us all on that Friday morning at St. Ninian’s Church in Chorlton. But most of all I think it is more beneficial to celebrate the passing of Mathew, and be thankful that his time in this life was employed in such a fruitful pursuit. Perhaps we should reflect on this and rejoice in the merit generated by by him.

R.I.P. Mathew, and very best wishes follow as you continue to journey on and learn to understand the purpose of life…… May the longtime sunshine upon you, all love surround you, and the pure light within you, guide your way on………

Peace and Love to you all,

Granville x

Is Warming up a Benefit before Yoga Practice?

Garbha Pindasana TurkeyThis question was posed to me by a very keen yoga student of mine. I’m sure it’s something that we are all familiar with, and is well worth some serious consideration. With the increasing popularity of ‘Heat Generating’ yoga styles, there is a remarkable shift towards introducing the heat element through various methods. So why is this? Well anyone who has trained in athletics will know that it is important to warm the body before undertaking the physical demands of a sport, and the consequences of avoiding to do this can be tremendous. The result being, grave injury to those parts of the body put under massive effort if not properly prepared before hand. This all makes total sense.

Now in yoga we have two major approaches. One being static yoga practice and the other being dynamic or flowing yoga practices. Which is better or more beneficial? The way I look at this is from the standpoint of having experience of both approaches. And it very much depends on the mind-set of the person practicing that particular form of yoga. If we practice the static poses or asanas and push for our maximum most expanded posture too soon into our practice session, we can expect to injure ourselves. Cold or cool muscle tissue is not really ready for big work loads and so we need to begin in a more gentle way and work towards our ‘edge’ in a mindful way and gradually increase our effort as we feel the body able to release more as our session progresses.

It’s a bit like, do you need to warm up before you sit down? Do you need to warm up before you climb the stairs to bed? Do you need to warm up before you wash the car? etc. etc….. Well you would most likely answer ‘No’ to these questions. So then if we apply the same reasoning to our yoga practice, do you need to warm up before your yoga practice then I would also answer not necessarily if we view our practice as keeping within our familiar boundaries. So how do we gain more flexibility then if we don’t ‘push’ ourselves? Well by doing the same things on a regular basis we become familiar with the exercise, our body can cope with the expectations put on it and over time yields to our efforts without resistance because of our persistent effort.

Of course we want to avoid doing our yoga practice in cold places particularly if there is wind or drafts, because as the bodily joints open it’s very important to keep cold from entering into them, so being in a warm environment is I would say pretty essential.

Now with the more dynamic forms of yoga, the heat is generated either by movement or by breathing practices. Now in these cases the body responds in a totally different way. Because we require the body to exhibit more flowing kinds of movements as in ‘Vinyasa’, then it’s pretty much essential to be generating heat to do these particular forms. Like you wouldn’t want to rev the engine of your car when you’ve just turned on the ignition would you?? And for those who have had experience of Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga then you will know how efficient the body can move when Ujiayi Breathing is undertaken.

But in Yin Yoga because the postures are not performed in a dynamic way then its not so important to have to same degree of heat in the body. In fact if you are too warm when you begin your session you may very well cool down too much and then start to feel a locking up of your body. In Yin Yoga, it’s much better to keep the temperature consistent so you do not go through this cooling effect. Simply keep within your ‘edge’ and remain mindful.

In yogAsana we use both approaches. The stillness at the beginning of a yogAsana session is characterized with still asanas and the releasing of the body into the postures. When we move into the mid-session of the practice then the body will have accumulated sufficient heat through the flow of prana or chi flow through the meridians or energy channels.

So which ever way you approach your practice session remember to be mindful and different approaches will be utilized at different stages of your progression. Be flexible in your approach to practice and remember one size of shoe doesn’t fit every foot…

Join Tony and myself for yogAsana in the HEAT in January. You’ll see what I mean…….

Peace and Love,

Granville x

yogAsana in the HEAT

Tony Wilmot adjustingHave you ever wondered what it would be like to practice yoga in a properly heated yoga studio? To experience the benefits of being able to concentrate fully on your yoga instead of the distraction of feeling uncomfortable below your working temperature? Well now is your chance because I have hired a ‘Hot Yoga Studio’ for 2 1/2 hours of Mantra, Pranayama and yogAsana. Now this is fabulous. We all know the benefits of being able to get down to business in a proper purpose built environment, so this is just that opportunity.

When we begin to go deeply into yoga postures, especially with the strong influence of the Yin Yoga element in yogAsana, then you can imagine the meltdown of tension and penetration around the joints and muscles under these conditions. The detoxing effects of sweating freely during the practice are considerable.

Together with fellow Yoga teacher Tony Wilmot, we have put together a program of Mantra, Pranayama and yogAsana for you to experience. Tony is a seasoned Ashtanga and Hatha yoga teacher and British Wheel of Yoga representative in the Birmingham area.

The venue is yogahaven Birmingham – and the date is Saturday 21st January 2012. The time is from 12:30 – 15:00.
A new experience for the New Year.
The cost of this Workshop is £30.

To book your place send your cheque made payable to “Yoga with Granville”  address: Higher Pot Oven Farm, Brown Wardle, Whitworth, Near Rochdale, Lancashire, OL12 8WU, England

You are freely invited to join us for lunch in one of the local restaurants after the practice.

To view flyer click yogAsana in the Heat 2012

Keep in touch for more articles in my Blog.

Peace and Love,
Granville x

What exactly are these ‘Openings’ in yoga asana?

yoga class at Sultan Palas Dalyan Have you ever been involved in your practice of asana and you’ve felt some release or click happening in your body? Or maybe you’ve heard of someone else expressing these sensations. Well what exactly are they? It’s very normal through our yoga practice that as we begin to release our body through stretching and better ways of achieving a relaxedness in our practice that at times we notice these releases that often feel liberating a if we’ve become free of something that has been weighing us down for some time – had some kind of revelation or insight that gives us another way of seeing ourselves in relation to the great scheme of things – these can be called Openings and are very rewarding, natural and expected.

However there are other kinds of openings that although leave us more knowledgeable, can have a serious debilitating effect on our physical and mental well-being. Ultimately these are not to be sought after and very often stay with us throughout our lives and severely handicap our ability to perform asana in the future. These are usually injuries that occur because of our lack of caution or at the hands of some teachers who take their students beyond their actual capabilities not purposefully, but because of a lack of sensitivity to the students limitations. Openings, or injuries, as I prefer to call them are rife within the world of sport and no exception in the world of yoga as well. In our eagerness to excel and ‘do our best’, we often exceed our safety limits and hurt ourselves.

But how do we go on then in our yoga sadhana and practice within a known parameters of safety. Well quite frankly we cannot do that. I’d like to say otherwise but I cannot. The very nature of practice is that we are moving into unchartered territory, ‘to boldly go where we have never been before’, and so we just don’t really know what the consequences will be or to expect. Particularly when working deeply on postures that take us into specific joint work. I spend quite a bit of my time talking with students who have injuries and recommending modifications to reconstruct their asana practice. And this is one of the reasons I wanted to share this post and to re-evaluate the way we address our sadhana and to bring to mind that yoga is a form of Therapeutic Practice and not for the platform of Circus theatricals.

Let’s keep our intention in mind and let us not be diverted onto the performance roundabout. Let’s face it, if you really want to see extremes of body mobility then just take a look at what contortionists can do. Mind boggling, at least it is for me anyway. Well personally, I have no ambitions to become a contortionist but I do appreciate their gifted abilities. Yoga is not about that. Yoga is about bringing ourselves into harmony, and as Mr. Iyengar himself even remarked in class one day, that the uninitiated ‘would think of him as some kind of a contortionist’, and that is clearly what he is not.

Remember Ahimsa or non-violence towards ourselves and others. If we can use this as our measure, then we can transform our attitude to a safer and more fulfilling way of self awakening. And this attitude of Ahimsa is the true purpose behind a vegetarian approach to eating and lifestyle. To respect all sentient Beings and to remember their right to life just as we expect others to have respect for our right to life.

Happy practice,

Peace and Love x

Granville

Full Circle by Joanna Najduch

Joanna leg stretchJoanna Najduch takes time out with Granville Cousins an inspiring  Yoga Teacher whose practice has indeed come……………

FULL CIRCLE

Yogis and Yoginis in the Manchester area have long thought themselves fortunate to have a yoga teacher like Granville Cousins in their midst.

An imposing six feet tall, born and bred in Manchester of West Indian descent, Granville cuts a formidable figure by any standards. Add to this his foundtion in martial arts, his Iyengar yoga training, together with over 20 yers experience teaching Astanga Yoga, and you just might begin to believe that us northerners are indeed on the something?

Click on this link to read more Full-Cirle-Joanna-Najduch

Looking After Your Hip Joints

Samo Konasana TurkeyThe hips are a large bony part of our skeleton that is responsible for supporting the spinal column and our legs. Not only do they give support but also provide a stable location to house our limbs responsible for our ability to move around. If our hip joints are not healthy then our ability to function freely is greatly impaired and if severe damage occurs either through injury or health problems they can be very difficult to repair and put right.

Like most of the joints they do not have a blood supply and so nutrients and lubrication happens by way of synovial fluid that serves to lubricate the joint surfaces and carry away any accumulated debris. If the joint lacks mobility then the health giving synovial fluid has a hard job flowing over the joint surfaces and where it cannot access sufficiently then determination of those joint surfaces is likely to occur.

But it isn’t just about extending the joints to their maximum because if this is done too violently then this straining aspect also creates an unhealthy joint area and then problems occur later on in life as is witnessed in those who have led active lives, and then in later years suffer joint problems caused through overuse and strain.

So in our yoga practice always be mindful of unhealthy pain that signals possible injury and the kind of discomfort experienced from merely doing our practice. Some discomfort is part of doing yoga but we don’t want to take this into an injury phase. Work thoroughly whilst in postures but remember to include that very important element of softness and relaxedness during your practice. Keep the joints free and mobile. Keep them healthy.

Doing Your Laundry

Solitary VajrasattvaHow does washing out your clothes at the laundry and Purification tie into yoga practice. Well it’s pretty easy to make this analogy. As we strive to keep our bodily garments free from pollution so must we make effort to keep our minds free from the pollution of unwholesome thoughts and to try and eradicate them when we find them in our consciousness. If we notice dwelling on thoughts of malice or other kinds of thoughts that we know in our hearts are not profitable then we need to divert our attention towards that which is wholesome and beneficial. Easier said than done eh?
Well practice is just like going to the launderette. When we stand on our mat for yoga practice or sit on our cushion for meditation this is going to the mind laundry. By continually associating ourselves with this meditative environment, the mind begins to prefer it’s clarity to the environment of greyness, dullness and over excitement. It’s just a matter of acclimatisation. And it may take some time. But if you can make the resolve to practice your yoga on a daily basis eventually you can tip the scales in your favor and turn your mental state around..
Without this tending towards virtue, there can be no yoga. Remember the phrase INAPPROPRIATE ATTENTION. It’s a very good friend.

The image to the right is of  Buddha Vajrasattva, the Buddha of Purification.
And now back to pick up my clean laundry….

How I Came to Yoga

Head Shot for How I Came to YogaA spiritual journey of discovery and how this practice has changed my life into one of continual investigation into the meaning of life, its purpose, and understanding the nature of things.

by Granville Cousins

My first experience with Yoga was at school at the age of sixteen. I remember one of my classmates trying to place the palms of his hands together in between his shoulder blades in the posture of Namaste. He was the only person who could do it and I wondered where he learned something like that. “Yoga” he said. And I never gave it another thought. Coming from an athletic and Catholic background, I was looking for a form of exercise that would stay with me for the whole of my life that also encompassed a spiritual element. In my late teens I again came into the field of yoga when I saw a television program called “Yoga for Health” introduced by Richard Hittleman and assisted by such a notable yoga practitioner as Lynne Marshall. The postures were challenging for me as I felt I possessed no natural flexibility. However my appetite had been whetted so I then pursued my quest on the path of Yoga.

The first major breakthrough came when I practiced from a book called “Yoga and Health” by Selvarajan Yesudian and Elizabeth Haich. I remember the bliss and the ecstasy of my first sessions. One eye on the book while trying to execute the postures and breathing exercises. This made me keener to learn, so I was glad when I came across “Light on Yoga” by Mr. B.K.S. Iyengar. His excellent performance of the postures and in-depth detail contained in the text were very inspiring for me. I used to practice for 3 – 4 hours daily using the tables provided at the back of the book. However after 6 months of this intense practice, I guess I just felt overwhelmed with it all, and went on to investigate Tai Chi, a gentle form of Martial Arts that incorporates meditation in movement. I Stayed with Martial Arts for about 10 years, during which time I achieved a 1st dan (Black – Belt) in Kung Fu and then later studied Aikido.

My appetite for meditation had been whetted from the early times when I was working on the yoga alongside Selvarajan Yesudian’s book when I became acquainted with Buddhism. I attended a 10-day retreat with the Venerable Archarn Sumedho, a monk of immense stature and knowledge in the way of the Buddha. This was very different from what I had been used to, and I felt that this stiff body of mine needed more opening and flexibility if I was going to attend many more of these retreat sessions. I also became involved in Zen Buddhism and by this time I knew that this was more the way that I wanted to go, so after obtaining my 1st dan in Kung Fu I left the Martial arts and in 1982 went up to Throssel Hole Priory, a Zen training monastery, for a 3 month Lay Training Program but was very pleased when they permitted me to stay longer, a total of 6 months in all. This I regard as one of the richest times of my life with regard to training. My role at the monastery was to do with the joinery work, and as that was my trade I put my skills to good use. But monastic training is more about giving yourself to what you are doing in your daily life, which isn’t always what we want to do.

After leaving the monastery I again taken up my trade as a self-employed joiner. I really missed the Yoga Practice though, and I was very glad when a friend of mine introduced me to a yoga teacher in Manchester called Jeanne Maslen, a lady with whom I hold the utmost regard, and from here I felt that I became firmly set on the path of yoga. Whilst in her classes I decided that I wanted to learn more about yoga and to attend an Iyengar Teachers Training Course.

The course was very involved and I obtained my Introductory Level and Intermediate Junior Teacher Training Certificates. I also took up the martial arts again. This time I studied Aikido with Wassel Koleznikov and became one of his assistants in the class. As there were only two assistants we had to show the techniques to the students that had been demonstrated on us by the Sensei (teacher). After four years with Wassel, I again left the martial arts and focused on my Zen training and yoga with a Japanese Zen Master called Hogen. His practice is very inspiring and we used to go running and practice yoga along with the Zazen (seated meditation). This was quite an intense period of my life and on top of all that was going on I started to build my own house. This took about 18 months and after selling it bought Higher Pot Oven Farm, which is where I live now. In 1990 I went with my teacher and other students to Pune in India where we practiced with Mr. Iyengar on a three-week Teachers intensive. This was quite hard going but so rewarding to be in the presence of one of the great Yogis of this modern age. Being in the presence of such a man and in the romantic atmosphere of India made lasting impressions on my life. On my return to England, and having every intention of carrying on with my joinery work, something had changed within me, and the course of my life was to take another turn.

One January morning whilst preparing to get on with my job, after returning back from the Christmas holidays, I was taken aback when I was summoned from within to leave the joinery trade and go and teach yoga. A new direction had been prepared for me, and a new life-style was about to be forged. I went down to the unemployment offices and applied for The Enterprise Allowance Scheme. With their funding, this would allow me to go and teach yoga on a full time basis until I could build up enough classes to make a living. Manchester was where my classes were set up and I had just made inroads into teaching yoga in health clubs. At that time yoga and the leisure industry had opposing views on many aspects of fitness so it was quite something when I was able to set up classes at one of the premier health clubs in the area, ‘Living Well’. After teaching Iyengar Yoga for some years, in 1995 I was introduced to Michael Taylor and Elizabeth Wilson with whom I learnt Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga at their house on Sunday Mornings. These were some of the most enjoyable yoga sessions that I have attended. In an upper bedroom with about 5 of 6 other yogis, we sweated our way through the Primary Series.

After a short while I was invited to meet a person with whom the yoga world has much to be grateful. This man was Derek Ireland, and I attended one of his Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga workshops in London. He also accepted my application to teach for him in Crete, at The Practice Place. Together with his partner Radha, I studied with them in the morning sessions and taught Iyengar Yoga in the evenings. Since those early days I have now set up classes teaching mainly Ashtanga Yoga and Posture Classes that are based for the most part around the Primary Series but incorporating my knowledge of the postures gained mainly from my Iyengar Yoga background. My classes are quite thorough, my students tell me, and on my Workshops and Yoga Holidays I introduce meditation practice as part of the daily regime. This is most important, as yoga is very supportive to the discipline of mediation. If we cannot sit still, how can we allow the deeper levels of our consciousness to manifest? I practice the Sound and Light Meditation and my Meditation Master is Suma Ching Hai. The requirements for this path are an Ethical life Style, a Vegetarian diet including no eggs, Abstention from Alcohol and Drugs, and to devote a certain proportion of the day in contemplation of the Holy Sound and Divine Light. “If thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be filled with Light”.

During these times when the planet needs to be treated with respect, I feel that Ecology and working with the environment are crucial issues. Myself I have an Organic Reed-Bed System installed on my farm, which deals with all my Sewage and grey water. In the Summer when the Reeds are blooming, it is really beautiful and looks just like a garden with 4 foot high Norfolk Reeds occupying a portion of the field. There are no chemicals involved, the whole process relying on the natural elements and bacteria living around to roots of the reeds. My farmhouse has just been refurbished with the aid of a council grant and I hope to continue to improve and incorporate environmentally friendly ways towards completion of the development.

May I take this opportunity to thank all my teachers and students, and let us enjoy together the Bliss of the Divine and the Ecstasy of His Grace.