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Miscellaneous links
 

NYCYogaStudioFinder   New York yoga centers. OMagain.com's own listing, currently limited to studios in Manhattan. 


YogaFinder   Search by country, state, etc., to find yoga teachers & centers worldwide.

 
YogaDork   Blog chock full of juicy goings-on.


YogaPassBook   Here one may purchase a booklet containing passes for free classes at a long list of yoga & Pilates studios throughout New York City (and several other major US cities). Coupons expire at the end of the calendar year, but most are good for two or more visits. Could potentially save you lots of money.

 
YogaPeeps     “…a place online where yogis and yoginis can listen to their peeps (people)” Site founder Lara Cestone interviews renowned yoga instructors and offers the audio as mp3 files also available by podcasting.


YogaJournal   True, Yoga Journal has changed hands and editors repeatedly over the years, and has become more and more commercial and mainstream (as has yoga on the whole). And true, there is more "fluff." But perhaps one need not go so far as to call it— as did one critic— "insidious" (The Hostile New Age Takeover of Yoga). This magazine still has much of value, especially for the relative beginner, and their website certainly has a wealth of information. They offer several free email newsletters, a searchable archive of past articles, and a Pose Finder offering detailed advice on yoga asanas.


YogaWorkshop   Website of Richard Freeman, masterful practitioner and teacher of Ashtanga Vinyasa yoga. The site is primarily dedicated to goings-on at his yoga studio in Boulder, Colorado, but also includes notes on postures, articles, and excellent interpretations of several important Sanskrit chants such as the invocation commonly chanted before practice by ashtanga vinyasa practitioners (Vande gurunam...). At the Store, one may purchase Richard's practice DVDs, and a number of excellent recorded lectures, including the The Yoga Matrix, a 6-CD set on yoga philosophy that is unparalled as an introduction for beginners and equally fascinating and inspiring for experienced yogis. Not to miss: the audio archives on the YW blog, with recordings from Richard's Sunday Talks series.
Richard Freeman 


e-Sutra  Blog hosted by Leslie Kaminoff, author of the bestselling
book Yoga Anatomy and founder-director of The Breathing Project, a nonprofit studio in Manhattan. Never afraid to post something that will stir up a healthy discourse, he has with this blog been "making waves in the yoga community since 1998." Kaminoff is an anatomy teacher who has specialized particularly in the inner workings of the breath. He is also an amazing bodyworker and a teacher of yoga in the tradition of T.K.V. Desikachar. Nowadays Kaminoff prefers to call himself a “yoga educator.” Read why, in his article in the International Journal of Yoga Therapy: I’m Not a Yoga Therapist Anymore!
 

Easwaran
   Website of the Blue Mountain Center for Meditation and of Nilgiri Press, legacies of the late Eknath Easwaran, who wrote beautiful English translations and commentaries on the Bhagavad Gita and the principal Upanishads. Easwaran’s writings drew upon not just Hinduism and Buddhism, but also Christianity, Judaism, Islam, etc. Through this site, one can subscribe to the daily email newsletter Thought for the Day, with inspirational quotes and commentary.
   
Off the mat
 
GoodGuide Assess the ecological impact of the products you buy (or used to buy). Daniel Goleman, author of the bestselling book Emotional Intelligence, and more recently Ecological Intelligence, is on a mission to get as many people as possible to use this amazing new website.
 
VegGuide   International listing of vegan, vegetarian and veg/vegan-friendly eateries, searchable by region, town, zipcode, address.
 
TheMeatrix   Food for thought: a cartoon made for the internet, a disturbing critique of industialized agriculture. 


 
  Treats for the devotee
 
ACI-LA   The Asian Classics Institute of Los Angeles: Here Lama Marut (Brian K. Smith) has a truly enormous trove of free "Downloadable Teachings" in the form of readings (pdf files) and audio (mp3 files), on many topics: Yoga Philosophy, the Sanskrit language, Mahayana Buddhist teachings on Happiness,  Compassion, Death, Dharma, etc., etc. Also in-depth study of major texts like the Yoga Sutra and the Bhagavad Gita.

 
ExoticIndia   See this archive of articles/newsletters for in-depth explorations of ancient Indian mythology, arts and philosophy. Here's a very nice recent article about the many names of Krishna; great for anyone who has ever been baffled by the preponderence of epithets for the divine, in the Gita as elsewhere.


Souljerky   Here are said to be "dried chunks of soul for you to chew on"— brought to you by the same community of yogis that offers up the phenomenal periodical Namarupa.


 
 

 

Additional resources:   yoga-related directories
 
 
                                                                                                                                                        
 

 

 
Classical yoga texts & commentary
 
 
 
ONLINE...

Yoga Sutra translations
 
"The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali: The Threads of Union” Translation by BonGiovanni A very concise and clear rendition, mirroring the extreme terseness of the original Sanskrit, to the extent that is possible. (The Sanskrit original is completely without verbs!)

The Online Companion to “The Yoga-Sûtra Of Patañjali: A New Translation With Commentary" Chip Hartranft's translation, companion to his book on the Yoga Sutra, published 2003 by Shambhala Classics. NOTE: At the bottom of the page, click on Sanskrit-English Translation (PDF) in order to follow the link to a pdf file* which gives the sutras in the Sanskrit (Devanagari font), as well as in phonetic translation, and in the English, interpretated both line-by-line and word-for-word. (*Adobe software is required to read a pdf file; this can be downloaded for free on the internet.) If your computer and browser are already ready to handle a pdf, you may take a shortcut to this document, here.

P.N. Mukerji translation of the Yoga Sutras Appendix F from "Yoga Philosophy of Patanjali," published in 1983 by SUNY Press. This link leads to a page with just the aphorisms in English translation by P.N. Mukerji. The full book is a widely respected scholarly reference, as it contains, line for line, the original Sanskrit (Devanagari) of both the Sutra and the classical Yoga Bhasya (commentary traditionally attributed to the ancient sage Vyasa). Each line is then given in English translation, followed by extensive notes (rendered in English) given to Mukerji by his teacher Swami Hariharananda Aranya, head of the Kapil Math (Kapila Monastery) of Madhupur, Bihar, India. The Vyasa commentary is widely considered essential to correctly interpreting the sutras.


Extensive collections

Advaita Vedanta Library
  If you are searching online for English translations of ancient Sanskrit texts, you may find many directories to be disorganized and often also out-of-date, with "dead links." This collection, however, consists of a refreshingly concise single page that links to excellent translations of a vast body of works.
 
Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda. Also available as a hardcover set, a whole shelf full of volumes, this compilation is now available, free of charge, on the internet. Includes Vivekananda's writings as well as transcriptions of his talks, given mainly in England, the U.S. and India. This one-man embassy for Indian culture began globetrotting in the 1890s, but his message of unity,hope and peace speaks to us as clearly today as ever. Vivekananda had an extraordinary ability to quote at will, and translate to English, passages in Sanskrit — from e.g., the Bhagavad Gita, the Upanishads, and Patanjali, Ramanuja, Shankara, etc.— and to frame them in such context as to make them more readily grasped by Western audiences.

Anyone interested in very in-depth discussion of questions such as just how objective Vivekananda could be in his presentation of Indian philosophy (as if anyone could ever really claim objectivity), may well enjoy the Kelamuni blog ("Explorations in neo-vedanta and perennialism: informal essays and book reviews examining basic themes and ideas in neo-vedanta, perennialism, and transpersonal theory.")
 
... & OFF-LINE

4 translations of the Bhagavad Gita
 
Eknath Easwaran translation
. Nilgiri Press, 1985 (softcover). Also in hardcover from Shambhala Publications. Easwaran's Gita is an excellent introduction to this text, an eminently readable version. He does not break down the text line by line, however he does discuss certain word choices he has made, in his beautiful 45-page-long introduction, which itself alone is priceless. Each chapter is also preceded by an insightful synopsis and commentary. Excerpt: Chapter 12.

Graham M. Schweig translation. Harper Collins, 2007.  Available as hardcover or e-book. When I read Schweig's recent article in Namarupa, I knew I would have to go out right away and buy his new translation of the Bhagavad Gita. He has been "contemplating its verses forover thirty-eight years," and it shows. In this elegant rendering, the full Sanskrit text is presented in English transliteration as an appendix, and the text is given in verse with excellent footnotes.
 
Stephen Mitchell translation. Harmony Books, 2000. A beautiful, poetic rendering, although without commentary or any discussion of various possible interpretations of the original Sanskrit. Excerpt: Chapter 9. See also: Stephen Mitchell interview on NPR regarding his process of translating the Gita. Mitchell is famous for his eloquent English translations of the Tao Te Ching, of Rainer Maria Rilke and of the book of Genesis, among other classics. 

Winthrop Sargeant translation. Hardcover: Doubleday, 1979. Softcover: SUNY Press, 1994. Yoga Journal's reviewer said, “If you don't know Sanskrit but you still want to come to grips with the Gita in its original language, then this is the version for you... every word is analyzed for its grammatical form and given a range of possible English equivalents. If you work with a verse for a while, you begin to see some of the nuances and possible alternative meanings present in the original—even if you don't know Sanskrit.” Says a reviewer on Amazon, "...since Sargeant's edition has a linguistic orientation, one will have to look elsewhere for a 'philosophic' commentary."

 
 
 

 
 
 
 
T. Krishnamacharya and longtime student
Indra Devi, on his 100th birthday in 1989.
 
 
T.K.V. Desikachar & family  T. Krishnamacharya's son and longstanding student, T.K.V. Desikachar founded the Krishnamacharya Yoga Mandiram (KYM) in Chennai, India, in 1976. This school has emphasized that yoga practice must never be taught with a "one size fits all" approach, emphasizing the adaptation of yoga practice to one's individual abilities and condition, and the use of yoga as a form of therapy. T.K.V. Desikachar has authored of a number of books, including The Heart of Yoga. Although little involved in teaching at the KYM of late, he occasionally tours and offers workshops around the world, as do both his wife Menaka and their son Kausthub.
Two interviews with Desikachar: LifePositive (2004); ChennaiOnline (2008)
 
 
Srivatsa Ramaswami  Author of The Complete Book of Vinyasa Yoga and other books based on more than three decades of private study with T. Krishnamacharya, Ramaswami aims to teach yoga much as it was taught to him by the master. This, he says, has been widely done only in more fragmented form, even by other notable teachers who studied under the same guru. Ramaswami emphasizes slow, steady movements and long breaths— so much so that his Vinyasa Krama approach can make some of what is taught internationally as vinyasa yoga, look a bit like like aerobics by comparison. Ramaswami has relocated to the U.S. from Chennai, and he frequently tours in several states, offering workshops and teacher trainings. See Ramaswami's recent article in Namarupa: My Studies With Sri Krishnamacharya.
 
 
A.G. Mohan & family  A family of yogis whose work centers around a therapeutic approach where individual consultations are held to prescribe custom-tailored asana sequences, pranayama exercises, etc., to suit one's needs and constitution. The Mohans have thoroughly integrated the practice of yoga with traditional Ayurvedic healing as well as Western medicine. A.G Mohan studied with Krishnamacharya for eighteen years and is the author of Yoga for Body, Breath and Mind and of Yoga Therapy: Yoga and Ayurveda for Health and Fitness. He co-teaches with his wife Indra Mohan, who was one of the few people to receive a post-graduate diploma in Yoga from Krishnamacharya, and their son Ganesh, a U.S.-trained M.D. and Indian-trained Ayurvedic physician. Daughter Nitya teaches yoga in Singapore, while the rest of the family live and teach in Chennai, India. They occasionally offer workshops and teacher trainings in the United States.
 
 
K. Pattabhi Jois & family  Having studied with Krishnamacharya at an early age, K. Pattabhi Jois (1915-2009) was appointed by the Maharaj of Mysore to teach yoga at the Sanskrit College. Later he founded the Ashtanga Yoga Research Institute in Mysore, India, which today draws large numbers of devoted adepts from around the globe. Jois's Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga method draws its name from the concept of ashtanga that hails from from the Yoga Sutra of Patanjali, the ancient Sanskrit text that is the primary reference for the darshan of yoga. Thus when people nowadays say "ashtanga yoga" it is only clear depending on context, or with some explanation, whether one is thereby referring to Jois' particular approach to vinyasa yoga, or to the ashtanga outlined by Patanjali over two millenia ago. Jois' Ashtanga is known for its long and rigorous sequences of postures, which typically require many years of practice and which are intended to be practiced six days a week, except on full- and half-moon days. Known for the axiom, "99% practice - 1% theory," Pattabhi Jois just passed away (May 18, 2009). His tradition is carried on by ashtanga vinyasa teachers around the globe, including his son Manju Jois, his daughter Saraswathi Rangaswami and his grandson Sharath Rangaswami.
Interview with Manju Jois by Guy Donahaye
Pattabhi Jois leading grandson Sharath in advanced ashtanga vinyasa sequence (video on YouTube.)
 
 
B.K.S. Iyengar & family  A student of Krishnamacharya from age 16 to 18, Iyengar would would later become brother-in-law to his guru; Krishnamacharya was married to his sister. Though he regrets not having studied at greater length directly under his guru, he says that because he spoke some English, Krishnamacharya urged him to leave Mysore at this early age in order to teach and spread the knowledge of yoga. And so he did, with great success. He went on to develop his own methodology which is now taught as "Iyengar Yoga" all around the world. Especially after the publication, in 1966, of his classic book Light On Yoga, Iyengar sparked much interest in yoga and garnered an international following. His most notable contributions have been very detailed attention to, and instruction in, alignment in asana practice, and  pioneering work in modifications of postures for the sick and disabled, as well as in  developing props, such as the now-ubiquitous yoga blocks, straps, bolsters, "rope walls," etc. Many yoga therapists around the world favor his techniques. Now in his nineties, Iyengar still teaches at his Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute in Pune, India, along with his daughter Geeta and son Prashant.
 
1938 newsreel footage of BKS Iyengar practicing asana. (on YouTube)
 
 
Indra Devi  Russian-born Eugenie Peterson (1899-2002) later took the name Indra Devi. Having fled to Germany during the Revolution, she was drawn to Indian thought from a young age. She first traveled to India in 1927, and settled down there for some 12 years. In 1937, she became the first woman— and, some say, the first Westerner— to study yoga with T. Krishnamacharya. During this period in India, Indra Devi met and married a Czech diplomat. When he was transferred to China in 1939, she went on to open a yoga school in Shanghai. After the second World War, she continued her study of yoga in the Himalayas. Following her husband's death, she moved to the United States and opened a yoga studio in Hollywood. In 1960, Indra Devi traveled to the Soviet Union and convinced the Kremlin to abolish the USSR's prohibitions on yoga practices. In 1985, she moved to to Argentina and founded the Indra Devi Foundation, which continues to foster the spreading of yoga throughout Central and South America. She also traveled and taught workshops around the U.S. and Europe, and wrote a number of books, including the posthemously released Yoga for You. Indra Devi continued with her yoga asana practice past the age of 100.
 

 

Related articles, etc.

My Studies With Sri Krishnamacharya. (pdf file) From the periodical Namarupa: Article by Srivatsa Ramaswami.
 
3 Gurus, 48 Questions. (pdf file) From the periodical Namarupa: the same questions were put to Desikachar, Iyengar and Jois, about their experiences studying with Krishnamacharya.

Krishnamacharya's Legacy. Article from Yoga Journal.
 
1938 newsreel footage of Krishnamacharya practicing asana and bandhas, amazingly, at age fifty. 


 
  
 
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