What I Do As a Yoga Therapist & Other Highlights from the 3Rd Annual Symposium on Yoga Therapy and Research • Meeting of Schools • Response to Keynote Address

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What I Do As a Yoga Therapist & Other Highlights from the 3Rd Annual Symposium on Yoga Therapy and Research • Meeting of Schools • Response to Keynote Address THE INTERNAT I O N A L A S S O C I ATION OF Y O G A T H E R A P I S T S YYoo gg aa T h e r a p y Too dd aa yy June 2009 Volume 5, Issue 2 What I Do as a Yoga Therapist & Other Highlights from the 3rd Annual Symposium on Yoga Therapy and Research • Meeting of Schools • Response to Keynote Address I am an Israeli Yogini Yoga Meets Mainstream Creating a Boutique Mental Health Yoga Studio 1 Yo g aT h e r a p yToday M a rch 2009 Ta b l e O fC o n t e n t s June 2009 Feature Section 15 SYTAR: Pre to Post 15 IAYT's Third Annual Symposium on Yoga Therapy and Research brought to life current research, practices and views on Yoga therapy. In this section you will find articles on a landmark meeting of schools; a sampling of what the Common Interest Community presentations were like; an overview of the general session presentation “As a Yoga Therapist, This Is What I Do;” and a response by Marshall Hagins, PT, PhD to Dr. Timothy McCall’s keynote address. onPractice 5 I am an Israeli Yogini by Michal Yarkoni 5 7 Purnam: The Heart of Yoga Therapy by Stephanie Sisson, LICSW, ERYT onSeasonalPractices 9 Therapeutic Applications of Yoga Practices for Summer and Fall by Patricia Hansen, MA, ERYT OnEducation 11 Journey Into YogaRx and Healing 25 by Lea Kraemer, ERYT OnIntegrativeMedicine 25 Yoga Meets the Mental Health Mainstream by Julie Deife onMedia 27 How to Use Herbs, Nutrients & Yoga in Mental Health Care by Julie Deife onResearch 29 Summaries of Pilot Studies on Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease 31 by Kelly McGonigal, PhD onBusiness 31 Creating a Boutique Yoga Studio by Kate Hillman onMembers 33 Charter Members IAYT Member School Program; Overview of Standards Development for Yoga Therapy Training Programs; and more Cover Photo: Eric Small, Iyengar teacher, Los Angeles. Photo by Adam Latham, angeladam.com. M a rch 2009 Yo g aT h e r a p yToday 2 Yo g aT h e r a p yTo d a y from the Editor PUBLISHER International Association of Planting (and tending) a Spring Gard e n . Yoga Therapists EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Julie Deife hese past few months while I pre- COPY EDITOR Kelly Birch p a red the soil and planted my gard e n , GRAPHIC DESIGNER Ken Wilson TI assembled the Summer/Fall issue of Yoga Therapy Today is published in March, June, and Yoga Therapy To d a y. I thought about the right December and mailed to IAYT members. mix of minerals and organic soil, the seeds and the watering system for my garden and IAYT BOARD & MANAGEMENT how IAYT's soil, seeds, methods and condi- President Matthew Taylor, PT, PhD Vice President Eleanor Criswell, EdD tions affect its growth, too. Every ingre d i e n t Treasurer Matra Raj, OTR, TYC and its corresponding effects will make a Board Members Molly Lannon Kenny d i ff e rence, whether for an organic garden or Clare Collins, RN, PhD an organization that depends on diverse inputs and methods to Betsy Murphy, BSN, RN, RYT, HN-BC Executive Director John Kepner, MA, MBA bring forth the fruits of labor and love. Member Services/ Jesse Gonzales F rom Seattle to New York, from Israel to Los Angeles where the Office Manager T h i rd Annual Symposium on Yoga Therapy and Research (SYTA R ) Advertising Manager Madeline Groves was held in March, IAYT members have had a lot to say. We learn MISSION how they have become Yoga therapists and about the work they do, IAYT supports research and education in Yoga, and serves as the obstacles they face, the knowledge they seek, and the mix that a professional organization for Yoga teachers and Yoga thera- works best for them. pists worldwide. Our mission is to establish Yoga as a recog- Eric Small (whose photo is on the cover) is a virtual icon for his nized and respected therapy. work as an Iyengar teacher living with MS for over forty years; MEMBERSHIP Shanti Shanti Khalsa is a Kundalini Yoga therapist who meets her IAYT membership is open to Yoga practitioners, Yoga teach- clients with an approach that incorporates mantra, mudra a n d ers, Yoga therapists, Yoga researchers, and healthcare profes- lifestyle changes; and Leslie Kaminoff, a Yoga educator in the tradi- sionals who utilize Yoga in their practice. tion of TKV Desikachar, uses breath and hands-on techniques as MEMBER BENEFITS foundational methods for his work. Their inspiring SYTAR pre s e n- • Subscription to the International Journal of Yoga Therapy tations—although not indicative of all styles of Yoga—capsulate dif- • Subscription to Yoga Therapy Today f e rent approaches to Yoga therapy. • Access to IAYT’s research resources and digital library So does the meeting of schools, also reported on in the SYTA R • Professional recognition through IAYT’s online listings section. Representatives from forty-one schools across the U.S. and and an IAYT membership certificate • Discounted registration at IAYT events five other nations sat down to hash out what it means to be a Yo g a therapist and begin the process of defining the training that future CONTACT Yoga therapists should have. This issue also brings us a response to 115 S. McCormick St., Suite 3, Prescott, AZ 86303 the keynote address delivered by Dr. Timothy McCall, written by Phone: 928-541-0004 (M-F, 10AM – 4PM MST) Marshall Hagins, PT, PhD. Hagins' article is sure to encourage a dia- Fax: 928-541-0182 www.iayt.org • [email protected] logue about Yoga and evidence-based medicine. “People from the heart,” as I call the three writers of “I am an HOW TO SUBMIT TO YOGA THERAPY TODAY Israeli Yogini,” “Purnam: the Heart of Yoga Therapy,” and “Journey Authors into YogaRX and Healing,” talk about life and Yoga in re a l - t i m e Email a query or completed article to: [email protected]. Yoga intersections lest we conclude that this esoteric science was meant Therapy Today relies on submissions from the membership. Please submit reports and articles on training, on business, on m e rely for abstraction and debate. (I can't just dream about my gar- practice, on views and insights of the field and profession of den—I have to do the work, too.) Yoga therapy. Brief articles should be 800–1000 words; feature Much of Yoga directs us to focus on the inevitable challenges of articles should be 1500–2500 words. Articles are reviewed and reining in the mind and the senses. So it is not surprising that the accepted on a rolling basis and may be submitted at any time. influence of Yoga on the mental health care profession is gro w i n g . Interviews and Reviews Psychoanalyst, re s e a rc h e r, and Yoga practitioner Dr. Patricia Ger- YTT interviews leaders in the field of Yoga therapy and reviews innovative training materials, professional resources, b a rg along with her husband Dr. Richard Brown (psychiatrist, psy- and training programs. Send nominations and contact infor- chopharmacologist, psychotherapist, and Yoga teacher) are feature d mation to: [email protected]. You may also contact Julie Deife, in “onIntegrativeMedicine,” a section that will continue in the editor, by mail at: Post Office Box 867, Corrales, NM, 87048. December issue to help us understand the people who are bridging Advertisers East and West. Their work and that of others you will meet in fol- Call 928-541-0004 or email [email protected] for advertising lowing issues of Yoga Therapy To d a y, are seeds from previous cycles rates and deadlines. Editorial decisions are made independ- ently of advertising arrangements. and seasons now scattering to take root in new soil. It is my hope that this issue will incite reflection and bring for- ENVIRONMENTAL STATEMENT w a rd useful information that will inspire care of the IAYT garden. This publication is printed using soy-based inks. The paper contains 30% recycled fiber. It is bleached without using chlorine and the wood pulp is harvested from sustainable fore s t s . In service, Julie Deife 3 Yo g aT h e r a p yToday M a rch 2009 M a rch 2009 Yo g aT h e r a p yToday 4 o nP r a c t i c e by Michal Yarkoni I am an Israeli Yo g i n i am an Israeli Yogini.” This state- The familiar background sounds of my ty and karma. It was through the deepening ment has folded within it a childhood were those of birds, and of heli- of satya (truth) in Yoga that I realized that “Icharged complexity. Unfortunate- copters, and explosions of bombs. Among there is no place far enough to hide from ly, the title Israeli is not a neutral one. For my first memories are those of collecting myself, or my fears, or traumas. Despite my some, it brings connotations of war, vio- flowers and snails in the fields by my home honest efforts to make America my home, it lence, bombs, occupation, terror, victims, and others of hearing the whistle of wasn't and will never be. I returned home and holocaust. For others it brings up approaching rockets as Mom covers me to Israel. intense beauty, holy land, rich history, and with her body beside the closest wall she And my home remains a very charged magic.
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