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Yep. I’m not here to flame any particular brand. Looks like there are plenty good ones out there, but I will say the different tip attachments make a big difference. The one I bought has a fairly firm and pointy one that’s great for getting deep into elbow areas.Is that the tool that repeatedly taps or pounds an area - about $300?
I’ve been around a decent number of Yogi folks in my life so I’m fairly aware of different approaches. There are many. The thing that usually bugged me was when someone immediately shoved off the idea of trying it in any way at all under the premise of having to attain all those positions instantly. It’s obviously not the point, and for anyone that actually IS there, I would think it highly unlikely they got there right away. It’s a very long road, but a rewarding one if travelled well. I also saw (and found for myself) true and lasting recovery from things I originally thought I’d just have to live with. Shoulder stuff, knee stuff, back and neck stuff…Yo Bart, that's one example of dude who's practices hours daily and has for years even at an older age if you stuck it out and did with conviction you could get there . That's one of my favorite vids but there's millions out there start slow and see where your end range is with each moment and movement. I would add the balancing poses are very attractive to practice from a climber perspective. I don't know about being agile if that hereditary to some degree I'm sure but staying limber is a choice. I started yoga after a back injury years ago to rehab and couldn't do half the poses properly I can do now. But it's alot of time invested to get there.. don't do things that cause you pain. No pain no gain doesn't work in regards to this practice..
Yep. I’ve heard it said that if you can simply breathe and move at the same time, you can do Yoga. How far you go with it is an individual journey. I’ve also heard that some Yogis will only work on a particular portion of the entire possible myriad of positions only to master that one. Also that the ones that finally reach enlightenment look back and say, “Yes, I can now do all those poses…but WHY?” Seems there’s a great deal of latitude in the game.I dated a yoga instructor for a while. One thing she always started her class with was emphasizing that not every body is the same and that there are positions some people may be physically incapable of fully getting into. That's not a shortcoming, that's just who you are. Accept it and push yourself to YOUR limit, not the preconceived limit expected of you.
I've been in some classes where the instructor will go around pushing and pulling people deeper into a position and all I can think is "you're a lawsuit waiting to happen".
Well.....I could go out and buy several till I find one I like.....or I could PM you and ask you brand and model, or.....you could just tell us here.Yep. I’m not here to flame any particular brand. Looks like there are plenty good ones out there, but I will say the different tip attachments make a big difference. The one I bought has a fairly firm and pointy one that’s great for getting deep into elbow areas.
So, the first I ever heard of this was in a book about a particular well known and successful osteopath, and he apparently built the thing himself. That was 15 years ago, and it never dawned on me that companies would now be producing them commercially.Well.....I could go out and buy several till I find one I like.....or I could PM you and ask you brand and model, or.....you could just tell us here.
How long have you had it? Is it missing any features you've heard of and would like?
Thanks for saving me a bunch of beginning research.
(Oceans was the main "owner resource" that had me feel comfortable buying a 101-48AJ lift.)
I like flo appoach, the fella I posted a video of earlier. When he teaches he says maybe you can do this, or maybe you cannot , doesn't matter. Do whats best for your body. If you fell uncomfortable sensation back away. Always starts by protecting the body, no breaking it. As we both said there's plenty yogis out there to work with and journey of a thousand miles starts with one step.I’ve been around a decent number of Yogi folks in my life so I’m fairly aware of different approaches. There are many. The thing that usually bugged me was when someone immediately shoved off the idea of trying it in any way at all under the premise of having to attain all those positions instantly. It’s obviously not the point, and for anyone that actually IS there, I would think it highly unlikely they got there right away. It’s a very long road, but a rewarding one if travelled well. I also saw (and found for myself) true and lasting recovery from things I originally thought I’d just have to live with. Shoulder stuff, knee stuff, back and neck stuff…
You ever work with a couple other people connected to comms and you’re all doing the same task? Sometimes you hear one person wheezing or breathing erratically and others you can’t even hear at all? Breath is quite literally EVERYTHING.I like flo appoach, the fella I posted a video of earlier. When he teaches he says maybe you can do this, or maybe you cannot , doesn't matter. Do whats best for your body. If you fell uncomfortable sensation back away. Always starts by protecting the body, no breaking it. As we both said there's plenty yogis out there to work with and journey of a thousand miles starts with one step.
We are all in vast levels and different people. Some days I can't go as deep or get into poses other days same pose no trouble at all. Doesnt matter, doesnt even concern me. The poses are the last piece of puzzle for me , it is more for me controlling the breath, but above all the mind practice moving through with the breath and feeling my body truly with presence and mind awareness I hope to bring with me through out each day.
Well now my wife's been training to get certified as a pilates instructor , so I'm off to do an hour of that with her as a test dummy lol
Will report back on how pilates goes for me I've herd its great for physical rehabilitation.
Hahaha best thing you can do man. Pretty uncomfortable at first but you feel amazing afterwardsUnder no circumstances am I willingly getting into an ice bath.