Click for full-size, high-res photo:
Flickr photo set here
You’re welcome to use these as long as you credit them “Photo: Lydia Mann” and tag them “lkaminoff” (on social media sites).
- WATCH/LISTEN:
- Prana chant video
- The Warrior Series: Upwardly Mobile video and article on Yoga Journal website
- Tom Myers’ Deep Front Line dissection video
- Gil Hedley’s YouTube channel
- Breath-Centered Yoga with Leslie Kaminoff (DVD from Amazon)
- Freeing the Breath: Health, Relaxation, and Clarity Through Better Breathing with Leslie Kaminoff (audio CD from Amazon)
- Yoga Anatomy YouTube channel
- Jessica Wolf’s Art of Breathing DVD (from Amazon)
- Jill Bolte Taylor’s “Powerful Stroke of Insight” TED Talk
- Yoga Alliance’s Yoga Talks with Leslie Kaminoff on Regulation
- Will Ferrell’s SNL yoga class skit (terrible quality, sorry)
- RECOMMENDED READING:
- ANATOMY:
- Yoga Anatomy, 2nd edition
- Yoga Journal article: Anatomy 101: Understanding Your Tailbone by Amy Matthews and Leslie Kaminoff
- More Leslie Kaminoff content on Yoga Journal
- The Body Moveable by David Gorman
- Trail Guide to the Body: How to Locate Muscles, Bones and More by Andrew Biel
- Anatomy Trains: Myofascial Meridians for Manual and Movement Therapists by Thomas W. Myers
- Sensing, Feeling, and Action: The Experiential Anatomy of Body-Mind Centering by Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen
- Taking Root to Fly: Articles on Functional Anatomy by Irene Dowd
- Scoliosis: Ellen Kiley interviewed by Julie Wilkins and ForeverFused.com
- Reversed organs: Situs Inversus
- HISTORY / BIOGRAPHY / PHILOSOPHY:
- Sri T. Krishnamacharya’s history of classical alignment in the Yoga Makaranda, part I (PDF) and Yoga Makaranda, part II (PDF)
- Religiousness in Yoga: Lectures on Theory and Practice by T.K.V.Desikachar
- Health, Healing, and Beyond: Yoga and the Living Tradition of T. Krishnamacharya by T.K.V. Desikachar and R.H. Cravens
- Yoga Yajnavalkya (PDF) or book, by A. G. Mohan
- Freud and Yoga: Two Philosophies of Mind Compared by Hellfried Krusche
- Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human by Richard Wrangham
- The “Yoga Sutra of Patanjali”: A Biography (Lives of Great Religious Books) by David Gordon White
- Benjamin Lorr’s Hell-Bent: Obsession, Pain, and the Search for Something Like Transcendence in Competitive Yoga
- Leslie’s original post on providing certificates.
- Yoga Alliance “Statement on Yoga Therapy”
- Leslie’s blog post from 2008 (updated 2016): “I’m Not a Yoga Therapist Anymore“
- “Seizing the Whip: B. K. S. Iyengar and the Making of Modern Yoga” by Eric John Shaw, California Institute of Integral Studies, Asian and Comparative Studies
- Leslie’s “A Tale of Two Farmers”
- SCIENCE / PAIN / MEDICINE:
- YOGA PRACTICE:
- The Heart of Yoga: Developing a Personal Practice by T.K.V. Desikachar
- Yoga for Wellness: Healing with the Timeless Teachings of Viniyoga by Gary Kraftsow
- Yoga for Body, Breath and Mind: a Guide to Personal Reintegration by A.G. Mohan
- Leslie’s original stick figure drawing of the Hands-free Warrior Series
- Amy Matthews’ article Wild Thing Is Not Impossible (but it still might not be worth doing) in response to Matthew Remski’s original post “Wild Thing” Pose: Impossible, Injurious, Poignant
- “Thermometer” bandhas expoloration:
- NEW QUOTE: “Just because a little bit of something is useful doesn’t mean that a whole lot of it is better.”
- ANATOMY:
Leslie performing kapalabhati on a bathroom scale
Leslie Kaminoff performs kapalabhati on a bathroom scale, illustrating Sir Isaac Newton’s law: “For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.”
Should We Keep Mula Bandha All The Time?
Have you heard advice about maintaining mula bandha all the time? Have you heard advice about maintaining any body position all the time? Join Leslie and students as they examine well-meaning advice, habits, and practices you can follow to honor the balance into your system.
Soma / Psyche – Introduction to a Talk by Frances Sommer Anderson
What is Flexibility, and How Much Do We Really Need?
Do you do yoga to live a better life, or do you live to do better yoga? Your answer may surprise you, and it will help you learn where to set healthy limits in your own practice.