Satsang: Mistakes, Milestones & Miracles on the Spiritual Path

With Swami Divyananda, Swami Vimalananda and Swami Ramananda

Join us as these three veterans of the spiritual path share the most important lessons they have learned and answer questions, based on their many years of committed practice. They will recount the humorous and heartbreaking stories that shaped their growth and the teachings that opened their hearts to lasting Peace.

By donation

 

Swami Ramananda is the Executive Director of Integral Yoga Institute in San Francisco and a greatly respected senior teacher in the Integral Yoga tradition, who has been practicing Yoga for over 40 years. Ramananda offers practical methods of integrating the timeless teachings and practices of yoga into daily life, and transforming the painful aspects of human experience into steps toward realizing one’s full potential.
He leads beginner, intermediate and advanced level yoga teacher training programs in San Francisco, and offers a variety of programs in many locations in the U. S., Europe and South America. Ramananda trains Yoga teachers to bring Yoga into corporate, hospital and medical settings and has taught mind/body wellness programs in many locations. He is a founding board member of the Yoga Alliance, a national registry that supports and promotes yoga teachers as professionals. His warmth, wisdom and sense of humor have endeared him to many.

Swami Divyananda Ma is one of Integral Yoga is senior monastics and foremost teachers. Over the years she has served as the director of the Integral Yoga Institutes in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Coimbatore, India and as the Ashram Manager of Satchidananda Ashram, Yogaville in Virginia. In addition to teaching at these centers, she has taught Yoga and meditation on special retreats, in corporations and universities, at the Commonwealth Cancer Center and for the Dr. Dean Ornish Heart Disease Programs. For many years she was one of the primary Basic Hatha Yoga teacher trainers at Integral Yoga’s International Headquarters in Yogaville, VA. Swami Divyananda served for eleven years at the Integral Yoga Institute in Coimbatore, South India and led tours throughout South India during that time.

Swami Vimalananda Ma, RYT500, is an Integral Yoga sannyasi – monk. She has been involved with Integral Yoga since 1971 and Director of the San Francisco Integral Yoga Institute from 1992-2011. She specializes in teaching yoga philosophy and spiritual counseling.

2020-04-05T20:32:40-07:00March 5th, 2020|Tags: , , |

Kirtan & Satsang: Transcending Traditions: Honoring the Impact of Yoga-CANCELLED

Sorry but this event has been cancelled

Join Michael Lerner in this special, celebratory, satsang sharing the vast knowledge and deep wisdom he brings from his many years of experience.

Accompanied by Astrud Castillo leading Kirtan!

Satsang, a special time for us to come together as a community. In Sanskrit, Sat means truth and Sangha means community. Satsang offers an opportunity to come together to share spiritual teachings. The philosophy of Integral Yoga is explored, often, through an informal discussion. Although spiritual paths may diverge, the act of sharing spiritual teachings with others is inspiring and creates a solid foundation for continued practice. People of all faiths are welcome.

 

Michael Mitra Lerner, PhD, is the president and co-founder of Commonweal, a health, environmental and educational center in Bolinas, California. He is also president-emeritus and co-founder of Smith Center for Healing and the Arts in Washington, D.C. Smith Center also uses Integral Yoga as a basis for its Cancer Help Program and other yoga classes. A former faculty member at Yale University, Michael received a MacArthur Prize Fellowship for contributions to public health in 1983. He is also co-founder of Health Care Without Harm, the Collaborative on Health and the Environment, and The New School at Commonweal. www.commonweal.org

 

Astrud Castillo is inspired by the practice of Nada Yoga, the deep inner listening and exploration of the unstruck sound. From this exploration, the inner and outer vibration and expression of Kirtan arises. Astrud brings with her a host of talented musicians from the Bay Area with whom she is honored to play. Kirtan is a way to express gratitude and joy, pain and sorrow and celebrate the gods and goddesses in all their forms. It is through the devotional practice of call and response, and repeating their names, that our hearts awaken and our barriers dissolve. Through this, kirtan enables us to experience wholeness and union, Yoga.

2020-03-13T17:26:26-07:00February 27th, 2020|Tags: , , |

Satsang: Wings for the Soul, Mystical Poetry for Spiritual Growth

 

Mystical poetry and sacred songs are powerful expressions of the human experience, the dynamic meeting of the ego-mind with the Grace of the Divine. That interaction produces a perfect suffering, the labor pains of spiritual growth and the bliss of union with the Infinite. Join us for an evening of sharing words and music that reflect this evolution of the soul, and through our discussions, awaken inspiration and peace in the heart.

Satsang, a special time for us to come together as a community. In Sanskrit, Sat means truth and Sangha means community. Satsang offers an opportunity to come together with IYI senior instructors to share spiritual teachings. The philosophy of Integral Yoga is explored, often, through an informal discussion. Although spiritual paths may diverge, the act of sharing spiritual teachings with others is inspiring and creates a solid foundation for continued practice. People of all faiths are welcome. May be attended on a drop-in basis with no preregistration.
The topics for discussion at Satsang change each week and include a wide array of diverse and interesting subjects and issues ranging from personal healing to global transformation.

Satsang is held every 1st and 3rd Saturday of the month.

By donation | $8 suggested

2020-01-29T11:25:14-08:00January 29th, 2020|Tags: , , , |

How my self care led to serving others

by Pearl Bindu Bauer

I had just started a graduate program at Davis in September 2008, so not only was I stressed and tired from coursework and commuting, but I was without extra funds to spare on self care. A friend mentioned Integral Yoga Institute (IYI) because he knew I had been shopping around for a yoga studio that spoke to my soul; he also knew that IYI offered a work exchange program so I could volunteer and take free yoga classes in exchange. I lived only a few blocks away from the Institute, so I decided to take a class one Thursday morning, and more than 10 years later I still remember it so vividly. Saraswati beautifully led us through a Hatha 1 class, and I remember my heart singing after the 90 minutes was over. Deep relaxation and pranayama practice were all new to me, and I didn’t realize that yoga could be a deeply transformative experience. I was also surprised and impressed with how different this class was from the “mc-yoga” classes that other studios in the city were offering. It was the kind of class I was looking for, and I immediately spoke to the receptionist about the work exchange program. Within a week, I was working in the kitchen.

Every Thursday for two years, I took the 9:30am Level I/II class in the Temple and then at 11:00am, I went down to the kitchen and helped the kitchen mom prepare meals for the IYI community. In my classes, I learned how to use yoga postures and breath as a destressor, for example how to use the asana and pranayama practice to come into my body. In the kitchen, I learned how to cook meals that emphasized a sattvic diet, for example how to use asafoetida instead of garlic and onion and how to cook nutritious vegetarian foods made of nuts, seeds, whole grains, fruits and vegetables to help build our bodies and calm our minds. As the weeks and months progressed, I began to meet many wonderful people who became my friends and teachers, and I became acquainted with Swami Satchidananda’s insightful (and witty!) teachings – back in those days, we listened to cassette tapes of Satchidananda’s satsang while we ate the first half of our meal in silence. I found his teachings profoundly useful as I deepened my own spiritual practice, and I enjoyed incorporating his messages into my daily life.

Swami Satchidananda has said that the more you live for others, the more others live for you, and my experience serving at IYI has shown me the truth of these words. While my original motivation for working in the kitchen was to gain free yoga classes, I realized that the experience was so much more profound. Indeed, I deepened my asana practice, but in the process, I found a family who inspired me to be my best self. Eleven years later, I have gone through Basic, Yoga Therapy and Intermediate Teacher Trainings. I’ve also joined the silent retreats at Commonweal, and I teach Hatha 2 in Jyoti on Saturday mornings. Even though I now live in Half Moon Bay, I commute into the city to teach these classes because it’s important for me to remain connected to this wonderful community. Who knew that my decision to work in the IYI kitchen so many years ago would have become such an invaluable experience in my life? To this day, I am eternally grateful for all that I have learned and continue to learn.


Pearl Bindu Bauer has been practicing yoga for 20 years, teaching for 8. The literal meaning of yoga is “union” and what she loves about yoga is how it helps her find alignment in her body/mind/spirit and physical/emotional connections. While meditating helps her stay clear, the asana practice on the mat helps her come into the body – the balance between the two is key for her daily practice. In her Hatha 2 classes, she often incorporates an intentional practice – for example, a gratitude or a vision-making practice. She finds that giving students focus as they are flowing through asanas is key in aligning the physical body with the spiritual experience, a true yogic union.

2020-01-23T07:11:59-08:00January 23rd, 2020|Tags: |
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