A woman in my neighbourhood has been coming to my Power Yoga classes.  I was at her house recently for a, don’t laugh, Tupperware party and she introduced me to some others.  She mentioned I taught yoga and said “sometimes it feels like we way too many Sun Salutations but I always feel great afterwards!” 

And I was like, hmmm, do we *do* too many Sun Salutations?  We probably max out at 5 and don’t always do that many.  But this was just her subjective impression, and that’s cool, i’m happy for the feedback because it makes me think.

Some styles of yoga take Sun Salutations or leave them.  My Kripalu teachers would have us do a couple after we were warmed up when they felt like it.  But in Ashtanga the 5 Sun Salutation A’s are just the *beginning* of your warm-up.  And it makes me think again about focus.

Often I find when I’m bored, I’m actually scattered so while I think I should fix it with more stimuli, it doesn’t help at all.  I really need less.  And that’s the cool thing about Ashtanga and Bikram - doing the same poses everytime.  It forces you to bring your attention to the subtle stuff. 

It forces you to look inward - because there’s nuttin’ interesting going on outside!  Once you get tired of wondering how many Sun Salutations you’re going to have to do - you notice whether this forward bend feels different than the last, or whether your back feels any looser this time around in Updog or, god forbid, you notice your breath :-)

Now I don’t do alot of Sun Salutes in every class.  Sometimes when my Power Yoga class sounds really scattered before we start I just crank the tunes and get everyone’s sweat on, mixing it up and wearing them out.  It guarantees that everyone will get mellow and have a good relaxation at the end. 

But I also think that forcing yourself to be ok with the repetition is good too.  It’s just harder.  Because we wish we were doing something different.  And then we realize that the value is in just doing what we’re doing. 

So, I’m sorry to say, my neighbour isn’t going to get out of Sun Salutations in my class.  But I might make a point of explaining why they’re hard on our head and why that’s good a good thing.