A rigorous, traditional practice with a set sequence of postures, performed in the same order every time, synchronized with breath. The discipline builds profound strength, flexibility, and focus through repetition and daily practice.
Ujjayi breath throughout. Each movement has a specific breath count. Inhale = expansion. Exhale = contraction.
Nine gazing points. Each pose has an assigned drishti: nose, third eye, navel, hand, toes, far right, far left, up, down.
Mula bandha (root), uddiyana bandha (abdominal). Energetic seals that contain and direct prana.
Ashtanga has six series, but most practitioners work exclusively in the first one or two:
Forward folds, hip openers, twists. Approximately 75 poses. Purifies and heals the body. Most practitioners spend years here—some, a lifetime.
Deep backbends, leg-behind-head poses. Opens energy channels. Only begun after Primary Series is established.
Four advanced series. Arm balances, extreme flexibility, deep strength. Very few practitioners reach these levels.
The traditional format. Students practice at their own pace, memorizing the sequence, while a teacher moves through the room giving individual adjustments. Named for Mysore, India, where Jois taught. No led cues—you must know the sequence.
Teacher calls out poses and breath counts. Everyone moves together. Useful for learning the sequence and maintaining correct pacing. More structured than Mysore.
Power Yoga emerged from Ashtanga—teachers like Bryan Kest, Beryl Bender Birch, and Baron Baptiste all trained with Jois. But Power Yoga discarded the fixed sequence, allowing creative freedom. Ashtanga practitioners sometimes view Power Yoga as a watered-down version; Power Yoga advocates see it as necessary adaptation. Both perspectives have merit.
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