Embrace the vibrancy of summer with a special Yin Yoga workshop at the Live From Love Center!
This is a season of expansion, transformation, and passion. To deepen this connection, we’ll explore the element of Fire and how its qualities correspond with summer time. Maya will guide you through meditation, pranayama (breathwork), the heart and small intestine meridians, and a Yin Yoga practice curated for this time of year.
You’ll also have a chance to connect with others through group discussion and receive a handout so you can continue these practices at home.
Sliding scale $30-50 via Venmo @maya-rook or card when you pay online. Reserve your spot here.
Location:
Live From Love Center
145 Waldoboro Road
Bremen, ME 04551
This workshop is part of a larger series that will meet once a season throughout the year to explore each of the elements.
Meet Your Teacher:
Maya Rook is a certified yoga instructor with nearly 30 years of meditation experience. She received her 200-RYT in 2019, completed additional certifications in Yin Yoga and Yoga with Seniors, and is the creator of Firefly Studio. Maya is passionate about making meditation and yoga practices accessible to everyone, breaking through misconceptions about mindfulness, and helping people connect with the present moment through breath and movement. Her yoga and meditation classes are also supported by her work as a cultural historian and college educator. Participants have described Maya’s approach to Yin Yoga as nurturing, relaxing, and peaceful.
What is Yin Yoga?
Yin Yoga is a beautiful complement to our more active Yang lifestyles and practices. Here, we slow down and hold poses of stillness, typically for 3-5 minutes, using props to help support us. The intention of a longer hold on a physical level is to stimulate and nourish the connective tissues and fascia. We also work consciously with the breath and the mind-body connection through these poses of relative stillness and cultivation of awareness of sensations that arise. Yin Yoga draws from Daoism and the Five Element Theory in Traditional Chinese Medicine as different poses relate to specific organs and meridians in the body, supporting and balancing one’s energy.