About Yoga with Dawn Mauricio

August 1, 2010

Dawn Mauricio is a Certified Yoga Instructor, whose style of teaching has evolved into a method that blends the insights and practices of Yoga with the mindfulness and Meditation of Buddhism. Since becoming a Yoga teacher in 2006, Dawn has accumulated an inspiring amount of trainings, including:

Three Hatha Yoga Teacher Training Certifications

  • 350-hour Mindfulness Yoga and Meditation Training, certificate obtained in April 2009
  • 200-hour Kripalu-inspired Yoga Teacher Training, with Kelly McGrath and Mélanie Chevarie, certificate obtained in December 2007
  • 100-hour Hatha Yoga Teacher Training with Hart Lazer and Nicole Bordeleau, certificate obtained in July 2006

Pre-Natal Yoga and Yoga for Kids Teacher Training Certifications

  • 12-hour Pre-Natal Yoga Teacher Training with Janice Clarfield, certificate obtained in May 2007
  • 15-hour Yoga for Kids Teacher Training with Maalaa, certificate obtained in October 2006

Mentoring and Retreats

  • 150-hour Yoga Mentoring Program with Hart Lazer
  • 2-year Intensive Vipassana Meditation and Study Program with Daryl Lyn Ross
  • More than 80 nights of silent meditation retreats (including 1 month on Thai monastery Wat Chom Tong)

Read the details of Dawn’s biography

Don’t let your backbone slide

September 2, 2009

“Study Yoga; you will learn an infinite amount from it – but do not try to apply it, for we Europeans are not so constituted that we apply these methods correctly, just like that.” – Carl Jung, Yoga and the West

The backbone of modern Yoga is Pantanjali’s 8-Limb Path, in which each stage is a preparation for the next. In Sanskrit (Yoga’s ancient language) , it’s called Ashtanga where ashta means “eight” and anga means “limb”. Keep in mind that this is not to be confused for the widely popular style of Yoga of the same name, Ashtanga (as if this wasn’t already confusing enough).

For those who are unfamiliar with the 8-Limb Path, it is as follows: Read the rest of this post»

Mindfulness reduces stress, studies show

June 29, 2009

TIME meditation coverWhen asked what I do for a living, I reply “I teach Yoga.” Almost always the follow-up question is “What kind of yoga?” The times when I’m feeling more talkative I respond “Mindfulness Yoga”. The follow-up to that is a quizzical look.

As defined by my teachers of the Mindfulness Yoga and Meditation Training I completed at Spirit Rock, Mindfulness Yoga is an inter-disciplinary method that blends the insights and practices of yoga with the mindfulness and meditation of Buddhism. Although the act of blending Yoga and Mindfulness together is new, Mindfulness is not, dating back to the time of the Buddha. In laymen terms, Mindfulness is about being in the present moment – letting go of past memories or future thoughts; paying full attention to what you are doing, moment by moment. Mindfulness training involves learning how to be aware of your mind, body and emotions and is taught in yoga, meditation, tai chi, and other similar practices. Read the rest of this post»

Yoga Mala in The Gazette

June 22, 2009

In The Gazette on Monday, June 22 there was a snippet with a photo of this year’s Yoga Mala. It was in Susan Schwartz’s Applause section. There were some mistakes in the article and I apologize for them. The corrections are below:

- two teachers excluded from the teaching list were Rocio Mchorro (Yoga Sangha) and Anna Smutney (Moksha Yoga Montreal)
- two teachers mentioned but they were not able to co-teach at the event were Allison Ulan and Dina Tsouluhas

Otherwise, it was great! I’ve included the scan here for those of you who missed it.

Dawn_Mauricio_YogaMalaGazette

The movie HOME

June 21, 2009

I’ve been getting a lot of mass e-mails from yogi friends lately promoting the new documentary Home. From watching trailers I knew this was an “Inconvenient Truth”-style documentary. I was a little reluctant to watch it, not because I wanted to stay in an ignorant bliss, but because a lot of these movies try to convey the urgency of the matter by throwing a lot of hard-hitting facts at you. I do understand and completely believe the urgency, but having them bundled up together for dramatic effect sometimes overwhelms me, causing me to lose hope momentarily.

This is where my yoga and meditation practice really help. Knowing this is my pattern, I try to be aware of this reaction. I then try to sit in meditation for a few minutes exploring this feeling of hopelessness. I allow it to rise, even grow, but as all things do, it also disappears. Read the rest of this post»

DOSHA know how healthy you are?

June 14, 2009

Having been a yogi for a number of years now, it is only natural I get exposed to yoga’s syblings, for example meditation, pranayama, and shatkarmas to name a few. But more and more, a certain sister has been trying to win my attention – and I think it finally won: Ayurveda.

As quoted from an ezine article:
Read the rest of this post»