(via Dix livres sur le Yoga - Les lumières de Mathilde || Curated with love by yogadaily)




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(via Dix livres sur le Yoga - Les lumières de Mathilde || Curated with love by yogadaily)
I love to read. It’s one of my passions that I’ve felt really connected to since I was a kid. I had one teacher tell my mom at a parent teacher meeting that I was a good student but that I always rushed through my work so I could read my book 🤣📚 NERD. ALERT. I’m all about a good book that I can take into my daily life and practice. Knowledge will only get you so far, so it’s important to align an experiential practice alongside the mental work. My current read? “Character and Neurosis” by Claudio Naranjo, M.D. ❤️ it is blowing my mind. ✨ STAY TUNED ✨ for my blog post on book suggestions for newbie yogis. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * #yoga #yogi #bookstagram #yogini #yogabooks #yogabook #nerd #yogateacher #yogaeverydamnday #gypsy #gypsysoul #gypsystyle #anthropologiehome #anthropologie #anthrolove #bookworm #yogagram #blog #gypsyogii #yogaforlife #yogalove #love #happiness #yogainspiration #yogajunkie #read
books that completely changed my yoga practice 📚✨
the morning light catches the worn spines on my bookshelf. six books, stacked beside my mat in my gothenburg apartment. each one a disruption, a question i didn't want to answer.
these aren't the books that comforted me or confirmed what i already believed about yoga. these are the books that challenged everything i thought i knew, that asked difficult questions i couldn't ignore.
the ones that made practice harder before they made it deeper.
luna sleeps on the windowsill, the winter sun warming her fur. i reach for one of these books sometimes before practice, reminding myself that the path isn't about collecting beautiful ideas.
it's about letting those ideas reshape you, even when—especially when—it's uncomfortable.
here are the six books that disrupted my practice in ways i'm still processing.
1. the heart of yoga 📖
t.k.v. desikachar
early pandemic, 2020. gothenburg was gray and quiet, the world had folded inward. i was following online yoga classes in my apartment, trying to find "the right way" to practice when everything felt wrong.
sara, my swedish teacher, mentioned desikachar in passing: "yoga must adapt to fit the person, not the person to fit yoga."
i borrowed the book from the studio library.
what i expected: another guide to proper alignment and traditional sequences.
what i found: permission to stop trying to fit myself into someone else's practice.
desikachar writes about his father, krishnamacharya, who famously adapted yoga for each individual student.
there was no "one right way."
the practice served the person, not the other way around.
this felt revolutionary after years of trying to force my runner's body into poses designed for different bodies, different needs. my hamstrings were chronically tight. forward folds hurt. but i kept pushing, thinking that was dedication.
desikachar gave me permission to modify, to choose different poses, to create sequences that served my body instead of fighting it, not as failure, but as the actual practice.
i remember closing the book that first night, luna curled beside me, and feeling something release in my chest.
relief. deep, unexpected relief.
my practice didn't need to look like anyone else's, it just needed to be honest.
2. the yoga sutras 🧘♀️
patanjali (translated by chip hartranft)
sara recommended this in 2021, during those late swedish nights when darkness fell at three in the afternoon. i'd been practicing yoga for five years by then, feeling proud of my progress in crow pose and headstand.
i thought i was doing yoga.
the very first sutra: yogas citta vrtti nirodhah—yoga is the stilling of the fluctuations of the mind.
not: yoga is about flexibility.
not: yoga is about instagram-worthy poses.
not even: yoga is about the body.
the body is just the tool. the work happens in the mind.
i sat on mat that night, luna asleep on the pillow, reading by lamplight. the entire first chapter of the sutras barely mentions physical postures. it's all about consciousness, about attention, about what happens when the mind finally becomes still.
i realized i'd been doing gymnastics.
beautiful, mindful gymnastics, but gymnastics nonetheless.
the revelation came slowly over weeks: my morning runs along the göta river, where i paid attention to my breath and let thoughts pass without attachment, were closer to yoga philosophy than some of my mat work.
running was dhyana, meditation in motion.
some of my flow classes were just exercise.
this wasn't a criticism of physical practice. it was an expansion. the poses weren't wrong, they were incomplete without understanding their purpose.
the body isn't the destination.
it's the doorway.
3. cutting through spiritual materialism 💭
chögyam trungpa
ananya mailed me this book in 2022, after the bali retreat. i was still posting beautiful yoga photos from ubud—sunrise warrior poses, meditation by rice paddies, the aesthetic of enlightenment.
i felt spiritually accomplished.
like i'd arrived somewhere.
trungpa's first chapter destroyed that comfortable story.
spiritual materialism: using spirituality to build up the ego, not dissolve it. collecting practices, experiences, teachers, retreats as badges of how evolved you are.
the pursuit of enlightenment as another form of achievement.
every page felt personal.
the retreats i'd attended weren't about deepening practice, they were credentials. the sanskrit i dropped in conversation wasn't integration, it was performance. even my "humble practice" posts were carefully curated proof of my spiritual advancement.
i was using yoga to construct an identity, not transcend one.
the shame came first, then came anger—at trungpa, at ananya for sending it, at myself for recognizing the truth.
i stopped posting about practice for six months.
not as punishment, but because i needed to figure out what i discovered about spiritual ego and what was actually practice.
that silence taught me more than any retreat.
when no one was watching, when there was no proof, no validation, no spiritual currency being earned, what remained?
the answer: a very ordinary practice.
less impressive. more honest.
trungpa's book didn't make me more spiritual, it made me more human.
which, i'm slowly learning, might be the whole point.
4. yoga body 📚
mark singleton
i read this in 2023, preparing for my trip to rishikesh. i wanted to understand yoga's ancient roots before studying at the source.
instead, singleton showed me that the "ancient tradition" i thought i was practicing was largely invented in the 20th century.
ngl this one hurt.
the modern postural yoga i'd learned—vinyasa flow, power yoga, all the asana-focused styles—emerged from a fascinating blend of indian wrestling exercises, european gymnastics, british military calisthenics, and bodybuilding culture.
the flowing sequences i loved?
influenced by scandinavian gymnastics brought to india by the british.
many poses i thought were 5,000 years old were actually less than 100 years old.
i felt betrayed at first. lied to. like i'd been sold a fake history, a manufactured authenticity.
i'd go back to the book, checking the citations, looking for holes in singleton's research.
but his scholarship was solid.
the history i'd believed wasn't what i thought.
then something shifted…
if yoga had always been evolving, adapting, incorporating new influences, then maybe my hybrid practice—yoga for runners, poses modified for tight hamstrings, sequences designed for my swedish apartment—wasn't less authentic.
it was part of the tradition's evolution.
the betrayal became liberation.
yoga wasn't a pure, unchanging ancient practice i needed to preserve. it was a living tradition that had always adapted to new contexts, new bodies, new cultures.
my practice could honor the philosophy while existing in my body, in this time, in this place.
that wasn't corruption.
that was how yoga had always worked.
5. the body keeps the score 🌿
bessel van der kolk
sara recommended this in 2024, after i mentioned feeling "stuck" in certain poses despite years of practice. some hip openers made me inexplicably anxious. some backbends felt impossible, not from lack of flexibility but from something deeper.
van der kolk writes about trauma—not just big-t trauma, but the accumulated stress and painful experiences the body stores when the mind can't fully process them.
the nervous system remembers.
muscles hold memory.
awareness alone doesn't release everything.
reading this book, i understood…
my resistance in pigeon pose wasn't about tight hip flexors. my shallow breathing in heart-opening poses wasn't about rib cage mobility.
these were stories my body was telling, memories it held.
western neuroscience was explaining what eastern philosophy had described differently. the body as teacher. the wisdom beneath conscious thought.
this changed my entire approach.
practice became less about achieving shapes and more about listening. what was my body trying to tell me in this sensation? what old fear or hurt was asking to be acknowledged?
i started approaching difficult poses with curiosity instead of force.
not "why can't i do this?" but "what is this showing me?"
some poses i'll probably never "master." and that's okay. they're not tests to pass. they're conversations with my nervous system, with memories i'm still processing, with parts of myself that need gentleness, not achievement.
van der kolk bridged my two worlds—the embodied wisdom of yoga practice with the scientific understanding of trauma and healing.
both were right. both were necessary.
the body keeps the score.
practice is how we listen.
6. light on life ✨
b.k.s. iyengar
i borrowed this from the gothenburg studio library in 2021, during a phase when i was very focused on intuitive, flowing practice. listen to your body. move with breath. let it be gentle and soft.
iyengar's approach felt rigid in comparison.
precise alignment. specific angles. disciplined attention to detail. his entire teaching philosophy centered on exactness, on form, on what looked like rigidity.
i almost returned the book without finishing it.
but one line stopped me: "freedom comes from discipline."
that paradox stayed with me.
i'd been using "intuitive practice" as permission to avoid difficult things. if a pose was hard, i'd flow past it. if my alignment was off, i'd tell myself that listening to my body meant not forcing.
which was partially true.
but i was also using intuition as an excuse for laziness.
iyengar showed me that structure creates the container where real freedom can happen. like knowing grammar allows you to write poetry. like learning scales allows you to improvise music.
the discipline isn't about rigidity, it's about building capacity.
about creating strength and stability that let you move with both power and ease.
i started experimenting with more structured sequences. holding poses longer. paying attention to alignment details i'd ignored.
and something unexpected happened: the practice deepened.
not because i was forcing, but because i was present. the structure demanded attention, attention created awareness, awareness revealed things i'd been glossing over.
freedom and discipline weren't opposites, discipline was how i found freedom on mat.
now my practice holds both. structure and intuition. precision and flow.
iyengar's careful alignment for poses that need it, desikachar's adaptation for poses that don't.
not either/or.
both/and.
what these books taught me 💫
i stand here in my gothenburg apartment, these six books on the shelf beside my mat.
they didn't make practice easier.
they made it more honest.
the pattern i see now: each book disrupted something i thought i knew. each one asked me to hold complexity instead of certainty. each one deepened practice by challenging it.
desikachar gave permission.
patanjali gave purpose.
trungpa gave humility.
singleton gave context.
van der kolk gave compassion.
iyengar gave structure.
together, they showed me that growth doesn't come from reading books that confirm what we already believe. it comes from the ones that make us uncomfortable, the ones that ask difficult questions, the ones that refuse to let us stay comfortable in our assumptions.
the books that challenge your practice are more valuable than the ones that comfort it, because true understanding comes not from having your assumptions confirmed, but from having them compassionately disrupted.
my practice looks different now than it did six years ago.
not more impressive—maybe less, from the outside.
but deeper. more grounded. more mine.
still learning, still questioning, still letting books disrupt what i think i know.
because that's where the real practice lives.
what books have challenged YOUR practice? drop your recs in the replies or reblog with your own list—i'm always looking for my next disruption 📚✨
کتابهای زبان اصلی یوگا: راهنمایی برای آشنایی بیشتر با فلسفه و تمرینات یوگا
یوگا، به عنوان یک فلسفه و روش تمرینی که در طول تاریخ هزاران سال تکامل یافته است، نه تنها در تقویت بدن و ذهن مؤثر است، بلکه به افراد کمک میکند تا به هماهنگی و آرامش درونی دست یابند. برای کسانی که علاقهمند به یادگیری عمیقتر یوگا و فلسفه آن هستند، کتابهای زبان اصلی میتوانند منابع غنی و آموزندهای باشند.
در این مقاله به معرفی برخی از بهترین و معتبرترین کتابهای زبان اصلی در زمینه یوگا میپردازیم که به شما کمک خواهند کرد تا دانش خود را در این زمینه گسترش دهید و تکنیکهای یوگا را بهتر درک کنید.
1. "The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali" – Swami Sivananda
یکی از منابع اصلی و بنیادی یوگا، "Yoga Sutras of Patanjali" است که به تشریح اصول فلسفی و روانشناسی یوگا پرداخته است. این کتاب به بیان آساناها (حرکات فیزیکی) و پرنایاما (تنفس) نمیپردازد، بلکه بر مراقبه و خودآگاهی تأکید دارد و به شما کمک میکند تا به هدف نهایی یوگا که دستیابی به آرامش ذهن و آزادی از رنج است، برسید.
چرا باید بخوانید؟
معرفی فلسفه عمیق یوگا
راهنمایی در زمینه مراقبه و دستیابی به آرامش درونی
مناسب برای کسانی که به دنبال درک فلسفه و جنبههای معنوی یوگا هستند
2. "The Heart of Yoga: Developing a Personal Practice" – T.K.V. Desikachar
کتاب "The Heart of Yoga" یکی از آثار برجسته در زمینه یوگا است که توسط یکی از بزرگترین استادان یوگا در قرن بیستم، T.K.V. Desikachar نوشته شده است. این کتاب بهویژه به تمرینات شخصی و تعلیمات کاربردی یوگا پرداخته و شامل راهنماییهایی برای توسعه یک تمرین منظم و شخصی یوگا است.
چرا باید بخوانید؟
مفاهیم یوگا را از دیدگاه فردی و شخصی بررسی میکند
توصیههایی برای انجام تمرینات یوگا در زندگی روزمره
مناسب برای کسانی که میخواهند تمرینات یوگای شخصی و متناسب با نیازهای خود ایجاد کنند
3. "Light on Yoga" – B.K.S. Iyengar
B.K.S. Iyengar یکی از بزرگترین اساتید یوگا است که کتاب "Light on Yoga" را بهعنوان مرجعی جامع برای یادگیری یوگا به جهان معرفی کرده است. این کتاب بهویژه برای کسانی که به دنبال یادگیری دقیق و صحیح آساناها و پرنایاما هستند، یک منبع عالی است. علاوه بر این، کتاب به مفاهیم معنوی و روانی یوگا نیز پرداخته است.
چرا باید بخوانید؟
مرجع جامع برای یادگیری تکنیکها و فلسفه یوگا
توضیحات دقیق و مفصل درباره آساناها، پرنایاما و مراقبه
مناسب برای یوگابازان مبتدی تا پیشرفته
4. "The Bhagavad Gita" – Eknath Easwaran (ترجمه و تفسیر)
گرچه "The Bhagavad Gita" کتابی مذهبی است، اما آموزههای آن برای یوگابازان بسیار مهم و کاربردی است. این کتاب به مکالمهای میان آرjuna و Krishna پرداخته و درباره مفاهیم مختلف مانند وظیفه، اراده آزاد، و اتصال به نیروی الهی صحبت میکند. در واقع، گیتا بهعنوان یک راهنمای معنوی و فلسفی برای تمرین یوگا و زندگی روزمره شناخته میشود.
چرا باید بخوانید؟
معرفی فلسفه و آموزههای معنوی یوگا
کمک به درک عمیقتر از هدف و مسیر یوگا
مناسب برای کسانی که میخواهند ارتباط عمیقتری با خود و جهان پیرامون خود برقرار کنند
5. "Yoga Anatomy" – Leslie Kaminoff, Amy Matthews
کتاب "Yoga Anatomy" بهویژه برای کسانی که علاقهمند به یادگیری علمیتر و آناتومیکی یوگا هستند مفید است. این کتاب بهطور دقیق و با استفاده از تصاویر آناتومیکی، نحوه عملکرد بدن در هنگام انجام آساناها و تأثیرات آنها بر ساختارهای مختلف بدن را شرح میدهد. این کتاب مناسب یوگابازانی است که میخواهند اطلاعات فنی و علمی بیشتری در مورد تاثیرات یوگا بر بدن کسب کنند.
چرا باید بخوانید؟
بررسی دقیق و علمی تأثیرات حرکات یوگا بر بدن
مناسب برای کسانی که میخواهند تمرینات یوگا را با دقت بیشتری انجام دهند
مرجعی عالی برای معلمان یوگا و افرادی که به آناتومی بدن علاقهمند هستند
6. "The Key Muscles of Yoga" – Ray Long
این کتاب به بررسی نقش و اهمیت عضلات در انجام حرکات یوگا میپردازد. با استفاده از تصاویر آناتومیکی، Ray Long نحوه عملکرد عضلات در حرکات یوگا را تشریح کرده و به یوگابازان کمک میکند تا آگاهی بیشتری از بدن خود پیدا کنند و از آسیبهای احتمالی جلوگیری کنند.
چرا باید بخوانید؟
معرفی عضلات اصلی بدن در حرکات یوگا
کمک به درک بهتر از نحوه عملکرد بدن در تمرینات
مناسب برای افرادی که میخواهند تکنیکهای یوگا را با دقت و آگاهی بیشتری انجام دهند
7. "The Yoga Bible" – Christina Brown
این کتاب یک مرجع جامع برای یوگابازان مبتدی و پیشرفته است که شامل آساناها، پرنایاما، و مراقبه به همراه توضیحات مفصل در مورد هر یک است. این کتاب برای کسانی که به دنبال یک منبع ساده و در عین حال جامع برای یادگیری یوگا هستند، بسیار مناسب است.
چرا باید بخوانید؟
مرجعی جامع برای یوگابازان مبتدی
توضیحات ساده و کاربردی برای یادگیری تمرینات مختلف یوگا
مناسب برای کسانی که به دنبال یک راهنمای کامل برای تمرینات یوگا هستند
نتیجهگیری
کتابهای زبان اصلی یوگا منابع غنی و آموزندهای برای یادگیری و درک عمیقتر یوگا و فلسفه آن هستند. از آساناها و پرنایاما گرفته تا مراقبه و فلسفه معنوی یوگا، این کتابها به یوگابازان کمک میکنند تا تمرینات خود را به سطح بالاتری برسانند و به درک عمیقتری از خود و دنیای اطرافشان دست یابند.
Dr. Bob Ahern of Ohio State University recommends my book. #yogasong#ohiostate,#bobahern#yogabooks#yogalife#yoga#bookreview#gregoryormson#amwriting https://www.instagram.com/p/Ck8qx0Ztshc/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Camel pose in yoga.
Camel pose in yoga.
Its cool. Rochak Publishing of India sent me The Taj Mahal Review, Vol. 22, 1 with PR for my book, Yoga Song, included. I've been to the Taj Mahal once, and published a story in CutBank online about the train ride getting there. #yogasong #yogainspirationals, #gregoryormson, #yogalife, #yogabooks, #rochakpress, #tajmahalreview, #amwriting, #cutbank (at Lake DuBay Shores Campground) https://www.instagram.com/p/CiaPnjgrbH_/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=