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Sarah Plumer's Bio


Yoga came into my life through the influence of a mentor during the final years of my dance training. I found that certain asanas (yoga postures) helped me attain a greater sense of core strength in my body, as well as an unequivocal mental focus for performing dance.

After receiving a BFA in Modern dance in 1994 and moving to New York in l995, I began searching for a yoga practice that suited me as I continued to pursue my dance career. I soon discovered Ashtanga Yoga (Ashtanga Yoga is a traditional practice where one moves from one asana to another in a specific flowing sequence.) Ashtanga Yoga is practiced at one's individual pace, which appealed to my desire to learn through quiet practice and inner listening. I also enjoyed the flowing sequence of movements.

I was fortunate to have found a well-respected teacher who has challenged me to move beyond mental and physical limitations. One of the most powerful benefits is that, with consistent practice, old injuries from years of classical and modern dance and running have healed. Along with physical healing, yoga offered ways of improving my mental attitudes about myself and the world around me.

I traveled to Mysore, India during that first year to study with Sri. K. Pattabhi Jois. Taking that first step out of my fast-paced New York lifestyle offered me the opportunity to explore what stillness and an unaccustomed abundance of time could do for me. In India, along with my asana practice, I learned a pranayama (breathing) practice. This became an important tool to facilitate sitting still for periods of time and becoming the observer of my thoughts. I found that meditation is the key to experiencing deeper states of peace and overall well-being.

Back in New York, soon after returning from India, I continued yoga teacher training informally. I immersed myself in ancient and contemporary yoga texts and practiced yoga daily. Gradually, over the course of two years, I felt more and more drawn into welcoming yoga to the forefront of my life, and less desire to perform as a dancer. This has meant heightening my awareness and love of myself, as well as accepting the whole range of life: both the pleasant and the painful.

At the request of a friend, I began sharing what I learned with other dancers. Several months later, I began teaching regularly in health clubs. I created yoga classes with flowing movement sequences which linked asanas, natural breathing, and meditation. I found that my dance training--that daily work with alignment--in addition to the study of anatomy and kinesiology--the study of the principles of mechanics and anatomy in relation to human movement--have all been essential to the development of balanced yoga sessions. From my experience and observations, teaching is also about sharing from an open, loving place within oneself. I love helping others to find their own inner light by guiding them toward making consistent, positive changes in their yoga practice, thought patterns, and, ultimately, lifestyles.

In the fall of 1999, I was asked to begin an Ashtanga Yoga program for Crunch's "Yoga Shanti." This wonderful opportunity has allowed me the consistent space, time and students to use all that I have learned about working with each individual's needs. At present, I teach an Ashtanga Yoga program at Crunch, which has a studio dedicated exclusively to yoga, located at 623 Broadway at Houston Street (Tel: 212-420-0507).


INTRODUCTION TO YOGA

WHAT CAN YOGA DO FOR ME