This is how to Detour in a group class.

Have you ever wondered how to teach a class where everything just fits together, where the movements complement each other perfectly and lead people toward an experience full of “ah-ha” moments that keeps them coming back forever and ever?

If you answered “no” to that question, you’re in the wrong place.

But if you said “yes”, read on to learn how you can regularly provide the best-ever class experience for your students.

When you teach this way, people will experience postures like they never have before. I hear the words “Well that’s the best that’s ever felt” from my students so frequently that I’m no longer surprised – I’ve actually come to expect it.

I’m not saying that to toot my own horn (beep beep!). I’m telling you that because I want your students to say the same thing in your classes.

That’s what will happen when they understand how their bodies are designed to move. This understanding not only lets them practice yoga with a different, informed perspective; it also lets them do everything else in their lives with a heightened level of physical awareness, not to mention curiosity and confidence.

Here’s where to start:

When you look at a position or movement, identify all of the components required to make it happen. Since every pose is a combination of a bunch of different things going on at once, it can be super beneficial to break a position down into more digestible parts.

Let’s do this with Chaturanga.

Look at this picture and see if you can identify all the things happening in my body.

Here’s my list:

– Loaded wrist extension
– Elbow flexion
– Shoulder external rotation
– Pressing strength (both eccentric and concentric)
– Scapular stability
– Core centration/spinal stability
– Pelvic stability, supported by co-contracting my abdominals and glutes
– Knee extension
– Toe extension

I remember when I used to teach Mysore-style classes and I’d take a student into a pose with a laundry list of instructions and they’d look at me and say “That’s too much to remember! Too many things!”

I had no idea how to teach in a more digestible way. Until now.

Looking at that list of movement components in chaturanga, you obviously can’t make all of it a priority at the same time.

Instead, pick the things you want to highlight today.

Let’s start with wrists, shoulders, and pelvic stability (you could totally choose something different tomorrow).

What could you offer the class for active wrist extension that would teach them a) how mobile (or not) their wrists already are and b) how to integrate some active wrist prep into their regular practice? This is one of my go-to’s.

To focus on the shoulders, do some work that highlights the role of external rotation when it comes to keeping the shoulder heads from dumping forward. I talked about this in a workshop, comparing push-ups and chaturanga to bench-pressing. Teach some movements that isolate shoulder external rotation so that people have the opportunity to work on that and experience what that feels like without having to concentrate on anything else at the same time. That’s the beauty of isolation before integration.

For the pelvic stability piece, include some prone and supine work that brings awareness to pelvic tilting and core engagement. I’d also do some work on all-fours asking people to find abdominal activation without altering the curves of their spinesomething like this.

Once I have an idea of which smaller pieces/movements I want to offer in the class, I figure out how to link them all together. What are the things they have in common? How can I connect one to another in a way that would feel logical?

If you practice each of these activation pieces yourself, the similarities between them will reveal themselves.

For example, let’s say you start on all fours, focusing on the breath and establishing the neutral curves of the spine. From there, lean back and move into those wrist hinges I linked to above. After that, walk the hands forward until you’re on your belly and do some pelvic tilting, finding the difference between posterior, anterior, and neutral positions. Now, bring the arms out to a cactus position for some external rotation work before pressing back to all-fours to do another round of wrists.

It doesn’t have to be complicated, but it should be progressive – building one movement on top of the next to give your students time to adapt and figure out the possible activations. Once you’ve helped them wake up all these different parts, they’ll have access to them in a more complex position like chaturanga.

This is what “isolate, activate, integrate” means.

I introduce that approach—affectionately known as I-A-I to those in our training progams—in Detour Method Online. In Detour Method Synthesis we then really get into the nitty-gritty details of what it looks like to apply I-A-I in group classes.

If you’re interested in learning more about either of those programs, get in touch.

Til next time,

Cecily

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