Yoga Alliance Thailand - YAT

Yoga Alliance Thailand - YAT Thailand's Yoga Alliance with branches world-wide. Get certification of being a Yoga Teacher -Yoga Schools in Thailand & overseas. yogaalliancethailand.com

Thailand's Yoga Alliance with branches world-wide for the Registration of Yoga Teachers and Yoga Schools in Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Malaysia, SE Asia, Far East and overseas. www.yogaalliancethailand.com

We are official Yoga Organization in Thailand for Yoga Alliance International with branches worldwide for providing certification to the Yoga Teachers and Yoga Schools from around the world.Yoga Alliance International-Thailand (YAT) offers Certification at the 200-500 hr and Master Level: www.yogaalliancethailand.com

Founded by the Reverend Sri Swamiji Vidyanand also President, creator of Transformational Yoga Program and Director Thailand - Yogi Nik (+66841200205). Inspired by the vision of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother, Yoga Alliance International, is a worldwide Organisation now in Thailand namely by Yoga Alliance Thailand (YAT), that celebrates the diversity and integrity of yoga practices throughout the world. Open to all Yogic minded individuals everywhere, Yoga Alliance International-Thailand (YAT) supports the integrity of Yoga practices and philosophy throughout the world.

Yoga Alliance Thailand - YAT wishes you, Chinese New Year Of The Horse Wishes! Heartfelt wishes for your loved ones for ...
30/01/2014

Yoga Alliance Thailand - YAT wishes you, Chinese New Year Of The Horse Wishes! Heartfelt wishes for your loved ones for the Chinese New Year 4712!

This year is the Year of the Horse, which is said to bring prosperity and wealth. Chinese New Year is celebrated on the first day of the Chinese calendar, and this year it will fall on 31 January. Chinese New Year is the longest and most important celebration in the Chinese calendar. The Chinese year 4712 begins on Jan. 31, 2014.

Chinese months are reckoned by the lunar calendar, with each month beginning on the darkest day. New Year festivities traditionally start on the first day of the month and continue until the fifteenth, when the moon is brightest. In China, people may take weeks of holiday from work to prepare for and celebrate the New Year.

A Charming New Year
Legend has it that in ancient times, Buddha asked all the animals to meet him on Chinese New Year. Twelve came, and Buddha named a year after each one. He announced that the people born in each animal's year would have some of that animal's personality. Those born in horse years are cheerful, skillful with money, perceptive, witty, talented and good with their hands. Rembrandt, Harrison Ford, Aretha Franklin, Chopin, Sandra Day O'Connor, and President Theodore Roosevelt were born in the year of the horse.

Fireworks and Family Feasts
At Chinese New Year celebrations people wear red clothes, decorate with poems on red paper, and give children "lucky money" in red envelopes. Red symbolizes fire, which according to legend can drive away bad luck. The fireworks that shower the festivities are rooted in a similar ancient custom. Long ago, people in China lit bamboo stalks, believing that the crackling flames would frighten evil spirits.

The Lantern Festival
In China, the New Year is a time of family reunion. Family members gather at each other's homes for visits and shared meals, most significantly a feast on New Year's Eve. In the United States, however, many early Chinese immigrants arrived without their families, and found a sense of community through neighborhood associations instead. Today, many Chinese-American neighborhood associations host banquets and other New Year events.

The lantern festival is held on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month. Some of the lanterns may be works of art, painted with birds, animals, flowers, zodiac signs, and scenes from legend and history. People hang glowing lanterns in temples, and carry lanterns to an evening parade under the light of the full moon.

In many areas the highlight of the lantern festival is the dragon dance. The dragon—which might stretch a hundred feet long—is typically made of silk, paper, and bamboo. Traditionally the dragon is held aloft by young men who dance as they guide the colorful beast through the streets. In the United States, where the New Year is celebrated with a shortened schedule, the dragon dance always takes place on a weekend. In addition, many Chinese-American communities have added American parade elements such as marching bands and floats.

09/12/2013

Yoga Alliance Thailand Login Systems

09/12/2013

What Yoga and My Yoga Mat taught me:

1. Unapologetic ”me” time. My yoga practice requires me to step inside of my own skin and focus on myself.

2. Health. I’ll be the first to admit that I came to my yoga practice for my body. Yet I don’t think I ever expected my physical self to ultimately be the last thing I hop onto my mat for. Still, there’s no denying that I love the body that my yoga practice has made—and I love the health and invigoration I feel both during my mat and during the rest of my daily life.

3. Self-growth. I have absolutely grown as a person because of my yoga practice. It’s forced me to confront my ego, my needs for control and perfection, and my deeply ingrained type-A personality—and I can’t believe how much of these self-defining qualities no longer define me because of my practice.

4. Patience. I'm certainly not a patient person, but I'm more patient now than I used to be. I think part of this comes from simply working on poses that literally took me years to get into the full posture (or I'm still working on). My practice has also taught me to enjoy those poses between poses—better known as life.

5. Take time to be still. Some of my best practices involve me sitting in the same place on my mat; focusing on my breath or getting deeply into one posture and then holding it. I've taken this stillness out into my daily life, and for a hyperactive ADD person, this is a huge accomplishment, no medication required.

6. I'm not the same person every day, and that’s okay. I can be a really moody man, and my mat has let me come to terms with this. During my yoga practice, I feel out how my body and my moods are shifting all the time—and I've learned that my life is often most successful when I acknowledge and accept my current situations rather than always swimming upstream.

7. Happiness is my responsibility. Sure, other people can affect our moods—but they don’t get credit for causing them. Your happiness is your responsibility, period. My yoga practice gets the credit for this realization because I learned how much power and control I have over myself from my mat time.

8. Yoga exists off the mat. Ironically, having a regular practice of asanas has taught me to see the yoga that I practice constantly, when I'm no where near my mat.

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