About me

After 15 years of experience in financial markets, in a variety of sales, marketing and communications roles, I am turning my knowledge into a freelancing career, offering professional writing and editing services on demand.

I am a native English speaker and able to translate complex investment ideas into simple everyday language, covering topics such as equities, bonds, commodities, property, hedge fund of funds, structured products, multi-asset funds, leveraged funds, ETFs, OEICs, UCITs, SICAVs and SPCs.

I am also a qualified yoga instructor, having completed 200 hours of training in Hatha Yoga in Hong Kong and a further 300 hours of advanced training in Vinyasa Flow in India. I offer both private lessons and group classes in a private studio in Mid-Levels. Please check my website for more information and for my current teaching schedule.

http://yogaflowwithjo.wix.com/joyoga

https://www.facebook.com/yogaflowwithjo

Tuesday, 24 February 2015

Yoga for Weekend Warriors

Are you a Weekend Warrior? Do you think yoga is 'too easy' for you?


My last blog post was about private yoga lessons, and why they are totally worth the money! You can read all about it here.

This week is about yoga for Weekend Warriors – dudes and gals with high-pressured office-based jobs leading relatively sedentary lives during the week, who like to party it up at the weekend – the ‘work hard, party hard’ brigade. These Type A’s like to go all in, no matter what they are doing. If they are going to work out, they want a high intensity, high impact, or high adrenalin form of exercise.

Weekend Warriors might think that yoga is not for them – that it’s too slow/too boring/too easy.

Well.

I teach a couple of Weekend Warrior type guys, let’s call them James and Carl*, who now come to my Vinyasa Flow class on Saturday afternoons quite regularly. They are both finance professionals by day and superheroes by night. OK, I’m kidding about the superheroes part, but they certainly work out like they need the strength and power to stop runaway trains and save the world. They do weights. They do cardio. They do boxing/MMA/other cool warrior-type stuff (although they wouldn’t hurt a fly and only ever injure themselves, but still..)

And they do yoga.

The first time I taught James was in a private one-on-one class. At the end he said to me, “I don’t normally do this kind of yoga – I just don’t feel like I get much of a workout. I need to work up a sweat so I only go to hot [yoga].”

“Ha!” I said. “Why didn’t you say so earlier?”

Luckily, he is a good friend of mine, so I persuaded him to come to another class.

The next Saturday rolled around and it was time for my Vinyasa Flow class. It’s just James and Carl in class this week. As I’m just starting out, my classes are quite small at the moment (though they will remain relatively small – maximum 8 people in a class). This means that I can demonstrate a pose, watch them come into the pose, and then verbally ‘adjust’ them by giving specific instructions to help with alignment.

They set up their mats and wait for me to start. First comes a few minutes of seated meditation. I ask them to focus on the breath and slow everything down. Then we do a few warm-up stretches and twists and onto a more dynamic warm-up. We go through a few rounds of Sun Salutation A, and then a few more rounds of Sun Salutation B. As we start to speed up, synchronising each movement within a single breath, I see a bead of perspiration form on James’s forehead. It was only 10 minutes into the start of the class.

We then worked through some standing warrior flows, holding each pose for 3-5 breaths. Throw in a bunch of arm balances, standing balance poses, inversions and backbends, and you’ve got yourself a pretty good all-body workout, building strength AND flexibility.

60 minutes later and after relaxing in the all-important shavasana, we come back to the start, with a few moments sitting quietly and focusing on the breath.

“OK, that wasn’t easy,” James admits. “I’ve never had so much alignment instruction in a yoga class before! All this time, I’ve been doing warrior 2 wrong!”

Carl, who knows me better than that, knew not to throw around comments like “It’s too easy!” or “Yoga is for wimps!”

“So, err, you do a beginner’s yoga class too?” asked Carl.

At the next Saturday afternoon Vinyasa Flow class, James rushes in and puts his mat down. Carl is already there. It’s 5 minutes before the start of class. James says hi and immediately starts doing a few hip stretches, neck rolls and shoulder openers while I’m chatting to another student. Finally, I look at the clock and ask everyone to find a comfortable seat as we are about to start.

“Wait a minute!” James protests. “It’s not 5pm yet! I’ve still got about a minute left!”

I reassure him that the class is designed to start off with warm-ups and stretches before we launch into the hard stuff.

“Yes, but your whole class is hard,” he grimaces. “I need to do my own warm ups first! I ached for days after your last class.”

Moral of the story: only tell your yoga instructor friend that you think yoga is too easy if you want to be tortured work up a sweat. :-)

Both James and Carl* are regulars now, at my Vinyasa Flow class, and they love it! (I think..!) I’ve also taught them some awesome stretches for their post-gym workouts (like pigeon and lizard) and a few poses that they can do at home, anytime (in particular, the shoulder-roll to open up tight shoulders and the spinal twist to alleviate lower back pain).

***

The problem is that beginner’s yoga perhaps IS very slow/maybe boring/too easy for Weekend Warriors like James and Carl. But it’s usually in the beginner’s classes that you get more technical alignment instructions. Beginner’s classes need to be slower in order to convey the myriad of detail that goes into a pose. It also takes time to learn and remember the ‘correct’ alignment of a pose, especially if you only attend a yoga class once a week. So the teacher will often repeat alignment cues, or choose to repeat poses so that they can give different instructions the next time. I can see why some people think it’s too ‘boring’.

In Vinyasa Flow/Power Yoga or other intermediate-level classes, you get to do more fun stuff, but the teacher generally assumes that you already know the basics. It’s impossible to give as many alignment cues in a more dynamic, fast-paced flow-based practice because you are not holding some of the poses for very long.

It’s important to get the fundamental alignment right before progressing to the more advanced poses. The key is to find smaller classes – up to 8 students, say, where the teacher is able to watch over everyone and give appropriate alignment cues as opposed to general ones. This will ensure that you are getting specific instructions that help YOU improve your practice, even in a more dynamic Vinyasa Flow class. In the larger studios, where you might get 20 or 30 people in a class, it’s especially difficult for a teacher to do this.

If you are interested in joining my small group Vinyasa Flow classes, click here for my upcoming schedule.




*Not their real names – their identities must be protected in case they do in fact turn out to be superheroes.

Thursday, 5 February 2015

8 Reasons to Take Private Yoga Lessons!

Why take a private yoga lesson? 


My last post was about the amazing health benefits of a regular yoga practice (see here for more details). Hopefully it will have gone some way in persuading you that yoga is good for you!

“OK,” you might think, “I’d love to give it a go, but I’m not flexible enough!”

Or: “I’ve never done it before; I’m worried I won’t be able to follow the class properly!”

These are the two most frequently given reasons I’ve heard from people who are reluctant to join my group yoga classes. (I teach vinyasa flow on Saturdays and hatha flow for beginners on Sundays. See my Facebook page YogaFlowWithJo for more information.)

In answer to the first – I say that you go to yoga to become more flexible, you don’t have to be already flexible to start going to yoga.

And in answer to the second – I get it. I understand. No one wants to be the newbie in the class, the one that doesn’t know what downward facing dog is. You think it’s embarrassing. HOWEVER, I’d like to reassure you that no one is looking at you or judging you in a beginner’s class. EVERYONE has been the newbie at some point or other.

Even for experienced yogis, we still get that feeling sometimes, when we go to a new class with a new teacher and we don’t know what’s coming or don’t immediately understand the alignment cues, and we’re looking around to other people in the class thinking, “Say what? What does she mean by that??”

But if you’re still worried, the best thing to do is to go for a private yoga lesson. These one-on-one lessons can build your confidence and teach you the basics of yoga alignment. As with any private training, the benefits go beyond the functional training. Here are 8 good reasons to take a private yoga class:

  • A private lesson is less intimidating for beginners. It’s just you and the teacher. No one else. So if you feel self-conscious about not being able to touch your toes, or if you want to ask a gajillion questions, or if you think your arms are too skinny/too wobbly/too hairy or whatever (they’re not – but we all have weird issues with our own body parts), then a private lesson is a great way to work on your yoga skills before attending a group class.

  • You get individual attention and personalised alignment cues. The teacher is there for YOU. The class is all about YOU. There are a million ways to describe a pose. And your body is different to my body. This means that when you move into a pose, you will need different cues depending on what your body is doing at the time. Your teacher will watch you move into the pose and verbally ‘adjust’ you by giving you personalised cues and instructions.

  • You get more hands-on adjustments. Sometimes, giving verbal adjustments isn’t enough, especially for beginners. Maybe you haven’t developed that sense of body awareness yet. Your teacher might be instructing you to square your hips in Alanasana (High Lunge) and you might think that your hips ARE square! Until the teacher physically adjusts you and you realise that you needed to bring one hip forward and the other hip back.

  • You can work towards a personal goal. Most yoga classes for beginners will be a balanced practice and may include a range of standing, sitting, balancing, strengthening and lengthening poses. For general health benefits, this approach is great! But maybe you particularly want to lose weight, or build upper body strength, or you’re a runner and you want to offset the tightness in your hamstrings with a yoga practice. It can be anything. Private lessons are all about you and your body, your goals.

  • You can work safely with injuries. This is an extension of the ‘it’s all about you’ approach. You can still practice yoga with injuries and in many cases yoga will help with your rehabilitation. Take care to explain the nature of your injuries to your teacher well before the class so that she has time to do her homework. If she knows about your injuries beforehand, she can design a thoughtful class sequence accordingly.

  • Practise whenever and wherever it suits your schedule. You might be super busy and the only time you can fit in a yoga session is at 8am on a Wednesday morning before your meetings start. Or maybe you prefer to practise in the evening at 8pm and wind down before getting ready for bed. Whatever your schedule is, a private yoga lesson fits in with your day, rather than the other way round.

  • Take your practice to the next level. When you’re no longer a beginner, you might want to continue with private lessons as a way to keep challenging yourself. Once you have the basics down pat and you have a regular yoga practice, you can use the time in your private lessons to start practising the more challenging poses. Want to learn headstand? No problem! Want to fly into crow pose? Your teacher will guide you step by step into these poses safely and with self-compassion.

  • Build your confidence towards a self-practice. I feel that good private yoga teachers will eventually teach themselves out of a job. Once you’ve learnt the fundamentals of alignment, the art of sequencing, the breakdown of each pose and its particular physical and mindful benefits, you could start to play around with creating your own yoga practice. It may take years, or it may take months – it all depends on what you are looking for.

Of course, these are all just physical and practical benefits of private yoga lessons and yoga is so much more than just a physical practice; it is a way to connect the mind with the body and the soul. But we’ll leave that topic for another day..




Friday, 30 January 2015

Top Reasons to Start a Yoga Practice Today!

Need a good reason to take up yoga? 


Today, there are millions of people around the world who practise yoga. Young and old, male and female, it seems that the popularity of yoga is booming. The top 5 reasons people give for starting a yoga practice include: 1) flexibility (78.3%), 2) general conditioning (62.2%), 3) stress relief (59.6%), 4) improve overall health (58.5%) and 5) physical fitness (55.1%).

Academic research suggests that yoga does help with all of these factors, and the benefits can be seen after the very first yoga class. However, the key to reaping the benefits of yoga is consistency. Taking one class, once in a while is good; but practising yoga on a regular basis - daily if possible - is better. Even a 5-10 minute home yoga session is beneficial to health; it doesn't have to be very long and it doesn't have to include any fancy poses.

That said, for beginners, it is always advisable to practise with a qualified teacher who can help to break down the poses and explain the correct alignment to prevent injuries. A good teacher can also show you a basic sequence that you can practise at home, when you're ready.

And if you needed any more convincing that yoga is good for you - well the science says it is so!




yoga infographic

Monday, 19 January 2015

Yoga is for everybody!

Are you thinking about getting fit and healthy in the New Year?
Are you looking for ways to de-stress the mind and body?
Are you new to yoga and think that you are too inflexible to go to a class?

Yoga is for everybody, whether you are young or old, big or small. It doesn't matter whether you can touch your toes or not! A regular yoga practice keeps you feeling young and energetic, makes your body strong and fit, and helps to focus the mind.

Everybody is welcome on the mat!

Please contact me for more information about my classes or to book a private lesson.