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oak tree yoga

174 Victoria Road
Wargrave
07977934346
yoga classes and yoga teacher training

oak tree yoga

  • Welcome
  • Classes
    • One to One
    • Online
    • Special Needs
    • Sound Baths
  • Retreats
    • Retreat with Us
    • June 2025 Hampshire
    • July 2025 Sweden
    • October 2025 Hampshire
    • November 2025 Hampshire
    • March 2026 Goddess Rising Day Retreat
    • Yoga Retreats Booking Now
  • Thai Massage
  • Yogi's Library
    • PRACTICE WITH US
    • THIS WEEK'S CLASS
    • 20 MINUTE CLASSES
    • VINYASA
    • SLOW FLOW
    • HATHA YOGA
    • YIN-YANG YOGA
    • RESTORATIVE YOGA
    • 7 CHAKRA SERIES
    • MEDITATION
    • TUTORIALS
    • Guided Meditations
  • Journal
  • Sign In My Account

Chakras 101

July 30, 2022 Sarah Raspin

In our classes online this summer, we will be working systematically through all seven chakras with movement, breath and meditation work. As a basis for this teaching, it will be helpful to understand exactly what chakras are in the yogic sense.

Chakra means wheel, literally “that which revolves” and in yogic literature the word refers to the seven vital centres in the subtle body, where important energy lines (nadis) cross. 

The chakras have become a popular topic in New Age thinking, alternative medicine, and yoga, but there is a growing gap between how the chakras are viewed today and how they are regarded in traditional yogic literature.

In new age thinking, the chakras are used mainly for physical healing; in this system each chakra is said to be related to certain organs or bodily functions, which can become diseased or healthy based on the relative clarity of the chakra itself.

The yogic approach is different to this and aimed purely and simply at clearing chakras as part of the process of growing Self-knowledge, spiritual development and enlightenment. The techniques of yoga - asana, mantra, pranayama, and meditation - all lead to towards clearing energy, cleansing chakras and personal development. In yoga, chakras cannot be moved, influenced or opened by another.

According to the yoga system, in the ordinary human state, which is rarely transcended except by sustained spiritual practice, the chakras are closed; that is, they do not truly function. The result of this is not disease, but ignorance, known in yoga as avidya: the mistaken belief that we are separate from everything and everyone else. Someone’s chakras can be closed and yet they can be healthy, emotionally balanced, mentally creative, and successful in many areas of life.

To bring the subtle centres called chakras towards clarity, the body and mind must be put in a state of rest and balance.  You lay the groundwork for this in the all of the work you have done in yoga to create stillness of body, breath, senses, and mind.

Opening chakras requires opening to universal feelings of compassion and devotion and connection with a sense of the universal life force. For example, to open the heart chakra is quite different than being in a heightened, vulnerable, or overly emotional state; rather to awaken this chakra is to go beyond mere personal emotions to understand the cosmic energy behind all emotional fluctuations.  

Opening the chakras requires an open and receptive attitude, it cannot be forced. You may have experienced chakra opening for yourself, those quiet but meaningful inner shifts that take place during the practice of yoga. Conversely, you may only understand ths chakras intellectually, knowing where they are and what has been taught about them and their significance to yoga practice. Either path is valid and seeking sensation for the sake of it won’t get you very far.

The best way to begin chakra work is deep within the quiet, peaceful state that we find ourselves in when we practise yoga. Be alert to that which is shifting within you and learn to be curious about it.

Sarah xx

← Calm CountsPeace and Power →
Rainy day yoga ✌🏼🕊️

Sunday morning autumn practice looks like this - slow movement, nourishing pranayama & gentle poses held for a long time. Meditation rises naturally.

Doesn't look like much from the outside, but everything on the inside ha
When fear arises, lift your heart✌🏼🕊️

The victories & challenges we encounter in our yoga practice become the manual for how to live more skillfully.

Fear has a posture. When we are scared, our breath becomes shallow, our chest caves in &
Stay hopeful✌🏼🕊️

Be friendly with happy people,
Have compassion for the unhappy &
Cultivate equanimity towards the wicked
Yoga Sutra 1:33

Patanjali taught this to his students about 2,000 years ago. 

It's easy to be friends with happy people
If you want to continue to do your best & most dedicated work, you ought to know how best to replenish your energies afterwards ✌🏼🕊️

The week after retreat is necessarily a very slow one here. We're back to our usual weekly schedule, but quiet
You are stronger than you think you are ✌🏼🕊️

Good people need to be strong, because the bad ones shout so very loudly. 

#bestrong #pinchamayurasana #inversionworkshop
Disconnect to reconnect ✌🏼🕊️

Retreats offer an immersive experience to deepen one's meditation practice, fostering self-understanding, emotional regulation, and a renewed sense of vitality 🤍

#yogatribe #yogaretreat #meditationretreat #yogaweeken

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