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Thursday, 31 December 2009 10:25

Texas Yoga Conference

Written by Jennifer Bridges Buergermeister

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The First Annual Texas Yoga Conference (TYC) will be hosted by Unity Church (2929 Unity Drive, Houston, TX) on February 19-20, 2010. TYC was founded in 2009 by Houston area yoga studio owners, who share a passion. That passion is to introduce, represent, and support Texas yogis and the Texas yoga community. The conference intends to inspire the general public about yoga and to educate it about the numerous and diverse branches of yoga.

Monday, 28 December 2009 00:00

Creating an Alliance

Written by Jennifer Bridges Buergermeister

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Seriously, I had no idea at the time that the "Got Yoga?" campaign to market yoga in Texas would have such significance in the creation of the Texas Yoga Association. After founding the conference, it just came to me that we needed a state-wide association to glue us all together. Then I saw the movie Milk! Shortly after that, I found out that the Texas Workforce Commission had moved toward regulating Austin Yoga closing many yoga schools and studios who could not afford the hefty annual fee to operate.

Sunday, 27 December 2009 18:00

Yoga Unifies Houston

Written by Jennifer Bridges Buergermeister

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Author of The Healing Path of Yoga, Nischala Joy Devi, said, “With humility, we embrace the sacredness through the study of Yoga.” An open mind and heart will follow.

“Yoga” is a derivative of a Sanskrit word meaning “unity.” Many yoga practitioners will define yoga as a series of stretching and strengthening postures, known as asana, used in combination with meditation and breathing techniques. What they describe is actually Hatha Yoga, the yoga of postures. This popular form is only one branch of the yogic tradition. There are many branches on the yogic tree, much like the tree of life. But they share in a complete sense that yoga is about unification.

Wednesday, 16 December 2009 12:06

A Community of Support

Written by Marilyn Gore

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Recently, yoga teacher training programs in Austin, Texas became subject to scrutiny of the Texas Workforce Commission, resulting in administrative nightmares, financial burdens and ultimately a number of facilities choosing to shut down operations completely. The Texas Workforce Commission first contacted Austin yoga teacher training programs with a demand letter alleging that teacher trainings were subject to career school regulations and licensing requirements of Title 3, Texas Education Code, Chapter 132. This letter required that the yoga teacher trainings be brought into compliance with the regulations or be prepared for the enforcement of penalties against them if they did not seek compliance.

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TYA is accepting donations to help defray the costs of our legal response to the TWC and our efforts to get legislative protection for the yoga community. Donate in any amount via PayPal -- We appreciate your support!