national center for complementary and alternative medicine five-year strategic plan 2001–2005

(Frankie) #1
therapy (IYT) was founded in 1993 by Joseph
Le Page in San Francisco, California. Le Page
designed a teacher-training program specifi-
cally for conventional and medical settings
aimed at rehabilitation.


  1. ISHTA yoga: ISHTA yoga is a blend of postures,
    breathing, and meditation geared to access
    human potential developed by Alan Finger,
    founder of Yoga Zone Studios and second-gen-
    eration yoga master who has been practicing
    for more than 40 years. The Yoga Zone has four
    studios in New York for more than 1,700 stu-
    dents per week. Finger began his yoga studies
    as a teenager in his native South Africa under
    the instruction of his father, Kavi Yogiraj Mani
    Finger, who studied yoga in India. Alan Finger
    became a Western Yoga Master and in 1992
    developed ISHTA yoga, which in Sanskrit refers
    to developing a personal yoga practice that
    meets individual needs. The acronym ISHTA
    refers to the Integrated Science of Hatha Tantra
    and Ayurveda, a physical and spiritual form of
    yoga. ISHTA combines Ashtanga, Viniyoga,
    Iyengar, and the practices of Paramahansa
    Yogananda. Finger’s company has published a
    book, more than 50 videos, and the nationally
    televised Yoga Zonetelevision show that aired
    on the Health Network.

  2. Iyengar yoga: Founded by B.K.S. Iyengar, who
    adapted it from Patanjali’s traditional yoga
    methods, Iyengar is one of the most commonly
    practiced forms of yoga in the United States. It
    involves the use of tools, such as belts, chairs,
    blocks, and walls to help make postures more
    attainable for beginners and individuals with
    physical limitations.

  3. Jivamukti yoga: Created by David Life and
    Sharon Gannon in 1984, Jivamukti combines
    meditation and physical challenge with San-
    skrit chanting, readings, references to scriptural
    texts, a diverse selection of music, poetry, pos-
    tures, and breathing techniques.

  4. Kali Ray TriYoga: Founded by Kali Ray (Kaliji)
    in 1980, the TriYoga Center in Santa Cruz, Cal-
    ifornia, was established to offer a system of
    yoga based on a series of flowing, dancelike
    movements accompanied by music in a medita-
    tive environment.
    11. Kripalu yoga: Kripalu yoga is the form of yoga
    practiced at its homebase, the Kripalu Center
    for Yoga and Health, a nearly 30-year-old non-
    profit education fellowship located in Lenox,
    Massachusetts, and the largest retreat center
    for yoga and holistic health in North America.
    The organization was founded in 1966, when
    Yogi Amrit Desai created the Yoga Society of
    Pennsylvania, a nonprofit organization provid-
    ing yoga classes and training for yoga teachers.
    The center was renamed to honor Yogi Desai’s
    guru, Swami Kripalvananda. Swami Kripalu is
    better known as Bapuji, which means beloved
    grandfather. He was a master of kundalini yoga
    as well as a respected speaker, writer, and musi-
    cian. Kripalu’s philosophy consists of three
    conceptual stages. Willful practice focuses on
    body alignment, breath, and consciousness;
    willful surrender is the practice of holding pos-
    tures to the level of tolerance and beyond to
    deepen concentration, and release tension.
    12. Kriya yoga: A technique of pranayama (energy
    control) used during meditation to accelerate
    one’s spiritual progress. Kriya, the Sanskrit
    word for action, is geared to divine union
    through a certain act or technique. It was intro-
    duced to the West by Paramahansa Yogananda
    and combines an esoteric meditation technique
    with other practices of raja and hatha yoga. It is
    considered to be one of the most effective tech-
    niques for achieving self-realization (samadhi).
    The Ananda Sangha organization offers Kriya
    preparation classes, including the year-long
    Ananda Course in Self-Realization.
    13. Kundalini yoga: The source of all forms of yoga,
    Kundalini is a comprehensive science of
    breathwork, postures, sound, chanting, and
    meditation with the goal of merging with the
    universal Self. Known as the Yoga of Aware-
    ness, Kundalinimeans “coiled one,” referring to
    the power of the Absolute or Consciousness
    that creates and sustains the universe. The idea
    is that the coiled and dormant form of this
    power is harbored by everyone and symbolizes
    the potential of consciousness. Yogi Bhajan
    introduced Kundalini to the West in 1969; he
    believed that it is everyone’s birthright to be
    healthy, happy, and holy and that people of all


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