Svastha Yoga Therapy Syllabus

1. FOUNDATIONS OF WELLBEING & YOGA THERAPY

Duration: 10 hours

This course lays the foundation for understanding the traditional approach of yoga and
ayurveda toward wellbeing. Building on that, we then explore the practical ways to create
sustainable positive transformation. The contents of this course are at the heart of all work as a yoga student, yoga facilitator and teacher of wellbeing, and as a yoga therapist.

In this course you will:  

  1. Appreciate the holistic view of yoga and ayurveda.
  2. Explore wellbeing as the balance of functions in all levels of yourself.
  3. Use the full-spectrum Svastha map of wellbeing to look at the skills of wellbeing.
  4. Receive an introduction to assessing imbalance.
  5. Work with the ways to create, support, and sustain positive change.
  6. Understand conscious vs. unconscious in the yoga view: patterns and shifts.
  7. Appreciate the importance of the principle of adaptation—use it or lose it.
  8. Explore willpower, energy, resistance, effort as parameters that influence change.
  9. Differentiate stress vs. challenge. Cultivate safety, resilience. Understand coping and allostasis.
  10. Use curiosity, exploration, play, and the new vs familiar.
  11. Cognize the role of environment in change: supports for new patterns, triggers for old patterns.
  12. Choose steps in the journey of change: small steps and large steps.
  13. Adjust degree of challenge: less vs more in time and complexity.
  14. Manage lapses, trying again vs trying differently.
  15. Work with motivation: values, conviction, insight, changing vs. growing.
  16. Explore the personal meaning of change, value system, intrinsic and extrinsic rewards, changing vs. growing.
  17. Cultivating acceptance, balancing engagement and letting go.

Traditional Frameworks

  1. vṛtti, samskāra
  2. hetu, phala, āśraya, ālambana
  3. śraddhā, vīrya, prajñā
  4. tapas, svādhyāya, īśvara-praṇidhāna
  5. vrata/vow/commitment

2. BREATHE WELL

Duration: 40 hours

This master course covers the keys of breathing well: skills, practices, wisdom, insights, and science.

In summary, in this course you will:  

  1. Learn the skills needed to breathe well, lifelong.
  2. Receive guided exercises, observation and assessment, and teaching practice for those skills.
  3. Understand the necessary functional anatomy of breathing techniques.
  4. Learn decision pathways to work with imbalances of the breath.
  5. Understand safety and contraindications of different breathing skills.

Topics include

  1. Charting the parameters of breathing.
  2. Observing the breath as it is.
  3. Finding comfort with the natural breath and understanding its uses.
  4. Regulating the cycle of breathing skillfully.
  5. Managing the effort of breathing: decreasing the effort of breathing with ease, increasing the effort with arousal.
  6. Working with deep breathing and shallow breathing.
  7. Understanding the anatomy, principles, and practice of physical patterns of breathing and their uses, including abdominal breathing, lower rib breathing, upper chest breathing, and breathing into the back.
  8. Appreciating the connection between breath and body movement and its practical uses.
  9. Lengthening the breath with care and comfort.
  10. Safely using fast breathing.
  11. Cultivating the inhalation: including using movement, position, touch, visualization, sound, and sequencing.
  12. Cultivating the exhalation: including using movement, position, touch, visualization, sound, and sequencing.
  13. Developing breath suspension, safety, contraindications, benefits, sequencing and more.
  14. Using breathing ratios and stepped breathing in asana and pranayama.
  15. Using ujjāyī breathing in asana.
  16. Working with sound to enhance breathing

Traditional Frameworks

  1. bhāva
  2. dhāraṇā, dhyāna, samādhi
  3. smṛti-sādhana
  4. prajñā
  5. vikalpa, vitarka, vicāra
  6. grahītā, grahaṇā, grāhya

Modern Science

  1. Functional anatomy of the respiratory system.
  2. Functional anatomy of breathing cycle.
  3. Physiology of respiration (control of breathing, oxygen and carbon dioxide, energy
  4. generation, hyperventilation and hypoventilation etc.)
  5. Visceral regulation and breathing (interoception, vagal tone, heart rate variability, regulation through breath etc.

3. MOVE WELL

Duration: 60 hours

This course will take you through all the important skills of movement for each region of the body, the major disorders that arise in those regions, and the yoga therapy approach to managing them. These same skills are also what keep your locomotor system healthy and help you move well, lifelong.

In summary, in this course you will:  

  1. Learn the locomotor skills needed to move well. 
  2. Receive guided exercises, observation and assessment, and teaching practice for those skills. 
  3. Understand the necessary functional anatomy of key body regions. 
  4. Learn decision pathways to work with imbalances of these body regions. 
  5. Appreciate the implication of major locomotor system disorders and diagnoses and learn how to approach them.

Topics include:

1. Understanding, practicing, and teaching the skills of moving well:

  • pain-management as needed
  • awareness & exploration
  • relaxation, release
  • mobilization, easing movement
  • stability, control
  • strength, endurance
  • range of movement, stretching
  • alignment for safe and effective force transmission and loading
  • balance, gait
  • agility, speed and responsiveness
  • coordination, increasing complexity
  • positive emotion and supportive dialogue toward the body
  • breathing to support moving well
  • play, exploration, intrinsic reward


2. Learning and teaching guided exercises for each of these regions to develop important movement skills, with a holistic focus:

  • low back
  • mid & upper back
  • neck
  • shoulder
  • elbow, wrist & hand
  • sacrum
  • hip
  • knee
  • ankle & foot


3. Learning and teaching guided practices combining multiple movement skills for a region and across regions.

4. Appreciating safety and contraindications in teaching and practice.

5. Observing a student, assessing locomotor imbalances, and working with decision pathways or protocols for managing those imbalances.

6. Working with major locomotor disorders such as:

  • lumbar spine (chronic low back pain, disc herniation, sciatica, facet joint dysfunction, hyperlordosis, spondylolisthesis)
  • thoracic spine (hyperkyphosis, stiffness, facet joint dysfunction)
  • cervical spine (head forward alignment, disc herniation, nerve compression) 
  • scoliosis
  • shoulder (impingement, rotator cuff tears, instability)
  • elbow, hand (epicondylitis, carpal tunnel syndrome) sacroiliac pain and dysfunction
  • hip (fracture, alignment, soft tissue imbalances)
  • knee (IT band, meniscal tears, ligament strains) 
  • dropped arches, hallux valgus


7. Understanding the tissues of the locomotor system: fascia, cartilage, bones, muscles, ligaments, joints, nerves.

8. Appreciating the global organization of movement: tension, compression, tensegrity and integration; prediction, feedback, neural control; development of movement.

9. Understanding the science of key locomotor skills.

4. REST, REJUVENATE & FEEL POSITIVE

Duration: 30 hours

Many of us are overwhelmed in modern life. We struggle to manage our energy, find rest, and bring positive feelings to our mind and body. This program will give you the knowledge, practice, and skills to balance your energy levels, find deep rest and restoration, and cultivate positive emotions and sensations of compassion, joy, gratitude, and more. You will learn ancient wisdom underpinning these topics in yoga, explore modern and practical applications, and develop your teaching skills.

In summary, in this course you will:  

  1. Learn to balance your energy levels from being low or high to a neutral and functional state. 
  2. Understand and practice rest, deep rest, and restoration. 
  3. Cultivate positive emotions and sensations in mind and body including compassion, love, joy, and gratitude. 
  4. Develop teaching skills for all the above.

Topics include:

Balancing energy

  1. Understanding emotion, valence, energy, and the connection to the yogic frameworks of guna-s and klesa-s.
  2. Winding down from high energy: using your body, breath, senses to recover balance.
  3. How to meet high energy level where it is and chart multimodal stepdown.
  4. Activating from low energy: using your body, breath, senses to recover. How to meet low energy level where it is and chart multimodal step up.


Cultivating deep rest and recovery

Working with:

  1. safety and letting go.
  2. support and release.
  3. mobilization and ease.
  4. visualization for relaxation.
  5. surrendering effort.

…and more techniques of deep rest.

Cultivating positive emotions

  1. Exploring the role and importance of positive emotions in wellbeing.
  2. Understanding the traditional presentation of positive emotions in yoga.
  3. Growing compassion, joy, love, gratitude and more.
  4. Understanding the challenges in cultivating positive emotions.
  5. Working with therapeutic applications of positive emotion practices.


Traditional Frameworks

3 guṇa-s, bhāva, maitrī, karuṇā, mudita, upekṣā, santoṣa.

Modern Science

Understanding the stress response and its role in activation, regulation, and shut down:

  1. sympathetic nervous system, activation, mobilization responses.
  2. parasympathetic nervous system, relaxation, immobilization responses
  3. polyvagal theory, heart rate variability
  4. window of tolerance, resilience

5. FOUNDATIONS OF AYURVEDA, NUTRITION & LIFESTYLE

Duration: 30 hours

This course gives you a solid foundation in the traditional approach of ayurveda, as relevant to wellbeing maintenance, nutrition, and yoga therapy. We will explore the skills of healthful eating and developing a nourishing relationship to food. We will also go into the topics of lifestyle management, sleep management, and taking care of the senses. Further, we also cover digestive disorders and the yoga and ayurveda approach to managing them.

In summary, in this course, you will:

  1. Learn the foundations of ayurveda for health maintenance and wellbeing direct from the ancient traditional sources, and made accessible and clear.
  2. Understand the importance of nutrition and be guided in developing strategies for optimizing relationship to food and diet.
  3. Examine and implement lifestyle management of sleep, energy, daily activity, fasting, exercise, and sensory management for greater wellbeing from a traditional and modern scientific perspective.


Topics include:

1. Exploring the roots and key frameworks of ayurveda from the traditional sources, clearly and effectively, including:

a. guṇa and kriya: qualities and functions of body and mind.

b. three doṣa-s (vāta pitta kapha) and their divisions.

c. seven dhātu-s.

d. agni and āma.

2. Understanding and assessing ayurvedic constitution (prakṛti) and observing individual balance and imbalance (vikṛti). 

3. Learning common patterns of imbalance of the functions of the doṣa-s and measures to balance them. 

4. Exploring the impact of daily life routine (dinacarya) and adaption to the seasons or environment (ṛtucarya) from the traditional ayurvedic perspective.

5. Following the models of kāla, artha, karma, hīna-, ati-, and mithyā-yoga, and prajñāparādha, to analyze imbalances of senses and actions and bring them back to wellbeing.

6. Developing daily routine and rituals and personalizing lifestyle. Balancing work, play, rest.

7. Reflecting on and developing pathways for adapting to stages of life.

8. Taking care of the eyes and ears and managing what we see and hear.

9. Appreciating the importance of sleep, the science behind it, and developing better quality and duration of sleep holistically.

10. Overview of the physiology of the digestive system as relevant to holistic wellbeing and yoga therapy.

11.Introduction to the complexity of the science of nutrition, the microbiome, and common approaches to diets in the modern era.

12. Charting diet and eating patterns for yoga therapy.

13. Understanding relationship to food and hunger (nourishment, sensation, craving, coping).

14. Cultivating beneficial relationships to food, before, during, and after eating.

15. Investigating the importance of fasting, its relevance, safety, and strategies to practice it effectively.

16. Major digestive disorders and the yoga therapy approach to managing them.

6. ART & SCIENCE OF AWARENESS

Duration: 30 hours

Awareness is the basis of conscious choice. Empowerment in self-care and wellbeing begins with noticing our patterns. Starting from there, classical yoga presents the practices of mindfulness, absorption, and contemplation expansively and in depth. In this master course you will understand, practice, and learn to teach these experiences of awareness to others—comprehensively, from yogic, modern, and practical perspectives.

In summary, in this course, you will:

  1. Understanding the key types of awareness practices.
  2. Examine the ancient yoga frameworks that structure and explain awareness practices.
  3. Explore how we can use different types of awareness practices optimally on our journey of wellbeing.
  4. Classify objects of awareness, what we can practice mindfulness or meditation on, based on practical samkhya and yoga frameworks.
  5. Practice yogic mindfulness extensively and in-depth.
  6. Experience absorption practices in sight, mantra, breath and body, positive emotions and more.
  7. Practice composite visualizations of sensations, images, and more.
  8. Explore the neuroscience of consciousness and attention.
  9. Understand the connections between yoga and modern positive psychology and neurobiology on the topic of meditation and mindfulness.

Topics covered include:

What and why of awareness practices

  1. The categories of directed attention: mindfulness, absorption, contemplation. What are their key features and the differences between them?
  2. The stages of progressive absorption in meditation practices.
  3. dhāraṇā, dhyāna, samādhi, samyama in traditional yoga.
  4. Ways that awareness practices play an important role in supporting holistic wellbeing and self-transformation: monitoring, focus, insight, goal-setting.
  5. Experiencing holistic states of change (bhāva).
  6. Recalling one’s attention (smṛti-sādhana).
  7. The arising and role of insight (prajñā) in transformation.
  8. What to meditate on? Objects or experiences of focus: body, breath, senses, emotions, abstractions, I-sense (grahītā, grahaṇā, grāhya).
  9. Contemplation and abstractions in meditation pathways: vikalpa, vitarka, vicāra.
  10. Awareness and the three guṇas of yoga as an underlying framework.

How of awareness practices

  1. Balancing effort and relaxation in attention practices, walking the line between energy and dullness.
  2. Growing the qualities of steadiness and entrainment.
  3. Understanding and practicing focused vs. expansive awareness states.
  4. Managing the emotional background of mindfulness and absorptive states.
  5. Cultivating a stable meditation pathway over time.
  6. Finding salience or importance in objects of absorption.

Yogic mindfulness: cultivating sattvic presence

  1. Understanding the cautions, challenges, recommendations in mindfulness practices.
  2. Developing and deepening sattvic mindfulness of breath, body, senses, thoughts and emotions.

Yogic absorption: foundations of mantra, imagery and more

Understand the principles of, and practice absorption in:

  1. sound, mantra, speech.
  2. light, images.
  3. breath and body sensation.
  4. positive emotions.
  5. peace, stillness.

Science of consciousness and attention

Understand the neuroscience of the self, including:

  1. emergence and purpose of self-construct.
  2. nerve signaling, neural circuits.
  3. theories of consciousness.
  4. top-down monitoring and feedback systems.

Explore the neurobiology of:

  1. mindfulness, absorption.
  2. flow states, default mode network.
  3. mystic and alternative consciousness states.

Traditional Frameworks

  1. bhāva
  2. dhāraṇā, dhyāna, samādhi, smṛti-sādhana
  3. prajñā
  4. vikalpa, vitarka, vicāra
  5. grahītā, grahaṇā, grāhya

7. YOGIC LIFE MANAGEMENT

Duration: 10 hours

Relationships are a key ingredient of good life quality. Humans are not meant to live in isolation. We depend on relationships from birth until our passing to provide us with support, connection, stability, positive emotions, meaning, and much more. In this course, we will explore the yogic frameworks, reflections, and practices that can help us nurture supportive, safe, and beneficial relationships in our lives.

In this course, you will:

  1. Appreciate the role of connection in wellbeing.
  2. Learn to take a holistic approach to navigating relationships.
  3. Understand common archetypes from the ancient perspectives in a modern context: parent-child, spouse, friend, teacher-student, therapist-client etc.
  4. Explore how ethics and boundaries are key to safe and stable relationships.
  5. Be guided through reflections, practices, and teaching skills on all the above topics.

Traditional Frameworks

8. YOGA SUTRA & SAMKHYA

Duration: 30 hours

This flagship course presents the core psychological and philosophical theory, frameworks, and insights of Samkhya and Yoga. Presented by the Mohans, with impeccable authenticity, exceptional depth, and precise clarity, this course encapsulates the teachings of Patanjali, the esteemed commentator Vyasa and the key yogis from thereon.

Samkhya and yoga philosophy and psychology are grouped and organized by concepts and frameworks in this offering. The entire wisdom of these ancient texts is made accessible in a structure that students can follow in modern times, without compromising their integrity. 

In this course, you will:

  1. Learn all the important frameworks of Samkhya and Yoga.
  2. Understand these ancient systems by concepts and frameworks, so you see their relationships clearly and concisely.
  3. Be connected directly to the classical sources, so that you are completely confident in what you are learning.
  4. Explore how these teachings are related to wellbeing

9. RESPIRATORY & CARDIOVASCULAR DISORDERS 

Duration: 12 hours

Learn to use yoga therapy to help people with asthma, allergies, sinusitis, COPD, high blood pressure, atherosclerosis, ischemic heart disease, heart failure, arrhythmias, and deep vein

thrombosis.

Topics include:

  1. Key anatomy and physiology of respiratory and cardiovascular systems.
  2. Symptoms, pathology, and summary of modern medical guidelines as relevant to yoga therapy of important disorders: asthma, allergies, sinusitis, COPD, high blood pressure, atherosclerosis, ischemic heart disease, heart failure, arrhythmias, and deep vein thrombosis.
  3. Yoga therapy approach to these disorders

10. YOGA, METABOLISM, DIABETES & OBESITY

Duration: 8 hours

Diabetes is one the most prevalent major diseases in the world now. It has been on the rise for years and the burden of its complications is unfortunate and traumatic. Diabetes is not merely a disease of insulin and glucose—that is only part of a more complex metabolic

dysfunction. 

Obesity is a worldwide problem and it is well-known that behavioral change is crucial to managing a healthy weight.

Yoga and ayurveda, through a holistic approach to nutrition, movement, lifestyle change, and stress management, can have a substantial impact on managing diabetes.

This course will explain the yoga therapy approach to helping those with diabetes and obesity.

Topics include:

  1. Physiology of metabolism, insulin and glucose, and weight control.
  2. Symptoms, pathology, and summary of modern medical guidelines as relevant to yoga therapy of diabetes and obesity.
  3. Yoga therapy approach to these disorders.

11. YOGA THERAPY IN CHRONIC PAIN

Duration: 8 hours

Chronic pain is one of the most prevalent, debilitating, and expensive problems in the modern world. This course will explain pain science (biology, pathways, etiology, classifications) and the practical ways through which we can help manage, mitigate, and resolve chronic pain

with yoga therapy.

Topics include:

  1. Pain science: biology, pathways, etiology, classifications.
  2. Practical ways in which yoga therapy can help manage, mitigate, and resolve chronic pain.

MENTORING & INTEGRATION

Duration: 40 hours

Essential to the Svastha Yoga Therapy Program and other Svastha trainings, this mentoring and integration stream will anchor and deepen your yoga studies. It is an opportunity to immerse yourself in direct, ongoing, holistic study with the master yoga teachers.

In this ongoing mentoring, you will:

  1. Receive teachings on the full spectrum of yoga, traditional wisdom, yoga therapy, practical application, case studies, integrative and holistic approach to wellbeing, and more.
  2. Be able to ask relevant questions and deepen your yoga knowledge with direct contact to primary sources.
  3. Receive ongoing support and inspiration in your yoga journey.
  4. Bring your teaching questions related to your group and individual therapy consultations.
  5. Be guided in a variety of yoga practices, month after month.
  6. Establish a long-term study pathway as was done in the traditional days.
  7. Find insights by revisiting and iterating on the many deep keys of classical yoga.

This integration and mentoring pathway offers students a rare and unique opportunity, beyond time-limited and topic-limited courses.