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Susan Marcus

For Susan, yoga truly is the union of body, mind
and spirit; it is a means for connecting deeply and authenticallywith
Life and with one's Self. Her classes include Pranayama (breathwork)
as well as asana (postures), but her focus remains on prana (life
force; breath), using breath as a means for opening the body more
fully in asana without the strain and struggle with which we tend
to push through the rest of our days. To her, yoga practice is about
letting go, and surrendering to the natural opening and releases
that each inhale and exhale offer. When you can learn to do this
in your yoga practice, you can learn to be more open to the natural
flow of life, whatever it may bring, and then life too becomes a
joy instead of a struggle.
Susan's classes are ideal for beginners and advanced
students alike - anyone who wants to embrace all the benefits that
yoga offers. Susan is a great example of how yoga can literally
change your life. During her former stint as a Public Defender,
often working over 80 stressful hours a week, Susan was in a car
accident that not only injured her spine but also triggered the
onset of fibromyalgia, a physically and emotionally debilitating
illness. By 31, she was also diagnosed with osteoarthritis and degenerative
disc disease (DDD). Formerly active as a runner, walker, swimmer
and cyclist, she could no longer walk more than a few blocks, and
often, not at all. She was in constant pain and perpetually physically
and mentally exhausted. Remembering how healing her yoga practice
had been in her earlier, college years, she returned to it again,
modifying poses she couldn't do and embracing those she could.
From the start, Susan's yoga practice was more
than just the doorway back to physical activity; it was a sanctuary
from the chaos and struggles in her demanding life. Susan's yoga
practice was, and is, the foundation of her journey toward self-awareness,
healing, and personal transformation. It has also been tremendously
physically rewarding. After the first few years of dedicated yoga
practice, nearly all traces of fibromyalgia were gone. Eventually,
MRIs no longer showed any trace of arthritis or DDD.
Awed by its many profound benefits, Susan began
teaching yoga in 2000 and soon gave up practicing law entirely (she
viewed her former work as incompatible with the yogic principle
of Ahimsa, or non-harming). Fascinated by the self-awareness and
emotional aspects of yoga, she became certified as a Phoenix Rising
Yoga Therapist, whose mind-body principles she also incorporates
into her classes. She has since become a mentor for new yoga therapy
trainees and is the founder of Prana Yoga and Body-Mind Therapy,
where she offers small classes responsive to her students' needs,
works individually with clients who want to explore the secrets
and wisdom of their bodies, and offers workshops that help students
cultivate mindfulness as well as self-knowledge through the body.
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