EPISODES
Each month the guys delve deep into all things yoga and life with some of the brightest and most forward thinking, stereotype-busting guys from all walks of life. We hope these conversations inspire and empower listeners and guys everywhere to get started on their journeys to better living through the practice of yoga.
Episode 8: The Intrinsic Power of Iyengar Yoga
Bolsters, blocks, belts, chairs, and even walls can safely offer support for weak muscles and unstable joints as practitioners navigate nagging injuries and challenging yoga poses (“asanas”). Combined with an experienced Iyengar teacher, the use of props can also help unlock a subtle, unexpected awareness within. Today’s guest is Andi Wirz, a friend and native of Switzerland who has been teaching the Iyengar method for twenty years and led classes at two of the most respected backcare studios in the country, Samamkaya and Yoga Union.
Episode 7: The Guy Who Got Me into Yoga
I met Tom Strachan during the high-flying dot-com boom days in the early 2000s while working for Akamai Technologies in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was his passion and dedication to yoga that inspired many of his colleagues to try yoga, and thankfully I was one of them. In our conversation, Tom shares how Bikram yoga helped him cope with his early days of sobriety and speaks to the many benefits of having an on-going practice as he enters his 50s.
Episode 6: Building Resilience and Awareness
The first of two interviews, Dr. Dan Bornstein is an associate professor of the department of health, exercise, and sport science at the Citadel, the military college of South Carolina, and the director of the Center of Performance, Readiness, Resiliency and Recovery (CPR3). He leads one of the only graduate degrees in the nation designed to meet the growing demand for exercise science specifically designed to work with military personnel and first responders – those considered tactical athletes by occupation. In this conversation, Dan shares how a significant back injury in his youth ultimately led him to yoga and his interest in musculoskeletal health and physical fitness while also shaping his commitment to public service and giving back.
Episode 5: Body-building, Karate, Schwarzenegger, and Yoga
With over thirty years in the fitness industry, Steve Safrit is the owner and founder of SoFul Yoga and a co-founder of The Forum Gym in Salisbury, North Carolina. He is a passionate advocate for yoga’s many benefits for the mind, body, and spirit. His path began in 2001 when he earned his 200-hour teaching certification as a means of complementing his weightlifting regimen and karate practice and he now teaches at gyms, pediatric centers, health fairs, schools, and churches.
Episode 4: Learning to Let Go
Curt is the director of the center for innovation at the Fessenden School and a long-time friend since college. Curt shares his path for how he got into meditation in high school and how his practice helped him manage stress-related back pain while making a career shift from financial services into education.
Episode 3: This Isn’t Competitive
Bryan Wymbs is a lawyer in North Carolina who got into yoga over fifteen years ago. He shares his experience taking his first class at a local gym and how the non-competitive practice of yoga helped provide balance in his life, particularly in managing stress and focusing on the moment.
Episode 2: Pain Forces You to Change
Derek met Alaska native David Demers while playing lacrosse for the Portland Ales in Oregon during the late 1990s. Dave shares how yoga helped him manage chronic lower back issues that he struggled with since his college days and allowed him to keep playing lacrosse and hockey well into his 50s.
Episode 1: The Intentional Aging Athlete
Bill Rexford is a longtime coach, teacher, and athlete who had a successful career playing lacrosse both for Dartmouth College and at the top level of club leagues. Rex talks about how yoga came into his life in the 90s as a high school coach in Oregon and how it helped him navigate the realities of past injuries and roadblocks with intentionality, both in his practice and his life.