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Lani's
primary sadhana is psychotherapy with children, adults, and couples.
She did her academic training at the University of Chicago, studying
linguistics as an undergraduate and psychology as a graduate student,
during which time she was a resident at Bruno Bettleheim's Orthogenic
School, the world-renowned institution for autistic children.
Since autism is a pre-verbal disorder, she recognized from the
very beginning of her training the importance of bodily experience
in emotional development. In her subsequent work at Northwestern
Memorial Hospital, and now in private practice with individuals
of various psychological difficulties, she has expanded her appreciation
of the total body-mind-self connection. Concomitant with her academic
pursuits, she has established a satisfying marriage and family
life in Hyde Park, this despite a tumultuous childhood in Chicago's
suburban north shore.
Lani became a yoga teacher after fifty years of sports, and dance,
and horseback riding, and triathlons. Like so many jocks-turned-yogi,
she feels she has "come home" to her yoga mat. "This
is the perfect time of life to do yoga," she says. While
her years of athletics have rendered her stiffer than she'd like,
she is also in a position to empathize with other recovering "workoutaholics".
Not surprisingly, ashtanga was her doorway into the world of yoga;
from there she moved on to Ana Forrest's teacher training as well
as Daren Friesen's program at Moksha Yoga Center. Anusara and
Universal Yoga also hold special appeal for her due to the complementary
nature of strength and softness inherent in these styles.
As a yoga teacher and as a psychotherapist, Lani strives to balance
the sukha (easiness, softness, relaxation) and sthira (steadiness,
grounding) of the practice, which she views as metaphors for life.
The look of the poses is immaterial; what matters more is how
they feel and the authentic self-expression they embody. Which
is not to say her classes are undisciplined; if anything they're
extremely demanding. Core strengthening is a top priority, as
is coordinating muscular and organic energies. Developing rhythm
and grace by following the undulation of the breath is also key.
There is some emphasis on sound and the energetic properties of
the Sanskrit language, a carry-over from her studies in linguistics.
And of course it goes without saying that creating a safe "holding
environment" (to borrow a term from her psychotherapist's
lexicon), is an absolute prerequisite in her class.
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