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Cheryl Uphill

Certified Yoga Therapist

Teaches Hatha Yoga Weekly

Teaches Hot Yoga Weekly

In-Demand Private Lessons

"Yoga therapy is a bridge between
mind, body and soul" ~ Cheryl Uphill
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Where Does Cheryl Teach? Who Does She Share Teachings With?

Yoga Therapy FAQs

Yoga is union. Translated into English from Sanskrit means “to yoke” the spirit and physical body together. Wikipedia description: “Yoga (Sanskrit) is the physical, mental, and spiritual practices or disciplines which originated in ancient India with a view to attain a state of permanent peace of mind in order to experience one’s true self.”

A yoga therapist helps guide the client through the journey of their life and the many struggles we must all face being human. The most therapeutic value lies within the very dynamic of the relationship of the client and yoga therapist. Building rapport and understanding between them is key with clear and regular communication.

Yoga therapy is the process of empowering individuals to progress toward improved health and well-being through the application of the philosophy and practice of Yoga. (Definition by IAYT)

Yoga therapy is difficult to define, in part because of the breadth and depth of the tradition itself, and because, like Yoga, the discipline can be approached in so many different ways. Nonetheless, for Yoga therapy to be better understood and accepted, it is necessary to have a reasonable and pragmatic definition understandable to those without experience with Yoga, yet still acceptable to those steeped in the practice and philosophy.

Mind ~ Body ~ Soul approach to Integrative Health & Yoga Therapy

(Which translates to working on the standpoint of a Physiological, psychological and spiritual level.)

  • Energetic subtle body awareness and the psychology behind it (Metaphysical approach). Yoga Psychology is the study of the mind and the yogic methods for transforming our personality and our experience of consciousness.
  • Structural Alignment therapy- Physical Body Awareness
  • Basic Ayurveda- Diet & Nutrition
  • Rehabilitation of Injuries
  • Yoga Nidra- Relaxation, guided imagery and teaching your body to come from a calm centered place.
  • YT offers Asana (poses easily held) or body movements to address the body, Pranayama (breath work) to address the mind and Meditation (Dyhana) to address the spirit.
  • YT does not claim to diagnose a client’s physical or psychological condition, or prescribe a treatment that goes against the client’s health professional’s advice.
  • In fact many Yoga Therapist’s work directly with Physiotherapy, Physical Therapist’s, RMT’s, OT’s even Doctor’s on occasion, as part of your wellness team to aid in pre:surgery, recovery and healing.
  • YT can help in many areas which include: Anxiety, Depression, Cancer, auto immune diseases, Chronic Illness and pain, Grief & Loss Relief, treatment of addiction and PSTD.
  • Hands on approach… Therapeutic touch and reconnecting with your inner self.
  • Touch is a very important part of yoga therapy as it a tool for your proprioceptive learning. Teaching you to feel more in your body, breath, and spirit!
  • Restorative poses to aid in relaxation, calming of the nervous systems and stress management tools to help aid in working in the concrete jungle of your life.
  • Physiological, emotional, spiritual, healing responses in the tissues of the physical body, mind and heart.
  • Can help improve ones health, self-awareness, reduction in tension throughout the whole body into the connective tissues and muscles, strengthening the mind – Body connection and creating balance, freedom of limitations in the body and improve your attitude towards self-caring and worth.
  • Can be known to prevent suffering in; physical & structural limitations, emotional & spiritual pain. YT can; build strength, balance in Mind, Body and Spirit, flexibility in the muscles, connective tissues, and joints, improves respiratory & cardiovascular function and of the endocrine systems, promote recovery in injuries, surgeries, and aids in treatment of addiction. Reduces; Anxiety/Depression, stress, chronic pain, cortisol levels, and blood pressure. It enhances; a complete overall well-being, brain and limbic function, higher quality of life, self-care, self-confidence, optimism, increased serotonin levels and improves in sleep disturbances.
  • Shifts energy on the physiological level from sympathetic nervous system (flight-fight-freeze response) to parasympathetic nervous system that induces a relaxation response.
  • Provides equanimity to cope with the daily stresses of life as we move through the stages of life and targets the root cause of the affliction. It enhances the overall quality of life and reduces suffering.

I have had chronic pain, many injuries, challenges and surgeries after being an athlete most of my life in martial arts. I specialize in the areas of providing tools for those in chronic pain, grief/loss management, physical, emotional and spiritual injuries, And prescribe many therapeutic remedies & practices through restorative poses, meditation, Mind, Body, Breath, Spirit and Energetic awareness, structural alignment, Ayurveda, Stress Management and hands on techniques.

My definition of yoga therapy is where science meets spirituality. A mind-Body medicine that empowers the client to self-actualization. Learning to guide oneself through empowerment to become your own healer, higher self, teacher, best friend and soul mate. YT offers a wide range of tools to everyone no matter what the issue may be. It’s biggest benefit may be that it empowers people in the healing process.

They can step aside from being medicalized, being the patient and become a student of knowledge into the self.

I have read many things that Yoga therapy is the wave of the future in integrative, holistic approaches to overall wellness! It is a perfect blend of mind body and spirit and is leading edge with new discoveries all the time as it is constantly shifting, changing like our physical bodies as they age.

Quote: “Teach what is inside you, not as it applies to you, to yourself, but as it applies to the other” ~ Sri T Krishnamacharya

  1. Teach what is appropriate to the individual (yukta-shiksana).
  2. Differences in different people must be respected (bheda).
  3. Teachings must consider the situation, place, or country from which the student comes (desha).
  4. Each person needs to be taught according to his or her individual constitution, age, disposition, etc.(i.e., obese, lean, young, old, etc.) (deha).
  5. The method of instruction depends on the time of year, the seasons, etc. (kâla).
  6. Depending on the occupation of the student, he or she will need to be taught different things (e.g., a runner would be taught differently than a philosopher) (vritti).
  7. One must understand the capacity of the student, how much endurance he or she has, how much memory, how much time to study or practice (shakti).
  8. The teaching must conform to the direction of the mind (i.e., it must take a person’s interests into account, such as exercise, devotion, God, chanting, etc.) (mârga).

The necessary paperwork will be sent to you via email or it can be downloaded off this website. It includes: History/ Lifestyle form and determine your dosha assessment.

*If you require the Yoga Therapist to have an open dialogue with your doctor or other related therapist’s, with your written permission, it can be done for a small fee.

After your paperwork has been reviewed , there will be one more intake form to complete in person upon the first visit. Your assessment recommendations will be built and implemented within the second session. Which will include a detailed home practice of poses, relaxation, meditation and general dietary & nutrition recommendations. Depending on the discoveries made in our first meeting I may be able to facilitate some breathing, movement and poses to take away with you right away.

Yoga therapy is a self-empowering process, where the care-seeker, with the help of the Yoga therapist, implements a personalized and evolving Yoga practice, that not only addresses the illness in a multi-dimensional manner, but also aims to alleviate his/her suffering in a progressive, non-invasive and complementary manner.  Depending upon the nature of the illness, Yoga therapy can not only be preventative or curative, but also serve a means to manage the illness, or facilitate healing in the person at all levels.

TKV Desikachar & Kausthub Desikachar 

Yoga therapy, derived from the Yoga tradition of Patanjali and the Ayurvedic system of health care refers to the adaptation and application of Yoga techniques and practices to help individuals facing health challenges at any level manage their condition, reduce symptoms, restore balance, increase vitality, and improve attitude.

Gary Kraftsow American Viniyoga Institute

Yoga therapy is that facet of the ancient science of Yoga that focuses on health and wellness at all levels of the person: physical, psychological, and spiritual. Yoga therapy focuses on the path of Yoga as a healing journey that brings balance to the body and mind through an experiential understanding of the primary intention of Yoga: awakening of Spirit, our essential nature.

Joseph LePage, M.A., Integrative Yoga Therapy (U.S.A.)

Yoga therapy adapts the practice of Yoga to the needs of people with specific or persistent health problems not usually addressed in a group class.

Larry Payne, Ph.D. Samata Yoga Center (U.S.A.) 

Yoga therapy is the adaptation of yoga practices for people with health challenges. Yoga therapists prescribe specific regimens of postures, breathing exercises, and relaxation techniques to suit individual needs. Medical research shows that Yoga therapy is among the most effective complementary therapies for several common aliments. The challenges may be an illness, a temporary condition like pregnancy or childbirth, or a chronic condition associated with old age or infirmity.

Robin Monro, Ph.D. Yoga Biomedical Trust (England)

Yoga comprises a wide range of mind/body practices, from postural and breathing exercises to deep relaxation and meditation. Yoga therapy tailors these to the health needs of the individual. It helps to promote all-round positive health, as well as assisting particular medical conditions. The therapy is particularly appropriate for many chronic conditions that persist despite conventional medical treatment.

Marie Quail, Yoga Therapy and Training Center (Ireland)

The use of the techniques of Yoga to create, stimulate, and maintain an optimum state of physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual health.

Judith Hanson Lasater, Ph.D.

Yoga therapy consists of the application of yogic principles, methods, and techniques to specific human ailments. In its ideal application, Yoga therapy is preventive in nature, as is Yoga itself, but it is also restorative in many instances, palliative in others, and curative in many others.

Art Brownstein, M.D.

Yoga therapy may be defined as the application of yogic principles to a particular person with the objective of achieving a particular spiritual, psychological, or physiological goal. The means employed are comprised of intelligently conceived steps that include but are not limited to the components of Ashtanga Yoga, which includes the educational teachings of yama, niyama, asana, pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, dhyana, and samadhi. Also included are the application of meditation, textual study, spiritual or psychological counseling, chanting, imagery, prayer, and ritual to meet the needs of the individual. Yoga therapy respects individual differences in age, culture, religion, philosophy, occupation, and mental and physical health. The knowledgeable and competent yogin or yogini applies Yoga Therapy according to the period, the place, and the practitioner’s age, strength, and activities.

Richard Miller, Ph.D.

Yoga therapy is of modern coinage and represents a first effort to integrate traditional yogic concepts and techniques with Western medical and psychological knowledge. Whereas traditional Yoga is primarily concerned with personal transcendence on the part of a “normal” or healthy individual, Yoga therapy aims at the holistic treatment of various kinds of psychological or somatic dysfunctions ranging from back problems to emotional distress. Both approaches, however, share an understanding of the human being as an integrated body-mind system, which can function optimally only when there is a state of dynamic balance.

Georg Feuerstein, Ph.D.

Yoga therapy is a holistic healing art. Rather than prescribe treatments, it invites presence and awareness. Using age-old yogic approaches to deeper presence and awareness, we are able to know ourselves more fully. Out of that knowing, we are more easily moved to embrace the opportunity for change, growth, and enhanced well-being in body, feelings, thought, and spirit.

Michael Lee, Phoenix Rising Yoga Therapy

Yoga therapy is the application of Yoga to individuals to empower them to progress toward greater health and freedom from disease.

Ganesh Mohan, Svastha Yoga and Ayurveda

Traditionally, yoga is a path of self-transformation, self-realization, and transcendence. In my book Yoga for Wellness I used the image of a launch pad to explain that kind of yoga. Therapeutically, yoga is more like a life raft. When you’re drowning, yoga therapy gets you back up and integrated into yourself.

The primary perspective of the yoga therapist is different from that of a Western physician, or even an ayurvedic physician. An allopathic doctor’s job is to work with disease and cure it. Our approach is to work with the human beings who have the disease—to help them develop a better attitude and get a better perspective on themselves and basically to help them with their mind. That doesn’t mean that we don’t work in a curative direction with certain conditions. But if we’re working with somebody who has cancer, we encourage them to see a doctor; we don’t say, “Why don’t you stop using chemotherapy and try pranayama instead?” If somebody is undergoing chemotherapy, I’ll work with them to improve their digestion, help their sleep, stimulate the immune system, or help them feel better about themselves. So yoga therapy is complementary, not primary for conditions like cancer or AIDS.

In the tradition in which I was trained, the foundation for practice for most adults is to create stability at every level—structural stability, physiological stability (which could be equated to immunity, perhaps), and psycho-emotional stability, which is essential given the volatile nature of the external world. The next goal is to help them to awaken slowly and appropriately to a deeper dimension in life—the spiritual dimension—and then help them find a way of linking to that dimension through their heart in a way that’s not counterfeit. You must find an authentic link, something that inspires them. For example, I might ask somebody, “Do you remember what inspired you when you were five or six? Did you go to church? Do you remember the joy?” The point is to reconnect to something they felt in childhood, and to go back to that. Help them return to something deeper inside themselves that gave meaning to their life.

Would it be fair to say that stability at all levels is the goal of yoga therapy?

That’s a good starting point. Again, we’re talking about therapy. We’re talking about the life raft. What you want to do is get out of danger and reach a stable place. Then if something else awakens we can think about the launch pad to help people elevate to another dimension. I had a powerful epiphany, which I wrote about in my first book. I was watching PBS interview the man who developed the rocket science to launch the Voyager out of the solar system. It was a tricky thing because this satellite was quite small and couldn’t hold enough fuel to propel itself out of the solar system. So this man figured out how to use the “gravity well” of the planets to ricochet the satellite to its next destination. If you shot it too close to the planet, the satellite would crash into the planet. If it was close but not too close, it would go into orbit. But if it was just right it would swing around the planet and pick up momentum from the gravity of the planet and go on. I was watching this and suddenly a light bulb went off in my head.

I thought about the normal neurotic who’s in orbit around the planet called me. It’s me, me, me. It’s all about me. (The seriously ill people have crashed into themselves.) Now, we all have challenges, and what I’ve learned in my own life is that when I’m suffering, if I get caught in the loop I just circle around the suffering and I don’t get anywhere. But if I sit with it and relax into it and let myself feel it, I can gain momentum from it and it can propel me forward. That for me is helpful diagnostically. I can watch someone and I see where they’re preoccupied with this neurotic thing, with themselves. Then I figure out how to apply what we call pratipaksha bhavanam, a reframing of a person’s perspective on their own challenges. Pratipaksha is a key idea in yogic theory, not only for working with psychological problems but also for someone who has cancer or diabetes. What we’re trying to do is reframe their way of dealing with emotional challenges.

~ Gary Kraftsow

Yoga therapy is complimentary not the primary practice in someone’s healing journey.. Work with the whole human being.

Yin, as the name describes is a complimentary practice to a more active (or Yang) practice, or active lifestyle in general.  It is the Chinese name equivalent to Hatha Yoga which describes the balance of opposite energies. In the Yin practice we hold postures without any muscular effort and emphasize stillness and complete relaxation; this affects the connective tissue in the body (Fascia, tendon and ligaments) The physical benefits are in re-structuring the joints, and to repair any inbalances caused from conditioning or physical patterning. The mental or psychological benefits are meditative, helping to focus inward on the sensations and thoughts that arise without judgment or fear of moving deeper, as well as releasing stress and tension.

In today’s world, we are moving at such fast paces, that we have forgotten the importance of slowing down and being mindful of our breath in each moment. It is through this awareness that we reconnect to the source of that breath, and all that is.

Quality of Life

  • Eliminate insomnia
  • Improve quality of sleep
  • Promote relaxation
  • Improve quality of relationships
  • Assist with weight loss
  • Promote healthy food habits (less emphasis on sugar, caffeine)
  • Promote healthy life habits (decrease craving for alcohol, smoking)

Physical

  • Decrease pain
  • Increase ease of breathing
  • Improve ease of movement
  • Improve joint mobility
  • Decrease risk of falls
  • Improve spine / joint stability
  • Increase strength and flexibility

Physiological

  • Increase circulation (especially peripheral)
  • Improve digestion
  • Improve immunity
  • Increase distal sensation
  • Increase amount of O2 in blood
  • Regulate heart rate
  • Regulate blood pressure
  • Regulate respiratory rate

Psychological

  • Increase emotional stability
  • Increase confidence
  • Reduce depression
  • Reduce panic attacks and anxiety
  • Reduce fear
  • Increase level of alertness and sharpness of mind
  • Acceptance of limitations

Other Benefits

Reducing pain and discomfort, overcoming physical or emotional trauma, and recovering from illness, injury, addiction, or other health concerns.

Maintaining current health and well being, preventing illness or injury, and increasing flexibility and strength including preparing for, or complementing an existing health maintenance or fitness program.

Reducing stress, overcoming depression, anxiety, and psychological trauma, and helping to manage and deal with life-threatening illness.

Personal and/or spiritual growth. In the case of spiritual growth, we feel it is important to note that the course followed would be initiated by the student’s own interest and complimentary to the student’s personal spiritual practices, beliefs, and preferences.

Credit: yogatherapytoronto.com

What others say about Cheryl

I have known Cheryl since 2000 and seen her grow through many stages into the Intuitive/spiritual being she is today. Through many trials/tribulations and struggles she has landed on top of her game of life. She now shares this with her clients in hopes they may benefit in their journey. Take her yoga class, better yet treat yourself to a session of yoga therapy, you will not be disappointed.

You are not only talented and beautiful but you are a kind, gentle giving spirit and the way you love and support others is a gift to all around you… II just think u are absolutely amazing!!! XOXOXO

Cheryl is a kind and inspired Yoga therapist and teacher, who relates easily with others and has an innate ability to sense their spiritual and physical needs. She communicates positive energy that fill one with peace, healing and hope.

Cheryl is very outgoing, dedicated, and determined. She has a very free spirited personality that leads her to the top of her profession. She is open and willing to learn what it takes to take her where she wants to be. To hire Cheryl you wouldn’t be disappointed.

I’ve been practicing yin yoga for 5 years at GoodLife Northgate fitness at least 3 times a week.  Just last Monday night after my usual yin yoga restorative class with Cheryl Uphill the most amazing thing happened… I had the most restful qualitative sleep in years.

I had slept for over 8 hours and woke up feeling energized and content …which I haven’t experienced since I’ve been a stroke survivor.

Thank you Cheryl for all your guidance, encouragement , and compassion as I continue on my journey to healing with yin yoga!  Namaste