Anatomy of the Pelvis & Foundations of Adjustments

Schedule

Fri, 04 Sep, 2026 at 05:30 pm

UTC-04:00
Location

3015 7th St N, Saint Petersburg, FL, United States, Florida 33704 | St. Petersburg, FL

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Date: Friday, September 4-6
Time: Friday 5:30pm-8:30pm; Saturday-Sunday 9:00am-12:00pm and 1:00pm-5:00pm.
Cost: $467
Discounts: 10% for BE Members / Mysore Members
Capacity: Limited to 20 participants per module to support an intimate learning environment

This training welcomes dedicated practitioners who are drawn toward deeper inquiry, anatomical understanding, and embodied learning. While teaching applications are present, the material is also explored through self-practice, peer learning, and reflection. Many participants find this training brings clarity and maturity to their relationship with practice—whether or not they choose to teach.
This program works well for continuing education and advanced credentialing. The modules emphasize applied learning, integration, and long-term teaching intelligence—supporting teachers who are expanding their depth, scope, and sense of responsibility in their work.
Overview:
With perceptual awareness, assessment, and continuity established in earlier modules, Module Four moves into hands-on intervention. Here, anatomy, breath, spine, and pelvis are brought together to support adjustments that are intelligent, ethical, and safe.
Using the pelvis as a primary reference point, this module helps participants understand how structure, load, and movement patterns influence the way support is offered and received. Rather than learning adjustments as fixed techniques, the emphasis is on developing clarity around readiness, intention, and response. Foundational shapes with fewer joint articulations are used as primary learning tools, allowing participants to observe and respond with greater precision before working with more complex variations.
This module supports participants across roles—those deepening personal practice, those working with peers, and those teaching—by exploring hands-on work as a form of communication that can support learning, agency, and long-term trust.
Learning Objectives:
By the end of Module Four, participants will be able to:
- Demonstrate understanding of pelvic anatomy, including key bony landmarks and joint relationships, and how pelvic organization influences spinal alignment, load transfer, and leg support in asana
- Assess readiness for hands-on support by recognizing patterns of stability and mobility, effort and collapse, and flexibility versus control
- Apply anatomical insight of the pelvis to inform adjustments that are clear, ethical, and sustainable across varied bodies and contexts
- Practice hands-on adjustments with attention to consent, timing, pressure, and restraint, understanding touch as a form of communication rather than correction
- Differentiate between simple and complex adjustments, recognizing how foundational shapes with fewer joint articulations often provide clearer information for assessment and support than more complex variations, such as a seated forward fold in half lotus with a bound arm
- Adapt adjustments to support individual needs without diminishing agency, depth, or learning
- Discern when hands-on intervention supports awareness and skill development, and when it may interfere with integration
- Develop confidence in offering adjustments that prioritize clarity, responsiveness, and long-term trust

Anatomy of the Pelvis with Shila LaGrua:
Participants explore the pelvis as a central organizing structure in movement, stability, and load transfer. Attention is given to how pelvic shape and position influence both spinal organization and leg support.
Key areas include:
- Identifying key bony landmarks and joint relationships
- Understanding the pelvis as a meeting point between spine and legs
- Exploring load transfer, stability, and mobility
- Recognizing common pelvic patterns that appear in asana

Reading Readiness:
Before touch is ever applied, participants learn to assess whether support is appropriate. This section focuses on recognizing capacity rather than assuming need.

Areas of Exploration Include:
- Assessing structural readiness before offering hands-on support
- Differentiating flexibility from control
- Recognizing effort, collapse, and compensation
- Understanding when hands-on work supports learning—and when it may interfere

Adjustments | Part I — Foundations:
Adjustments are introduced as intentional actions rather than habitual gestures. Participants learn to approach touch with clarity, restraint, and purpose. Emphasis is placed on working first with simpler structures—where fewer variables offer clearer information—before applying these principles within more complex postures.

Key Themes Include:
- Distinguishing purposeful touch from habitual touch
- Understanding when simple (less body parts) adjustments are more effective than complex (more body parts and joint articulation) ones
- Establishing clear, respectful points of contact
- Working skillfully with direction, pressure, and timing
- Supporting agency rather than creating dependency
Accessible & Applicable Adjustments:
This section focuses on adaptability—learning the art of adjustments with physical touch, consent, and restraint, and how hands-on work can remain relevant across different bodies, contexts, and practices. By understanding how complexity increases variables, participants learn to choose when simplicity supports clarity and when complexity is appropriate.

Participants will Explore:
- Adapting adjustments across varied bodies and experiences
- Working within limitations without diminishing depth
- Understanding how adjustments translate beyond a single pose
- Applying anatomical insight to support broader movement patterns

Hands-On Practice:
Participants engage in experiential learning through both giving and receiving touch, with emphasis on awareness, consent, and feedback.

Practices Include:
- Experiencing foundational adjustments through sensation and observation
- Practicing touch with clarity, consent, and responsiveness
- Refining tactile awareness through feedback
- Developing confidence and restraint—whether working with oneself, peers, or students

By the end of Module Four, participants recognize that effective adjustments are guided less by technique and more by clarity, readiness, and restraint. The pelvis becomes a gateway for understanding how anatomy informs touch, and how thoughtful, restrained intervention supports longevity, trust, and sustainability in practice.
Whether applied to personal embodiment, peer-based exploration, or professional teaching environments, this module marks the transition from foundational anatomy and assessment into more complex applications of touch, where participants begin working with increased load, variability, and nuance while maintaining clarity, restraint, and ethical responsibility.
Teaching Schedule & Focus:
Friday | 5:30–8:30 PM
Orientation & Intentional Touch
- Opening circle and module orientation
- Establishing consent, boundaries, and communication
- Exploring touch as information rather than correction
- Developing sensitivity through observation and presence
- Gentle partner-based explorations

Saturday | 9:00 AM–12:00 PM
Seeing Before Doing: Pelvic Structure & Observation with Shila LaGrua
- Understanding the pelvis as a central organizer of movement and stability
- Exploring pelvic shape, orientation, and common structural variations
- Observing how pelvic positioning influences the spine, hips, and breath
- Learning to recognize habitual patterns held in the pelvis
- Developing the skill of seeing and sensing pelvic organization before intervening
- Guided movement and observation practices focused on clarity, support, and ease

Saturday | 1:00 PM–5:00 PM
Adjustments as Dialogue
- Exploring adjustments as conversation, not instruction
- Practicing subtle, responsive hands-on support
- Knowing when touch supports and when it interrupts
- Partner labs focused on clarity and restraint
- Group reflection on experience

Sunday | 9:00 AM–12:00 PM

Discernment in Application
- Choosing when and how to intervene
- Adapting touch for different bodies and needs
- Supporting agency through thoughtful contact
- Case studies from group and one-to-one settings
- Discussion and inquiry

Sunday | 1:00 PM–5:00 PM
Integration & Teaching Practice
- Integrating observation, touch, and restraint
- Teaching labs with feedback
- Reflecting on ethics and sustainability
- Integration of learning across modules
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Where is it happening?

3015 7th St N, Saint Petersburg, FL, United States, Florida 33704, 3015 7th St N, St Petersburg, FL 33704-2062, United States, St. Petersburg

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