"BIOLOGIC MATERIALS"
AND
"WHY DO I HAVE A CARPAL TUNNEL PROBLEM?"
Sam Bakuri, DDS, MSD
Dr. Bakuri has been a dentist for over ten years and is a Board certified Periodontist. He earned his DMD from the prestigious University of Pennsylvania then joined the Virginia Commonwealth University Residency Program where he earned a Master of Science in Dentistry He currently holds a position as assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and is on the faculty at Allegheny General Hospital.
Dr. Bakuri is a recipient of the George Coslet Award in Periodontics from the University of Pennsylvania and a member of the Golden Key Honor Society. He lectured on dental implants at the American Academy of Periodontics meetings in 2011 and 2013. He is a member of the American Academy of Periodontology and the Pittsburgh Dental Network. He is the founder and Director of the Pittsburgh Dental Horizon Study Club, a group dedicated to bringing outstanding continuing education to the dentists in the Tri-State dental community.
Dr. Bakuri is a volunteer for the Remote Area Medical in Wise County, Virginia, a charity founded for those in the U.S. who can't afford medical care. YouTube Video - Dr. Sam Bakuri talks about the importance of the Remote Area Medical events.
Dr. Bakuri’s wife is also a dentist, and they have a daughter, Tiba and a son Zain. In his spare time, he enjoys traveling and landscape photography.
Son Hui Yi
Registered Ashtanga Yoga Teacher
In truth, I did not find Ashtanga Yoga -
yoga found me at the perfect time. The important thing is that I responded. From early childhood, I have found joy and satisfaction in physical
activity. One of my earliest memories is ice skating on the Hahn River in Korea
with my father. The fact that I got frostbite on my pinky toes from it did not
dim my fondness for the experience. As I moved into my teenage years, I
experimented with a variety of activities; some were more fulfilling than
others. At first aerobics was fun, but the repetition became boring. I have
skied for over 35 years in Pennsylvania, Colorado and Europe. I have golfed for
about 15 years, at least a few times a week. Later, I studied the form of
Korean Martial Arts, Tang Soo- Do. Here I learned much about myself. I am
extremely self-motivated, have a great intensity of focus and a desire to
explore the limits of my personal power. I earned a Second Degree Black Belt.
Then in September 2004, with no warning, my life changed
forever. I was given a one-month free pass to a yoga class at a local hospital.
After only three classes, I knew that I wanted to become a yoga instructor. I
began to seek opportunities to learn more about yoga. It is a bit ironic that
the modern tool of the Internet opened up the vast world of the centuries-old
yogic path. One day while searching online, I saw a man named Sharath doing a
jump-through from vinyasa. That is the moment that yoga found me. I knew that I
would one day practice that kind of yoga.
In January 2005, although a complete novice, I did not
hesitate to travel to Mysore, India, the epicenter of Ashtanga Yoga, and the
home of the Pattabhi Jois Yoga School, which recommended a three-month program.
When I arrived, to my dismay I discovered that the school was closed for nine
days for an Indian Holiday. I would not be deterred. I had not traveled
half-way around the world to just sit in my room and wait. So, I searched
Mysore, seeking another Ashtanga school where I began taking private classes,
practicing Ashtanga yoga three times a day. I look back now and wonder, “What
madness possessed me then?” Fortunately, I was in good health, having practiced
Karate twice a day prior to my trip to India. This, combined with my active
lifestyle, allowed me to avoid injury. That first year in Mysore, India, I
never got to Pattabhi Jois' school. However, the following year, 2006, I made
sure that I went to Pattabhi Jois’ school, and have returned to Mysore every
year since.
On subsequent trips to Mysore, I was intent on learning
all that I could about yoga from a variety of teachers. As in life, there are
many paths, and I am fortunate to have had marvelous teachers. However, my true
yogic path continues at Pattabhi Jois’ school. Since 2008 I have traveled there
every year for a two-month stay, each time delving deeper into my yoga
practice. Following his death in 2009 at the age of 94, Pattabhi Jois’ grandson
Sharath carries on the great tradition of his Ashtanga yoga legacy. (Teaching Ashtanga Yoga in Bologna, Italy.)
On January 11, 2011, Sharath blessed me with an
Authorization to Teach Ashtanga yoga. On January 2013, Sharath asked me to
assist him teaching for a month. Yes, I got to wear that famous towel around my
waist in the Main Shala. In 2014 he had a special, two-month long course for
authorized teachers only and I was invited! What an honor! Since 2007, I
exclusively practice with Sharath as my teacher. My practice has deepened; my
body responds. Six days a week, I practice for approximately two hours a day.
Yes, it is demanding, sweat-pouring hard work, and I love it. In fact,
I look forward to the next day’s practice. I can both see
and feel how my health and vitality continue to improve. Yoga has found me, and
I am eternally grateful that I opened the door to this wondrous opportunity. I
look forward to continuing my yearly studies in Mysore with my Guru Sharath,
for “Where would my life be today without the bottom of my Guru’s feet?” And
now, I have the privilege of sharing my knowledge and practice with my students
who, if they choose, may follow their own yoga path.
(Teaching Ashtanga Yoga in Tierra del Sol, Aruba.)
(Teaching Ashtanga Yoga in Tierra del Sol, Aruba.)




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