Keep doing your yoga, but don't beat yourself up! - Telegraph

No sugar, no alcohol: did we forget to have fun?

30 OCTOBER 2016 • 6:0                                                                              

 

When it comes to diet, exercise and drinking, sometimes it seems like we’ve ricocheted from all-out hedonism to obsessive self-control. Neither are particularly healthy, so how can we find the perfect balance?

A quick glance around women I know: one is fanatical in her sugar-free diet, another is organic-only.

A third is so obsessed with her yoga-toned body that on a recent business trip to the US, she pre-ordered a yoga mat on Amazon, had it delivered to her hotel room and then signed up with a yoga teacher on Skype so she didn’t have to miss her daily practice.

I can think of only one who isn’t on some kind of punishing regime, a slave to their Fitbit or in some self-improvement hell. Most are vegan, vegetarian, pescatarian or following a ‘clean eating’ plan. 

Maybe I have a posse of freaks in my social circle, but I suspect the idea of ‘wellness’ has scooped us all into its net and, God, it’s hard work.

I am sugar-free but I will allow myself the odd apple

The modern drive is not just to be slimmer, healthier and fitter but also to be calmer, more serene, more mindful – to be ‘better’ is some indefinable way. It’s a quest so pervasive that we are in danger of forgetting how to have fun. 

Rebecca Friedman, 47, a PR from north London, is typical of this new breed: a non-drinking yoga bunny (the one who can’t miss a day) who has been on a diet since forever.

‘As a default setting I am sugar-free but I will allow myself the odd apple,’ she says, like she’s announcing she’s just eaten five Crunchies. If I go mad now it’s two Campari and sodas, and I might stay up until 12.30.’ 

Unpicking why we’ve become this obsessed about being ‘good’ is complex. Is it an expression of our ever-increasing self-obsession – partly thanks to the heady cocktail of social media and celebrity examples: Gwyneth and Goop, the Kardashians forever eating huge salads?

Stir in a creeping health obsession, a terror of ageing and it’s no wonder we’re clutching at anything – everything – that might prove to be the golden ticket to eternal youth. 

Louise Chunn, founder of welldoing.org, a website that matches clients with therapists, says, ‘Social media doesn’t help. Everything is documented.

'We see endless pictures of celebrities leaving the gym or on the beach, which is the stock in trade of some newspapers. We didn’t have to have toned abs a decade ago. Now it seems obligatory. People forget that celebrity social media shots are all manipulated; it’s a con to think you’re seeing into their glamorous lives.’

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Ruth Aylward-Davies is a psychotherapist who works in the City of London and Kent, and whose clients now talk of personal trainers, gym visits and constant dieting.

These are the same clients who will drink excessively and binge-eat at the weekend. ‘Any situation where we aim for perfection is bound to fail,’ she says. 

Her clients, like the rest of us, are not great at balance. ‘People see things as either good or bad,’ she says.

‘It’s much better to aim for somewhere in the middle. People need to keep healthy in a way that is simply part of their lives so they don’t have to swing between extremes.’

Aylward-Davies is in favour of the 80/20 rule, which suggests that doing the ‘right-ish thing’ 80 per cent of the time is good enough. In fact, many people I spoke to talked of ‘diet maths’ – the idea that if you are ‘good’, you can pig-out later. 

Gisele Bündchen in New York in 2002  CREDIT: WIREIMAGE

‘The phrase used often in our house is, “I’m allowed this” or “I’m not allowed that,’’’ says Tom Long, 45, a lawyer from New Zealand who now lives in London.

‘Since when did we have to give ourselves permission to do anything? It all feels like punishment and reward. I’m a grown man.’   

‘I eat quinoa and salad all week,’ says Chrissie Dickenson, 60, a social worker from Devon. ‘Then I get to the weekendand think, “Oh, sod it,” and eat a Double Peanut Butter Magnum, which are basically like crack for me.’ 

‘It’s good for your general sense of well-being to eat well, get some exercise, look as if you’ve made an effort in how you face the world – but there has to be balance,’ says Chunn.

Being sick in your own hair is not a fantastic look past 30

‘If you’re chasing perfection – cutting out whole food groups, aiming for an iron-hard stomach, and feel you’ve failed, you’ll be hit harder by low moods and anxiety.

‘You’ve got to be able to let off steam, enjoy yourself and have a treat without feeling that you’ll career into a physical and mental reversal. All of this is part of trying to deal with the fact that “life is full of surprises – and most of them are bloody awful”.

‘Some people, tryingto deal with these thoughts, and imagining the chaos that could be around the corner, want to control as much of their life as possible as a result. But life doesn’t play along. We’re probably better to be a little easieron ourselves, so that tough times won’t feel like such a catastrophe.’

Penny Brewer, 42, a writer from Hastings, was brought up by a mother permanently on a diet who would eat a cake and then, looking crestfallen, say, ‘Oh, I wish I hadn’t done that.’

‘So I eat really healthily, but when I have a cake, I never allow myself to regret it. I just enjoy it,’ she says.

‘Last weekend my husband and I went to San Sebastian in Spain and had an amazing meal that was 25 courses. It was probably 4,000 calories and I enjoyed every single one of them.’ 

That’s the way to go, then. When you’re ‘naughty’ – and I use that word carefully, because we are adults after all – the trick is to allow yourself to luxuriate in it. Which begs the question of what we do for fun.

‘Maybe it’s an age thing,’ says Abigail Buck, 45, a researcher from Hove, who doesn’t touch alcohol, wheat or sugar. ‘Your body tells you not to do things. It starts to hurt. So I stick to my regime and as I give things up I realise how much better I feel.’

So what does fun look like? ‘Shopping. I get a huge adrenaline kick from spending a couple of hundred quid at the garden centre. That’s what gets my heart pumping.’ 

Others I spoke to let rip by drinking, eating Green & Black’s and going out with friends. (‘Though unlike the old days, we all want to be home by midnight.’) 

The definition of a good time changes as you age too; being sick in your own hair is not a fantastic look past 30. ‘The trouble is that you get a bit older and think that the things you used to find fun will still be fun,’ says Rebecca, the yoga bunny.

‘Fun used to be partying hard, three bottles of wine, lots of people talking rubbish, getting into slight scrapes. But thatis absolutely not fun any more. I’m more moderate – except about exercise, because when I don’t do yoga, I don’t feel good. 

‘And last time I drank too much I felt so rough I didn’t get any pleasure from it at all, so there’s no point. It’s a questionof working out what fun means now. For me, it’s quite simple things: a walk with friends, cooking a nice meal, travel,  having new experiences. Those are my drugs of choice these days.’

At a glance | How to strike the right balance between healthy living and pleasure

  • Look at the patterns of what you do and why you do it. Letting off steam is useful, says psychotherapist Ruth Aylward-Davies, ‘but can sometimes be about “numbing out” – whether that is drinking or eating too much, even exercising to extremes – you are not really feeling, tasting, experiencing what you are doing.’

  • Consistent lack of balance could indicate an underlying emotional issue, agrees Mary Strugar, a nutritionist and psychotherapist who works with people who have eating disorders and addictions. ‘Sometimes people have enormous problems that are played out through food.’

  • Strugar recommends getting your iron, vitamin D, glucose levels and thyroid function checked. ‘Often people are doing quite wacky things with diet and they are ignoring the basics rather than approaching this in a balanced, sensible, systematic way.’

  • Strugar also suggests avoiding what she calls the ‘piecemeal approach’ (eg ‘My friend gave up wheat and she felt so much better, so I’ll try it.’). Have at least one session with a qualified nutritionist. To get out of what she calls the ‘binge/crave’ cycle, you have to look at – and often alter – your fundamental way of eating.

  • Remember there are different ideas of balance for different people.Because we have different psychological make-ups it’s about trying to figure out a balance that you can be happy with and that will work for you.

 

The Science of Yoga - Medical Daily

VITALITY

The Science Of Yoga: Breathing While Stretching Into Poses Relieves Stress And Benefits The Body

Oct 23, 2016 11:00 AM By Kelsey Drain

 

'More than 11 million Americans currently practice yoga, according to the American Council on Exercise.

Back in 2010, a comparative analysis study from researchers at the University of Maryland School of Nursing concluded that yoga may be as effective as, or even better than, exercise when it comes to improving health. What is actually happening in your body and brain? Here's the science behind this ancient practice.

What's the science behind the ancient practice of yoga?Photo courtesy of Pixabay

PHYSICAL BENEFITS OF YOGA

In a study from the ACE, researchers at the University of Wisconsin, La Crosse, found that eight weeks of yoga improved average flexibility by 13 to 35 percent.

“We saw very nice changes in flexibility of the entire body, the shoulder girdle, twisting, bending, reaching, good low-back flexibility — all those types of flexibility improved,” said researcher John Porcari. ”And those improvements should have very good carryover to everyday life.”

Paula R. Pullen, PhD, Research Instructor at the Morehouse School of Medicine, also found that it reducedinflammation, according to Forbes.

HOW IT WORKS IN THE BODY

Yoga moves your body in the ways it was designed to; as a way to ensure that it keeps functioning properly. The practice can be traced back to over 5,000 years ago, but some researchers think that yoga may be up to 10,000 years old, according to Yoga Basics.

Additionally, when practicing yoga you’re limited to “lifting” your own body weight, Gaiam reported. This means that it may take a lot more skill, time, and determination to get it right, but the benefits are better than with just lifting weights.

“You’re putting your body in positions and orientations that you ultimately have to support with your muscles,” yoga expert Rodney Yee told Gaiam.

MENTAL BENEFITS OF YOGA

Back in August, a report published in the Journal of Psychophysiology showed how women who practiced yoga had lower levels of psychological distress as well as less perceived stress when they were compared to the women who did not practice.

Those in the yoga group not only saw a change in their stress levels, Medical Daily previously reported, but also began experiencing positive emotions and improved mood conditions.

HOW IT WORKS IN THE BRAIN

Yoga boosts levels of brain chemicals like GABA, serotonin, and dopamine — which all make you feel good and are responsible for relaxation and contentedness, Forbes reported. This is achieved by taking deep breaths, improving blood flow to the brain, and acutely focusing your attention for extended periods.

Practicing yoga is also linked to opening your mind to learn new things.

"It thickens the layers of the cerebral cortex, the part of the brain associated with higher learning, and increases neuroplasticity, which helps us learn new things and change the way we do things," Dr. Loren Fishman, a New York City physician who is also a yoga instructor, told LiveScience.

Read more:

Take A Deep Breath For Stress Relief: Yoga Could Help Improve Mood, Reduce Waist Size, Study Shows

Yoga For Brain Power: Mindfulness Exercises Reduce Effects Of Cognitive Impairment By Improving Memory, Mood

Ahimsa , The Greatest Yoga of All - Huffington Post

THE BLOG

The Greatest Yoga Of All

 09/29/2016 01:34 pm ET

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Ed and Deb Shapiro Mindfulness, Meditation, Yoga experts; Bestselling Authors: YOUR BODY SPEAKS YOUR MIND; BE THE CHANGE, Coaches, bloggers Oprah.com

Although ‘make love not war’ may be the key to a better life it’s sadly not what we see when we look around us. Imagine, as John Lennon said, what a wonderful world it would be if there were no wars and no suffering! How cool it would be!

There is nothing that could be more significant, helpful, or honoring of human existence and dignity than harmlessness, or non-injury, called ahimsa in yoga.

This may sound so simple, but ahimsa requires a complete shift in attitude. Few of us get through life without causing harm, whether by ignoring someone’s feelings, by using more of the earth’s resources than we need, or by buying products made by underage and underpaid workers. What to do when insects invade the kitchen or slugs eat away at the vegetable garden, yet we don’t want to harm them? And how often do we think things that are hurtful or harmful to ourselves?

How many times a day, consciously or otherwise, do we put ourselves down, reaffirm our hopelessness, dislike our appearance, or see ourselves as incompetent or unworthy? How much resentment, guilt, or shame do we cling to?

If there is one yoga that that leads to Self-Realization it is non-injury or ahimsa. Sri Swami Satchidananda

In a world where selfishness and self-interests are the norm, it takes great courage not to react with greed or anger, which can easily lead to violence. Yoga teaches us to be honest, respectful, to take care of ourselves and others, and ahimsa is integral to these teachings. Simply through the intent to cause less pain each of us can bring greater dignity to our world, so that harm is replaced with harmlessness and disrespect with respect.

Gandhi, one of India’s greatest yogis, was the champion of ahimsa. He changing the course of history by showing how harmlessness is more powerful than violence, inspiring millions of others to follow his lead. This showed that human dignity through non-injury is the essence of human decency.

By developing a sense of respect for others and a concern for their welfare we reduce our own selfishness, which is the source of all problems, and enhance our sense of kindness, which is a natural source of goodness. The Dalai Lama

Practicing mindful yoga, sitting in quiet reflection, meditation or prayer is immediately calming. When we get off the cushion the peace stays with us, highlighting any tendency to cause harm and making such behavior far less likely. It becomes even more improbable as we deepen awareness of our fundamental interconnectedness, for then violence toward another is causing harm to ourselves.

Try this: throughout your day silently repeat: “May I be well, May others be well, May I practice harmlessness toward myself and toward all others.”

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Ed & Deb are the authors of many books. Deb is the author of award-winning Your Body Speaks Your Mind, now in 21 languages. They have three meditation CDs. See more at EdandDebShapiro.com

Follow Ed and Deb Shapiro on Twitter: www.twitter.com/edanddebshapiro

Read about the wonderful benefits of Yoga.............

The Healing Power of Yoga

Self-realization is the key to peace.

By Wesley Baines


Read more at http://www.beliefnet.com/wellness/the-healing-power-of-yoga.aspx#OU1gir5ZLLLzB7EF.99

Yoga is more than movement. It’s more than a mat or a set of stretches or a 90-minute activity to take the edge off the day. To Ally Hamilton, author of “Yoga’s Healing Power,” it is a way of life, and a path to healing. Yoga, which has more than 20 million American devotees, has definite physical benefits, helping people increase flexibility and relax their bodies. Yoga, as a system of thought, can also bring healing to the mind.

Hamilton writes of the word “sankalpa,” which is a Sanskrit word for “intention.” “Sankalpa,” she writes, “is the way to overcome negative samskaras, or patterns that aren’t’ serving us." All of the tools that yoga bequeaths to practitioners are used to break these negative habits—things that we do, repeatedly, that bring us discomfort or unhappiness. For those who keep up with psychology trends, this is a familiar concept. Breaking a bad habit often requires inserting a replacement. For instance, a counselor might recommend that someone drink water rather than smoking another cigarette. Eventually, that person will automatically begin to reach for their cup rather than their cigarette when they get a craving. The breaking of bad habits is essential for our wellbeing.

Hamilton goes on to write that the spiritual component of yoga “doesn’t ask you to memorize rules and then try to live by them; it teaches you to practice these ideas in your own body, from the inside out. It doesn’t ask you to take it on faith; it tells you to go ahead and test it out.” It’s immediately applicable, once learned, but “only works if you work it,” if you take the time to learn what yoga is all about and implement its practices, which revolve around eight limbs—eight sets of philosophical concepts which help show us the best way to live, and five kleshas, or obstacles to be overcome—ignorance of ourselves, strong identification with the ego, attachment to pleasure, aversion to pain, and fear of death.

Yoga’s healing power is bound up in self-realization—freedom from external coercion, whether that means freedom from addiction or bad habits or ignorance. The kleshas are walls that stand in the way of our self-realization, blocking us or blinding and keeping us from achieving our happiness. Hamilton illustrates the healing that yoga can bequeath, powerfully, as she moves through the ways she overcame each of the five kleshas in her own life, her examples giving readers a much more thorough understanding of how yoga can be applied to life, rather than simply limiting it to a form of exercise.

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The first klesha, ignorance of ourselves, is something that many suffer from. Each of us have cycles of pain—patterns, engrained in us by tragic circumstances, which we repeat over and over in our lives. Hamilton speaks of the beginning of her own cycle—issues with a commitment-phobic father and a mother who dabbled in alcoholism. She was often left wondering why she wasn’t loved. This manifested itself later in her life, as is the case with many of us, leaving her in a dire and painful situation. These tendencies are the aforementioned samskaras, or “grooves in the unconscious mind,”—our bad habits—and the more they are repeated, the stronger they become.

These patterns, though, can begin to be broken by simply recognizing them, by dragging them out into the light. Practicing yoga can help with this. Hamilton recommends that, when we finally begin to recognize these habits, we give some attention to our bodies, looking, especially at our posture, which often communicates how we feel about ourselves. The body can “store events and emotions for years,” and working with, and being aware of the body can unlock and undo these patterns from the past.

The next klesha, strong identification with the ego, is equally damaging, and especially affects those who are successful. Hamilton illustrates this point, writing about a wealthy client who was, at his core, unhappy. The klesha of the ego causes us to identify ourselves by what we have and what we’ve achieved, rather than who we really are—this limits us greatly. We look outside of ourselves for our value. The problem with this? Our stuff changes. Material wealth comes and goes. When we overcome this klesha, we are able to see our true value, which is much higher than that of anything we could ever buy.

Attachment to pleasure and the aversion to pain are the next two kleshas, and are two of the most familiar roots of destructive habits. They bring to mind things like drug addiction, unhealthy food cravings, and destructive physical relationships. But it can be any kind of crutch, really. The two kleshas are often intertwined—sometimes, we seek to drown ourselves in pleasures in order to run away from past hurts. Hamilton writes that “You may have developed coping mechanisms as you grew up, and perhaps they were necessary and served you then. Maybe you learned to run when things got scary, or to make yourself invisible…Or perhaps we hit our teenage years and started blurring the edges with drugs or alcohol, so reality would look and feel a little better.” In order to face these two kleshas, it is necessary to bring these coping mechanisms to light. When you’re on the mat, as Hamilton says, “there’s no escaping the truth”. You’ll be confronted with yourself, and once you are? You’ll be able to break down these barriers and free yourself.

The final klesha, the fear of death, is paralyzing. Hamilton writes that our “attachment to the earthly life is the root of most of our fears.” She goes on to say that “so much trouble comes from our strong identification with the body we’re in, with our names and our jobs and our hair color, and our huge fear that we are going to die and become nothing.” The realization that, quite literally, nothing comes from nothing, and that death is merely a transformative state is one that is not easy to attain, but one that can bring great relief. Within the belief framework of yoga, reincarnation occurs—you get to come back, which is much less frightening than the unknown. The point of each reincarnation is to reach the point where you don’t need to keep coming back, when you’ve finally learned and evolved so far that you no longer need an earthly body. You achieve, as Hamilton writes, “enlightenment”.

Hamilton writes that the “Dark Night of the Soul” that you’ll encounter when practicing yoga isn’t easy, but that “it’s easier than a lifetime spent suffering”. This is absolutely true. The sooner that you achieve self-realization, that you overcome the five kleshas we’ve outlined—which are only a small taste of what yoga is all about—the sooner you can begin to find happiness and peace. To find out more about Ally Hamilton’s journey into yoga, and to share in the wisdom she’s found there, check out “Yoga’s Healing Power”. You’ll find, as the title says, that yoga can be a path to healing, no matter what your core spiritual beliefs might be. The path to knowing You is never a bad one to tread.
Read more at http://www.beliefnet.com/wellness/the-healing-power-of-yoga.aspx?p=2#KTQ7ezyWUGU6CJmW.99


Read more at http://www.beliefnet.com/wellness/the-healing-power-of-yoga.aspx#OU1gir5ZLLLzB7EF.99

Ever wondered what's the difference between Yoga and Pilates?

What's The Difference Between Yoga and Pilates?

Aashna Ahuja   |  Updated: July 09, 2016 14:47 IST

Yoga may have a bigger fan following right now, but with celebrity Pilates teachers like Yasmin Karachiwala who trains Bollywood’s best - Pilates, too, is rising in popularity. A question that constantly pops up among fitness newbies is whether they should take Yoga or Pilates. Both improve muscular and postural strength, increase flexibility and reduce stress. So what’s the difference?

Yoga vs Pilates: The Breakdown

1. According to Vesna Pericevic Jacob of Vesna’s Wellness, “The main difference between Pilates and Yoga is in the core essence of the two. Yoga focuses more on relaxation, meditation and reaching a state of nirvana, while Pilates places more emphasis on the core and balance, achieving greater awareness about your body”.

2. In yoga, the primary goal is to stay connected to the breath. But in Pilates, the first order of business is the precision of movement and then the coordination of that movement with breathing.

3. Yoga is a “practice”, whereas Pilates is known as a “workout”.

4. The breathing patterns in both Yoga and Pilates are different. For the bulk of the asanapractice, yogic breathing is either ujjayi (a smooth, heat-inducing breath) or kapalabhati (a rapid breath that creates greater internal heat). In Pilates however, the breath for most exercises is a slow, controlled diaphragmatic breath but few exercises use a rapid breath similar to kapalabhati breathing in Yoga.
  

 


5. In terms of pace, yoga is considerably more static than Pilates. “Yoga is stagnant and Pilates is dynamic. Yoga is more about holding a posture (asana) for a number of breaths and the practice focuses on how to reach your ideal self. While Pilates urges you to focus on your body, your breath and how they move together, letting your body movement flow from one exercise to another”, says Dr. Namita Agarwal, Fitness Fusion.

6. The practice of Yoga originated in India more than 5000 years ago and has evolved over the centuries and cultures. Pilates is a much younger practice that was actually inspired by Yoga, and originated in the mid-20th century by Joseph Pilates. He created the exercises as a form of rehabilitation and strengthening, and referred to it as “Contrology” (the study of control).

7. Both Yoga and Pilates bring an understanding that the mind and body are connected. However, Yoga adds an additional element to the mix - the spirit - and the purpose is to unite the mind, body and spirit. 

8. Dr. Namita Agarwal, Fitness Fusion says, “Yoga doesn’t require any equipment. But in addition to the mat, Pilates can also be done using special equipment such as the Reformer, Cadillac and the Wunda Chair”. These machines use heavy springs to create resistance and are incredibly versatile, taking mat work to a different level. They can provide support to make exercises easier, or add resistance to challenge the muscles even more.
  

 


9. “Unlike Yoga where each exercise focuses on a single body part, Pilates works out the entire body”, adds Vesna Pericevic Jacob of Vesna’s Wellness. Pilates mainly targets the core, the upper legs to help engage the core and the glutes to stabilize the core.

10. Uday Pratap, Trainer at The Pilates Studio puts it simply, “Pilates is about body balance and Yoga is about inner self”.

The good news is that you don’t have to choose between the two. A lot of people practice both Yoga and Pilates to get just the right balance of benefits. Sanaa Vidyalankar, Founder of Sole to Soul, Delhi instructs a PIYO (Pilates and Yoga) class at the studio. Why choose Yoga or Pilates when you can have the benefit of both? According to Sanaa, “PIYO is flexibility and strength rolled into one powerfully dynamic workout. Yes you become flexible, but you also become so much stronger”!

Other Link(s):

Great article in the Guardian on Yoga..............

Yoga saved my life: three people share their stories

In celebration of World Yoga Day this week, we talked to three people about how it helped them overcome difficulties

 

 

 ‘My first yoga session was a turning point. I couldn’t really move beyond a few stretches.’ Photograph: Xinhua/Barcroft Images

Sarah Marsh and Guardian readers

Wednesday 22 June 2016 15.59 BSTLast modified on Wednesday 22 June 201616.47 BST

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At a time of difficulty last year I found comfort in yoga. I went through a period of torturous insomnia that left me wide awake every night until 3am, begging for my brain to switch off. I’d heard that yoga could help so started going to a local class. Immediately, I felt better. I loved how slow and methodical it was, and the fact that teachers discussed mindful and positive thinking. These were all things I’d heard little about before. Gradually, as I de-stressed and learned to relax, my sleep improved. I even used to go through the poses in my head before bed, which always helped me drift off.

So, for World Yoga Day, I wanted to find out whether this ancient practice had helped others too with any challenges they had faced. Here are three stories.

Vernon Kenny, 50: After six months of yoga I quit drinking and smoking. I didn’t need these substances any more

 

 

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 Photograph: Vernon Kelly

I was very reluctant to go to a yoga class when my wife asked me. She had been practicing for years in Japan, but wanted to go for the first time in the UK and was worried about the fact that the class would be held in English. That’s why she dragged me along with her. I moaned all the way there. “Can I not just wait for you in the pub?” I asked.

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At this point in my life I was drinking every day, and smoking a lot. I was living for the weekend and experiencing low-level depression that I managed through excessive shopping and substance abuse. This was 10 years ago – I was 40.

After my first class, which was just a regular one in a gym, everything changed. I was hooked straight away and six months in I’d stopped drinking and smoking, and my family and friends noticed the difference in me too. They noted that I was happier, friendlier and more open and compassionate. As a result my relationship with my wife was much better too. We used to argue over stupid things but that all stopped.

Giving up smoking was perhaps my greatest achievement. I had tried for years to do it but found it impossible. Yoga helped me because smoking and drinking were just a manifestation of my desire for happiness and, as I became more happy and contented, I realised that I didn’t need these substances any more. I experienced some physical discomfort for a few days quitting smoking but that soon passed. Yoga helped me control the psychological addiction to smoking.

Yoga brings you into a deep sense of relaxation physically and that creates more space for you mentally and spiritually. I started to understand that there was no satisfaction in trying to find happiness outside myself, for example through material possessions; all this stuff brought only temporary happiness, nothing permanent.

I now practice every day. I do an hour and a half before work. Then I meditate in the evening and I attend classes in Putney, London. I also teach yoga after work a few days, which gives me the same kind of buzz as going to a class.

Yoga isn’t going to turn everyone’s life around, but it has the potential to do so. You just need to be open to it. I don’t know whether it was luck or karma but yoga came to me at the right time. If I had gone to a class four years earlier I think I would have walked out immediately and gone straight to the pub. I wasn’t ready then but when I eventually found it I was.

Emily, 17: After experiencing anorexia, yoga taught me to have a better relationship with my body

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I was first introduced to yoga in hospital – an interesting place to do your first class in. I had attempted suicide multiple times and was ill with anorexia. I was told if didn’t go into hospital then I would be sectioned. I was in a terrible state, and had lost over half my body weight. My suicide attempts had been monthly, and I’d been on suicide watch for three years.

This was a year ago now, and today I am infinitely better. A big part of my recovery is down to yoga. At first I didn’t take it seriously at all because of a misconception that it is hippy and all of that, but actually I found that it kind of empowered me to realise my body isn’t just what people can see but how I can use it.

My first yoga session was a turning point. It was a very slow class because it was at a treatment facility. I couldn’t really move beyond a few stretches. At this stage I didn’t realise how physical and complex it could be. It was introduced to me as a way to calm. Yoga also helped to introduce me to meditation.

I have always been crazy flexible because I did ballet. Maybe that’s partly why I developed an eating disorder. But yoga made me realise that it’s not just about my appearance but also what I can do with my body. I can do headstands etc, and that’s really empowering. It’s my antidote to the desire to be thinner.

My life now is so much better. There are still bits and pieces I am trying to restore and I lost a bit of weight recently because of my exams. But my mental health has vastly improved. I am able to maintain friendships and will be going to university in September. I never thought I would be doing that; my parents were told I wouldn’t last until I was 16.

I used to over-think everything and be anxious a lot of the time. The clarity of yoga was really what helped, and having a routine. I am not one of those constant, dedicated people, and I only do yoga for 10 minutes a day, but it helps to ground me. It has taught me how to calm down and not panic at everything.

Che Marville, 45: Yoga saved me from nights of sleeplessness after an illness

 

 

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 Photograph: Che Marville

I have a long history with yoga. I started learning it when I was about 13, maybe even a little younger. I suffered from insomnia when I was 11 and 12 and found yoga the only way to cope. My sleep problems were triggered by an illness I developed as a child, the stress of migration and my parents’ divorce. My mother, siblings and I moved to Canada, but my family was originally from Guyana. When I was visiting family there I developed osteomyelitis, which is inflammation of bone marrow due to blood infection. I was deathly sick and lost the ability to walk. I was flown to Trinidad where I was diagnosed but the first surgery was unsuccessful so their solution was to amputate the right leg. My mother, a British-trained nurse, refused and sought out the Canadian embassy to help us return to Canada. The doctors in Trinidad said: “If you take her back she will die,” but my courageous mother took the risk based on her knowledge and faith.

When I got to Toronto I had a series of seven operations and gradually improved. I went through rehabilitation and wore a brace and never lost my leg. I was told that I would walk with a limp and one leg would be shorter than the other. I had experienced extreme pain and was so grateful to be alive that I developed spiritual practice during my illness. I discovered a greater sense of self and strength because I came so close to death.

As a result of my experiences I developed sleep issues and to help with this I started yoga. It wasn’t very common at that time and my family and friends certainly weren’t studying it. I did it privately and there was always a yoga teacher renting a church basement somewhere and books in the public library. I found the experience so profound that I was hungry to study with various teachers using the practice to heal myself.

 

 

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 Photograph: Che Marville

After I graduated I worked as a researcher at the Science Centre and that’s when my sleep problems came back. I started to research more into what was going on and began studying mindfulness and meditation. I realised I could cure myself.

After a while I felt my personal practice was strong and shared it with others. I designed a programme for nurses in hospital – because my mum was one – and they loved it. It ran in multiple hospitals and I also started teaching. One thing that is important to remember is that yoga isn’t just about acrobatics; it is an intricate holistic philosophy about your own unique health. It involves learning to be calm and to relax. When you do that your body can heal itself. One of the requirements of yoga is telling yourself the truth. When you do that you find a kind of serenity and inner peace. It doesn’t mean you become nice or good; you become the person you were born to be. You learn to accept your imperfections and fragilities.

Through yoga I’ve been able to help other people too and be of service in my community. I work with seniors, children and executives. I have received feedback from people saying that learning yoga has helped them sleep better and reduce their anxiety . It’s also helped people cope with depression. It has not healed them but it has helped them cope. Right now I am working with people who have cancer and it’s useful for them too. I am not talking about healing it but living with it, because it is a chronic illness and many who suffer from it have never confronted their own mortality before. The fear is often greater than pain and the practice of yoga and understanding your own body can help with that.

We've known this for years ask Ryan Giggs!!

Broome: Football and yoga go wonderfully together

(FIFA.com) 12 Jun 2016

© Getty Images

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"Breathe in, breathe out, breathe in, breathe out. Do you feel the energy that flows through your body?"

Phrases to that effect are sure to have been heard a great deal over the last few days at the headquarters of the Germany national team in Evian, where they are based for the European Championship. The reason? Optional daily yoga sessions have been offered to Bastian Schweinsteiger, Thomas Muller, Mario Gotze and Co for more than ten years now, and will continue to be on the agenda in France, where Germany face Ukraine in their opening UEFA EURO 2016 encounter on Sunday evening.

"Football and yoga go wonderfully together," said yoga instructor Patrick Broome, who has been in all of Germany's European Championship and FIFA World Cup™ camps for the last decade, in an exclusive interview with FIFA.com. "It's a very good addition for athletes to experience their body through different movements and to use their body in a non-competitive way. On top of that, it's a good way of preventing injuries. We can stretch and extend muscles that are overused and relax them. It helps with recovery. It's a wonderful way to relax. At major tournaments all the players complain that they can't sleep because there's so much tension. Yoga's good to help establish a bit of distance and to feel more relaxed again."

Was Germany's fourth World Cup title at Brazil 2014 therefore a consequence of his work? "It was certainly one of many important pieces of the mosaic that combined to form that perfect whole."

Broome, a trained and certified psychologist, runs a Jivamukti Yoga Center [Jivamukti is a branch of traditional yoga that was developed in the USA in 1984] in Munich, and counts several members of the Bayern Munich squad as regular visitors. Furthermore, he has given seminars all over the world for the last 20 years. 

"I once asked a player to put his arms above his head," Broome said. "He tried but couldn't do it; he just had so much muscle that he couldn't raise his arms above his head anymore. But I also have others who are as agile as cats. Those kind of muscle-bound players are virtually extinct in the game now though," he said with a wink.



Earning acceptance in football was not easy for Broome at first. There used to be a lot of prejudice and scepticism and even today he gets the occasional questioning look when he talks about his work with Germany. "Nowadays most of the players are happy and enthusiastic to do it," Broome continued. "When I'm travelling with the team and meet members of different delegations, sometimes they're amazed that a yoga instructor is part of the staff. However, I know that a lot of football clubs in Germany, England and Spain now have yoga instructors."

It was certainly one of many important pieces of the mosaic that combined to form that perfect whole.

Germany's yoga instructor Patrick Broome on yoga's contribution in bringing the country its fourth World Cup title

Yoga exercises have even been included into everyday training in semi-professional football too. The German Football Association (DFB) recorded several video sequences with Broome so that youth players could learn how to stretch the back of their thighs and take care of themselves from a young age in order to make sure their muscles do not stiffen.

It was thanks to Olivier Bierhoff that Broome's collaboration with the DFB started in 2005. The former Germany striker, who scored the Golden Goal in the 1996 European Championship final, took up yoga after retiring and got to know Broome. When Bierhoff became general manager of the national team he brought him into the Germany set-up. "A lot of the exercises are toned down and geared towards football; in concrete terms that means I don't do anything that could risk a player getting injured," Broome said. "Everything flows from physiotherapy. It's yoga that's tailor-made for professional athletes."

Jurgen Klinsmann, who was Germany head coach when Broome first became involved, also proved to be very influential. "Klinsmann had the courage to try anything that could squeeze out the last few percentage points from the players," Broome said. "Back then he was ridiculed because he used rubber bands, but now every amateur club uses them too. Among the technical staff here at the DFB, Klinsmann is still very highly regarded because he had the courage and power to implement changes. He opened doors."

In France, the 46-year-old Broome will be tasked with keeping Germany's players relaxed as they chase another title. And anyone who remains unconvinced about the power of yoga need look no further than one player who has been especially keen on taking Broome's sessions: Mario Gotze – the man who scored the winning goal in extra time against Argentina in the World Cup Final on 13 July 2014.

Read what the Telegraph has to say about Yoga!

Yoga better than crosswords for preventing pre-Alzheimer’s memory loss 

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Yoga and meditation can help prevent mental decline CREDIT: ALAMY

 

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Yoga and meditation are more effective than crosswords and memory games for combating the mental decline that often precedes Alzheimer's, research has shown.

Scientists compared the two approaches in a group of 25 volunteers over the age of 55 who had reported memory issues such as forgetting names and faces, missing appointments or misplacing belongings.

They found that after three months both were equally good at improving verbal memory skills, which help people remember names and word lists.

But the yoga provided added benefits in visual-spatial memory, which helps people to recall locations and navigate while walking or driving.

Eleven participants received weekly hour-long memory training sessions and performed exercises ranging from crossword puzzles to computer-based tasks.

The other 14 were given an hour-long yoga session once a week and practised Kirtan Kriya meditation at home for 20 minutes every day.

Lead researcher Harris Eyre, from the University of Adelaide in Australia, said: "Historically and anecdotally, yoga has been thought to be beneficial in ageing well, but this is the scientific demonstration of that benefit.

"We're converting historical wisdom into the high level of evidence required for doctors to recommend therapy to their patients."

The form of yoga used in the study, known as Kundalini, focuses on breathing, meditation and chanting as well as poses designed to increase strength and flexibility.

It incorporates Kirtan Kriya meditation, which involves chanting, hand movements and visualisation of light, and has been used for hundreds of years in India to prevent mental decline in older adults.

The technique involves meditation and chanting for 20 minutes a day CREDIT: TELEGRAPH

After 12 weeks the scientists saw similar verbal memory improvements in both groups of volunteers. However, visual-spatial memory was increased to a greater degree in the yoga-meditation group.

Participants practising yoga and meditation were also less likely to be depressed and anxious, and were better able to cope with stress.

Mood enhancement is important because of the emotional difficulties involved in coming to terms with cognitive impairment, said the researchers, whose findings are reported in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.

"When you have memory loss, you can get quite anxious about that and it can lead to depression," said US co-author Professor Helen Lavretsky, from the University of California at Los Angeles.

The memory improvements coincided with altered neural activity, monitored using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) brain scans.

Connectivity changes were seen in the brains of both groups, but only those of the yoga-meditation group were statistically significant.

Prof Lavretsky added: "If you or your relatives are trying to improve your memory or offset the risk for developing memory loss or dementia, a regular practice of yoga and meditation could be a simple, safe and low-cost solution to improving your brain fitness."

Dr Laura Phipps of Alzheimer’s Research UK, said: “Exercise in general can bring important physical benefits as well as enjoyable social experiences, and has been linked to a lower risk of cognitive decline and dementia.

"This small study suggests yoga may have an impact on brain function and mood in people with early memory problems, but it will need following up in a larger group over a longer period of time.

"While there is a growing body of evidence to suggest that physical activity is beneficial for cognition, it’s still unclear what type and intensity of activity could be most important."

The study was funded by the Alzheimer's Research and Prevention Foundation, based in the US.

Of course it should! From the Guardian

Should yoga be part of NHS care?

A Manchester GP practice is prescribing yoga for patients – and even plans to create its own on-site studio to host classes

 

THE GUARDIAN

 Yoga is cheap, sociable and available in a number of forms to suit all ages, tastes and abilities. Photograph: Juha Tuomi/Rex

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Rachel Pugh

Tuesday 26 April 2016 08.25 BSTLast modified on Tuesday 26 April 201608.26 BST

 

Some patients at The Docs city-centre surgery in Manchester emerge from the consulting room, minus a prescription, but clutching a voucher for a free yoga class courtesy of staff at the practice who are convinced that yoga deserves a more prominent part in NHS care.

The tickets entitling the bearers to a 45-minute class at the nearby Studio 25 were initiated by one of the partners, Dr Matthew Joslin. He developed them following powerful Facebook support for an open letter he wrote to the NHS in January appealing for greater incorporation of the Indian exercise and mindfulness techniques into day-to-day healthcare. The letter received 17,000 Facebook shares.

Astonished at the reaction, 46-year-old Joslin has added to his 16 years as a yoga practitioner by training to teach the physically-demanding Ashtanga form of the practice. He plans to start giving one class a week from June onwards at Studio 25, and later in the the basement at The Docs when work has been carried out to convert it into a yoga studio, with a physiotherapist also on hand to tackle a range of musculoskeletal problems.

“It is time yoga became the default option to get people moving, improve strength, flexibility and posture and – while you’re at it – to bring a helping of mindfulness to promote mental health,” says Joslin.

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This is not just about bad backs and dodgy knees. Joslin has become aware that many of the men and women coming into the consultation room of his inner-city practice bring problems that he feels yoga could help. Cardiovascular disease, diabetes, pregnancy, back pain, obesity, mental health issues, social isolation and a number of the difficulties faced by people in old age fall into this bracket.

Yoga is cheap, sociable and available in a number of forms to suit all ages, tastes and abilities – from the more static and strengthening Iyengar, the therapeutic and meditative Svastha, to the cardio workout offered by Ashtanga. Could it be a way of hitting a number of health problems at once?

 

 

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 ‘It is time yoga became the default option to get people moving, improve strength, flexibility and posture,’ says Dr Matthew Joslin (pictured). Photograph: Rose Joslin

Figures from Sport England from 2013-14 suggest that 388,200 people over 16 participated in yoga for 30 minutes every week – up from 296,800 in 2008-09 – and the NHS England chief executive, Simon Stevens, announced last autumn that yoga was to be offered to health professionals alongside Zumba and health checks, in a package aiming to cut the £2.4bn annual cost of sick leave in the health service.

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However, recently-issued draft guidelines on lower back pain from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) do not mention yoga specifically in recommendations that people take exercise to improve their condition. Although Nice says its recommendations do not exclude yoga, there is not enough scientific proof that it works.

Joslin started yoga to cure a bad back but became hooked by the practice when he was introduced to Ashtanga during a period of anxiety and depression that nearly made him quit medicine. He now goes to three classes a week, including a Friday lunchtime class accompanied by The Docs’ GP trainee, Shahnawaz Khan, and practice nurse, Wendy Cooke.

The 45-minute Yoga Express programme, to which he sends his patients, was devised by renowned yoga teacher Matt Ryan, who used to be a DJ at Manchester’s Hacienda nightclub, and used the practice as his way out of drug and mental health problems.

The GP reels off anecdotal examples of patients who have had similar positive experiences – an adult with neurological damage following meningitis, who now has better balance and coordination; a woman with serious depression, who communicated after her first session of yoga.

A major problem is that the evidence base for yoga is not there. A Cochrane review of yoga and back pain pointed this out, even though there is a strong support for the benefits of exercise on cardiovascular disease. Another difficulty about yoga is that it is used to describe a number of practices from the meditative to the highly athletic.

Dr James Newham, from Newcastle University’s Institute of Health and Society, and researchers from Manchester University have carried out the first study of antenatal yoga in the UK – published in the journal Anxiety and Depression – showing that a single session of yoga reduced self-reported anxiety by a third and stress hormone levels by 14%.

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Dr Kishan Rees, a clinical teaching fellow in medical education at Lincoln UMED, believes that economic constraints on the NHS call for a broader view of public health. “There may be a lack of evidence to support some complementary therapies such as Yoga,” he says. “However, as long as it causes no harm, these approaches should be implemented as part of a toolkit people can access as they see fit.”

In the US, the work of the meditative aspects of the yoga by psychologist Dr Richard Miller have been officially recognised. He used the state of lucid sleep (yoga nidra) to treat post-traumatic stress in soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.

The government’s Mindful Nation project backed the concept of mindfulness and recommended that mindfulness-based cognitive therapy should be commissioned on the NHS for recurrent depression. In the UK, the Phoenix Prison Trust takes yoga and meditation to prisoners, to improve their physical and mental wellbeing.

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Justin Varney, interim deputy director of health and wellbeing at Public Health England, says: “There are a variety of types of activity that people can undertake to contribute towards achieving a healthy amount of physical activity, with most people preferring to undertake a mix. Yoga is an excellent way to achieve the two sessions of muscle strengthening per week in alignment with our guidance.”

Yoga is always going to be a turn-off to some who associate it with mysticism and drugs, but Joslin believes that austerity and the Facebook reaction suggest yoga is worthy of more careful official consideration. “I want to see whether there is a way to marry the amazing healing sustaining practice that is yoga, with the services offered by the NHS,” he says. “The NHS already sends people to the gym and to swimming pools. Find me a physiotherapist who doesn’t think yoga is a good idea.”

Read how Yoga can help you leave your unsatisfying job!

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The Life Waiting for You: How Yoga Can Help You Leave Your Unsatisfying Job

 04/25/2016 08:42 am ET

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  • Sujantra McKeeverFounder of Pilgrimage of the Heart Yoga and PilgrimageYogaOnline.com

JORDAN SIEMENS VIA GETTY IMAGES

 

 

If you... follow your bliss, you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that you ought to be living is the one you are living... Follow your bliss and don’t be afraid, and doors will open where you didn’t know they were going to be.

— Joseph Campbell

 

 

I woke up and knew I could not stand another day of doing the same thing I had hated doing yesterday. After bouts of insomnia at night, I struggled to wake up in the morning, finally dragging myself out of bed at the last possible minute. I had chronic headaches from grinding my teeth. Frustration was building, and the actions that flowed from this frustration were often hurtful to myself and others: yelling at a dear friend for no reason, putting myself down, and sabotaging anyone’s efforts to help.

I lay in bed, awareness of what my day would hold filling me with a growing sense of dread. That’s when I did what I had always done: I shut down my emotions and went to work.

Chances are you recognize this scenario. A recent Gallup report shows that 70% of Americans feel disengaged or unhappy work. For many of us, this goes beyond a vague sense of dissatisfaction with the day-to-day vagaries of everybody’s job. It is the burden of feeling, day in and day out, that we have made a terrible mistake. We live with the constant misery of the belief that we are not where we are supposed to be and we are unable to escape.

But are we really trapped? When disenchantment with our work begins to affect our health and quality of life to this extent, is there anything we can do?

As I struggled with these questions, I started to admit my unhappiness to my friends. One of my best friends had used a daily yoga practice to get through an ugly divorce, and she suggested I intensify my own dabblings in yoga. Having nothing to lose, I decided to give it a try.

One of the greatest gifts I have received from my daily yoga practice is the ability to accept the importance of my deepest feelings. Our frustration from not following our heart’s knowing arises for good reason. There is a place deep within each of us into which the conscious mind can rarely go. The frustration we feel when our actions are misaligned with our calling is a clear signal that it’s time to examine these deeper feelings. Often times we are afraid of these signals because they demand of us the courage to make radical change.

My teacher wrote that the essence of yoga philosophy is “the acceptance of life for the transformation of life.” That simple statement embodies the key to creating change.

The first step is the “acceptance of life” - and with it, the acceptance of our truest intuition about our purpose. Yoga and meditation give me the ability to find a place of calmness and balance within. When I sit in meditation and begin to cultivate a sense of stillness, I am then able to examine my deepest feelings honestly and without fear.

It can be challenging to face the emotions within. Under the feelings of boredom, frustration, or dissatisfaction, there can be a sense of inadequacy or unworthiness, fear of failure, or shame about ending up in this situation to begin with. There can be the realization that your love for someone or something has changed. The emotions on the surface let you know that your life is not in alignment with your highest purpose and potential, and it is this underlying feeling that can be so damaging to your wellbeing in the long term.

When I was 31 years old, I was miserable. I was bored with my management job at a restaurant and felt frustrated and restless. One night I decided to take ownership of those emotions. I stopped blaming others, in particular the owner of the restaurant, and faced the fact that I was bored with my life. For the first time, I was able to admit to myself that there was another path that had been calling me.

As I sat there with full awareness of my frustration, an amazing thing occurred. The frustration was transformed into the enthusiasm I needed to make change. I got up from that meditation and made two phone calls that forever changed my life. One was to give notice at my job; the other was to hire an editor to help me write a book that I had bottled up inside me.

You see, the feeling of being trapped is often a bellwether of powerful transformation. It is an external sign of our unfulfilled potential for greatness. The practice of yoga and meditation gives us the tools to be present with our underlying intuition, in all its terrifying and exhilarating glory. And when we are truly able to sit quietly with all of our hopes and fears, we just might discover what it takes to heal and move forward.

Follow Sujantra McKeever on Twitter: www.twitter.com/pilgrimage_yoga

Yoga can help to improve your athletic performance.

You are here: Home / Featured Content / 10 Reasons Why Athletes Need Yoga

10 Reasons Why Athletes Need Yoga

APRIL 6, 2016 BY TED MCDONALD LEAVE A COMMENT

It’s not too late to hop on the bandwagon.

“Why should I do yoga?” you say, “I’m an athlete. I get plenty of strength training. I do my stretching, so I have enough flexibility. Why do I need yoga?” It’s the kind of case where they’re throwing the baby out with the bath water. So many people think yoga is for wimps, or it’s religious, or it’s not worth my time. Someone once said if you don’t have 30 minutes to give to yourself, you need 2 hours. The simplest answer is for why athletes need yoga is to improve your physical body, to improve your mental game, and for the longevity of your career. If you’re not ready to think long term, your career is going to be short, I promise you.

We’ll start with the physical benefits of yoga because all athletes know their body’s so well.

1 is to increase your core strength. You can do crunches for days, but it’s never going to strengthen your rhomboids. You can do rhomboid exercises, but that’s not going to create the intelligence to get your entire midsection working together. Yoga strings together a series of specific movements that teaches some of the core muscle groups to work together. I love watching super strong athletes come into my class and be in shock because they’re unable to hold their own body weight. Yoga helps you link these crucial groups for most any sport.

2 is yes, increase your flexibility. I know, most athletes stretch. But most of them don’t stretch nearly enough. Years ago, I remember racing against team Balance Bar in a 24 hour Adventure Race. It was during a mountain biking section of the course and we had just finished a 17 mile run. At the top of the hill we passed Team Balance Bar because one of their members was on the floor with severe leg cramps. Part nutrition yes, but also part flexibility. Never under estimate the power of a great range of motion.

3 is improved balance. We all hate to stand on one leg for minutes on end, but there is no doubt that the fire burning on the sides of your calf muscles and around your ankles are improving your balance. Most of us athletes think we need agility, and we do, but you’ll put yourself among the few athletes who use balance and isometrics together to create more core strength. As a runner, I need strong ankles. I get it from trail running and standing on one leg. You can too!

4 is that it supports joint health. Yoga is a low impact form of exercise. You will be doing movements that encourage a wider range of motion, at the same time you’ll be holding poses to increase strength. This combination will strengthen the joints, the proper muscles and tendons surrounding those joints. When impact happens, the stress goes right to the joint. The stronger they are, the more you’ll be able to absorb some of that impact. So whether you’re running, playing tennis, football, lacrosse, or any sport, you want your joints to be ready to support your actions.

Next we’ll move to the mental benefits of the yoga practice.

5 is increased focus and concentration. In yoga we slow down, we focus on our breathing, and we pay attention to our movements. This process allows our mind to calm down from all the information bombarding us on a daily basis. It may not seem like much, but the more time we spend calming down, the easier it gets to calm down.

6 is an increased ability to deal with stressful situations. The practice of yoga teaches us how to deal with difficult situations. We get into poses that are hard, but it’s in a safe environment where we can learn how to deal with that difficulty. We later become better at handling the challenge and that practice begins to seep into our lives. We learn to deal with stressful situations better because we’ve had the practice. It could be teammates, family issues, coaches, etc. The practice goes beyond the physical.

7 is a better connection to your breath. Why do you need to learn how to breath? The number one reason, as an athlete, is to help lower your stress. Knowing how to breathe helps you explode when you need to and calm down faster when you have to recover. Your breath is a tool that most athletes don’t use to enhance their performance. The more you learn about how it can help you, the better you’ll use it to increase your performance and decrease your stress.

And finally, the improvements to your longevity and overall career.

8 is injury prevention. There’s an old saying in mountain biking, you’ve either recently crashed or you’re about to. Mountain biking is a tough and dangerous sport. If you’re even the slightest bit of a daredevil you will crash. I have more scars on my body from mountain biking than any other sport. Thankfully, my yoga practice helps me recover quickly. I love stretching out my muscles to help speed up recovery. Whether it’s a crash or just general soreness from a race. I’m always back

9 is shorter recovery times. I’ve dealt with an achilles tendon issue for a while and while it still gives me a little trouble, I’m able to run without pain thanks to my yoga practice. The yoga allows stretches all the muscles and tendons around the achilles which gives it more space. Similarly, when your lower back is tight, you can stretch the hamstrings and give your back more space. These are just some of the benefits of the yoga practice.

10 is that yoga reduces stress. We all know that heart disease is the number one killer in our country and the world. One major contributing factor is stress. Yoga reduces your overall stress, thus directly contributing to a longer life and a longer career. So roll out that mat that’s collecting dust and begin what may not just save your life, but keep you healthier, happier and stronger for much longer than you think!

Most professional athletes that I know are looking for an edge over their competition. Yoga is that edge. I’ve seen it work for Olympians, Tour de France cyclists, professional ultra runners, and of course, all the pro leagues here in the states including NBA, NFL, MLB, NHL and more! So if you’re looking for that extra secret sauce, I’ll see you on the mat!

- See more at: http://goodmenproject.com/featured-content/10-reasons-athletes-need-yoga-tdmd/#sthash.9hCsFdmS.dpuf

Here's a great article on why we need to stretch.

What Science Can Teach Us About Flexibility

YOGA JOURNAL YOGA PRACTICE

BY FERNANDO PAGÉS RUIZ  |  AUG 28, 2007

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If you’re already practicing yoga, you don’t need exercise scientists and physiologists to convince you of the benefits of stretching. Instead, you’d probably like them to tell you if there’s anything in their flexibility research that can help you go deeper in your asanas. For example, when you fold into a forward bend and are brought up short by the tightness in the back of your legs, can science tell you what’s going on? And can that knowledge help you go deeper?

The answer to both questions is “Yes.” A knowledge of physiology can help you visualize the inner workings of your body and focus on the specific mechanisms that help you stretch. You can optimize your efforts if you know whether the tightness in your legs is due to poor skeletal alignment, stiff connective tissues, or nerve reflexes designed to keep you from hurting yourself. And if you know whether any uncomfortable sensations you feel are warnings that you’re about to do damage, or whether they’re just notices that you’re entering exciting new territory, you can make an intelligent choice between pushing on or backing off—and avoid injuries.

In addition, new scientific research may even have the potential to extend the wisdom of yoga. If we understand more clearly the complex physiology involved in yogic practices, we may be able refine our techniques for opening our bodies.

Why Stretch?

Of course, yoga does far more than keep us limber. It releases tensions from our bodies and minds, allowing us to drop more deeply into meditation. In yoga, “flexibility” is an attitude that invests and transforms the mind as well as the body.

But in Western, physiological terms, “flexibility” is just the ability to move muscles and joints through their complete range. It’s an ability we’re born with, but that most of us lose. “Our lives are restricted and sedentary,” explains Dr. Thomas Green, a chiropractor in Lincoln, Nebraska, “so our bodies get lazy, muscles atrophy, and our joints settle into a limited range.”

Back when we were hunter-gatherers, we got the daily exercise we needed to keep our bodies flexible and healthy. But modern, sedentary life is not the only culprit that constricts muscles and joints. Even if you’re active, your body will dehydrate and stiffen with age. By the time you become an adult, your tissues have lost about 15 percent of their moisture content, becoming less supple and more prone to injury. Your muscle fibers have begun to adhere to each other, developing cellular cross-links that prevent parallel fibers from moving independently. Slowly our elastic fibers get bound up with collagenous connective tissue and become more and more unyielding. This normal aging of tissues is distressingly similar to the process that turns animal hides into leather. Unless we stretch, we dry up and tan! Stretching slows this process of dehydration by stimulating the production of tissue lubricants. It pulls the interwoven cellular cross-links apart and helps muscles rebuild with healthy parallel cellular structure.

Remember the cheesy ’70s sci-fi flick in which Raquel Welch and her miniaturized submarine crew get injected into someone’s bloodstream? To really grasp how Western physiology can benefit asana practice, we need to go on our own internal odyssey, diving deep into the body to examine how muscles work.

Muscles are organs—biological units built from various specialized tissues that are integrated to perform a single function. (Physiologists divide muscles into three types: the smooth muscles of the viscera; the specialized cardiac muscles of the heart; and the striated muscles of the skeleton—but in this article we’ll focus only on skeletal muscles, those familiar pulleys that move the bony levers of our bodies.)

The specific function of muscles, of course, is movement which is produced by muscle fibers, bundles of specialized cells that change shape by contracting or relaxing. Muscle groups operate in concert, alternately contracting and stretching in precise, coordinated sequences to produce the wide range of movements of which our bodies are capable.

In skeletal movements, the working muscles—the ones that contract to move your bones—are called the “agonists.” The opposing groups of muscles—the ones that must release and elongate to allow movement—are called the “antagonists.” Almost every movement of the skeleton involves the coordinated action of agonist and antagonist muscle groups: They’re the yang and yin of our movement anatomy.

But although stretching—the lengthening of antagonist muscles—is half the equation in skeletal movement, most exercise physiologists believe that increasing the elasticity of healthy muscle fiber is not an important factor in improving flexibility. According to Michael Alter, author ofScience of Flexibility (Human Kinetics, 1998), current research demonstrates that individual muscle fibers can be stretched to approximately 150 percent of their resting length before tearing. This extendibility enables muscles to move through a wide range of motion, sufficient for most stretches—even the most difficult asanas.

If your muscle fibers don’t limit your ability to stretch, what does? There are two major schools of scientific thought on what actually most limits flexibility and what should be done to improve it. The first school focuses not on stretching muscle fiber itself but on increasing the elasticity of connective tissues, the cells that bind muscle fibers together, encapsulate them, and network them with other organs; the second addresses the “stretch reflex” and other functions of the autonomic (involuntary) nervous system. Yoga works on both. That’s why it’s such an effective method for increasing flexibility.

Your Internal Knitting

Connective tissues include a variety of cell groups that specialize in binding our anatomy into a cohesive whole. It is the most abundant tissue in the body, forming an intricate mesh that connects all our body parts and compartmentalizes them into discrete bundles of anatomical structure—bones, muscles, organs, etc. Almost every yoga asana exercises and improves the cellular quality of this varied and vital tissue, which transmits movement and provides our muscles with lubricants and healing agents. But in the study of flexibility we are concerned with only three types of connective tissue: tendons, ligaments, and muscle fascia. Let’s explore each of them briefly.

Tendons transmit force by connecting bones to muscle. They are relatively stiff. If they weren’t, fine motor coordination like playing piano or performing eye surgery would be impossible. While tendons have enormous tensile strength, they have very little tolerance to stretching. Beyond a 4 percent stretch, tendons can tear or lengthen beyond their ability to recoil, leaving us with lax and less responsive muscle-to-bone connections.

Ligaments can safely stretch a bit more than tendons—but not much. Ligaments bind bone to bone inside joint capsules. They play a useful role in limiting flexibility, and it is generally recommended that you avoid stretching them. Stretching ligaments can destabilize joints, compromising their efficiency and increasing your likelihood of injury. That’s why you should flex your knees slightly—rather than hyperextending them—in Paschimottanasana (Seated Forward Bend), releasing tension on posterior knee ligaments (and also on the ligaments of the lower spine).

Muscle fascia is the third connective tissue that affects flexibility, and by far the most important. Fascia makes up as much as 30 percent of a muscle’s total mass, and, according to studies cited in Science of Flexibility, it accounts for approximately 41 percent of a muscle’s total resistance to movement. Fascia is the stuff that separates individual muscle fibers and bundles them into working units, providing structure and transmitting force.

Many of the benefits derived from stretching—joint lubrication, improved healing, better circulation, and enhanced mobility—are related to the healthy stimulation of fascia. Of all the structural components of your body which limit your flexibility, it is the only one that you can stretch safely. Anatomist David Coulter, author of Anatomy of Hatha Yoga, reflects this in his description of the asanas as “a careful tending to your internal knitting.”

Now let’s apply this physiology lesson to a basic but very powerful posture: Paschimottanasana. We’ll begin with the anatomy of the asana.

The name of this pose combines three words: “Paschima,” the Sanskrit word for “west”; “uttana,” which means “intense stretch”; and “asana,” or “posture.” Since yogis traditionally practiced facing east toward the sun, “west” refers to the entire back of the human body.

This seated forward bend stretches a muscle chain that begins at the Achilles tendon, extends up the back of the legs and pelvis, then continues up along the spine to end at the base of your head. According to yoga lore, this asana rejuvenates the vertebral column and tones the internal organs, massaging the heart, kidneys, and abdomen.

Imagine you’re lying on your back in yoga class, getting ready to fold up and over into Paschimottanasana. Your arms are relatively relaxed, palms on your thighs. Your head is resting comfortably on the floor; your cervical spine is soft, but awake. The instructor asks you to lift your trunk slowly, reaching out through your tailbone and up through the crown of your head, being careful not to overarch and strain your lower back as you move up and forward. She suggests that you picture an imaginary string attached to your chest, gently pulling you out and up—opening anahata chakra, the heart center—as you rotate through the hips into a seated position.

The image your teacher is using is not just poetic, it’s also anatomically accurate. The primary muscles at work during this first phase of a forward bend are the rectus abdominis that run along the front of your trunk. Attached to your ribs just below your heart and anchored to your pubic bone, these muscles are the anatomical string that literally pulls you forward from the heart chakra.

The secondary muscles working to pull your torso up run through your pelvis and along the front of your legs: the psoas, linking torso and legs, the quadriceps on the front of your thighs, and the muscles adjacent to your shin bones.

In Paschimottanasana, the muscles running from heart to toe along the front of your body are the agonists. They’re the muscles that contract to pull you forward. Along the back of your torso and legs are the opposing, or complementary, groups of muscles, which must elongate and release before you can move forward.

By now, you’ve stretched forward and settled into the pose completely, backing off slightly from your maximum stretch and breathing deeply and steadily. Your mind focuses on the subtle (or perhaps not so subtle) messages from your body. You feel a pleasant pull along the full length of your hamstrings. Your pelvis is tilted forward, your spinal column is lengthening, and you perceive a gentle increase in the spaces between each of your vertebrae.

Your instructor is quiet now, not pushing you to stretch further but allowing you to go deeper into the posture at your own pace. You’re getting to know the posture and getting comfortable with it. Perhaps you even feel like a timelessly serene statue as you hold Paschimottanasana for several minutes.

In this kind of practice, you’re maintaining the posture long enough to affect the plastic quality of your connective tissues. Prolonged stretches like this can produce healthful, permanent changes in the quality of the fascia that binds your muscles. Julie Gudmestad, a physical therapist and certified Iyengar instructor, uses prolonged asanas with patients at her clinic in Portland, Oregon. “If they hold the poses for shorter periods, people get a nice sense of release,” Gudmestad explains, “but they aren’t necessarily going to get the structural changes that add up to a permanent increase in flexibility.”

According to Gudmestad, stretches should be held 90 to 120 seconds to change the “ground substance” of connective tissue. Ground substance is the nonfibrous, gel-like binding agent in which fibrous connective tissues like collagen and elastin are embedded. Ground substance stabilizes and lubricates connective tissue. And it is commonly believed that restrictions in this substance can limit flexibility, especially as we age.

By combining precise postural alignment with the use of props, Gudmestad positions her patients to relax into asanas so they can remain long enough to make lasting change. “We make sure people aren’t in pain,” Gudmestad says, “so they can breathe and hold a stretch longer.”

Reciprocal Inhibition

Along with stretching connective tissue, much of the work we do in yoga aims to enlist the neurological mechanisms that allow our muscles to release and extend. One such mechanism is “reciprocal inhibition.” Whenever one set of muscles (the agonists) contracts, this built-in feature of the autonomic nervous system causes the opposing muscles (the antagonists) to release. Yogis have been using this mechanism for millennia to facilitate stretching.

To experience reciprocal inhibition firsthand, sit down in front of a table and gently press the edge of your hand, karate-chop style, onto the tabletop. If you touch the back of your upper arm—your triceps muscle—you’ll notice that it’s firmly engaged. If you touch the opposing muscles, the biceps (the big muscles on the front of your upper arm), they should feel relaxed.

In Paschimottanasana the same mechanism is at play. Your hamstrings are released when you engage their opposing muscle group, the quadriceps.

David Sheer, an orthopedic manual therapist in Nashville, Tennessee, uses the principle of reciprocal inhibition to help patients safely improve their range of motion. If you went to Sheer to improve your hamstring flexibility, he would work the quadriceps, developing strength in the front thigh to help relax the hamstrings. Then, when the hamstrings have achieved their maximum range for the day, Sheer would strengthen them with weight-bearing, isometric, or isotonic exercises.

At the Yoga Room of Nashville, Betty Larson, a certified Iyengar instructor, uses the principles of reciprocal inhibition to help yoga students release their hamstrings in Paschimottanasana.

“I remind my students to contract their quads,” says Larson, “lifting up the entire length of the front of the leg, so the back of the leg is loosened.” Larson also includes backbends in her classes to strengthen her students’ hamstrings and backs. She feels it’s extremely important to develop strength in the muscles you are stretching. Like many teachers, Larson is using ancient yogic techniques that apply physiological principles only recently understood by modern science.

According to Sheer, she’s doing the right thing. He claims the best type of flexibility combines improved range of motion with improved strength. “It’s useful flexibility,” says Sheer. “If you only increase your passive flexibility without developing the strength to control it, you make yourself more vulnerable to a serious joint injury.”

Let’s return to your Paschimottanasana. Imagine that this time, as you pivot from your pelvis and reach your trunk forward, your hamstrings are unusually tight. You can’t seem to move as deeply into the pose as you would like, and the harder you try, the tighter your hamstrings feel. Then your instructor reminds you to continue breathing and relax every muscle that’s not actively engaged in sustaining the pose.

You give up trying to match your personal best. You relax into the posture, without judgment, and slowly your hamstrings begin to release.

Why are you able to gradually bring your head toward your shins once you stop straining? According to science—and many ancient yogis—what was limiting your flexibility most wasn’t your body, it was your mind—or, at least, your nervous system.

The Stretch Reflex

According to physiologists who view the nervous system as the major obstacle to increased flexibility, the key to overcoming one’s limitations lies in another built-in feature of our neurology: the stretch reflex. Scientists who study flexibility think that the small, progressive steps that allow us to go a little deeper during the course of one session—and that dramatically improve our flexibility over a life of yoga practice—are in large part the result of retraining this reflex.

To get an understanding of the stretch reflex, picture yourself walking in a winter landscape. Suddenly you step on a patch of ice, and your feet start to splay apart. Immediately your muscles fire into action, tensing to draw your legs back together and regain control. What just happened in your nerves and muscles?

Every muscle fiber has a network of sensors called muscle spindles. They run perpendicular to the muscle fibers, sensing how far and fast the fibers are elongating. As muscle fibers extend, stress on these muscle spindles increases.

When this stress comes too fast, or goes too far, muscle spindles fire an urgent neurological “SOS,” activating a reflex loop that triggers an immediate, protective contraction.

That’s what happens when the doctor thumps with a small rubber mallet on the tendon just below your kneecap, stretching your quadriceps abruptly. This rapid stretch stimulates the muscle spindles in your quadriceps, signaling the spinal cord. An instant later the neurological loop ends with a brief contraction of your quadriceps, producing the well known “knee jerk reaction.”

That’s how the stretch reflex protects your muscles. And that’s why most experts caution against bouncing while stretching. Bouncing in and out of a stretch causes the rapid stimulation of muscle spindles that triggers reflexive tightening, and can increase your chances of injury.

Slow, static stretching also triggers the stretch reflex, but not as abruptly. When you fold forward into Paschimottanasana, the muscle spindles in your hamstrings begin to call for resistance, producing tension in the very muscles you’re trying to extend. That’s why improving flexibility through static stretching takes a long time. The improvement comes through slow conditioning of your muscle spindles, training them to tolerate more tension before applying the neuro-brakes.

Proprioceptive Neuromuscular Facilitation…What?

Among the recent developments in Western flexibility training are neurological techniques that retrain the stretch reflex, promoting quick, dramatic gains in flexibility. One of these techniques is called—take a deep breath—proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation. (Fortunately, it’s usually just called PNF).

To apply PNF principles to Paschimottanasana, try this: While bending forward, just short of your maximum stretch, engage your hamstrings in an isometric contraction—as if you were trying to draw your heels down through the floor—lasting approximately five to 10 seconds. Then release this action, and see if you can move a little deeper into the forward bend.

The PNF method manipulates the stretch reflex by having you contract a muscle while it’s at near-maximum length. When you engage your hamstrings, you actually ease the pressure on your muscle spindles, and they send signals that it’s safe for the muscle to release further. In a seeming paradox, contracting the muscle actually allows it to lengthen. If you engage and then release your muscle fibers in this way, you will probably discover more comfort in a stretch that was near your maximum just seconds before. Now you’re ready to open a little more, taking advantage of a momentary lull in neural activity, deepening the stretch. Your nervous system adjusts, affording you greater range of motion.

“PNF is as close as we’ve come to scientific stretching,” physical therapist Michael Leslie says. Leslie uses combinations of modified PNF techniques to help members of the San Francisco Ballet improve their flexibility. “In my experience it can take weeks of static training to achieve the gains possible in one session of PNF,” Leslie says.

As of yet, yoga has not focused systematically on PNF-type techniques. But vinyasa practices that emphasize careful sequencing of asanas and/or repetition of asanas—moving in and out of the same posture several times—tend to promote neurological conditioning.

Gray Kraftsow, founder of the American Viniyoga Institute and one of the most highly respected teachers in the Viniyoga lineage of T.K.V. Desikachar, likens Viniyoga to PNF. “Alternating between contracting and stretching is what changes the muscle,” Kraftsow says. “Muscles relax and stretch further after contracting.”

Prana & Flexibility

Kraftsow also emphasizes the importance of the breath in any kind of neurological work, pointing out that breathing is a link between our consciousness and our autonomic nervous system. “It’s this quality of breathing,” Kraftsow says, “that qualifies it as a primary tool in any science of self development.”

Pranayama, or breath control, is the fourth limb in a yogi’s path toward samadhi. One of the most important yogic practices, it helps the yogi gain control over the movement of prana (life energy) throughout the body. But whether viewed through esoteric yoga physiology or the scientific physiology of the West, the connection between relaxation, stretching, and breathing is well established. Physiologists describe this mechanical and neurological correlation of movement and breath as an instance of synkinesis, the involuntary movement of one part of the body that occurs with the movement of another part.

While you are holding Paschimottanasana, breathing deeply and steadily, you may notice an ebb and flow to your stretching that mirrors the tide of your breath. As you inhale, your muscles tighten slightly, reducing the stretch. As you exhale, slowly and completely, your abdomen moves back toward your spine, the muscles in your lower back seem to grow longer, and you can drop your chest toward your thighs.

It’s obvious that exhalation deflates the lungs and lifts your diaphragm into the chest, thereby creating space in the abdominal cavity and making it easier to bend the lumbar spine forward. (Inhalation does the opposite, filling the abdominal cavity like an inflating balloon, making it difficult to fold your spine forward completely.) But you may not realize that exhalation also actually relaxes the muscles of your back and tilts your pelvis forward.

In Paschimottanasana, the musculature of the lower back is in passive tension. According to research cited in Science of Flexibility, every inhalation is accompanied by an active contraction of the lower back—a contraction in direct opposition to the desired forward bend. Then exhalation releases the lower back muscles, facilitating the stretch. If you place your palms on your back, just above the hips, and breathe deeply, you can feel the erector spinae on either side of your spinal column engage as you inhale and release as you exhale. If you pay close attention, you’ll also notice that each inhalation engages the muscles around the coccyx, at the very tip of your spine, drawing the pelvis back slightly. Each exhalation relaxes these muscles and frees your pelvis, allowing it to rotate around the hip joints.

As your lungs empty and the diaphragm lifts into your chest, your back muscles release and you are able to fold into your ultimate stretch. Once there, you may experience a pleasant, seemingly eternal moment of inner peace, the pacifying of the nervous system traditionally considered one of the benefits of forward bends.

At this point, you may feel especially in touch with the spiritual element of yoga. But Western science also offers a material explanation for this experience. According to Alter’s Science of Flexibility, during an exhalation the diaphragm pushes up against the heart, slowing down the heart rate. Blood pressure decreases, as does stress on the rib cage, abdominal walls, and intercostal muscles. Relaxation ensues, and your tolerance to stretching is enhanced—as well as your sense of well-being.

Short Cuts to Flexibility?

But not every moment in yoga is peaceful. At the extreme end of hatha yoga achievement, practitioners can experience breakthroughs that may involve a degree of pain, fear, and risk. (After all, hatha does mean “forceful.”) You may have seen the photograph in Light on Yoga of B.K.S. Iyengar poised in Mayurasana (Peacock Pose) on the back of a student in Paschimottanasana, forcing her to fold more deeply. Or perhaps you’ve watched a teacher stand on the thighs of a student in Baddha Konasana (Bound Angle Pose). Such methods might appear dangerous or even cruel to an outsider, but in the hands of an experienced instructor they can be remarkably effective—and they bear a striking resemblance to cutting-edge techniques in Western flexibility training that focus on reconditioning neurological mechanisms.

As I researched this article, a friend told me about a time he accidentally engaged one of these mechanisms and experienced a surprising breakthrough after years of trying to master Hanumanasana (a pose better known in the West as “the splits”). One day, as my friend attempted the posture—left leg forward and right leg back, hands lightly supporting him on the floor—he stretched his legs farther apart than usual, allowing almost the full weight of his torso to rest down through his hips. Suddenly he felt an intense warmth in his pelvic region and a rapid, unexpected release that brought both his sitting bones to the floor. My friend had triggered a physiological reaction rarely encountered while stretching, a neurological “circuit breaker” that opposes and overrides the stretch reflex. While the stretch reflex tenses muscle tissue, this other reflex—technically, it’s known as the “inverse myotatic (stretch) reflex”—completely releases muscular tension to protect the tendons.

How does it work? At the ends of every muscle, where fascia and tendons interweave, there are sensory bodies that monitor load. These are the Golgi tendon organs (GTOs). They react when either a muscular contraction or a stretch places too much stress on a tendon.

The huge, state-sponsored sports apparatus of the former Soviet Union developed a neurological flexibility training method based largely on manipulating this GTO reflex. “You already have all the muscle length you need,” argues Russian flexibility expert Pavel Tsatsouline, “enough for full splits and most of the difficult asanas. But controlling flexibility requires control of an autonomic function.” Tsatsouline makes the point by lifting his leg up on a chair back. “If you can do this,” he says, “you’ve already got enough stretch to do the splits.” According to Tsatsouline, it’s not muscle or connective tissue that’s stopping you. “Great flexibility,” asserts Tsatsouline, “can be achieved by flicking a few switches in your spinal cord.”

But exploiting the GTO mechanism to enhance flexibility entails certain risks, because muscles must be fully extended and under extreme tension to trigger a GTO reflex. Implementing enhanced methods of flexibility training—like the Russian system or advanced yoga techniques—requires an experienced teacher who can make sure your skeleton is correctly aligned and that your body is strong enough to handle the stresses involved. If you don’t know what you’re doing, it’s easy to get hurt.

If used correctly, though, these methods can be extremely effective. Tsatsouline claims he can teach even stiff middle-aged men, with no prior flexibility training, how to do the splits in about six months.

Applied Physiology

By now you may be asking yourself, “What do these Western stretching techniques have to do with yoga?”

On the one hand, of course, stretching is an important component of building the yoga-deha, the yogic body that allows the practitioner to channel ever more prana. That’s one reason why the major hatha yoga schools base their practice on the classic asanas, a series of postures that illustrate and encourage the ideal range of human movement.

But any good teacher will also tell you that yoga isn’t just about stretching. “Yoga is a discipline that teaches us new ways of experiencing the world,” Judith Lasater, Ph.D. and physical therapist, explains, “so that we can give up the attachments to our suffering.” According to Lasater, there are only two asanas: conscious or unconscious. In other words, what distinguishes a particular position as an asana is our focus, not simply the outer conformation of the body.

It’s certainly possible to get so caught up in pursuit of physical perfection that we lose sight of the “goal” of asana practice—the state of samadhi. At the same time, though, exploring the limits of the body’s flexibility can be a perfect vehicle for developing the one-pointed concentration needed for the “inner limbs” of classical yoga.

And there is certainly nothing inherently contradictory about using the analytical insights of Western science to inform and enhance the empirical insights of millennia of asana practice. In fact, yoga teacher B.K.S. Iyengar, perhaps the most influential figure in the Western assimilation of hatha yoga, has always encouraged scientific inquiry, advocating the application of strict physiological principles to the cultivation of a refined asana practice.

Some yogis are already embracing this synthesis enthusiastically. At the Meridian Stretching Center in Boston, Massachusetts, Bob Cooley is developing and testing a computer program that can diagnose flexibility deficiencies and prescribe asanas. New clients at Cooley’s stretching center are asked to assume 16 different yoga postures as Cooley records specific anatomical landmarks on their bodies with a digitizing wand, similar to the ones used in computer-aided drafting. These body-point readings are computed to make comparisons between the client and models of both maximum and average human flexibility. The computer program generates a report that benchmarks and guides the client’s progress, spelling out any areas needing improvement and recommending specific asanas.

Cooley uses an amalgamation of what he sees as the best points of Eastern and Western knowledge, combining the classic yoga asana with techniques similar to PNF. (An eclectic experimenter, Cooley incorporates Western psychotherapeutic insights, the Enneagram, and Chinese meridian theory in his approach to yoga.).

If you’re a yoga purist, you may not like the idea of a yoga potpourri that mixes new-fangled scientific insights with time-honed yoga practices. But “new and improved” has always been one of America’s national mantras, and blending the best from Eastern experience-based wisdom and Western analytical science may be a principal contribution our country makes to the evolution of yoga.

This is why we practice yoga!

THE BLOG

Why Is Yoga Becoming So Popular?

 02/23/2016 01:59 pm ET

  • Huffington Post
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  • SadhguruMystic, Yogi and Founder, Isha Foundation

 

There are many reasons why yoga is becoming popular today. One thing is, your body is like a barometer, it makes you realize some fundamental facts about yourself. If you know how to watch it, it tells you everything about yourself. Not the fancy things that you think, but the real facts. Your mind is too deceptive; every day it says something different, but if you know how to read the body, it tells you everything just the way it is, your past, present and future. That is why fundamental yoga starts with the body.

Yoga is the only system that has lived for over 15,000 years without any papacy or enforcement. Nowhere in the history of humanity has it happened that somebody put a sword to someone's neck and said, "You must do yoga." It has survived and lived on because it has worked as a process of wellbeing like nothing else. Even though today it is being taught in a very rudimentary or even distorted way, it still endures. Many things come and go with changing fashions, but yoga has survived for thousands of years, and it is still picking up momentum.

 

Another reason is that people -- young or old -- are stressed like never before. People are anxious and neurotic, and whatever methods they employ to handle their internal turmoil, like dancing, going for a drive or climbing a mountain, has worked to some extent, but has not given them a solution. Looking towards yoga is a natural progression.

The main reason for yoga's growing popularity is the large-scale transmission of education. Today, we have more intellect on this planet than ever before. As the intellect becomes stronger, people look for logical solutions. The more logical they become, the more they become dependent on science, and the outcome of science is technology. Yoga is not an exercise; it is an ancient technology towards wellbeing and ultimate liberation. As the activity of the intellect becomes stronger in the world, more people will shift to yoga over a period of time and it will become the most popular way of seeking wellbeing.

Yoga is Not an Exercise

Yoga needs to be practiced in a very subtle, gentle way, not in a forceful muscle building way, because it is not about exercise. The physical body has a whole memory structure. If you are willing to read this physical body, everything -- how this cosmos evolved from nothingness to this point -- is written into this body. Yoga is a way of opening up that memory and trying to restructure this life towards an ultimate possibility. It is a very subtle and scientific process.

Read why your Doctor should be prescribing Yoga

Why More Western Doctors Are Now Prescribing Yoga Therapy

YOGA JOURNAL YOGA AND HEALTH

BY SUSAN ENFIELD  |  FEB 3, 2016

 

 

With a growing body of research proving yoga’s healing benefits, it’s no wonder more doctors—including those with traditional Western training—are prescribing this ancient practice to their patients. What’s behind the trend, and will it help you feel better? YJ investigates.

In a small workout room with a handful of other Navy veterans, David Rachford looked out the window to watch the fringed leaves of a tall royal palm tree wave softly in the warm Southern California breeze. The soothing view eased the challenging exercise routine he was trying for the first time. It was just a simple twist, Supta Matsyendrasana (Supine Spinal Twist)—nothing like the rigorous daily training he’d done as a damage controlman on aircraft carriers—but his legs refused to cooperate, due to the painful nerve damage and severe sciatica he’d suffered as a result of a career-ending back injury. As an outpatient receiving pain-management treatment at the Veterans Administration West Los Angeles Medical Center, Rachford was now required to attend this weekly yoga physical-therapy class. It was the last place he’d ever expected to find himself.

“I thought yoga was for thin, bendy, liberal, hippie vegetarians and affluent housewives, not tough, macho ‘warrior’ types,” says the 44-year-old, now a Web developer in Santa Barbara, California. “But at that time, I felt pretty broken. I was in a lot of pain and open to anything that might help. I was depressed and scared at the prospect of surgery, and mourning the loss of my health and my self-image of being a physically fit ‘tough guy.’” Rachford also worried he wouldn’t be able to hold his own in a yoga class. “I couldn’t bend much or stand more than a couple minutes without assistance,” he says.

A yoga therapist led Rachford and the rest of the group through gentle stretching poses, urging them to repeat the simple movements at home daily. He did, and sure enough, over the next few months, Rachford noticed his range of movement gradually increasing and his pain improving. “I became more aware of my breath, body, and sensations,” he says. “My yoga practice became the base that restored my health, taking me from smoking, having high blood pressure, and being overweight and pre-diabetic to being fit, active, and a picture of health. I’ve lost 50 pounds, my blood pressure is normal, and I can jog and hike without pain.”

See also 16 Poses to Ease Back Pain

Ancient Healing in a Modern Setting

In India, yoga masters have worked with students like Rachford for years, helping them heal chronic ailments, oftentimes by recommending specific postures. Here in the West, yoga has only recently become a component of medical care. However, a growing number of health care practitioners are turning to the ancient practice as a way to help their patients feel better. Yoga therapy is now recognized as a clinically viable treatment, with established programs at major health care centers, such as The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Cleveland Clinic, and many others. In 2003, there were just five yoga-therapy training programs in the International Association of Yoga Therapists (IAYT) database. Today, there are more than 130 worldwide, including 24 rigorous multi-year programs newly accredited by IAYT, with 20 more under review. According to a 2015 survey, most IAYT members work in hospital settings, while others work in outpatient clinics or physical therapy, oncology, or rehabilitation departments (and in private practice).

The health care world’s increased acceptance of yoga therapy is partly due to a significant body of clinical research that now documents yoga’s proven benefits for a range of health conditions, including back painanxietydepression, and insomnia, as well as its ability to help reduce risk factors for cardiovascular disease and hypertension. Yoga has even been documented as a way to alleviate the side effects of cancer treatment.

“The size, quantity, and quality of clinical trials for yoga therapy are increasing exponentially, and it’s mostly happened over the past five years,” says longtime yoga researcher Sat Bir Singh Khalsa, PhD, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and co-author of the Harvard Medical School Guide e-book Your Brain on Yoga. In fact, more than 500 research papers on yoga therapy have been published in peer-reviewed journals, including the randomized, controlled, double-blind studies that are modern medicine’s gold standard, and the field now has its first professional-level medical textbook, Principles and Practice of Yoga in Health Care (Handspring Press, 2016), co-edited by Khalsa; Lorenzo Cohen, PhD; Shirley Telles, PhD; and Yoga Journal’s medical editor, Timothy McCall, MD. “The book’s publication is an indication of how far yoga and yoga therapy have come,” says McCall.

Yoga therapy has grown partly by piggybacking on yoga’s ever-increasing popularity. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Health Interview Survey, in 2002 only 5 percent of the US population actively practiced yoga. By 2012, that number had nearly doubled, reaching 9.5 percent. At the same time, more practitioners believe yoga improves their health: In 2004, only 5 percent of readers surveyed by Yoga Journal said they did yoga for health reasons; in this year’s Yoga Journal and Yoga Alliance joint Yoga in America study, more than 50 percent of all respondents cited health as a motivator. Although funding for yoga research remains modest compared to funding for pharmaceutical research, it’s growing. In 2010, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center received more than $4.5 million—one of the largest yoga-related grants ever—from the National Institutes of Health’s National Cancer Institute to support an ongoing study of the efficacy of yoga as part of a treatment program for women with breast cancer. Results published so far are promising: Breast-cancer patients who practice yoga while undergoing radiation therapy have lower levels of stress hormones and report less fatigue and better quality of life.

The research on yoga as a helpful component of cancer treatment has expanded the most, says Khalsa. “These days, it’s hard to find a major US cancer center that does not have a yoga program,” he says. “Patients are demanding, and spending more on, complementary medicine like acupuncture, chiropractic, massage, and yoga.”

See also A Yoga Sequence to Keep You Healthy this Winter

What Is Yoga Therapy, Exactly?

For many yogis, simply practicing yoga regularly improves overall well-being and strength. However, fast-paced vinyasa classes are not for everyone, especially those suffering from a health challenge or injury. Yoga therapy serves as a safe alternative. Led by yoga teachers who’ve received additional training to work with clients with various health conditions, the styles and formats differ widely, ranging from chair yoga in hospitals and elder-care facilities to small, focused therapeutic classes and one-on-one sessions.

“In yoga therapy, we work on individuals, not conditions,” says McCall, a former internist who now trains yoga therapists with his wife, Eliana Moreira McCall, at their Summit, New Jersey, yoga therapy center. That’s because patients often have multiple, overlapping conditions, he says: “For instance, we may work on back pain, but the client also ends up sleeping better and becomes happier.” Some therapists focus on physical mechanics, while others bring in Ayurvedic healing principles and factor in diet, psychological health, and spirituality to create a holistic, customized plan.

See also An Introduction to Yoga Therapy

As a new professional field, yoga therapy has only recently become more established. Over the past 12 years, the IAYT has made major strides with its mission to establish yoga as a respected and recognized therapy in the West, from publishing an annual peer-reviewed medical journal to presenting at academic research conferences. With an NIH grant, the group has created rigorous standards and is now accrediting training programs and beginning to certify therapist graduates. “Our goal is a certification that is respected not only by those steeped in the yoga tradition, but also by the many health care fields we work in partnership with,” says John Kepner, IAYT’s executive director.

Increasingly, yoga therapy is making inroads in conventional health care settings. At Manhattan Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation in New York City, Loren Fishman, MD, author of Healing Yoga, regularly uses yoga alongside traditional treatments to treat scoliosis, rotator cuff syndrome, and other neuromuscular problems. “Many physicians have come to appreciate the beneficial effects of yoga, says Fishman.”

Patients—even the most skeptical—are experiencing the benefits of yoga therapy firsthand. When Stacey Halstead was plagued by chronic insomnia, she made an appointment with her family doctor, whom she hoped would prescribe sleeping pills. But after chatting with Halstead about stressors in her life, the doctor instead suggested she try yoga to see if it helped release tension and manage stress. “I was furious with her,” says Halstead. “I was exhausted and wanted something to help me now.” She agreed to try yoga for six weeks, but only with her doc’s promise to consider medication if the experiment failed. To Halstead’s great surprise, yoga did help her sleep—and Halstead hasn’t requested those sleep meds.

See also How to Outsmart Your Insomnia

Results from several studies show that Halstead’s outcome—and the positive results experienced by countless patients who are turning to yoga therapy—is common. In the newest scientific studies, researchers are using genomic expression and brain imaging to understand how yoga affects practitioners on a cellular and molecular level. “Researchers take blood samples before and after yoga practice to see which genes have been turned on and which were deactivated,” says Khalsa. “We’re also able to see which areas of the brain are changing in structure and size due to yoga and meditation.” This kind of research is helping take yoga into the realm of “real science,” he says, by showing how the practice changes psycho-physiological function.

See also Yoga Therapy: Need to Know

The Future of Yoga Therapy

Given rising health care costs and challenges, experts agree yoga is a safe, relatively affordable complementary therapy. But making it more accessible to those with less access is key. “Health care providers and the yoga community need to continue to reach out to people of color and in lower socioeconomic levels—populations that suffer more stress and higher rates of lifestyle-related diseases,” says McCall. One important step would be changes in insurance coverage, says Fishman. “I would like to see health care institutions and insurance companies accept yoga as a reimbursable treatment for specific conditions, some of which have already been proven and some of which are currently being studied,” he says.

It will take time to shift both practitioners’ and patients’ attitudes toward yoga. Many from both groups still view yoga as strictly a supplement to conventional treatment rather than a primary approach. However, increasing access to yoga therapy and a growing body of scientific evidence documenting its benefits are cultivating a sense of optimism among those immersed in this work. “I see a bright future where yoga and other mind-body practices become more accepted within standard medical care, as our medical system starts to move away from a more limiting illness model to a more enlightened wellness model of health,” says Lorenzo Cohen, PhD, professor and director of the Integrative Medicine Program at MD Anderson Cancer Center and grandson of the famed early Western yoga teacher, the late Vanda Scaravelli. The most powerful shift may be the one that happens within each of us—when we take responsibility for our own health, do our practice, and allow for transformation and healing to occur.

Rachford, the Navy vet, is now a trained yoga teacher and leads classes at the publishing company where he works. He also teaches community classes. “We tend to want immediate cures for pains or injuries, and Western medicine is very much geared toward prescriptions and surgery,” he says. “But yoga doesn’t work that way. As Sri K. Pattabhi Jois said, ‘Do your practice and all is coming.’ Yoga helps me deal with stress and has allowed me to release addictions and harmful behaviors. It has set me free from pain and suffering, which allows peace, joy, and health to be present in my life.”

See also Alternative Medicine Guide: Find the Right Treatment for You

 

How to find the right yoga therapist

Wondering whether yoga therapy might help you with a health issue? Here are some tips on navigating this new therapeutic field:

Do your research

To see if yoga therapy will help to heal your specific condition, or if you want to read the research before you invest your time and money, visit Yoga Alliance’s site (yogaalliance.org) to find study highlights for specific health conditions under Yoga Research.

Explore local options

Search the IAYT member profile database (iayt.org) to find details on training, style, and areas of expertise for yoga therapists near you. Although certification standards for individual therapists aren’t yet in place, they’re expected in the next year or two. Your yoga teacher or doctor may also be able to recommend a therapist. If you don’t find someone near you, consider traveling to a nearby town, since you need to see a yoga therapist only intermittently. “What’s important is that you get a thorough evaluation, and a home practice that suits you well,” says McCall.

Talk with your primary health care provider

Many doctors still think of yoga as vigorous exercise that would be inappropriate for people with health challenges, so be prepared to do some educating (bring your research). If you’ve found a yoga therapist you like, you may want to give your doctor permission to discuss your case with him or her, says Laura Kupperman, E-RYT 500, a professional yoga therapist in Boulder, Colorado.

See also Coordinating Yoga Therapy with Doctors and Other Health Professionals

If you have just had a dry January, you might need this for February!

Yoga for Hangovers

We've all been there; next time you overindulge, try these yoga poses to help reboot your body

Lauren Imparato | Feb 02, 2016

Topics: 

yoga poses,

hangovers

209

SHARES

 

Let's face it: Hangovers suck. But as I later learned on Wall Street, there are those nights when you know you are going into a full pour, whether you really want to or not. Client dinners, group holiday parties, celebratory cocktails, the list goes on and on. Yes, of course you can decline when offered, but we all know that saying no to a drink can occasionally come with a price tag in business, fair or not. And, besides, a few drinks can make the unbearable work affair bearable.

And then there is your social life. A night out with friends, talking and laughing over cocktails is fun. But sometimes you forget to pace yourself, and that's a sure ticket to Hangover-land. Life is life, and we should live it to the fullest, even if it means getting slightly overpoured from time to time. (Next time you go out, eat one of these Pre-Party Meals to Avoid a Hangover beforehand.)

The first time I went to yoga hung over from a never-ending client dinner the night before, the teacher hovered over me for what felt like the whole class, pontificating on the evils of alcohol, coffee, meat, cheese, capitalism, and leather, for that matter.Seriously-shut-up-now-please-my-head-is-pounding, I thought, as I attempted a Tree pose, wavering in the alcoholic winds of my breath.

But as I developed my personal yoga practice and continued my studies, I soon learned that yoga can actually help hangovers, as it is one of the few physical activities that penetrates the deeper layers of the body—namely, the organs. The key to yoga as a hangover helper is to practice specific poses that target and heal the places that alcohol has attached. (Furthermore, not all ancient yoga traditions ban alcohol, so there is no need to involve guilt of any kind.)

The vast majority of my students have come to me with a hangover at least once. I have treated hundreds of them with my Retox methods. Now, even if a student tries to hide their hangover, I see it. The glossy eyes, the disheveled hair, the faint scent of vodka sweating out their pores, the backward stretchy pants... I keep the student after class, not for a talking to, but for some simple tips that will offer relief. (Try The One-Day Cleanse Hangover Cure.)

I have put together a combination of poses to eradicate toxins, oxygenate the bloodstream, and wring out the liver, the organ responsible for processing all the booze.

Excerpted from RETOX: Yoga*Food*Attitude Healthy Solutions for Real Life by Lauren Imparato. Reprinted by arrangement with Berkley, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC. © Lauren Imparato, 2016.

 

Total Time: up to 15 minutes

You will need: Chair, Mat

1. Twisting Cleansing Breath

A

B

VIEW LARGERA.

Sit in your seat and place your fingertips on your hips, or on your shoulders. Inhale to a comfortable level. Begin short, sharp breaths our of the nose, where the inhale is simply a reaction to the exhale, as the diaphragm pumps on the abdominal wall. It should flel somewhere between sneezing and b'owing your nose.

B.

As you pump, on each exhale, twist left and right. Continue pumping the exhales and rotating from side to side for thirty to sixty seconds. End in the center. Relax your arms and breathe normally.

Sets:

1

Reps:

1

2. Fists Into Abdomen Forward Fold

A

VIEW LARGERA.

Make your hands into fists and bring them to your abdomen, below your rib cage, knuckles touching. Inhale fully, then exhale and press your fists into your abdomen. Inhale again, and on your next exhale, fold forward, keeping your fists pressing in and now up into your abdomen.

Sets:

1

Reps:

1

3. Kidney Relief Backbend

A

VIEW LARGERA.

Place your hands by your sides or on the chair behind you. Inhale, lift your chest. Exhale, find a backbend in your middle and lower back. Breathe into your kidneys and optionally drop your head back. Hold three to ten breathes.

Sets:

1

Reps:

1

4. Sun Salute A

A

VIEW LARGERA.

Start standing with your feet together and your hands touching at your chest. Inhale, reach your arms overhead. Exhale, fold forward, and bring your forehead to your shins. Inhale, extend your spine, look forward. Exhale, Chaturanga or Plank pose. Inhale, Up Dog. Exhale, Down Dog. Close your eyes and hold here five breaths. Then inhale and step or jump your feet between your hands. Exhale, fold forward. Inhale, reach your arms up, look up. Exhale, hands to your heart.

Sets:

1

Reps:

5-10

5. Twisted Chair

A

VIEW LARGERA.

Stand with your feet together. Inhale, bend your knees into Chair pose and lift your arms up. Exhale, twist to the right, bringing your left elbow outside your right knee, palms touching and thumbs to sternum. Look up and hold five to 10 breaths, then repeat on the other side.

Sets:

1

Reps:

5-10 on each side

6. Reverse Backbend Lunge Twist

A

VIEW LARGERA.

Start in a high lunge, right leg forward. Inhale, and lift your left arm up and back. Exhale, place your right hand on your back thigh. Twist and bend back, looking at the palm of the hand or down at the floor. Breathe five to 10 breaths, then repeat on the other side.

Sets:

1

Reps:

5-10 on each side

7. Handstand at Wall

A

VIEW LARGERA.

Place your hands on the floor, a palm's length from the wall. Lift one leg into the air. Jump up onto your hands until your heels reach the wall. Rest your body on the wall, press into your hands, look down, and breathe. Hold for as long as you can to boost your circulation.

Sets:

1

Reps:

1

Want to sleep better? You'd better book a lesson!

7 Yoga Tips for Better Sleep

Huffington Post

Posted: 01/19/2016 8:28 am EST Updated: 01/19/2016 2:59 pm EST

Yoga, including physical poses, breathing techniques, and meditation, can help calm down a busy mind and get rid of nervous energy. Yoga has both energizing (brahmana in Sanskrit) and calming (langhana) elements, and the combination of the two can help a sense of balance. Yoga also helps you become more aware of the mental and physical states that are preventing sleep. Yoga can be safely integrated with the current main form of therapy for insomnia: cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I).

Yogameditation, and other mindfulness have been shown to improve sleep in several studies, including helping people suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, military veterans, the elderly, and nurses. Yoga also can improve sleep quality in people with physical illnesses, including osteoarthritisbreast cancer,Parkinson's disease, and irritable bowel syndrome. A recent national randomized controlled study found that a yoga program that integrates poses, breathing, and meditation improves overall sleep quality and memory in cancer survivors.

One study used focus groups to find out how mindfulness changes sleep. Several people found that mindfulness helped them relax so that they could "just decompress and fall asleep." One person experienced immediate effects:

My sleep was almost immediately, positively impacted though I didn't sleep longer, but I slept better. So, I woke up more refreshed even though I wasn't sleeping more, and that happened for me very quickly.

Mindfulness also increased awareness of disruptions. One person stopped using the phone at night and reported becoming "possessive of my winding down time."

Participants also noticed that consistent practice is key:

I couldn't meditate during the vacation. And I noticed that the benefits left me. I came back home and here was the chatter all back again, "I shouldn't have said that. Shouldn't have done that. I said the wrong thing to that person."...It was all back.

And as I went to lay down and go to sleep I couldn't go to sleep. And when I do the meditation that chatter goes away. And I can't even say how it goes away, it just goes away. I lay down at night, and I'm not chattery.

"Body scan? That's sort of everybody's enemy or best friend at some point. I remember I really hated it at first," one person observed. Not everyone will enjoy the same elements of yoga. You might find it difficult to sit still in meditation, or you might find poses repetitive. But just because it feels frustrating, you can find rewards over time.

So find what works best for you, and keep in mind that your experience of the identical exercise will change day to day.

Here are seven tips on how to use yoga for better sleep. Do these exercises after your regular nighttime routine so you can go straight to bed after the last exercise. Avoid doing these exercises in bed since your bed should be reserved for sleep as much as possible. Part of good sleep hygiene is a routine that prepares your body and mind for sleep. Consistency is important, so do even a little every night.

1. Start with self-compassion.
One fundamental basis of yoga is being kind and compassionate to your body and mind. Notice if you are holding onto harsh thoughts. Try to weave in self-compassion for both your body and mind throughout your practice, and let go of the idea of perfection. Do not do anything painful.

2. Get in touch with your breath.

  • Find a comfortable seat or lie down on your back.
  • Close your eyes.
  • Place one hand on your abdomen and the other hand on your chest.
  • Begin to take smooth, slow breaths as if you are sipping air through your nose. Exhale through your nose slowly, keeping your mouth closed.
  • Pace your breath by repeating these phrases in your mind:

On the inhale, "I breathe in, and let go of the day."
On the exhale, "I breathe out, and let go of the day."

3. Release tension using a yoga breath called Lion's breath.

  • Inhale through your nose.
  • Stick out your tongue and exhale through your mouth loudly, as if you are fogging up a mirror.

4. Calm down using forward folds.
Avoid using your hands to pull yourself forward or forcing the shape of the pose--it's not about your hands or head reaching the floor or your feet. Instead, let gravity do most of the work.

Standing Forward Bend

  • Arm variations: Place your hands to opposite elbows, or clasp your fingers at the base of your head
  • Bend your knees as much as you need to in order to rest your torso on your thighs.

Embed from Getty Images

 

Wide-Legged Forward Fold

Embed from Getty Images

 

Head to Knee Forward Bend

Embed from Getty Images

 

Seated Forward Bend

Embed from Getty Images

 

5. Gently stretch your hips.
Be cautious if you have any hip injuries.

Bound Angle

Embed from Getty Images

 

Reclined Figure Four

 

Reclined Bound Angle 
If you have tight hips, try placing blocks or a folded blanket underneath your knees or placing your feet further away from your tailbone.

6. Try a gentle inversion.

Legs Up the Wall

Embed from Getty Images

 

7. Wind down at the end of your practice with a body scan meditation.
Body Scan for Sleep meditation (12 minutes)

If you're still stressed, check out Yoga Poses for Stress Relief.

Connect with Dr. Wei: Facebook / Twitter / Harvard Medical School Guide to Yoga

Follow Marlynn Wei, MD, JD on Twitter:www.twitter.com/newyorkpsych

It's not all about Yoga! This is from someone who has been coming to Yardley Yoga for at least the last 9 months.

 

 

There was a young yogi named Guy

Whose client was painfully shy

When doing the plank

She buckled and sank

Whilst muttering “yoga, oh why!”

 

There was a great dog named Stan lee

Whose gait was remarkably free

He could do downward dog

It was never a slog

And was happy, as happy can be.

 

There once was a fine pup called Larry

Whose motto was “never to tarry.”

He barked and he ran

As young dogs just can

Whilst looking for something to carry.

Kathy Harris.............

 

 

 

Still not sure it works? Read this and then come and give it a go.....

It Works: New Study Outlines What Meditation, Yoga, & Prayer Can Do To The Human Body

January 16, 2016 by Arjun Walia.

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The medicinal benefits of meditation and yoga are now firmly established in scientific literature. One of the latest studies to emerge on the matter comes from Harvard researchers working at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). They determined that meditation literally rebuilds the brain’s grey matter in just eight weeks. It’s the very first study to document that meditation produces changes over time in the brain’s grey matter. (1)

Another promising study has recently come out of the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC). These researchers conducted the very first study where the use of the “relaxation response”was examined in patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) and Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), and the first to investigate the genomic effects of the relaxation response in individuals with any disorder. The report was published in the journal PLOS-ONE. (source)

When it comes to ‘prayer’ or ‘distant healing’ — directing human attention on physical systems — significant results have been obtained that warrant further investigation. For a selected list of downloadable peer-reviewed journal articles reporting studies of psychic phenomena, mostly published in the 21st century, you can click HERE.

Scientists over at the HeartMath Institute have demonstrated that when a person is feeling really good, and is full of positive emotions like love, gratitude, and appreciation, their heart beats out a different message that’s encoded in its electromagnetic field, which in turn has positive health effects on their body overall. You can read more about that here.

Factors associated with human consciousness (thoughts, feelings, emotions, perception, intention) have long been studied to see how they affect and interact with our physical world. You can read more about that here.

The Power Of Meditation, Yoga, & Prayer on Human Health

Meditation, yoga, and prayer are all grouped into a category (in medical terms) called ‘relaxation-response techniques.’ These techniques have been subject to several studies which clearly show that regular practice directly affects physiologic factors such as heart rate, blood pressure, stress, anxiety, oxygen consumption, and more. It was first described over 40 years ago by Herbert Benson, Director Emeritus of the Benson-Henry Institute and co-author of the paper presented in this article. 

The new study, out of the Harvard-affiliated Massachusetts General Hospital, from the Institute for Technology Assessment and the Benson-Henry Institute (BHI) for Mind Body Medicine, found that people participating in the ‘relaxation-response program’ actually used fewer health care services in the year after their participation, compared to how many they used the previous year.

The Harvard gazette reports that relaxation response techniques, such as meditation, yoga, and prayer, could reduce the need for health care services by 43 percent.

“Our study’s primary finding is that programs that train patients to elicit the relaxation response — specifically those taught at the BHI — can also dramatically reduce health care utilization. . . . These programs promote wellness and, in our environment of constrained health care resources, could potentially ease the burden on our health delivery systems at minimal cost and at no real risk.” – James E. Stahl, lead author of the study

The study was published last Tuesday in the journal PLOS ONE.

So, how did the research team analyze the impact of mind-body interventions on modern day medical techniques? They gathered data on people who have been participating in the BHI Relaxation Response Resiliency Program for the past eight years. After analyzing more than four thousands participants, and comparing it with a control group of almost fourteen thousand (while also taking other factors into consideration — read the study for more), the participants engaging in the relationship program displayed an average reduction of 43 percent when it came to using their regular health care services over the year after their participation in the project.

I think of it this way: There are many gates to wellness, but not everyone is ready to walk through a particular gate at a given time. From a public health perspective, it is better to be prepared to offer these tools to people in their customary settings than to wait for them to seek out these interventions. For that reason, we feel that mind-body interventions — which are both low-cost and essentially risk-free — should perhaps be incorporated into regular preventive care.” – Herbert Benson, founder and director emeritus of the BHI and co-author of this current study

Meditation/Yoga Prayer Techniques

Personally, I believe a common misconception about meditation is that it must be done in a special way, or you must sit in a certain position. All you have to do is place yourself in a position that is most comfortable for you and focus on your breath, in and out. It’s not about trying to empty your mind, it’s about more so about developing a “non-judgemental awareness of sensations, feelings and state of mind” (source). Let your thoughts and feelings come and go, then return your focus to your breathe. Telling yourself not to think will only produce the opposite effect, but you can work on choosing how to feel and respond to those thoughts. Meditation can be similar to state of mind, in that some might have the ability to produce the same brainwave frequencies that are commonly seen in meditators without actually meditating. On the other hand, there are many devout students of meditation who spend hours of their time each day devoted to this ancient practice.

If you are someone who doesn’t have much experience with meditation and would like to try it, you can check out some of our articles on the topic that offer some advice/tips on meditation, as well as find some guided meditations here.

As far as yoga goes, here is a 20 minute yoga class for complete beginners, and here is a list of articles we’ve written that provide more instruction and information about yoga.