"Everyone can incorporate Yoga into their daily lives for better living. Yoga is not just meditation, but instead a it's a doorway to balancing your physical, mental and spiritual being. The Benefits of Yoga for Your Life are almost endless."

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Yoga Techniques and Yoga17 May 2008 02:11 pm

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I saw this and wanted to share it with you. The following is an excerpt I received in my email…

Open Your Heart with This Three-Part Series

The spine is the central channel for the human body and one of the main benefits of physical yoga postures is that they facilitate and encourage spinal flexibility and strength. A flexible spine is vital in procuring the healthy flow of life force, also called kundalini and chi, and this Spinal Flex Series can help deliver this flow to your body.

Spinal flexes support your spine in a number of ways. The gentle wavelike motion, along with the coordinated breath, allows the chest to open, releases tension around the rib cage, and maximizes circulation in the torso so that you can breathe deeply. This heart-healthy exercise can also get your circulation going just when you need it.

Popularity: 54% [?]

Yoga27 Sep 2007 08:15 am

Basic yoga may look easy, but it’s a tough flexibility and strength workout. One of the easiest ways to learn the skills you need for yoga is to take a class. However, as with all kinds of classes, it is important to understand the basic rules of etiquette before you sign up. By following these rules, you and those around you will be more comfortable.

A Positive Attitude

First of all, keep a positive attitude. Don’t lose patience. Like anything else, yoga takes time to learn and to develop proper skills. Don’t let the frustration drive you away. (Though, if after awhile in a class you’re more frustrated than before, you might want to try a different instructor or class.) If you’re feeling negative, don’t voice your frustration during class, instead speak with the teacher afterwards.

Stay in Your Own Sandbox

Don’t put your mat too close to or too far from the other students around you. You need enough space to stretch out your arms and not touch your neighbor. On the other hand, don’t take any more space than you need. Crowded classrooms need all the space they can get.

Proper Yoga Clothing

Don’t wear clothes that will fall off or show too much skin. Wear clothing that is comfortable and will stretch, but bear in mind that you might be doing such unusual positions as turning upside down. Showing skin can make others feel uncomfortable and can create embarrassing situations if your clothing slips.

Respect

Don’t stare; you may be more advanced than those around you, or you may be the only first beginner in the room. Everyone starts somewhere, and everyone has his or her strengths and weaknesses. Respect that. Staring at someone who is or is not doing the techniques correctly is unfair-stare at the teacher instead, that is what an instructor is for.

Know Your Limits

Don’t overstrain yourself-if you can’t perform a stance, just do it as far as you can or substitute the alternate stance that the instructor will probably suggest. Don’t force yourself to do something you can’t yet just because you’re too embarrassed to admit that you need the alternate stance. Don’t overestimate your abilities. Injuring yourself can disrupt the entire class. Avoid other interruptions as well and don’t draw attention to yourself. Respect other students and yoga’s goal of peace and overall balance (inner and outer). Avoid chatting and loud breathing, and turn your phone off.

Don’t be offended if the instructor corrects your pose. You can’t see what you’re doing; he or she can, and the instructor is there to help and teach you. It’s meant to be help, not an insult. That is what classes are for-help with your technique-so by learning the rules of etiquette, you can be sure to enjoy class and keep it an enjoyable place for those around you.

Popularity: 100% [?]

Yoga Benefits and Yoga31 Aug 2007 02:41 am

Yoga is a science; and indeed, in many places in the world (such as India), it is referred to as a science. This is not mere playing with words; it truly is approached as a science, which means that it is understood in terms of the scientific method.

Yogic science seeks to verify cause and effect, and build principles based upon objective observations. Indeed, in many places in the world, to be a yogic master of any credibility, one must be highly educated in the sciences, including physics and the biological sciences.

This discussion on yoga as science is important for us to have here, because it allows us to sensible ask the question: what are the benefits of yoga? After all, if yoga is a faith or a belief, then asking this question isn’t fair; because it’s one that yoga cannot answer in terms that we can objectively understand.

Yoga is a science; as empirical and pragmatic as kinesiology, or exercise science, which seeks to understand how the body acts and reacts to changes in the internal physical environment. And even more simply than any of this: each of us has a right to ask the basic question why should I bother doing this yoga thing? before we should be asked to consider experiencing it for ourselves.

Indeed, while the experience of yoga cannot be reduced to words – just as reading a book on preparing for a marathon isn’t going to actually physically prepare you to run a marathon – the goals and principles of yoga can easily be discussed.

Here’s the Mayo Clinic’s take on the benefits of meditation:

“Meditation is used by people who are perfectly healthy as a means of stress reduction. But if you have a medical condition that’s worsened by stress, you might find the practice valuable in reducing the stress-related effects of allergies, asthma, chronic pain and arthritis, among others.”

Yoga involves a series of postures, during which you pay special attention to your breathing — exhaling during certain movements and inhaling with others. You can approach yoga as a way to promote physical flexibility, strength and endurance or as a way to enhance your spirituality.

The Mind-Body Connection

Yoga is centered on the mind-body connection. This mind-body harmony is achieved through three things:

postures (asanas)
proper breathing (pranayama)
meditation

Mind and body draw inspiration and guidance from the combined practices of asanas, breathing, and meditation. As people age (to yogis, ageing is an artificial condition), our bodies become susceptible to toxins and poisons (caused by environmental and poor dietary factors).

Yoga helps us through a cleaning process, turning our bodies into a well synchronized and well-oiled piece of machinery.

Physical Benefits

By harmonizing these three principles, the benefits of yoga are attained. And just what are these benefits?

equilibrium in the body’s central nervous system
decrease in pulse
respiratory and blood pressure rates
cardiovascular efficiency
gastrointestinal system stabilization
increased breath-holding time
improved dexterity skills.
Improved balance
Improved depth perception
Improved memory

Psychological Benefits

As noted above, Yoga also delivers an array of psychological benefits; and in fact, this is a very common reason why people begin practicing it in the first place. Perhaps the most frequently mentioned psychological benefit of yoga is an improved ability to manage stress. Yoga diminishes an individual’s levels of anxiety, depression, and lethargy; thus enabling him/her to focus on what’s spiritual and important: achieving balance and happiness.

Supporting a Healthy Lifestyle

There is some very interesting psychology behind this that students of western thinkers (e.g. Freud, Jung, Fromm, etc.) will find familiar and, indeed, quite rational. When an individual decides to be happy, something within that person activates; a kind of will or awareness emerges. This awareness begins to observe the jungle of negative thoughts that are swimming constantly through the mind.

Rather than attacking each of these thoughts - because that would be an unending struggle! - yoga simply advises the individual to watch that struggle; and through that watching, the stress will diminish (because it becomes exposed and thus unfed by the unconscious, unobserving mind!).

At the same time, as an individual begins to reduce their level of internal negativity, subsequent external negative behaviors begin to fall of their own accord; habits such as excessive drinking, emotional overeating, and engaging in behaviors that, ultimately, lead to unhappiness and suffering.

With this being said, it would be an overstatement to imply that practicing yoga is the easy way to, say, quit smoking, or to start exercising regularly. If that were the case, yoga would be ideal! Yoga simply says that, based on rational and scientific cause and effect relationships that have been observed for centuries, that when a person begins to feel good inside, they naturally tend to behave in ways that enhance and promote this feeling of inner wellness.

As such, while smoking (for example) is an addiction and the body will react to the lessening of addictive ingredients such as tar and tobacco (just to name two of many!), yoga will help the process. It will help provide the individual with the strength and logic that they need in order to discover that smoking actually doesn’t make them feel good.

In fact, once they start observing how they feel, they’ll notice without doubt that instead of feeling good, smoking actually makes one feel quite bad inside; it’s harder to breathe, for one.

Scientists have proven that there is a true physical addiction that is in place, alongside an emotional addiction that can be just as strong; perhaps even stronger. The point here is simply to help you understand that yoga can help a person make conscious living choices that promote healthy and happy living. This can include:

quitting smoking
reducing excess drinking

eating healthier

getting more sleep

reducing stress at work (and everywhere else for that matter)

promoting more harmonious relationships all around

Please remember: yoga doesn’t promise anyone that these things will simply happen overnight. At most, yoga is the light that shows you how messy things in the basement really are; and once that light is on, it becomes much more straightforward - not to mention efficient and time effective - to clean things up!

Emotional Benefits

Yoga has also been hailed for its special ability to help people eliminate feelings of hostility and inner resentment. As a result of eliminating these toxic emotions, the doorway to self acceptance and self actualization opens.

Pain Management Benefits

Pain management is another benefit of yoga. Since pain and chronic pain are conditions that affect all of us at some point, understanding the positive link between yoga and pain management could be invaluable.

It can also be financially valuable, since the pain medication industry is a multi-billion dollar marketplace and many people, especially as they age, find that their insurance or government coverage won’t cover some pharmaceutical and over-the-counter pain relief medications. The website www.lifepositive.com provides some illuminating information on yoga and pain management:

Yoga is believed to reduce pain by helping the brain’s pain center regulate the gate-controlling mechanism located in the spinal cord and the secretion of natural painkillers in the body.

Breathing exercises used in yoga can also reduce pain. Because muscles tend to relax when you exhale, lengthening the time of exhalation can help produce relaxation and reduce tension.

Awareness of breathing helps to achieve calmer, slower respiration and aid in relaxation and pain management. Yoga’s inclusion of relaxation techniques and meditation can also help reduce pain. Part of the effectiveness of yoga in reducing pain is due to its focus on self-awareness.

This self-awareness can have a protective effect and allow for early preventive action.

Real People, Real Benefits

The website www.bikramyogabrooklyn.com provides one very impressive testimonial from an average guy looking to save his own life:

“Bikram Yoga has helped manage my diabetes unbelievably. I have curtailed my insulin injections by 50%. I have lost 30 pounds, completely lost the desires to smoke, drink alcohol and eat junk food. I even wrote a book on how it saved my life called, No More Diabetes, How Yoga Saved my Life.” - John Spanek

Popularity: 72% [?]

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