Archive for the ‘Yoga for Athletes’ Category

Yoga Poses for Runners

Sunday, February 5th, 2012

yoga teacher trainingBy Sangeetha Saran

If you are an avid runner, a regular practice of Hatha Yoga will help prevent many of the most common running injuries by keeping your muscles and ligaments flexible and strong. Running is also a great complement to a Yoga practice. Running is very aerobic by nature and will partner well with the quieter, restorative nature of many Yoga poses. It is quite difficult to practice Yoga asanas in a flowing sequence that is performed with optimal alignment and is at a quick enough pace to raise your heart rate up to an aerobic level like running can do for an extended period of time. On the other hand, running even a mile or two at a moderate pace will ensure that most of us will receive the cardiovascular conditioning benefits of sustained aerobic exercise.

However, there are common injuries suffered by runners from the repetitive nature of the movement, especially if you run on a hard surface regularly such as concrete or asphalt. Practicing Yoga asanas that help to correct any alignment issues and strengthen ligaments and muscles will help to prevent some of the most common running injuries such as torn Achilles’ tendons, calf muscles, pulled hamstrings and tight quadriceps. Downward Facing Dog is a great Yoga asana for stretching out the Achilles’ tendons and hamstrings. Dancer Pose is a wonderful pose for stretching out the entire front side of the body, including the quadricep muscles.

Preparation for Downward Facing Dog

Come to the front of your Yoga mat in Mountain Pose. Take a few deep breaths as you raise your arms over your head and back down to your sides. Raise your arms over your head as you inhale and lower your arms as you exhale. Repeat this movement two more times.

Downward Facing Dog

To practice Downward Facing Dog, place your hands on your Yoga mat shoulder distance apart from each other with your hands parallel to the sides of your mat and flat on the floor. Step your feet back three to four feet so that your body makes the shape of a triangle. Distribute your weight evenly between your hands and your feet.

If you are not feeling enough of a stretch, move your heels up and down. Peddle your feet slowly to warm-up and then hold the pose with your heels at their maximum depth for five full breaths. Be gentle, if your Achilles’ tendons are tight, you may not be able to put your feet flush against the mat. Move slowly and keep breathing. To come out of the pose, inhale and step your feet to the front of your Yoga mat. You may wish to raise your arms over your head and then come back into Mountain Pose or simply place your hands on your hips and come to the front of your mat. Repeat two more times.

© Copyright 2012 – Aura Wellness Center – Publications Division

To see our selection of Online Yoga teacher training courses, please visit the following link.

http://www.aurawellnesscenter.com/store/

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Warming Yoga Poses for Skiers

Friday, December 2nd, 2011

yoga certificationBy Amruta Kulkarni, CYT 250

There are a number of Yoga poses that will warm-up both specific muscle groups and the entire body for a challenging day on the slopes. Skiing can be either leisurely or very demanding. In part, the snow conditions will determine the level of intensity and challenge for many skiers. In order to ski at your optimal level and to prevent injury, it is important to spend some time warming up for the day ahead. Practicing five to ten rounds of full Sun Salutations will help to lubricate all of your joints and warm-up all of the major muscle groups in the body.

After warming up with several rounds of Sun Salutations, practicing a Warrior Pose sequence that links together Warrior I, II and III will help to invigorate you and hone your sense of balance. Warrior I Pose will open up the front of your body and make you feel expanded and exalted. Warrior II pose will ground you and focus your concentration in an unwavering fashion. Warrior III pose will help you take flight and sharpen your sense of balance. By linking the three warrior poses together with the movements of the Sun Salutation, you will continue to warm up all of the major muscle groups in your body for the day ahead.

Warrior I Pose

To practice Warrior I, stand with your feet three and a half to four feet apart. Turn your right foot towards the front of the room and perpendicular to your Yoga mat. Turn your left foot in to a 45-degree angle towards the front of your mat. With your next inhale, bend your right knee to a ninety-degree angle and raise your arms overhead in prayer position with your palms touching each other. Do not extend your right knee beyond the line of your ankle. Hold this pose for up to five breaths. Feel the stretch through the entire length of your torso, arms and shoulders. From Warrior I Pose you can flow directly into Warrior II Pose.

Warrior II Pose

From Warrior I, bring your arms down to shoulder height with your palms facing the floor. Hold you gaze or drishti a few inches beyond the third finger of your right hand. Maintain a strong focus on this point as you hold the pose for three to five complete breaths. With your next inhale; you can glide into Warrior III.

Warrior III Pose

As you gaze over the middle finger of your right hand, shift your weight entirely to your right leg and lift off the ground for a one-legged balancing pose. Bring both arms directly in front of you with your palms facing each other in prayer position. Raise your left leg to hip height with your toes pointing towards the floor. Maintain a strong and steady gaze at one spot on the floor. Hold for three to five breaths adjusting your balance when needed. To come out of the pose, inhale and come back to Tadasana at the top of your Yoga mat.

© Copyright 2011 – Aura Wellness Center – Publications Division

To see our selection of Online Yoga teacher training courses, please visit the following link.

http://www.aurawellnesscenter.com/store/

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FREE CONTENT: If you are a Yoga Teacher, Yoga studio, blogger, e-zine, or website publisher, and are in need of quality content, please feel free to use my blog entries (articles). Please be sure to reprint each article, as is, including the resource box above. Namaste!

Yoga for Kickboxers

Saturday, November 26th, 2011

yoga certificationBy Jenny Park

Kickboxing and yoga seem to be on opposite ends of the spectrum at first glance. One is all about beating an opponent into submission, the other emphasizes that ultimately there are no opponents at all. One is aggression in the purest form possible, the other is bliss and peacefulness. How could two disciplines work together in harmony when they appear to be so at odds with each other? Like the yin and yang, they actually serve to complete each other by bringing about balance.

Kickboxing is a hybrid between boxing and traditional Eastern martial arts. The physical punches, jabs and footwork were divided from the spiritual aspects of the martial arts to create a purely physical style of fighting. Kickboxing provides a powerful cardio workout which makes it an effective way to get the body into shape and this has fueled its enduring popularity among those seeking high levels of physical fitness.

Yoga for kickboxers makes a lot of sense, because kickboxing is quite lacking in restorative movements which would compensate for the explosiveness of the practice. Traditional martial arts incorporate restorative practices that serve to rejuvenate participants in order to stave off fatigue, injury and muscle strain but this has been removed from modern kickboxing techniques. At best, most kickboxers will finish off their explosive training sessions with a few cool down stretches at the end of their workout, but this is insufficient. Yoga makes a great addition to an existing kickboxing regimen to fill in this gap.

Adding yoga to the exercise routine will give kickboxers increased levels of flexibility and will also serve to boost their range of motion. Both of these give a kickboxer the competitive edge over their opponents who likely train in the same old ways, resulting in a less robust range of motion on their part. Because kickboxing is a contact sport, it requires a heightened level of focus in order to stay one step ahead of the opponent. Yoga teaches inner stillness and laser focus by constantly drawing the attention into the present moment and this is extremely important for anyone playing a contact sport. Having a hyper-awareness of the environment and the opponent is essential for success in a sport which requires lightning fast reflexes.

Yoga also works muscle groups that would remain dormant and undeveloped with only kickboxing being used for physical conditioning. This increases the overall strength and endurance of the kickboxer as a whole which is yet another advantage to using yoga to diversify the fitness regimen.

Yoga need not take up too much time in the kickboxer’s schedule; short 20 minute sessions every other day is sufficient enough for individuals to reap all the benefits yoga has to offer when used in tandem with a traditional kickboxing training routine.

Adding yoga to the fitness regimen of a kickboxer is a great way to give them the competitive edge over their opponents and serves to prevent burnout and injury. It’s a great combination.

© Copyright 2011 – Aura Wellness Center – Publications Division

To see our selection of Online Yoga teacher training courses, please visit the following link.

http://www.aurawellnesscenter.com/store/

FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos. Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

FREE CONTENT: If you are a Yoga Teacher, Yoga studio, blogger, e-zine, or website publisher, and are in need of quality content, please feel free to use my blog entries (articles). Please be sure to reprint each article, as is, including the resource box above. Namaste!

Yoga Moves for Tough Guys

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

vinyasa yoga teacher certificationBy Dr. Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

When it comes to working out, tough guys have long adhered to the “no pain, no gain” philosophy. According to experts, however, this belief is not only faulty, but it can result in serious injury. While physical training can be rigorous, pain is not a prerequisite for success. It may actually be a warning from within one’s body to slow down or change routines.

Men have traditionally preferred competitive contact sports, but the need to win can be hard on the physical body and emotional health, as well. Professional athletes, along with other sports enthusiasts, are discovering that the practice of Yoga can help them function more effectively in contact sports, and increase their overall health and wellbeing, at the same time.

20 Ways Yoga Moves Help Tough Guys

• Teaches breathing techniques that make it easier to work through strenuous or painful routines

• Helps to release and balance uneven muscle patterns entrenched by years of rigorous training

• Improves flexibility and relaxes tight muscles

• Gives a different perspective and appreciation for “gentler” methods of exercise

• Increases awareness of sensations within the body

• Cultivates patience and helps to let go of perfectionism

• Makes other training programs more effective

• Helps to prevent injuries or to recover more quickly

• Tones muscles and improves posture

• Aids in weight control

• Slows down the aging process

• Enhances immune system and improves general health

• Encourages healthy sleep patterns

• Boosts concentration and mental acuity

• Improves organ function and circulation

• Releases endorphins that improve mood

• Enhances endurance and performance

• Breaks down lactic acid, resulting from sustained physical activity

• Works entire body

• Removes toxins from the body

If these reasons are not enough to convince tough guys of the benefits of yoga, these recent news stories might do the trick:

• Swami Bua – a Yogi, not listed in record books, because there is no written record of his birth – died in 2010, at an estimated age of 120. He could stop his circulation; and, in his later years, was still able to blow a conch shell for up to five minutes, during one breath, each year at an annual gathering, honoring the United Nations in New York City.

• Wim Hof broke his own world record in 2008 by spending for 1 hour, 13 minutes, and 48 seconds immersed in ice. He used Tummo breathing – a practice used by Yogi Monks in Tibet – to control his body temperature.

Chances are – not many men want to spend days blowing conch shells or using breathing techniques to stay alive on a freezing mountain, but these examples do illustrate the amazing power of Yoga and its potential to enable seemingly insurmountable feats. They leave little doubt of Yoga’s usefulness in the field of competitive sports and other arduous physical endeavors.

Although there are many Yoga moves (asanas) to challenge one’s strength and fortitude, the following is a short list for competitive athletes of both genders.

Yoga Moves for Tough Guys

The Sun Salutations Sequence

Dolphin Pose

Head Stand

Hand Stand

Crow Pose

Wheel Pose

Lord of the Dance Pose

As always, please consult with your primary physician or medical specialist, before starting a new exercise program.  Proper instruction with a certified and competent Yoga teacher is recommended.  Any pre-existing medical conditions or injuries must be respected by modifying techniques.

© Copyright 2011 – Aura Wellness Center – Publications Division

To see our selection of Online Yoga teacher training courses, please visit the following link.

http://www.aurawellnesscenter.com/store/

FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos. Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

FREE CONTENT: If you are a Yoga Teacher, Yoga studio, blogger, e-zine, or website publisher, and are in need of quality content, please feel free to use my blog entries (articles). Please be sure to reprint each article, as is, including the resource box above. Namaste!

Yoga Asanas for Snowboarders

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

become a yoga instructorBy Dr. Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

Flying down the side of a snow-covered ski slope, in boots attached to a snowboard, may not sound compatible with the gently flowing asanas of Yoga. Snowboarding is a strenuous sport that requires preparation and takes a toll on the joints. Yoga is an ancient healing art that consists of slow and deliberate movements. Yet, many winter sport enthusiasts are finding that the practice of Yoga for snowboarders helps to keep them in shape during the summer months and enhance their snowboarding skills all year.

How does Yoga Help Snowboarders?

• Improves flexibility

• Reduces injuries

• Helps injuries heal more quickly

• Builds stamina

• Tones muscles

• Increases body awareness

• Strengthens core muscles

• Improves balance

• Encourages effective breathing

• Loosens tight muscles

• Helps to support the spine

What Are the Precautions for Snowboarders Who Want to Try Yoga?

• Move slowly in to and out of poses.

• Practice deep breathing within your comfort zone.

• Stretch muscles, only within comfortable limits

• Consider health conditions or other limitations.

• Use a sticky mat and wear loose-fitting clothing.

What Are Some of the Asanas Recommended for Snowboarders?

• Mountain Pose – grounds and balances; prepares body for other poses

• Chair Pose – aligns shoulders, hips, and ankles; uses core muscles

• Forward Kneeling Lunge – stretches hip flexors and improves posture

• Warrior I Pose – balances and strengthens shoulders, arms, and ankles

• Downward Facing Dog – strengthens muscles in core, upper body, and legs

• Tree Pose – improves mobility in knee and hip; stretches hips, thighs, shoulders, and chest

• Seated Hip and Spine Twists – makes spine mobile; increases flexibility in thigh muscles

• Seated Cobbler’s Pose – strengthens thigh muscles and lessens strain on knees

The above-mentioned postures are a short list of asanas that will help a snowboarder develop a complete cross-training routine. Most of these postures could be joined together in a sequence, much similar to the Sun Salutations (Surya Namaskar). In fact, Sun Salutations are recommended for snowboarders. Obviously, balance is also of great importance. Although Tree pose was mentioned, Eagle, Warrior III, and Lord of the Dance pose would be beneficial, as well.

According to some Yoga instructors, the poses recommended for snowboarders vary, depending upon timing and location. Although Power Yoga may be great to get in shape and increase stamina, Restorative Yoga may be more beneficial for relaxing on the slopes or resting after a hard day. One thing is certain – core strength and balance are crucial to snowboarders, and Yoga helps to develop both.

© Copyright 2011 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

To see our complete selection of Yoga teacher training courses, please feel free to visit the following link.

http://www.aurawellnesscenter.com/store/Teacher-Courses/

FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos. Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

FREE CONTENT: If you are a Yoga Teacher, Yoga studio, blogger, e-zine, or website publisher, and are in need of quality content, please feel free to use my blog entries (articles). Please be sure to reprint each article, as is, including the resource box above. Namaste, Paul

Yoga For Professional Athletes

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011

yoga certificationBy Dr. Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

When an athlete advances in progression to the level of professional within the particular sport that they play, it becomes much more of a challenge to sustain a state of healthy wellbeing. Professional athletes have rigorous training and competition schedules.

The level of competition, tight schedules, and playing through injuries may, in turn, may hinder them from a taking care of their holistic needs. Unless they are on an “off-season” schedule, they have to push for any time to fit it into their schedule.

Just as it is very important for non-athletic or sedentary individuals, to maintain a healthy mind, body, and emotional state, it is just as important for the professional athletes to practice a healthy lifestyle, to avoid any injury, and to live in a stress reduced environment, as much as possible. By practicing Yoga, and incorporating it into one’s training regimen, it will greatly benefit an athlete through a season.

There are many different types of Yoga for athletic and for sedentary individuals. There are many types of Yoga for beginners. For people who are just starting to change their lifestyle, there are many gentle styles for beginners. At the same time, athletes of all levels may want more of a physical challenge.

Yet, not all athletes need to jump into an advanced Yoga class. What if a professional athlete is making a comeback from a pre-existing or a season ending injury? In such a case, any form of physical Yoga would be therapeutic in nature. Therefore, the needs of each individual are not the same.

For athletes who have already been practicing challenging Yoga, and are in peak health, there are styles to meet their needs. Physical Yoga can be designed to be progressively challenging in its nature. Power, Vinyasa, Prasara, and Hot Yoga are primary examples of physical Yogic methods, which progressively challenge athletes for maximum performance and potential.

Keep in mind that any form of Yoga can be perfectly tailored toward the needs of an athlete. There are already athletes in the NBA, WNBA, Track & Field, NFL, and Major League Baseball, who practice Yoga as a daily regimen. Athletes, such as Lebron James, Shaquille O’Neal, Kevin Garnett, Carl Lewis, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and the Philadelphia Eagles, have made it a point to practice Yoga for strength, flexibility, endurance, mental focus, and complete awareness.

If you look at a Yogic athletic body – it is defined, strong, flexible, energetic, and agile. This may not translate into size, but for those who want bulk, there is always progressive weight resistance. One example of needing size is on the defensive or offensive lines in the NFL.

Many of the football players on the lines in the NFL weigh more than 300 pounds (136.077 kg.) with an average height of 6 feet five inches (1.9558 meters). Luckily, they can also benefit from Yoga, by progressively gaining agility, energy, strength, and defined lean muscle mass.

The unique needs of athletes, at the pro level, are diversified. Yoga is a great alternative path to incorporate while athletes are stretching between sets, recovering from an injury, or training. By practicing Yoga, and eating well-balanced meals on a daily basis, athletes will definitely achieve optimal performance.

© Copyright 2011 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

To see our complete selection of Yoga teacher training courses, please feel free to visit the following link.

http://www.aurawellnesscenter.com/store/Teacher-Courses/

FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos. Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

FREE CONTENT: If you are a Yoga Teacher, Yoga studio, blogger, e-zine, or website publisher, and are in need of quality content, please feel free to use my blog entries (articles). Please be sure to reprint each article, as is, including the resource box above. Namaste, Paul

Teaching Yoga to Golfers

Tuesday, May 10th, 2011

yoga teacher trainingBy Dr. Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

If you ask most instructors which teaching opportunities they were made aware of, during their initial Yoga teacher training, most will readily admit they learned of none outside their studio. Regardless of the reason for this, most Yoga instructors are not aware of the wide spectrum of opportunity for working with the public.

Networking with local golf clubs, golf equipment suppliers, driving ranges, and miniature golf courses is an opportunity for Yoga teachers. Yoga sessions would have to be customized for the exact needs of golfers, and it must be remembered that there is a wide variation for pre-existing injury, age, fitness level, and flexibility among golfers. Much like Yoga practitioners, golfers cover a wide gambit.

Yoga for Golf Fitness

For the fitness-minded golfers, Yoga may appear to be less of a challenge than it can be. These “alpha types” will enjoy physically challenging sessions – especially Vinyasa Yoga or any Yoga which focuses on continuous movement. These flow Yoga sessions are very effective therapy for personalities, who deal with any kind of discomfort, by challenging themselves physically and mentally.

Many muscles and body parts are being used during a golf swing, including the back, shoulders, abdominal muscles, quadriceps, hamstrings, and calves. For golfers to get the most out of their game, it’s important to be relaxed and loose. Yoga can help immensely with this, as well as giving the client a tranquil state of mind.

Yoga for Golfers with Pre-existing Injuries

An alarming, and increasing number of golfers, play the game with an injured back. Some ideas for golfers, with back issues, are the knee to chest pose, the cat and cow positions, child’s pose, abdominal work, the table pose, locust pose, the hand to foot pose, cobra pose, downward dog, eagle pose, and a variety of twists.

For golfers, pain and injury don’t stop at the back. Those who have problems with their swing, due to pain in their shoulders, can practice the seated spinal twists, the lunge with a twist, bridge pose, triangle, revolved triangle, camel, camel twist, bow, and the half bow pose.

Customized Physical Yoga Sessions for Golfers

For golfers, who are looking for greater hip rotation and hamstring flexibility, some important poses are the happy baby, cobbler, pyramid, staff pose, half moon pose, and pigeon pose. It’s important to pay attention to the position of the hips when teaching or practicing these poses.

Golfers, who are looking for more upper body power, should try poses – such as the single leg downward dog, sage, crow, wheel, firefly, handstand, and dolphin pose. Always remember – that the shoulders should not be crunched up while going into these poses. The shoulders and neck should be loose and limp.

Mental Strength for Golf

Pranayama is essential, when it comes to practicing Yoga and golf. Golfers know that their game requires mental fortitude. Pranayama is the foundation to making the mind and body connection. This helps one to become calm in the worst of times. Getting out of a sand pit, or over a body of water, requires a positive frame of mind. Yogic breath awareness is a successful tool for golfers who want to stay mentally focused and improve their game.

Teaching Yoga to golfers is a huge field and teachers have barely scratched the surface.

© Copyright 2011 – Aura Wellness Center – Publications Division

To see our selection of Online Yoga teacher training courses, please visit the following link.

http://www.aurawellnesscenter.com/store/

FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos. Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

FREE CONTENT: If you are a Yoga Teacher, Yoga studio, blogger, e-zine, or website publisher, and are in need of quality content, please feel free to use my blog entries (articles). Please be sure to reprint each article, as is, including the resource box above. Namaste!

Best Yoga Exercise for Runners

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

yoga teacher trainingBy Faye Martins

Although running and Yoga may seem like activities that are on opposite ends of the exercise spectrum, they are complementary practices that work beautifully together. Running is a great way to aerobically exercise your whole body, at a relatively high level of intensity.  One of the primary benefits to running is great cardiovascular health and muscular strength, particularly throughout your legs. Running, however, can be stressful to your joints, ligaments and muscles.

It is estimated that with each mile, your feet will strike the ground a thousand times, and this is only over a distance of one mile. If you run twenty miles a week, each foot will strike the ground twenty thousand times.  This repetitive impact affects your legs, hips and feet, which can lead to stress fractures, pain, and stiffness on a regular basis. In order to counteract the stressful affects of running and maximize the positive benefits, practicing Yoga poses before and/or after your run will help you to stay limber, flexible, balanced, and less prone to injury.

Basic Sun Salutation Series

This is the best Yoga exercise for runners and an excellent series of poses.  The Suns Salutations are a great way to warm up all of the major muscle groups in your body.

Stand tall with hands in namaste mudra, while your feet are hips width apart from each other, and your elbows are flared to your sides. Take three, deep complete breaths. On your fourth breath inhale and raise your arms over your head with your hands in prayer position.  Look up at your hands and feel the stretch all along the sides of your torso, arms and shoulders. With your exhale, bring your hands down past your hips and forward to touch your toes. If your hamstrings are tight, you may need to bend your knees a little. Hold for ten seconds while breathing evenly.

Now, move into a suspended push-up position, this position is called Plank position because you maintain the straightness of your body like a board. Hold for five to ten seconds. The holding will build upper body strength very quickly.  With an exhale, come down onto your mat and inhale up into a gentle cobra pose with your hands next to your chest, elbows in, and palms flat on the floor. Only come up to where you are comfortable. Hold for ten seconds stretching out the front of your chest, throat and shoulders.

Slowly come down and push back into an inverted “V” shape. This pose is called Downward Facing Dog, just like the pose a dog does when he or she wakes up from a nap. Keep your hands shoulder distance apart, fingers spread out, elbows slightly cracked (not locked), and your upper arms gently rotated a little bit inwards towards your chest. This pose will stretch out your hamstrings, Achilles tendons, back, shoulders and arms. Hold for five breaths.

Slowly bring your feet to the front of your mat and come up to your original standing position with your arms overhead. As you exhale, bring your hands slowly back down to your sides. This is one round of the Basic Sun Salutation. Repeat three to five times. It is a great way to warm up prior to your run.

© Copyright 2011 – Aura Wellness Center – Publications Division

To see our selection of Online Yoga teacher training courses, please visit the following link.

http://www.aurawellnesscenter.com/store/

FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos. Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

FREE CONTENT: If you are a Yoga Teacher, Yoga studio, blogger, e-zine, or website publisher, and are in need of quality content, please feel free to use my blog entries (articles). Please be sure to reprint each article, as is, including the resource box above. Namaste!

About Yoga for Athletes

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

vinyasa yoga teacher certificationBy Kimaya Singh

Let’s face it, Yoga for athletes has to be physically challenging for the cross training effect. The deeper aspects of meditation aren’t always valued by athletes as much as the physical asana work. Physical Hatha Yoga is a remarkable system of exercises that complements many of today’s competitive sporting activities.

Some of these activities are football, soccer, track and field, swimming, and skiing, to name only a handful. The practice of Yoga poses and breathing techniques will help an athlete to increase his or her range of flexibility, joint mobility, muscular strength, balance, coordination, stamina, and the ability to focus.

One of the most rudimentary aspects of winning any competition is our mental attitude and ability to focus on the task at hand. Negative attitudes about one’s ability sap one’s strength, hope, and optimism. Yoga practice will help an athlete to become aware of his or her internal dialogue and shift the dialogue to one of positivity.

The slow, focused practice of Yoga asanas will also enhance an athlete’s ability to concentrate on only one task, the task of winning or performing well in his or her athletic endeavor. This mental discipline will help an athlete to avoid becoming distracted by extraneous thoughts at a critical moment in the competition or event.

Many competitive sports require an extreme amount of endurance. Athletes often engage in sporting activities that place great demands on the cardiovascular system over an extended period of time, necessitating a great amount of oxygen. The breathing practices of Yoga help to teach an athlete to breathe deeply when under physical stress. In this way, an athlete will learn how to take in and circulate oxygen on a regular basis, even when he or she is running the final mile of a marathon or skiing down a double diamond slope. This will improve an athlete’s performance by improving his or her endurance.

The practice of Yoga will also improve an athlete’s flexibility and balance. Many sporting activities stress and shorten muscles and ligaments throughout the body. Practicing Yoga on a regular basis, in tandem with your sport of choice, will help you to maintain flexibility throughout your body. Practicing Yoga balancing poses will also improve your ability to balance when you are participating in other sporting activities. This improved sense of balance is critical to performing well as an athlete, whether you are a running back trying to catch a touchdown pass, or an Olympic gymnast performing a routine on the balance bar.

A consistent practice of Yoga poses and breathing techniques will help an athlete excel in his or her chosen sport. Yoga is a wonderful therapeutic tool that will help to maintain flexibility and improve an athlete’s sense of balance. Yoga also teaches the ability to develop awareness of one’s thoughts, in order to enhance the positive thoughts and weed out the negative thoughts. This skill will help an athlete to harness the power of positive thinking and focus on the training session, event or competition at hand.

© Copyright 2011 – Aura Wellness Center – Publications Division

To see our selection of Online Yoga teacher training courses, please visit the following link.

http://www.aurawellnesscenter.com/store/

FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos. Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

FREE CONTENT: If you are a Yoga Teacher, Yoga studio, blogger, e-zine, or website publisher, and are in need of quality content, please feel free to use my blog entries (articles). Please be sure to reprint each article, as is, including the resource box above. Namaste!

YOGA FOR ATHLETES

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011

yoga certificationBy Andrea Soles

Looking for a new way to get in your resistance work? You might be surprised to find that Yoga is a fantastic complement for athletes of various sports as well as fitness enthusiasts to do just that. As yoga has increased in popularity over the past years, athletes are looking at incorporating the practice of Yoga into their training program to fix potential imbalances in their body and to improve their performance in their chosen field of sport.

Yoga is the ideal way to bring balance exercises into a performers training regimen. Most athletes are involved in some form of weight training and other resistance training that uses repetitive motions that only develop certain muscle groups, while ignoring others. Also, intense sports training might build strength in certain areas of the body but leaves the athlete inflexible and even weak in others. That creates imbalance in the body. Yoga is able to fix this imbalance and help to develop the muscles that have been ignored through the contraction of these muscles in the various poses.

Whether you are a golfer, skier, windsurfer, or soccer player, the mind body connection in yoga is an important element in producing peak performance.  Yoga can assist the athlete with developing a better way of breathing while improving balance, flexibility, core strength, and endurance.

Although proper breathing technique is the foundation of many sports, it is often ignored by many athletes. Yoga will help fix this lack of breathing skill and develop the correct breathing technique that is very much required in any game of sport. The integration of mind and body through correct breathing patterns helps to build stamina and endurance in an athlete. Proper breathing techniques also bring more focus and attention to the mind and sharpens one’s intuition. This gives the athlete an advantage over his fellow players.

The various poses in yoga help to build a strong abdominal core and the different types of contractions of these poses and movements act as a complementary form of resistance training to the typical gym-based workouts. However unlike in a gym, Yoga can be practiced outdoors without the use of heavy equipment. A perfect Yoga background could be a sandy beach with the sound of waves in the background or on a mountain top with blue sky within reach of your finger tips.

Frequent yoga practice increases flexibility and range of motion and the slow movements are perfect for athletes. Many sports enthusiasts are already using yoga movements as warm up and warm down routines in their practice to maintain flexibility of the muscles and joints as well as creating an excellent low-impact cross training technique.

When teaching Yoga for athletes, instructors are asked to give consideration to their students’ requirements; encouraging the practitioners to take it easy and to leave their competitive mindset out of the game. A “win-lose mentality” is surely to lessen anybody’s yoga experience and potentially reduces the spiritual benefits received from Yoga practice, such as quieting of the mind, to feel at peace and come to a still point of contemplation within the Self.

With the help of some teachers’ guidelines specifically geared towards athletes, Yoga practice can add variety to aerobic or strength workouts, reduce training boredom and provide a workout for any sportsman’s need.  When teaching Yoga to athletes it is important to understand the athlete’s body. Athletes is a broad term, covering everyone from recreational golfers to professional basketball players, and each sport will have a different effect on the player’s body.

Yoga teachers should assist students adapt their practices to suit their individual needs and requirements as well as reduce chances of injury and help recover from tough aerobic or strength workouts.  Talk with the individual students about their bodies, and show them a range of poses to bring their bodies into balance.

A class including, or specifically designed for, athletes should begin with a slow warm-up and proceed to moderate heat-building poses, such as Sun Salutations and standing poses. These asanas and sequences will prepare the body for the flexibility work to follow.

Athletes are usually goal oriented individuals who need to feel successful in their training. Poses such as Bakasana (Crane Pose), Utkatasana (Chair Pose) or a carefully executed Adho Mukha Vrksasana (Handstand) at the wall can play to athletes’ strengths and sense of accomplishment. Such affirming work in strength-specific poses salves the ego and helps students handle the flexibility poses that are more challenging for athletic bodies.

Athletes also benefit from yoga’s holistic approach to core strength. Properly strengthening the muscles of the core using poses such as Paripurna Navasana (Full Boat Pose) and Setu Bandha Sarvangasana (Bridge Pose) will improve alignment and lessen imbalances that lead to overuse injuries.

After generating heat in Sun Salutations, standing poses, and core work, the forward-fold version of Eka Pada Rajakapotasana (One-Legged King Pigeon Pose) is one good choice, as it targets many of the muscles that constrict athletes’ hips. Throughout the practice, athletes should use breath awareness as a way of managing the intensity of the poses. This skill will serve them in their sports as well.

Consider progressive sequencing both from class to class and from month to month. Be aware of the seasonal intensity of your students’ athletic training and help them conserve energy. If athletes complete too many tough workouts on and off the mat without time to recover, they’ll stress the body beyond its ability to compensate. Serious athletes should be especially careful during their competitive season, scheduling yoga in inverse proportion to the intensity of their training. The off-season is a good time for a strength-building practice; periods of intense sports activity are better matched with gentler, flexibility-specific sequences.

Some athletes will come to yoga because of an overuse injury. Others will be at risk for new injury because of their tightness. Use a gentle approach, demonstrating and encouraging modifications.  When athletes do arrive in class injured, explain to them that yoga is not a quick fix. Athletes are eager to return to their sport, but they must allow time for injuries to heal and for deeper changes to take place in the body.

When teaching Yoga to athletes, discourage competition in class. Yoga is not a performance-based process, as a sport is. It would be wise for students to take special care to focus on what they themselves are experiencing from moment to moment, instead of comparing their poses to those of others. Teachers are wise to encourage their students to stay focused internally and to work at a personally appropriate level. Yoga’s emphasis on mental focus and being in the moment has direct application to sport as is about learning to pay attention and focus ones energy.

As for the many benefits of practicing Yoga, in general classes and in those specifically geared towards athletes, it increases awareness of the body and empowers the practitioner to address his pain and limitations with gentle techniques rather than raw strength. While much of the positive results from Yoga is still based upon subjective feedback from participants, more research is looking closely at positive health outcomes from Yoga which has been linked to a decrease in low back pain and less reported chronic pain from arthritis, headaches, and carpal tunnel syndrome, as well as lower blood pressure, heart, breathing rates, and reduced insomnia.

After all, the most successful athlete is a healthy and relaxed athlete.

© Copyright 2011 – Andrea Soles

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