Posts Tagged ‘lose weight’

Yoga for Weight Loss – Is it a Big Scam?

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Yoga - pigeon poseBy Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

Could it be possible that Yoga for weight loss is just a marketing strategy?  How could Yoga help you burn sufficient calories to lose weight?  Is the public being taken for a “sleigh ride,” with a holistic approach to weight control?  Let’s take a deeper look and get to the bottom of an issue that has puzzled researchers.

1. Could it be possible that Yoga for weight loss is just a marketing strategy? To be honest, anything is possible, when it comes down to marketing services and products.  Why should Yoga be different?  The most common style of Yoga, taught outside of India, is Hatha and its many sub-styles.

On the surface, Hatha Yoga practice doesn’t seem like it would burn the necessary calories to lose weight – let alone control it.  Hatha Yoga was not created to be a solution for an inactive population that suffers systematic complications from obesity.  When Yoga, in its physical form, came about – people still performed their fair share of physical labor.

Therefore, it is possible that exaggerated claims could happen, but Yoga is a great addition to a completely healthy lifestyle.  It’s not the calories burned on the mat, as much as the reinforced behavior from eating right and performing other beneficial physical activities throughout the day.

2. How could Yoga help you burn sufficient calories to lose weight?  Every time this subject is brought up, Yogis from everywhere refer to the 2005 study conducted by researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, in Seattle, Washington, in the United States. 

With the aid of funding from the National Cancer Institute, medical researcher and Yoga practitioner, Alan Kristal, performed a medical study on the weight reducing effects of Yoga.  The findings were positive, for those who feel that Yoga is a good adjunct to a weight control strategy.

Yet, science and medicine do not come to conclusions on the basis of one study, and questions about the calorie burning properties of Yoga practice abound.  Even, if you have the temperature of a room increased to 105 degrees Fahrenheit, and run through faster sequences of postures, physical Yoga practice is still low-impact movement.

Claims about calories burned can range from 200 to 650 calories per hour, depending on the sequence of movements and the temperature of the room.  One snack could easily surpass the number of calories burned, so there is more to this mystery than calories burned.

Long-term Yoga practice opens an awareness that runs contrary to unconscious eating.  In other words: If you are conscious of what you eat, you will consume better food, and you will consume less, during the day.

3. Is the public being taken for a “sleigh ride” with a holistic approach to weight control?  Actually, the answer is “no.”  Weight control is not easy, especially during middle age, but Hatha Yoga does have solutions in the Yoga diet, postures, and living a healthy lifestyle.  The problem is: The public demands a magic bullet for weight loss; namely, pills that will temporarily reduce weight, but can have serious side effects and even cause death.

Yoga is part of a logical solution toward managing body weight.  Eating less, wise eating choices, drinking clean water, walking, weight resistance, and other physical activities are also part of the solution.  One point to consider about the intake of calories is sugar, or salt, hidden in drinks and processed food.

Yoga practice alone will help manage weight, but the practice of living healthy must be with us throughout the day.

© Copyright 2009 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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Weight Loss Yoga – The Hidden Secret

Saturday, January 17th, 2009

MarichyasanaBy Paul Jerard, E-RYT

The general concept of Hatha Yoga is a mind and body exercise, but that barely skims the surface as to what Hatha, or any other form of Yoga, is. Now we hear of Yoga for ripped abs, growing taller, stress relief, back pain, and raising children. Is it all a marketing ploy, or can it do all of these things?

Truthfully, ripped abs will require more than Yoga, but you can reduce and manage your weight. If you have tried losing weight before, you know about false promises. You know that instant weight loss diets are “roller coaster rides.” There is no yo-yo effect from bringing Yoga into your life, but changes do happen gradually, so let’s look at why and how.

Why does Yoga help people lose weight?

Up to this point in time – of all the studies that have taken place so far, the study (conducted by researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center) in Seattle, is the most well known. Yet, the concept of Yoga for weight reduction has experts baffled.

The physical form we know as “Hatha Yoga” does not burn the calories of a high impact exercise. When you put Yoga under a microscope, it produces results, but it leaves researchers baffled. What is the answer? In any study, subjects who practiced Yoga did so as a lifestyle. It was never viewed as a temporary fix.

Yoga is a lifestyle. To see it as an exercise is not the full view or an accurate picture. In fact, the biggest secret in losing weight, through Yoga practice, is enhanced emotional health. We often hear about mind, body, and spirit, but we ignore emotional heath. When your emotional health is unstable, it is hard to control your weight at all.

How does Yoga help people lose weight?

Through regular practice of Hatha Yoga, a practitioner can improve emotional flows. This puts your feet on stable ground and keeps your mind focused. Unhealthy habits can gradually be changed into positive habits. Sure you can count calories, if you like, but it’s much easier to take one day at a time, when you are programmed with healthy habits.

The deeper key is to change your mental thought process toward daily Yoga practice, walking, biking, activities, and moderate dieting habits. This is not a drastic lifestyle change, but it is a gradual one. It may take time to get to your optimum weight, but you will change your direction from the first day of Yoga practice.

© Copyright 2009 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos.
Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”
——————————————–
On-Site and Online Yoga Training
——————————————–
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
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