Posts Tagged ‘Yoga for Athletes’

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/

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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, Paul

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

Yoga for Athletes

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

By Debby Lo-Dean

From Elite athletes to everyday sports persons or the everyday person on the street that wants to get fit and stay fit, they all have a common goal and that is to improve their health and performance, reduce injuries and take their minds off their troubles and workout. The benefits of yoga can address all these issues. It is a good complimentary exercise to any sport.

For many, the word yoga, conjures up stretching, pain and crazy positions that they don’t even want to attempt. Some even think it’s just a woman’s exercise. Yoga is so much more and it is for all levels of age and fitness. Yoga works on your whole self. It’s a way to use your body and mind to find out where there are deficiencies and to manage them through breathing, stretching, meditating and slowing moving through the body parts assessing where muscles and ligaments are tight and slowly stretching them out. It involves mentally focussing on a particular yoga pose or on your breath.

How does yoga improve an athlete’s performance?

There are many ways in which yoga can improve an athlete’s performance. The first is to use yoga breathing which can help to increase stamina. Many of us due to stress and anxiety in our lives breath shallowly, this decreases the amount of oxygen that is delivered to the cells in our body and causes fatigue. Through yoga you learn to breathe effectively, breathing deeply filling up with rich oxygen and exhaling all stale air from the lungs.

Breathing

Deep breathing is also the foundation for reducing performance anxiety and improving concentration. Meditation in yoga teaches us to block out any worries or concerns and focus on the present and on our breath. If an athlete is able to block out all the pressure of the game and any other worries before a game and concentrate only on the game then they are going to have a much better game than if they are mentally distracted.

Flexibility

Another major benefit of yoga for athletes is that it may help prevent injury by improving flexibility. Sports injuries often occur when a muscle or ligament is jolted when it is tight or not warmed up. Regular yoga helps the achieve the fullest range of motion by improving flexibility that allows the body to move into positions necessary for sports more quickly and effortlessly with less strain or risk of injury.

Balance

Yoga also improves balance. Many sports require a sports person t move in any direction in a split second. By practising balancing moves in yoga an athlete can learn where to find their centre of gravity or balance. Through constant practise the body learns where the athlete’s centre of gravity is and then they can adjust their movements much more fluidly when they have to. This means an athlete for example a footballer is less likely to fall and sprain themselves. They can quickly take evasive action and correct their balance, so that they don’t hurt themselves.

Mental focus

Improving mental focus through yoga meditation and relaxation teaches the athlete to quiet the mind and re-energise the body. Often you’ll hear a person say that a player’s mind wasn’t in the game. Using relaxation techniques before competition improves performance during the game. Yoga meditation, relaxation and concentration on poses helps to calm the nerves of an athlete under pressure to perform by helping them to block out external influences and concentrate on what needs to be done. When practising yoga postures you are taught to be present in the moment and concentrate on the pose and to breath properly. In learning to hold postures, your mind automatically becomes clearer.

Strength

Yoga increases your strength by building core strength and using your own body weight. Strengthening in yoga requires your entire body to be working as a unit so that the strengthening of one muscle group is connected to that of another muscle group. Major and minor muscle groups are used simultaneously. The difference between yoga and say weight training is that you are working on your whole self, strengthening all muscle groups, lung capacity and mental capacity instead of just working on one or two muscle groups. Yoga works on muscles that support the spine and strengthening them, giving the body more flexibility. Yoga also helps to balance out your posture improving alignment, impacting on every aspect of how you move. When the body is out of alignment you can suffer headaches and pain. By regularly doing yoga you stretch your body one way and always counter balance by stretching the opposite way. The result is that your whole body feels strong as a unit.

Focus

With yoga you focus on a pose and breathing. You are taught to block out all troubling thoughts and focus on the now. In sports this can help you to stay focused on the game. You train your mind as well as your body. If your mind starts to wander when you are playing sport yoga exercises can help to train you to gently bring your mind back to the game.

Reduce stress

Stress for an athlete can be majorly detrimental, physically and mentally. Stress from pressure to perform or any other sources causes muscles to tense up, neck, back, hamstring muscles tighten, you can get stomach pain and headaches. These are some of the examples of how stress can reduce an athlete’s performance. Yoga helps to reduce or release stress in the body and the mind.

Kinesthetics

When you learn to focus on your body through yoga you can learn when you are in a pose how it should feel and what muscle group you are working on. You learn to put your body in the exact position and not to extend yourself too much to the point of pain. You should feel the stretch but as soon as you feel any pain you should stop to prevent any injury. You should become aware of the space around you. When you use this technique in sport it can help you become more aware of where you are, where you team mates are and where the opposing team players are. If the sport involves a ball you can focus on where the ball is and how to decide on the best play, access the best options and achieve the best results. This awareness is called kinesthetics, being aware of where your body is in space. You learn to put your body in exact positions and know when it is in the correct place.

Yoga’s combination of building strength, flexibility, postures balance and kinesthetics all work together to improve the athlete’s agility, the body’s ability to move freely and quickly without pain or stress. It also adds variety to an athletes exercise program.

Cross training

Athletes often do the same sport or exercise routine year – around in order to maximise training they can cross train or do interval training. Yoga is a great low impact way to cross train. It can help the athlete recover from a hard aerobic and strength workout. There are man athletes that workout or train and go hell for leather instead of slowing down and really working individual muscles (groups), controlling their breathing and using their core strength. Hard quick workouts produce lactic acid in muscles that causes the muscle to fatigue. Yoga is gentler on the body and can achieve great results. While doing yoga you are taught not to compete with other students. You go at your own pace and are aware of your own body. Your body should not jerk or be in any pain. In sport you shouldn’t compete with your own teammates but work together. If each team player works on their own strengths and pool them together during a game it will make for great fluid competition.

Competitive edge

Athletes are always looking for that competitive edge. It may be tempting to use something that is banned but at what cost. Yoga can give an athlete a competitive edge to rivals by creating a strong body that has a focused mind and sharpened intuition. You increase core strength, flexibility and learn to breath the most effectively increasing oxygen in the body and cells helping increase immunity. It can help unlock potential in the athlete that they didn’t know they had.

Summary

In summary yoga is a fantastic tool for athletes to use to help them perform to their optimum capacity. It teaches deep relaxed breathing techniques that help reduce performance anxiety, and improve concentration, improve flexibility and balance, increase mental focus and increase strength. It helps to improve mind/body connection and reduce stress. Yoga also helps to improve posture and raise awareness of kinesthetics (where your body is in space). It helps improve agility and helps to reduce pain, increases sportsmanship and is a great cross training exercise and best of all gives an athlete a overall healthy mind, body and soul with a competitive edge over other athletes.

Debby Lo-Dean teaches Yoga classes in Ashmore, Queensland, Australia.

Yoga for Athletes

Monday, June 29th, 2009

ChakrasanaWritten By Jessica Zarcone, CYT

For thousands of years, people have been using yoga to stay “flexible” both physically and mentally, making it ideal for athletes. An athletes body and mind must remain in peak condition. Yes, yoga does more, much more, than help you find inner peace.

With yoga spreading like wildfire in the athletic community (approximately 20 million Americans practice today), it is a important regimen with several benefits. Yoga is very gentle, is it practiced at a pace that suit’s you. Most athletes are familiar with the “no pain, no gain” attitude, necessary to build strength and speed. It serves them well and produces results. However if durability and flexibility are ignored, or injury and age are concerns, this aggressive approach can be counter productive. A gentler approach thru yoga is in fact the best way to utilizes strength to increase flexibility, as muscles grow stronger, they become more flexible. The saying in yoga goes “ If you feel pain, there’s no gain“.

Yoga poses are based on a system of stretches, balances twists, and bends, these poses exercises the entire body. What’s more, every forward movement is balanced by a backward movement, and every twist to the left is countered by a twist to the right, so no single set of muscles are overstretched. In addition, yoga works on more than just muscles- the spine becomes more elastic, the joints loosen, the lungs expand, the circulation is stimulated, and stamina increases. Yoga has the potential to offer real improvements to athletic performance, both physically and mentally. Athletes tend to already focus on breathing, however what they lack is uniform flexibility.

The flexibility component of yoga is very dynamic, stretching multiple muscles simultaneously in all three planes of motion. Also, rather than pushing and disregarding the body’s pain signals. Yoga teaches us to tune into all that we are feeling each moment. This awareness is very helpful for preventing and relieving stress or injury. Yoga allows athletes to better understand their body’s strengths and weaknesses, so that the weaknesses can be “worked on” over time. This will result in better performing muscles for the days to follow. The postures also develop a sense, common in dancers and gymnast, of where the body is in space, which is a necessary skill in any sport.

The type of strength developed in yoga teaches muscles to work equally and efficiently. The practitioner learns how to relax muscles that are not required and evenly uses the ones that are. The isometric strength and eccentric stretching used in yoga combined with the deep controlled breathing, is unsurpassed for building muscles that are resilient. This leads to more expedient healing from injury. Plus alignment practice improves response times and awareness of center of gravity, therefore improving balance.

Any prolonged or repetitive activities relating to work or sport can create muscle imbalances. Depending on the activity certain muscles are shorted, while others are lengthened and weakened. These imbalances can cause strain on joints and result in injury. Many athletes suffer from flexibility deficits. Since most sports involve the same repetitive motions, an athlete’s body becomes biased to those directional movements and positions. As a result, they become at risk of injury if they are challenged out of their available range of motion.

Hatha yoga starts with the body, and what holds the body together is the skeleton. Central to this frame work of 206 bones is the spine or backbone. It consists of 33 small bones called vertebrae, which are separated from each other by a disk of cartilage. The tissue is firm but flexible, just like that in your outer ear. These are the disks that “slip” when you lift things wrongly. The spine is not straight; it should have three natural curves, but poor posture can put the spine out of alignment resulting in backache and many other discomforts.

The pelvis, and hip bones are a basin shaped group of bones, pivotal to moving the body and also containing abdominal organs, such as the digestive system. It transfers the weight of the upper body to the legs and feet. Tilting the pelvis too far forward or backward results in poor posture and puts the spine out of alignment. It can also put unnecessary stress on muscles and internal organs.

Bones meet at joints, which are held in place by ligaments. The ends of the bones are protected by cartilage, and the joints are lubricated to make movement easier. The powerhouse of movements is the skeletal muscle, which is attached directly or indirectly to the skeleton. These muscles always work in pairs one contracts while the other relaxes. Both muscles and joints are easily damaged by the abuse we inflict on our own bodies.

All organs of the body, of course have a function, with the possible exception of the appendix. From the point of view of practicing yoga, the two most important internal organs are the lungs and the heart, which are part of the circulatory system. The lungs are responsible for taking in oxygen and getting rid of carbon dioxide. Their proper function, especially with modern levels of air pollution, is crucial to well being. Breathing exercises, pranayama, are important aspects of yoga. The heart pumps blood around the body, carrying nutrients and oxygen. Heart disease is one of the biggest killers in the western hemisphere, so a healthy heart and maintaining the correct blood pressure is literally vital. Learning to visualize the inner body, and send the energy of the breath to areas of need can increase the body’s healing power.

Of course, to benefit fully from yoga requires regular practice. It is not necessary to devote hours of every day to it, unless, of course, you want to. It is worth starting each morning with the Sun Salutations, even if your regular practice is only once or twice a week. Not only will this stretch the spine, limbs, and stimulate the circulation, it will invigorate and energize you for the day ahead and create a positive frame of mind. Think of it as a concentrated yoga program. Once you start it will be difficult to stop. The programs become successively more challenging, but there is no need to feel that all poses need to have perfect form, it is important to work at your own pace, it is not just about the poses, but about the breath and frame of mind while in these poses.

Methods of Hatha yoga abound and are varied, every teacher will have their own technique. However, it is important to be guided by a yoga instructor to help students quickly and efficiently reap the rewards. Traditional training programs sometimes overlook these areas.

When athletes go from one sport to the next, they may be “ in shape” but they may not have been using the same muscles from one season’s activities to the next. Each sport has it’s own unique movements and muscles used, demanding a holistic workout approach.

For example, golfers need to make sure their hips, thoracic spine (mid and upper back) and scapula (shoulder blade) open up in the rotational plane in order to prevent swing injuries to muscles and joints in other parts of the kinetic chain. Basketball players need to have excellent dynamic balance while in baseball , pitchers need a strong core, flexible back and hamstrings to maximally accelerate a pitch. A steady routine of stretching and therapeutic alignment, combined with controlled breathing, can keep athletes in shape all year and increase their enjoyment of each sport.

Since yoga is a gentle and non-competitive, an asset in a fiercely combative society. It encourages a healthy and preventive lifestyle, and aids recovery without recourse to drugs. Injuries obviously happen in sports where you are most challenged to be quick and strong, recovery from these injuries means continuing to explore your range of motion, promoting circulation, and bringing your mind to the area through the body scanning and general mental focus.

Practicing yoga while injured forces you to be more mindful and more careful. If you can take the element of fear out experimentation with your injuries and replace it with curiosity, keen observation, and a free breath, then you will not only help promote healing but also develop a more detached, less fearful approach. Complete avoidance of the injured area is sometimes the right course of action, but you should continue to work with different parts of your body as well as working with visualization and mediation.

No matter what the athlete is currently using for exercise and or training, yoga is extremely beneficial. Developing a regular practice of poses allows the athlete to be at his or her optimum performance. By gaining flexibility both mentally and physically, as well as growing stronger with balance and focus.

Aside from the physical and mental aspects of yoga, there is also a spiritual element. Basically, yoga teaches you about the connection with all living things and yourself. Through the discovery and realization of the connection that all living things have to each other, and element of camaraderie, non-violence and peace begins to shine through. So, no matter if you win or lose, you can be injury free, agile, and live with a sense of appreciation for your competitors and a feeling of peace.

While I consider anyone who practices yoga to be an athlete it is possible to injure yourself while in poses, it is important to know your limits. It is as if our body, and mind are puzzle pieces and when practicing yoga all the pieces fit perfectly creating a beautiful piece of art. There have been countless studies and trials done on the effects of Yoga and mental health, yoga and mental illnesses, yoga and physical ailments and disease for its growing respect in its preventive and healing qualities. With nothing to lose with everything to gain, try yoga today.

Jessica Zarcone, is a certified Yoga teacher, who teaches classes in the Denton Texas area.

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