Posts Tagged ‘yoga teaches’

Yoga Has a Strong Relationship with the Health Field

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

By Alexis Neal

Studies have shown that it has helped in numerous illnesses and stepped in when regular medical science could not complete the healing task itself. It has worked with the elderly, children and mental issues like depression and anxiety just to name a few. I personally have had years of struggling with severe anxiety and the inability to cope with stressful situations. I do not support the use of medications the majority of the time but was pushed by the medical field and after two and a half years on numerous medications that seemed to only make me worse, I reached out for spiritual help. After one meditation session, which lasted two hours, I felt a tremendous difference. I was able to do things that I could not do before like enter a crowded store. Though the healing is taking its time to get me back to 100% it is a much smoother healthier ride than the medications. Medications seemed to lower my concentration level and cloud my thoughts making daily tasks difficult. With daily Yoga and meditation I have not only felt clarity but have been able to take a stressfull situation and analize it rather than react to it. This is something that I have never been able to do in my life.

I have decided that I need to share this amazing power with every individual that I meet and that is why I enrolled in this school. To give a timeline, it was the end of April when I made this change and went from no energy and sleeping through most days to surfing and bicycling daily. I sleep a normal schedule and because of the intense improvement my doctors have agreed to remove me from all medications. Unfortunately, this is not an instant process and the lower my doses become-the more my body aches and the less I feel I can endure. This just assures me even more that they were not good for my body and probably did more harm than good. I can feel Yoga healing me daily.

In this economy, there is a tremendous amount of stress and you can feel it with each person you pass….and I live on an island so if you can’t relax here…there needs to be changes made. I am very glad to hear that with all the studies performed, health insurance companies are finally seeing the benefits of this exercise and adding it to their coverage for card holders. I have also heard that massages were added as well. I hope people take advantage of this great opportunity while they can. Unfortunately, most people don’t realize the signs of stress until their body starts ailing to get their attention. If a person is practicing Yoga and/or meditation regulary then when a stressful event comes along they will not only be able to recognize it but will be able to deal with it with deep breathing exercises and calming the mind. It is very difficult to wait until you are in a stressful position to then start Yoga because your mind is racing a hundred miles an hour and meditation would be almost impossible. I think Yoga needs to be practiced and learned to the best a person’s body will allow first before it is needed in such ways.

Yoga helps in other ways besides stress and anxiety issues, it helps with the lubrication of joints. My Nana used to get eight cortizone shots in each knuckle every day just so she can move her fingers because of severe arthritis and was still in tremendous pain. I worked with her for a month doing Tai Chi at a local senior center and she no longer needed the shots. I feel that Yoga will help the elderly with that as well as with the daily stiffness they wake up to or end up at the end of the day with. This would give them the ability to become more active in life…allowing more exercise rather it be soly Yoga or more and I believe would prolong their life by lifting their emotional mood. The saying “you are only as old as you feel” is true. If Yoga can take them back ten years where they can enjoy things they thought they could never do again then that would have to be a tremendous lift in emotions and spirit. To be able to give that gift to someone would be so rewarding there are no words to describe it.

Yoga is being taught in nursing homes and rehabilitation centers now and psychiatrists are even recommending it now as alternatives to medications. Of course, there are still doctors out there that just write prescriptions like its a race and truly don’t understand what they are doing nor do they believe in anything spiritual like Yoga. I hope one day everyone will see the benefits.

Yoga has been brought into the lives of children as well. I have watched it taught in preschools. It helps with the new child obesity problem in the United States right now for one. Overweight children usually just sit down during play time but this is not treated like free time, they make it mandatory to participate. Also, children that have been diagnosed with ADD or ADHD have been tested with Yoga and relaxation techniques and it had helped a significant percent, though not all. I believe with patience, these children could get off the horrible medications for those disorders if they were persistant with the Yoga techniques. It also teaches straight posture before slouching becomes a habit. Studies are now being done on mental patients with schitsophrenia, OCD and bi polar disease. The testing results are still inconclusive last I checked but they did see signs of calming with the movements and the combination of relaxing OM music.

Health and Balance says “Among yoga’s anti-stress benefits are a host of biochemical responses. For example, there is a decrease in catecholamines, the hormones produced by the adrenal glands in response to stress. Lowering levels of hormone neurotransmitters — dopamine, norepinephrine, and epinephrine — creates a feeling of calm. Some research points to a boost in the hormone oxytocin. This is the so-called “trust” and “bonding” hormone that’s associated with feeling relaxed and connected to others. That may be why so many romances start in the yoga studio. “

Yoga has been proven to aid in the healing of asthma, back pain, arthritis, lower blood pressure, slow heart rates, depression, multiple sclerosis, insomnia, memory, self esteem, self acceptance, body strength, flexibility, delaying ageing, harmonizing the mind and body, emotional balance, self enlightenment, balancing metabolism, highering pain tolerance, balance, body awareness, help with sexual impairments, moods like stress, anxiety and depression, self control, positive outlooks on life in general, improvements on social skills, lower cholesterol, increasing red blood cells, there is a lower risk of injury as compared to other exercises, eye hand coordination, more oxygen intake, increased range of motion, increased reaction time, depth perception, osteoporosis, alzheimers, type II diabetes, carpel tunnel syndrome, muscular dystrophy, migraines, less nausea during chemotherapy, arthritis, asthma, epilepsy, constipation, allergies, improve alignment and menopause just to name a few. Studies are being done every day to see what else this exercise can aid in.

Yoga makes you aware of your body so that you can sense an issue before it becomes a serious health issue….basically learning how to listen to your body and know what it is telling you rather than waiting until you are ill. Yoga can be practiced anywhere and that is something that most people do not know. They believe that they need the cute little mat in its case like Madonna is so often seen with but in actuality it can be done anywhere. If a person gets anxiety in the dentist office, heavy traffic, etc. then deep breathing exercises can help. I personally hate the laundromat so I sit on the washing machine and meditate with my headphones on to pass the time and ease my anxiety of knowing that I am stuck there for two hours with screaming children and machines that take your money. Oddly enough, on a few occasions women have jumped up on washers next to me and joined in…saying that I just glowed positive energy and that they just wanted some of it. That is when I decided to teach Yoga.

Yoga also teaches the right way of living. Practicing a lifestyle of calmness, a person is less likely to get into a verbal argument or altercation because they will think twice about it. A Yogi will feel the stress coming and stop it or control it before it rises keeping anything from happening and hopefully calming the other person(s) through their positivity. Also, if you just left a Yoga class and you feel rejuvenated and reborn so to speak…you will be less likely to stop for fast food on the way home of smoke that cigarette after class because it almost causes a feeling of guilt not to mention you feel like you wasted time in Yoga if you are going to continue harming your body. Yoga will promote healthier eating habits as most exercising does. According to Swami Sivananda: “About the last thing one should expect from yoga is wealth. Yet, when certain facts are pointed out, it becomes obvious that here is a value not to be overlooked.

First of all, as Swami Sivananda argues, “Health is wealth…. If you do not possess good health you cannot prosper in any walk of life” (Yogic Home Exercises). As we can see from the factors listed under Physical Health and Mental Health, yoga does affect our ability to deal with the problems in our businesses and professions. Many factors affecting our day-to-day and long-range; capacities for achieving business and professional goals may be influenced by yogic endeavors. One can hardly calculate results, but still can easily sense the significance of improved health for business success.Not only may one acquire more financially from good health, but he need spend less upon measures to alleviate illness. By reducing anxiety and desirousness, yoga tends to diminish our desires and the expenditures we make trying to satisfy those desires. A person who achieves peace with himself, even if only part of the time, has less motive for spending money to win the battle for satisfaction of his cravings. Yoga is less expensive than most other methods of attaining and maintaining health and relaxation.”

Yoga is both a physical and spiritual discipline and not an easy thing to jump into. It should be taken slowly like any exercise. I would want my students to come to me after class and tell me if they do not feel relaxed and calm after a class and then work with them on a one on one basis to see what is happening with them or running through their minds during the exercises when there should be nothing on their minds. They might require noisy headphones on like I do in order to drown out how easily I am distracted.

Today Yoga classes are offered almost everywhere, from small studios in shopping centers to hospitals and clinics. The more opportunities that become available I believe the more people will attend and see the benefits for themselves. At that point we can only hope that they pass that experience along because odds are most people have a child who could benefit, a sressed out spouse or an ailing relative, all of which could benefit greatly. This could also be a great bonding experience for either family members, friends, or co-workers. Yoga cannot be discussed in aspect to one benefit because there are just so many and the list gets bigger each day. I believe that it could benefit every situation. I am living proof that it heals and I hope to spend my life helping others heal themselves.

I have expressed and stressed the health benefits of Yoga but it also is very beneficial spiritually. I believe that is why women are more prone to take Yoga because we are more spiritual or rather require it in our lives. When a group of women are in close proximities there is an overwhelming energy and to be able to use that energy together in harmony will be extreme. I believe that my classes will be even more beneficial and spiritual because I will be doing them directly on the beach rather than inside a studio or airtight building with an ocean wave sound cd playing in the background. The sand is so much easier to ground yourself upon than a mat and women have this special connection with the ocean from birth so I think the benefits of having the classes there will be higher. I also think that just being at the beach…the smell…the sound…the peace…is almost meditation without even trying and will help those uncomfortable with trying something new or those who cannot clear their head long enough to benefit from meditation or breathing techniques. I look forward to the many health benefits Yoga will instill upon me and helping others achieve their goals.

Alexis Neal teaches Yoga classes on South Padre Island, Texas.

Three Methods for Teaching Yoga Students How to Cultivate Positive Energy

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

By Dr. Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

Students often attend Yoga sessions for relief from a constant barrage of negative messages during the day. If you listen to the news for ten minutes, you are likely to feel puzzled as to why so much social injustice still exists. Anyone can change the world for the best, by cultivating positive energy, and teaching others how to do the same thing.

Just like anything else, cultivation of positive energy requires a plan of action; otherwise, we will spend the vast majority of the day reacting to bad news. One method is to visualize and plan the day ahead. Some people feel they have no control over their lives. In fact, they do not have control over their lives because they have envisioned it.

Visualize Tomorrow

This requires a little time on the night before, but it is much similar to packing your lunch for the next day. Another way to make visualization more real is to write down your tasks and objective, while allowing some time for the unexpected surprises that life gives us.

Avoid Energy Drains

Unfortunately, there are people who sap energy from everyone else. One person I know refers to them as “time bandits.” They manage to fill the day with self-created obstacles, engage in lengthy pessimistic conversations, or talk about the flaws everyone else has.

You could compare them to human land mines. You can be hurt, the longer you spend time with them. You feel the energy being sapped away from you as their list of grievances grows. You may have tried to help before, but their goal is to complain about everything.

In reality, you choose who you associate with. If you associate with someone who drains your energy, you have to make some decisions to improve your life, or stay in a life boat with an energy drainer, drifting aimlessly through oceans of pessimism.

It is not easy to turn your back on anyone. However, if you show someone there is light at the end of the tunnel, and they refuse to see it, you have to move forward or allow someone else to hold you back.

Define Your True Self

In Yoga, we learn to identify one’s true self. Some call the cosmic self: “atma.” We also learn to avoid judging ourselves and others harshly. It is true that we are not our thoughts, but our thoughts have a way of defining us – in the form of self-criticism, regret, and negative thoughts.

Yoga teaches us to honestly look inside, to see the good and the bad. We can change today for a better tomorrow, but we cannot change anything until we stop engaging in self-criticism.

© Copyright 2010 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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Yoga and the Path to Holistic Health

Monday, December 28th, 2009

By Elaine Stillwell

Yoga is now universally practiced. Its comprehensive and versatile practice is open to all people; whether religious or atheist, young or old, male or female, physically capable or physically impaired. There are many popular styles of yoga to suit each individual, for example, yoga for pregnancy, yoga for children, and yoga for seniors. The popularity of yoga can be attributed to its therapeutic effects on both the mind and the body, enabling practitioners to enjoy a profound sense of well-being. These therapeutic benefits are particularly relevant today with the ever-increasing pace of modern life. In today’s hectic world with many and varied demands, yoga acts as a relaxing balm, counterbalancing frantic lifestyles by quieting the mind and allowing individuals to slow down and to savor living in the present moment. With regular practice, yoga teaches us how to develop a greater awareness of both our physical and psychological states, which in turn increases our ability to cope with everyday stress and situations, enabling us to step back and assess our reactions and coping mechanisms.

Yoga is essentially a complete science of human behavior, dealing with all aspects of man from physical to the psychological, emotional and intellectual. Yoga has the ability to draw out our positive qualities and to lessen our weaknesses. With its knowledge of anatomy, physiology, consciousness, and conscience, yoga is a science that is able to integrate our body, mind, breath, and awareness, understanding the genuine needs of each individual and dealing with each aspect of health and well being from the periphery to the core.

Words are inadequate to convey the total value of yoga; it has to be experienced to taste its awesome power.

Yoga bestows benefits on many levels. The practice of asanas and pranayama rejuvenates the body. Practicing asanas cleanses the body by purging toxins from the body. Yoga postures increase the circulation of fresh blood to every cell in the body. Muscles get oxygenated. Regular practice of stretches, twists, bends, and inversions — the basic movements of asanas – restores strength and stamina to the body. Asanas, together with pranayama or the control of the breath, rectify physical, physiological, and psychological disorders. They have a positive impact on the effects of stress and disease. Among the many ailments that benefit from the practice of asanas are migraines, high or low blood pressure, osteoarthritis, diabetes, and asthma. Asanas cater to the needs of each individual according to his or her specific constitution and physical condition. Health is not just an absence of disease. Good health means that the joints, tissues, muscles, cells, nerves, glands and each system of the body must be in a state of perfect balance and harmony. Asanas balance the respiratory, circulatory, nervous, hormonal, digestive, excretory, and reproductive systems perfectly. Yoga asanas also help to ensure an even distribution of bio-energy or life force, which brings the mind to a state of calm.

The body and mind are in a state of constant interaction. Yoga treats the mind-body as an integrated entity. The mind and body work interdependently. The proof of this is in pranayama. When we breathe slowly, deeply and rhythmically, our mind steadies and calms as a result. The turmoil of daily life brings stress to the body and the mind. This creates anxiety, depression, restlessness, and sometimes, rage. Yoga asanas while appearing to deal with the physical body alone, actually influences the chemical balance of the brain, which in turn improves one’s mental state of being. The primary aim of yoga is to restore the mind to simplicity, peace, and poise, and to free it from confusion and distress. This simplicity, this sense of calm and order, comes from the practice of asanas and pranayama.

Asanas, if correctly practiced, bridge the divide between the physical and the mental spheres. Yoga stems the feelings of pain, fatigue, doubt, confusion, indifference, laziness, self-delusion and despair that assail us from time to time. The yogic mind refuses to accept such negative emotions and seeks to overcome these turbulent currents on the voyage to the total liberation of the self. Once we become sincere practitioners of yoga, we cease to be tormented by these unhappy and discouraging states of mind. Yoga illuminates our life. If we practice with sincerity, seriousness, and honesty, its light will spread to all aspects of our life. Regular practice will bring us to look at our goals and ourselves in a new light. It will help remove obstacles to good health and stable emotions.

How does yoga minimize the impact of stress on the individual? Yogic science believes that the regular practice of asanas and pranayama strengthens the nervous system and helps people face stressful situations positively. Financial tensions, emotional upheavals, environmental pollution, and above all, a sense of being overtaken by the speed of events, have all increased the stress of daily life. All these factors strain the body, causing nervous tension, and adversely affect the mind. While yoga is not a miracle cure to free a person from all stress, it does help to minimize it. The worries of modern life deplete our reserves of bio-energy, our prana, because we draw on our storehouse of vital energy in the nerve cells. This can ultimately exhaust our energy reserves and lead to the collapse of mental and physical equilibrium. Asanas improve blood flow to all the cells of the body, revitalizing the nerve cells. This flow strengthens the nervous system and its capacity to endure stress.

The diaphragm, according to yogic science, is the seat of intelligence of the heart and the window to the soul. During stressful situations, when we inhale and exhale, the diaphragm becomes too taut to alter its shape. Yogic exercises develop elasticity of the diaphragm so that when stretched, it can handle stress, be it intellectual, emotional, or physical. In times of stress, regular yoga practice kicks in to integrate the body, breath, mind, and intellect. Slow effortless exhalation brings serenity to the body cells, relaxes the facial muscles, and releases tension from the organs of perception: the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, and skin. What follows is that, the brain, which is in constant communication with the organs, becomes void, and all thoughts stilled. Then, invading fears and anxieties cannot penetrate the brain. When we develop this ability, we perform our daily activities with efficiency and economy. We do not dissipate our valuable bio-energy, our precious prana. Our mind is free of stress and is filled with calm and tranquility.

The supreme goal of yoga is the union, (yoga means ‘union’ or ‘yoking’) of the individual spirit with the universal spirit, the finding of one’s essential nature (Self) beyond our ego, which has to be dissolved. This union with the Supreme, God, Brahman, Absolute, Ultimate Reality, Cosmic Consciousness, Universal Spirit, Soul, Void, Buddha Nature, It, represents a goal. Working towards this goal, the body, breath, mind, and spirit are disciplined, refined and perfected by yoga’s psycho-physiological techniques. Progress towards this goal provides great benefits to the body and mind, in improved health, relaxation, tranquility and self-mastery in life.

Yoga teaches and leads us to take this inner journey to the Soul. Yoga offers both the goal and the means to reach it. Yoga asanas integrate the body, the mind, the intelligence, and finally the Self in 4 stages. The first stage is one in which we practice at the level of the physical body. The second stage is when the mind moves in unison with the body. The third stage is when the intelligence and the body become one. The final stage is the state of perfection, of samahdi, nirvana, or satori. Intuitive Enlightenment occurs in a realized Yogin at this stage of Bliss and Joy.

Yoga meditation is one way that facilitates evolving the function of the mind from the subconscious to simple consciousness, gradually evolving to self-consciousness until it reaches universal consciousness. Outwardly, meditation is an awareness of posture, breath, and mental control. Inwardly, meditation is a spiritual search.

Meditation is a practical way to be more in touch with the fullness of our being through a systematic process of self-observation, self-inquiry, and mindful action.

Meditation is not a panacea for all of mankind’s internal conflict but it sure does help. Many Western doctors recommend meditation as an adjunct therapy. Many counselors, psychologists, and psychiatrists recommend meditation to stabilize the mind. Hospital physicians use meditation to control pain. Meditation is extremely cost effective. Patients in hospitals can be taught meditation in a matter of 8 weeks. Neuroscientists study brain waves of meditators and conclude that the brain can learn and rewire itself back to good health.

Yoga students meditate so they can relax the mind when needed. To relieve the mind of negative mental energy is the result of the practice of meditation. Meditation is one of the most natural methods to bring the mind under control. It has no negative side effects compared to drugs or alcohol. The benefits are a more relaxed and focused mind, ready for daily tasks. Improved concentration, health, and right attitude are keys to a better quality of life, which fosters happiness. Inner peace results, which brings about better relationships with others. With further practice, meditation brings together our physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual self, into balance. We live in harmony with ourselves, with others and the world around us.

In periods of personal or health crisis, we have the capacity to train our mind so we heal better and faster. Meditation is truly an ally of our mind.

Yoga is a holistic experience that benefits the body, mind and spirit.

Bibliography:

Hewitt, James The complete yoga book, Schocken Books New York 1977

Iyengar, B.K.S. Yoga The Path to Holistic Health, Dorling Kindersley 2008

Jerard, Paul M, Jr., website: http://www.yoga-teacher-training.org

Swami Vishnu-devananda, The Complete Illustrated Book of Yoga, Three Rivers Press, New York 1988

Courtesy: Dr Rita Khanna’s Yogashaastra Studio

Elaine Stillwell is a certified Yoga Teacher. She teaches Yoga classes in South Melbourne, Australia and San Francisco, California.

Practicing Yoga Will Shape the Course of Your Life in Three Steps

Friday, December 25th, 2009

By Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

How can Yoga help anyone change the course of life? How many people say they would like to make a lifestyle change? How often do you hear someone say he or she would like to make a difference? Let’s look at each issue, and discover a formula for positive change, which will help you, and everyone you know.

How can Yoga help anyone change the course of life? Making a positive change in your life requires you to make a commitment. The root of our commitment is our decision making process and how serious we are about focusing on it. Any form of Yoga, teaches us how to focus our mind, and make positive changes around us.

Whether you practice alone, or under the guidance of a competent Yoga teacher, you begin to realize the unlimited potential that is within each of us. The biggest difference between people is that many have no direction. This lack of direction is a result of great social changes around us or the inability to focus in a particular direction.

However, great social changes have never stopped humanity from moving forward. There is always someone who is focused enough to lead a cause or a nation. A person who has chosen to lead has made a decision, reinforced it with commitment, and focuses on progress every day of his or her life.

How many people say they would like to make a lifestyle change? Most people would like to make a change, but they have not seen the three-step formula of: decision, commitment, and focus. It is not complicated, but each of us has to make an initial decision in order to shape our destiny.

How does Yoga help one learn to make a difference? At the heart of every cause is someone who has learned how to completely focus his or her mind. Consider M.K. Gandhi: He was a humble man. He could have sat back refused to act, and blamed the world for everything. Instead, he created a global philosophy of nonviolent resistance to social injustice and colonialism.

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi’s decision to take part in India’s independence movement became a role model for other independence and social change movements around the world. We can learn from his example to this day. He may not have desired to change the world, but his example created awareness and changed the world view of social injustice.

From the outside, looking in, Yoga may seem quite ordinary. The physical Yoga styles move slowly, in comparison to other forms of exercise. The truth is – Yoga cannot be compared to exercises because the Yogic approach to life and health is holistic. To make decision, maintain a commitment, and remain focused, requires mental, spiritual, emotional, and physical fortitude; all of which can be revealed in Yoga practice.

© Copyright 2009 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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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

Yogic Insights – Five Solutions for Progress

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

Half Moon PoseBy Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

No matter who we are – we may feel “stuck” at times. We may see an obstacle and feel like we have hit the end of the road or a ‘road block.” How can Yoga help you when you struggle, at an impasse, which looks like there is only one solution?

We know there may be multiple solutions, but all we see is one, and the one we see may not be appealing. When we gather information to make decisions, we can create a system for progressive thought that gives us multiple solutions.

Sometimes, the best possible solution is a combination of ideas, which take time to link together. If you are the person who makes the final decision, it may require you to compromise your ideas until you find the best possible solution. Below is a system for making progress in the worst of times.

1. Listen to outside opinions completely. Even if you do not agree, the old saying: “two heads are better than one” is worth considering. Make sure you understand the other person’s viewpoint and record the idea before you dismiss it. All, or part of, a foreign idea may be the answer to move forward.

2. Listen to your intuition. If you have poor intuition, it is best to have an advisor who has good “gut instincts.” If you do not like the essence of something, you should proceed with caution. If you have a partner with strong intuitive skills, who warns you about the road ahead, proceed with more caution.

3. Know yourself. If there is one quality you should have from steady Yoga practice, it is to have a realistic perception of yourself. Yoga teaches us about our strengths and our weaknesses. Yoga is a gateway to self-observation, and the ability to transform oneself to become a better person, by training the mind.

4. Learn what you do not know. Yoga is a never-ending path of education, with more information than we can gather in one lifetime. This applies to many other subjects, as well. Libraries are filled with answers, but our time in this life is limited.

Therefore, life is an educational journey. Enjoy it! When you cannot find the solution to your questions, it helps to have intellectual company around you. Yet, some people are good at finding solutions because they are “street wise.” They may not have the formal education, but they are strong in the area of common sense.

5. Develop relationships based on mutual trust. It is good to have a trusted pool of talent with diversified abilities. Some of these groups are referred to as “master mind” groups. Why should any of us struggle alone, when we have trusted friends?

© Copyright 2009 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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Yogic Insights – A Closer Look at Fear

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Warrior 2 Yoga PoseBy Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

The teachings of Yoga show us to look within for answers and solutions to obstacles; but there are matters that people do not want to look at, and there are matters we cannot change. Many people do not want to look directly at the source of their inner fears. A meditation session, devoted to looking at our phobias, might not be fruitful – unless we have professional guidance.

How can we deal with the fear of loss, death, or evil? In Psalms 23:4 of the King James Version of the Holy Bible, it is stated: “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.”

Similar meanings can be found within Holy Books of all religions, but let’s look closely at this particular Psalm. The answer is that we all have fears, and they fill us with dread; but even in the worst of times, our spiritual faith is near. This is a universal theme in all religions.

Yet, many people fear danger and terror inspired by extremists. Some extremists are politically based and others are religious fundamentalists. The problem is how to logically deal with those who seek to divide us. Politics and religion are volatile subjects.

If we learn anything about our humanity’s historical mistakes, it should be how to prevent another Hitler or Stalin. Millions of people can be swept up, into a fury of hate and fear, by world leaders who are mentally unstable. Our solution is to participate in the democratic process. If we leave it to someone else, we have much to fear.

In the case of fearing loss: I’m sorry, but we are all temporary “custodians of wealth.” Even the rich cannot take wealth with them to the after life. We can, and we should, take action to maintain the quality of life for our family; but when fears about the loss of money become an obsession, it is unhealthy.

Fear of losing a loved one is also unhealthy. Fear of loss can create chronic stress, anxiety, panic attacks, and possibly death. Yoga teaches one to balance thoughts, problems, and emotions for better health. Any form of Yoga can help a person in the darkest of times.

Fear of death is a major concern of many people but let’s look at this exact fear closely. Do we have a choice? Can we escape death? Can we become immortal? Once again, I’m sorry, but from the moment we were born, we were destined to pass on into the next life. We do not have a choice.

Yet, we can make the most of the time we are here. We can show appreciation to everyone we meet. Yoga teaches us to live in the present. Enjoy what you have and let those you love know it.

© Copyright 2009 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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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

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.

Yoga for Self-Discovery – Finding Your Inner Child

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

Mother and Child YogaBy Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

In Yoga, self-discovery is the quest for truth, which begins within each of us. If we manage to avoid the pitfalls of self-pity, we often seek solutions outside of our being. A good example of this is when we try to change others, and when others try to change us.

How will Yoga help you find your inner child? The two words “inner” and “child,” when combined, take on an identity of their own. Someone may think of a situation comedy, while another person may think of counseling sessions. In contemporary psychology, the words, “inner child,” usually refer to the childlike components of a person’s psyche.

In Yoga, we may call this the true self or the original self. The inner child is often suppressed and not allowed to do any creative thinking. In some societies, we are taught to suppress the inner child, which hinders the chance of self-realization, enhanced awareness, or a self-awakening. Heaven forbid that we allow our childhood aspirations and creative thoughts to come to the surface of our being.

Why in the world do you want to find your inner child? Adults often spend time creating and thinking, but it is disconnected from the inner child, our true feelings, or our aspirations. Adults often live for duty. How else is the rent or mortgage going to be paid?

Yoga allows us to reach our inner child, who has aspirations, innovation, and takes positive action toward a successful outcome. Most children are inherently happy. Children are not afraid to take action, fail, learn new skills, or adapt to new environments.

The inner child is starting to look like a natural shot of adrenaline. To find the true self can create a state of new found positive energy. Adults have built their lives upon past success and failures, but that does not mean we processed the information correctly.

How many adults do you know who have given up on life because of past failures? Qualities such as: creativity, taking action, and self-confidence can disappear, if we believe that we are our failures. The important part of failure is to learn from it and alter our plans with a new solution.

Yoga teaches us many forms of self-reflection. To see the true self, look into the past without judgment. Do not indulge yourself in self-criticism. Finding the inner child is not dragging up the mistakes of the past. The real purpose of the exercise is to borrow the positive qualities of the child within, and move forward with solutions in mind.

© Copyright 2009 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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Teaching Hatha Yoga – About Students who are Grieving

Saturday, March 7th, 2009

Tree PoseBy Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

How can Yoga help someone cope with loss? Surely, Yoga must have its limits for healing one who has experienced loss or grief. Yoga teaches us to accept what we cannot control. Yet, we are not made of stone. Humans have emotions and we do not want to expose them for public display.

As each of us knows, there are different levels of grief and loss. Yet, that does not explain the level of misery someone may feel. The loss of a friend, spouse, parent, child, and pet are relative to the relationship, situation, or personalities involved.

There are more forms of loss which should be taken seriously. Grieving over the loss of a job, divorce, home, way of life, financial loss, or suddenly becoming handicapped are hardships which test each of us. One person may lose a job and laugh, while another person may consider suicide.

There are many people who are hurt by unemployment and financial hardships. Whole families can become homeless as a result. It is easy to consider the loss of a pet as nothing serious, if the pet is not your own.

It reminds me of something my grandfather would say: “I can’t feel it from here.” He was a general contractor, and builders do receive bumps or bruises during the course of work. If someone complained about their pain, he would gently say, “I can’t feel it from here,” with a smile on his face.

The lesson is we cannot feel anyone’s pain, but we can show compassion; regardless of how large or small we think a problem is. If you teach Yoga classes, you see many people in the course of a week. Sometimes, you may attend a funeral, wake or memorial service, out of respect.

Yet, we can only recommend, if we are asked. Here is a point to mention, if someone is having a very bad time with coping – it is wise to recommend counseling or Hospice. Counseling is extremely valuable and important during bereavement. Additionally, Yoga is practice for the difficult times in life, and for healing after those times have passed.

Recommending specific asanas, meditation, and pranayama, still depends on the student’s general health. However, if someone is on the path of recovery, asanas, which challenge strength, will help drain some of the negative emotional energy.

If a student comes back to your Yoga classes, soon after a major loss, he or she might want to “go easy” during practice, while emotions settle down. Just like physical pain, our students have to respond accordingly to emotional pain.

© Copyright 2009 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”
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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
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Universal Yogic Principles – What is Yoga?

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

Warrior 1 Yoga PoseBy Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

What is Yoga? Many times, Yoga is explained away as a Sanskrit word which means, union. In fact, Yoga means many things to many people. Yoga has been called a Hindu discipline, an exercise, a science of life, a self-improvement system, a gateway to God, and many more explanations.

There are some who will argue that Yoga is all of these things or none of these things. Is Yoga good or evil? If you look at the foundation of Yoga, it is Yama and Niyama. There is no evil in moral codes of conduct or moral observances.

Yet, someone will inevitably claim there is something evil in Yoga. Is training the mind for spiritual insight, growth, and tranquility, evil? Yoga is difficult to define. If Yoga falls into a category, which cannot be defined, then it is suspected by the “narrow minded” as a vehicle to undermine religions.

We know that Yoga will improve mental, physical, emotional, and spiritual health. As a result, Yoga practitioners will enhance their physical and mental wellbeing. Yoga teaches us many things. Within Yama and Niyama, one is taught to love his or her enemies, to find peaceful resolutions, to seek purity, to enjoy solitary moments, and to embrace self-denial.

It is worth noting, that every major religion, also shares these universal beliefs. Humankind suffers from limited thinking. Instead of cherishing cultural diversity, humans are too busy arguing about their differences. Yoga offers everyone, of every religion, a chance to see the good in each other.

© 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 Yoga Training: http://www.aurawellnesscenter.com
——————————————–
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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