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Will teaching Yoga to patients, who are recovering from
Cancer, be of benefit to them?
Please bear in mind
that I have no medical degree and am not a medical
professional. The advice given is that of a Yoga Teacher.
Always consult with your physician for a professional opinion.
Yoga cannot replace the medical treatment that cancer
survivors must experience. However, gentle, restorative yoga
speeds the recovery process and provides therapeutic healing
to a ravaged body.
Cancer does not discriminate, and strikes young and old with
impunity. The good thing about yoga is that it offers an
appropriate therapy, exercise program, and even life path,
for anyone young, old, or in between.
The benefits go far beyond improved flexibility and
relaxation. Yoga sets cancer survivors on the road to healing,
with a life-centered focus and a real way to cope.
Health care facilities, around the world, are now incorporating
yoga therapy into their cancer recovery centers. Medical
professionals are beginning to recognize the extraordinary
benefits yoga provides to patients.
The difficult road of recovery back from cancer is not always
lit well enough within basic clinical care. Yoga focuses on the
union of mind, body, breath, emotion, and spirit, to finally
give cancer survivors a holistic leg to stand on.
People recovering, from most types of cancer, share at least
a few maladies. Fatigue is the most common. Any time the
body is subjected to high stress situations, such as -
surgeries, radiation, chemotherapy and pain, fatigue is an
obvious result.
As part of the recovery process - The body has been fighting
a disease and then fighting to heal. Regular yoga practice will
increase energy levels, and allow those recovering from
cancer, to feel able again. Yoga postures strengthen and tone
core muscles in the body. This low-impact movement also
improves circulation and mobility.
The particular postures and yoga routine, that will help
someone recovering from cancer, will be prescribed on an
individual basis. There are many types of cancers, and what
may benefit one recovery, or individual, may not be as
effective in the case of another. That is why highly trained,
and expert yogis, are so important for therapeutic yoga and
cancer recovery.
Knowledge of particular healing or therapeutic properties, of
each posture, breathing method, and other yogic healing
aspects, is indispensable.
Pranayama, or yoga breathing, focuses on specific breathing
exercises that invoke relaxation and enhance optimum
recovery. Yoga instruction often employs guided relaxation,
meditation, breath awareness, visualization techniques, and
guided breathing exercises.
Students are guided to find a peaceful place, where they
release their anxiety and pain. Pranayama techniques also
have an extremely beneficial impact on the nervous system.
Focused breathing brings calm to the mind and body, allowing
for healing. Stress is the number one enemy to effective
healing.
As with many ailments, yoga students, recovering from
cancer, often suffer from decreased range of movement.
Along with increasing muscle strength, yoga postures improve
range of movement and flexibility.
Posture is also improved, allowing proper body alignment and
balance. With freer movement and mobility, cancer survivors
will begin to grow lighter in spirit and feel more independent.
Yoga for cancer recovery should focus on providing the most
benefit possible. This means patients should not push past the
point of pain. The important thing for anyone to remember,
who has been through a serious medical procedure, is to
begin slowly.
Perform the yoga poses in a way that is comfortably
challenging. There will be some discomfort on the road to
recovery. Steadily press forward, and find the internal limits,
but avoid approaching the pain threshold.
Yoga instructors need to remember that yoga therapy
requires adapting yoga practice to individual needs. Each
student's case will be different. Each class period will be
different. Teachers must also learn to be healers and "go the
extra mile" for any student recovering from cancer.
Those recovering from cancers, who choose yoga practice to
assist their healing, will benefit greatly across the board. In
addition to regular yoga practice, pay close attention to diet
and nutrition.
Yoga nutrition focuses on natural, whole foods that support
the body's functions. Support your body in every possible
way to make a complete recovery when healing from cancer.
More Yoga Health Questions
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