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Archive for yoga benefits

Active Petalumans Benefit Greatly From Yoga

In the news in the past few years we’ve heard NFL football players, pro golfers and stars of the NBA speak out about why they have turned to yoga in order to enhance their performance on the field, the golf course and on the court. According to pros, yoga is a great way to cross-train for a variety of sports, including running, surfing, swimming, skiing, cycling, and hiking.

We have some of our own active folks here in Petaluma that agree with the pros. Stephen Mori, in his twenties, thirties and into his forties did many endurance events from running to cycling. He began to feel his knees complain about the wear and tear from the repetitive physics of these activities. He describes a general experience of being out of kilter.  Now in his fifties has returned to yoga to enhance his physical balance, so that he can “continue cycling and running into the decades to come”. He says “I didn’t expect that yoga would become central to how I spend my discretionary recreational time. I find the benefits, not just in the physical sphere, but also for the psychological and emotional components. Yoga has taken on a life of it’s own central to my life affecting and benefiting my approach and outlook to both my personal and work life

Diana Gushulak, a local body worker here in town shared this with me “My family and I are active kayakers.  My years of taking yoga classes, has helped me to be more flexible in my body rotation; and my paddling stroke is more comfortable and more efficient.” And Cathy Fox, you all may know from her years as a head cook here in Petaluma, articulates,” The benefits of yoga have helped me physically in the pursuit of my passion for nature and hiking by keeping my legs strong and flexible and it has also taught me how to breathe when climbing over mountains.  Mentally yoga has changed my approach to hiking from, one of the trail as a treadmill at the gym, to one of being in tune and present with my surroundings and with myself on the path.”

Cathy brings up the breathing component of yoga that can be a huge assistance in the dynamic, athletic related activities. In yoga you develop the ability to use deep, relaxed breathing even when exerting a lot of effort and rigor. When you are able to maintain the even relaxed breathing your nervous system responds in a way that keeps you from triggering the stress response in the body. this allows you to stay out of a state of anxiety and pressure. It enhances your performance, endurance and concentration.

One challenging part of yoga for athletes and active people can be the shift in the mind from competition, pushing limits, to one of just observing, not pushing, and acceptance of things as they are, even your tight hamstrings if that is the case. The yoga practice will ask you to be patient and give time to the process of stretching out the shortened contracted hamstrings that you may have overdeveloped.

My very favorite saying (I wish I remembered where I first heard it) is “Strength without flexibility is rigidity, and flexibility without strength is instability” True fitness is having a balance between both.  The yoga perspective about this would combine the mental/emotional dimensions and notice that statement holds true for those parts of us as well. Stephen Mori points to that in his statement when he shares how his yoga has influenced his personal and work life as well.

Yoga helps keep joints mobile and moving freely, reduces muscle tension, promotes circulation, prevents injuries, prevents compression in bones, and increases mental alertness just to name a few of it’s wonderful benefits. I hope you recognize the advantage of adding yoga into your life’s activities and that we’ll see you in class soon.

Yoga Can Help You Manage Your Stress

We all have many pieces to our lives to keep in balance and manage. We can become overwhelmed with the needs of our children, our work, our partners or spouses and not find the time to take care of our own needs. Agitation and anxiety take over, these wear on our immune system and we begin to feel the effects in our bodies. Our energy may drop; we are more susceptible to illness. Allergies, chronic pain, high blood pressure, poor sleep, headaches are all symptoms that are exacerbated by stress in our lives. If you recognize yourself in this picture you, you might want to get yourself to a yoga class.

The ultimate goal of yoga is to bring you to a place inside, a calm and peaceful center that you learn to dwell in, or draw from like a well.  When you learn to access this center it allows you to rejuvenate and restore your immune system, your energy, your health.  Yoga will help you attune to the behaviors, diet and lifestyle choices that bring positive changes to the way you cope with the stress in your life.

There are physiological aspects that you may or may not understand going on in your body in response to the juggling, multi-tasking, busyness, worry, and struggle we all go through to manage our lives. You know it as ‘the stress response ‘. The body is programmed to send out chemicals to help us keep our energy going, to get us through whatever it is that is threatening us. This is a fantastic mechanism built in to keep us surviving. It turns negative when we don’t take time to do what is necessary for it to shut off. Instead it keeps going and depletes us more.

The deep breathing exercises (pranayama) that are taught in yoga classes send a message to the parasympathetic nervous system that we are safe. Then the sympathetic nervous system switches off the stress response. We feel relief quickly. A state of serenity and peace takes place of the anxiety and angst. What a relief!

The poses (asanas) practiced with the breathing in yoga class help open up the pathways in the neuro-muscular system so that oxygen and blood can flow easily to all the cells. This nice flush of nourishment, in addition, puts the body in a relaxed and satisfied state.

Yoga, overall, is considered very safe. But it is important that you check with your doctor or other health care provider before starting a yoga class. This is especially important if you have any existing health conditions. You may need to avoid certain poses, so it’s important to let the teacher know in advance.

At the end of a yoga class, you can expect to feel invigorated, yet refreshed and relaxed. If this isn’t the case let your teacher know. There may be another class better suited to your needs.

The Practice of Hatha Yoga Has Great Benefits to the Different Systems of our Bodies

Did you know there are 60,000miles of blood vessels in your circulatory system? Also, are you aware that the complete cycle for a blood cell from the heart through the body back to the heart takes less than one minute?  A well-balanced yoga class will provide moderate exercise for the heart muscle during the active part of the class and complete relaxation at the end of class. This balance of moderate work and complete rest is an ideal program for a healthy heart.

Did you know that the endocrine system regulates the secretion of important chemicals into your body’s blood stream? The chemicals have important functions like regulating the fight or flight response. Like all of the systems of the body, the endocrine system is designed to have periods of activity and rest. If this system is operating on red alert status all of the time the glands can be affected. The thyroid can lose its ability to secrete sufficient amounts of thyroxin. The adrenal glands can loose their ability to secrete adequate amounts of adrenaline and the pancreas can loose its ability to secrete adequate amounts of insulin. Yoga balances the endocrine system as a whole by balancing the mind, which then sends a message of balance to the pituitary, the master gland of the endocrine system. The yoga postures have a direct massaging and balancing effect on all the different endocrine glands.

The muscular-skeletal system of the body is designed to provide strong support and free
movement to our frame. Chronic stress, tension and inactivity can limit the body’s natural movement. When the muscles are chronically contracted through physical or emotional trauma, poor posture, and such, the skeleton loses its natural alignment. This may cause wear and tear and conditions such as osteo-arthritis and other chronic pain symptoms. As the muscular system comes back into balance through yoga, healthy alignment of the skeleton occurs, strength and flexibility return and this allows the muscular-skeletal system to be pain free and move with ease through the day.

For a strong immune system the yoga postures, the breathing exercises, the relaxation and meditation practices are fantastic tools. As we know, a strong immune system fights off invaders that can make us sick from invading bacteria or viruses, causing flus, colds etc. Our immune system can also be over working and producing too much mucus, which creates allergy symptoms like, inflamed eyes, headaches, stuffy ears, nose and difficult breathing. Through postures done in a relaxed way, slow, deep breathing and deep relaxation techniques we can calm and settle the nervous system which informs the  immune system to stop attacking foreign bodies and decrease the amount of mucus being produced. Our symptoms may subside.

There are more systems at work in our bodies including our respiratory and digestive systems. It’s important to remember we are taking care of a whole large multifaceted system that is designed to work synergistically, in harmony with all of its parts, in order to experience optimum wellbeing.  The essential teaching of Yoga is Unity Consciousness, bringing things together, joining all of the systems into balance. This integration is key to the positive benefits that we receive from a regular yoga practice. As our awareness in this deep interconnectedness grows, we can experience a reconnection to the sacred in everyday life and we will truly delight in the joy of being alive.