Yoga
is an ancient way, practiced for thousands of years, steeped in tradition and,
to most people, a mysterious enigma. When practitioners would speak of the many
benefits they had experienced in both mental and physical health, yoga would
seem to be both a perfect practice, or one whose claims were impossible to
believe.
Practitioners
of yoga, or yogis/yogins (yogini for the ladies) would speak of the unification
of mind, spirit, and body. The belief was that when these were brought into
balance the persons mental and physical health would improve. The word
"harmony" would be heard a lot, as would be "healing",
again, applied both to the body and the mind.
Until
recently, you could only go by what someone who had personal experience could
tell you. There was a reasonable amount of skepticism that yoga could actually
be as beneficial to your mental and physical health as its proponents claimed.
However,
in the last few years, scientific study, observation, and measurement have
proven that yoga can indeed have specific observable affects on your health. It
has been shown that body, mind, and spirit do work together and when the
effective level of each is raised, the person experiences a much better life in
terms of health, happiness, and harmony within himself or herself and with the
world in general.
An
article published by Johns Hopkins states:
"Over
75 scientific trials have been published on yoga in major medical journals.
These studies have shown that yoga is a safe and effective way to increase
physical activity that also has important psychological benefits due to its
meditative nature."
In
our modern society, we are likely to look at yoga first as an "exercise
program". As with any good exercise program, yoga can increase muscle
strength and repiratory endurance, improve flexibility, and promote balance. It
also tends to lessen pain in those afflicted with arthritis and helps to
increase energy levels in those who practice it.
Yogis
and yoginis also have long reported increases in what might be called positive
mental states, along with decreases in negative mental states. They tend to
report a greater level of optimism, a renewed or improved enthusiam for life,
and a higher sense of alertness and awareness of themselves and the world and
people around them. They have also reported decreased levels of aggressiveness,
anxiety, and excitability, as well as lowered levels of physical complaints and
illnesses.
Scientific
observation and testing is now bearing out what practitioners have been saying
for years. Studies on the biological, psychological, and biochemical aspects of
yoga have shown a wide range of positive results for most who take up the
practice of yoga.
When
practiced over time, yoga tends to level pulse rate, stabilize the nervous
system, normalize stomach and digestive activity, level hormones, and increase
joint range of motion. It increases energy, endurance, immunity, and
cardiovascular effeciency. It improves eye-hand coordination, reaction time,
dexterity, and helps the person to get more restful and restorative sleep.
Yoga
also seems to have psychological benefits as well. Practitioners and those who
study them report that it helps you become more aware of your body, accept
yourself more readily, improve your concentration, memory, learning and mood.
Additional
benefits of yoga as compared to other exercise programs is that it massages
internal organs in a way that other programs do not, and produces a detoxifying
effect. Some speculate that this may lead to delaying aging.
Finally,
yoga can be practiced almost anywhere, anytime, by anyone, and requires no
special equipment. It does not even require special training! While having an
expert teach you personally would be best, a careful reading of books on the
subject and a DVD or two can get you started. However, our modern citizens tend
to throw themselves headfirst into new projects. Not only is this completely
opposite from the philosophy and aims of yoga, but it can invite injury and
strain. The people in the books and DVDs have been doing yoga for years. It is
highly unlikely that you will immediately be able to duplicate their ability to
achieve the positions they demonstrate. Just do the best you can, and then do
it again tomorrow, and the next day, and the next day...
As
always, before beginning any physical fitness program, check with your doctor
first to make sure it is okay for you to start. Once started, however, be aware
that there are people in their 70's, 80's and 90's doing yoga. You will not be
alone.
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