Yoga is an ancient art that has been refined and modified by many great
teachers across the ages. It now comes
in so many different styles and techniques and different people may find
different versions of Yoga more suitable for them. This is because Yoga is a very personal
exercise routine with strong emphasis on looking within oneself in order to
achieve personal balance and wellbeing.
Regardless of which individual version of Yoga you practice there are a
number of things that apply to Yoga universally rather than to individual
branches of the discipline. If you want
to get the most from your Yoga session you will learn to understand these
things and develop them into your Yoga routine.
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You
will find that much of your time performing Yoga is spent in a sitting or lying
position, however the beginning of a Yoga session is usually a standard
standing pose. The standing pose is the
most natural position for a human to find themselves in, yet we spend
remarkably little time practising standing correctly. If you begin your Yoga session with a
standing pose you are free from the stress of having to take on an unaccustomed
position and this allows you to focus on other fundamentals of the Yoga
Discipline. For instance you can
concentrate on regulating your breathing and feeling the full healing benefits
of each breath.
The standing pose is
so natural to us that we don't need to pay it any conscious thought and can
focus on our breath entering the body and flowing through us. The standing pose is also beneficial to
bringing the body into alignment and centring ourselves both physically and
spiritually. Leonardo Da Vinci produced
a famous diagram showing the perfect symmetry of the human body when it is in
it's natural standing pose and this position has always been the most natural
for us to find our centre and balance.
The
bulk of a Yoga session is spent in placing our body in positions or poses that
stretch and activate the body. These
poses are entered into gently and gradually so there is no risk of injury. Many poses have a number of different levels
so we can get more and more benefits from them as our body becomes more used to
them. This is perhaps best demonstrated
by a simple forward stretch. When a gym teacher
tells a pupil to touch their toes the pupil is performing the same exercise
whether they can reach forward and touch the floor or whether the stretch only
goes as far as their knees. The only
difference is the level of incline.
The
forward stretch is also a perfect example of how the natural movements of Yoga
are used outside of a Yoga class or session - in this case in stretching and
warming up before sports or other physical activities. Most children who's coaches take them through
a stretching routine before a game of football have no idea that many of the
poses are borrowed directly from a Yoga session.
The
key to enjoying and benefiting from this main phase of the Yoga session is to
pace it to your level. As with the child
who can only forward stretch to knee level you do not need to perform the
exercise at the highest level from the first time you experience it. Find your comfort zone and then move a
fraction beyond it. Then each new
session try and maintain that level and push a little further if possible.
The
end of a Yoga session is also an important stage. This stage usually consists of a group of
restoration and restorative poses and positions that are designed to allow the energy
to flow back through your body. A good
Yoga session releases pent up energy in your body and allowing this energy to
flow freely to all parts of the body is a critical part of gaining the maximum
benefits from Yoga.
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