< Back

Meditation Sculpture

What is Yoga:

What is Yoga: Classical yoga, first organized by Patanjali (The Yoga Sutra of Patanjali) many centuries ago, described the eight limbs or stages of yoga. As students advance using varying combinations these eight stages, they reach higher levels of consciousness, peace, light and bliss.

The eight limbs of yoga are:

  • Yama - Universal commandments of right behavior - the "Do's"
  • Niyama - Individual prescriptions for right living - the "Don'ts"
  • Asana - Right posture
  • Pranayama - Life-force control, with attention on the workings of the breath
  • Pratyahara - Withdrawal of the mind from the five senses of the body
  • Dharana - Concentration and control of the mind
  • Dhyana - Meditation
  • Samadhi - Bliss consciousness

  Urdva_Dhanurasana Ado-muka-shvanasanaThe word yoga means to yoke or join, to achieve union with. It also defines the process of achieving union with the Supreme Being, universal intelligence, the ground of being, God. Use the definition of the "higher power" with which you are most comfortable. Allow for the possibility of a transcendent experience.

Yoga is a healing system of theory and practice. It is a combination of breathing exercises, physical postures, and meditation that has been practiced for more than 5,000 years.

Suryathon

While yoga evolved as a spiritual practice, in the Western world, a part of yoga, known as Asana, has grown increasingly popular as a form of purely physical exercise. Some Western forms have little or nothing to do with spirituality, but are simply a way of keeping fit and healthy.

arvangasana Yoga was introduced to American society in the late Paschimottanasana 19th century by Swami Vivekananda, the founder of the Vedanta Society. He believed that India has an abundance of spiritual wealth and that yoga is a method that could help those who were bound by the materialism of capitalist societies to a Students_doing_yoga chieve spiritual well-being. 

A survey released in May 2004 by the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine focused on who used complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), what was used, and why it was used in the United States by adults age 18 years and over during 2002. According to this survey, Yoga was the 5th most commonly used CAM therapy excluding prayer (5.1%) in the United States during 2002. Yoga is considered a mind-body intervention that is used to reduce the health effects of generalized stress.

 

YogaAsMedicineCover

Yoga as alternative medicine:  

Yoga is believed to calm the nervous system and balance the body, mind, and spirit. It is thought by its practitioners to prevent specific diseases and maladies by keeping the energy meridians open and life energy (Prana) flowing. Yoga is usually practiced in classes that range from 60 to 90 minutes in length. Yoga has been used to lower blood pressure, reduce stress, and improve coordination, flexibility, concentration, sleep, and digestion. It has also been used as supplementary therapy for such diverse conditions as cancer, diabetes, asthma, AIDS and Irritable Bowel Syndrome.

Restorative Yoga:

Restorative yoga is often associated with healing from diseases. Restorative yoga is yoga practiced in a very relaxed state by using supports instead of muscular tension to maintain the pose alignments. Restorative posesSupportedBackbend help relieve the effects of chronic stress in several ways. First, the use of props provide a completely supportive environment for total relaxation. Second, each restorative sequence is designed to move the spine in all directions. Third, a well-sequenced restorative practice also includViparitaCaranies an inverted pose, which reverses the effects of gravity. Because we stand or sit most of the day, blood and lymph fluid accumulate in the lower extremities. By changing the relationship of the legs to gravity, fluids are returned to the upper body and heart function is enhanced. Fourth, restorative yoga alternately stimulates and soothes the organs. With this movement of blood comes the enhanced exchange of oxygen and waste products across tsupported_childshe cell membrane. Finally, yoga teaches that the body is permeated with energy. Prana, the masculine energy, resides above the diaphragm, moves upward, and controls respiration and heart rate. Apana, the feminine energy, resides below the diaphragm, moves downward, and controls the function of the abdominal organs. Restorative yoga balances these two aspects of energy so that the practitioner is neither over stimulated nor depleted.

 

Yoga as exercise for treating diseases:

The popularization in the West of the medical aspect of Yoga is largely attributed to Dr.Swami Sivananda Saraswati's Bihar School of Yoga. Most yoga classes consist of a combination of physical exercises, breathing exercises, and meditation. These characteristics make yoga a particularly beneficial kind of exercise for people with certain health conditions, including heart disease/hypertension, asthma, and back problems.

For people with heart problems, studies have shown yoga to help people young and old. Specifically, yoga seems to promote heart health in several ways, including regulating high blood pressure and improving resistance to psychological stress. Yoga also has the potential to buffer against the harmful effects of bodily self-objectification as well as to promote embodiment and well-being.

 

Research on yoga and psychological and emotional health:

A growing number of clinical trials are being published investigating to what extent yoga is of benefit for psychological and emotional health. A PubMed search for "yoga and depression" yields 25 clinical trials published in 2007, 2008 and the first quarter of 2009 relating to yoga and emotional and psychological health. In addition, three review articles and three systematic reviews published during this period investigated the effects of various combinations of yoga, meditation and yogic breathing on mental health.

However, in recent years, there have been increasing reports of yoga-related injuries. These include carotid artery tears, bulging intervertebral discs, rotator cuff injuries, ganglion cysts, compression of the spine (vertebral column) and hyperextension of the neck. According to Gary Kraftsow, author of "Yoga for Transformation", many yoga positions aren't relevant to everybody. Orthopedic surgeon Jeffrey Halbrecht, M.D., medical director for the Institute for Arthroscopy and Sports Medicine in San Francisco, and a specialist in knee and hip problems, warns that both experienced and rookie yoga practitioners are getting hurt. "Yoga is marketed as such an innocuous thing," says Loren Fishman, M.D., assistant clinical professor of rehabilitation medicine at Columbia University in New York City. "But without care, injuries can absolutely happen."

 

Breast cancer studies:

In 2006, scientists at the University Of Texas conducted an experiment on 61 breast cancer patients. Thirty of the patients participated in yoga around the time of their radiation treatments. The yoga was customized for the cancer patients; it focused on breathing and relaxation, and excluded difficult exercises, given possible limitations on range of motion. The study found increased physical function, slightly better levels of social functioning, and lower levels of sleep dysfunction and fatigue. There was no difference in rates of anxiety  or depression.

Hatha yoga:

In The West, hatha yoga has become popular as a purely physical exercise regimen divorced of its original purpose. Currently, it is estimated that about 30 million Americans and about 5 million Europeans practice a form of hatha yoga. However, it is still followed in a manner consistent with tradition throughout the Indian subcontinent. The traditional guru-student relationship that exists without sanction from organized institutions, and which gave rise to all the great yogis who made way into international consciousness in the 20th century, has been maintained in Indian, Nepalese and some Tibetan circles.

______________________________________________________________________________

The Supine Lion, LLC
340 Bacon Road, Red Lion, PA, 17356 * (717) 246-0956 * SupineLion@comcast.net
January 06, 2010
______________________________________________________________________________