A few simple breathing techniques coupled with yoga, can flush out tiredness and infuse new energy into the body, says Saraswati Vasudevan
Wednesday, 10 February 2021
Reboot yourself with yoga
Yoga heals the blues
September 2015By Saraswati Vasudevan
Go to sleep
October 2015
Let prana flow
November 2015
Freedom from stress
December 2015
Awakening the Spine
January 2016
Total workout
February 2016
Calm down
March 2016
Dealing with Stress through Yoga
Stress reduction through yoga is not just about relaxation practices as it is commonly understood. In one of my consultations, I was listening to a student who was suffering from so much stress. The source of her stress was her great aunt who seemed to have such a strong control over this girl.
The making of a Yoga Acharya: process and milestones
There is a myth that a yoga teacher has to be a symbol of perfection, we have to “look” like a yoga teacher, be always happy and smiling, peaceful and grounded and very “wise” (certainly not in the worldly way of course). I had no idea of all this when I got into learning and teaching yoga. It was a sheer accident and still remains an interesting mystery of how it all happened. I was a good student in school and college, and did well with the yoga studies too… the intellectual kind who could effortlessly pick up threads from the sutras and make beautiful yoga stick figures on paper (still far from doing them on the mat). It was not until years later that I actually understood what being a teacher actually means!
Today, when I look back, I wish I had been more serious about my personal practice then. The study of the Yoga Sutra is perhaps the most fascinating part of the study quenching and creating more intellectual curiosity. After dabbling for years in Sanskrit definitions and concepts that made me “appear” very intelligent, I finally got down into the actual essence of the teachings which was and still is mind-boggling. I can’t have enough of it.
Layer after layer opens up deeper meanings and possibilities… so much lies beneath, waiting to be discovered! Learning classical postures and techniques helped to understand meanings from which the function of a posture is derived and how to intelligently adapt or modify a posture or pranayama technique to address a very specific and unique need of the student and achieve a desired function. The skill of a surgeon and creativity of an artist comes into play here.
Meditation as a process of refining and concentrating the mind, methods and techniques and beyond these methods and techniques, touching and experiencing glimpses of insight – from that part of the mind which is beyond thought is exciting!
The training is a life long process though the course comes to an end in 12 months. The desire to learn and grow keeps our practice and teaching alive.
Am I willing to learn from the students, accept and work on my apparent limitations?
Has my threshold for reactivity gone up? Am I now aware of my judgments?
Can I go beyond my self and touch another person’s pain? Can I feel true love and compassion?
The Gift of Yoga Therapy
Working in the amazing field of yoga therapy, we come across not only miraculous recovery stories but also witness profound transformation of the human spirit. A gift and a privilege to stand at the threshold of somebody’s healing experience, to feel their joy and gratitude, once again affirming, “Yes, yoga works!”
- An initial consultation will help the therapist to understand the individual at all levels – physical, physiological, mental, emotional, their personality and life circumstances and also the impact of the illness at all these levels.
- In consultation with the student, set clear goals to be achieved in the process – both short term and long term.
- Select appropriate tools and techniques and suitably adapt them to address the individual’s abilities, requirements and circumstances.
- Design effective practices for the person that can be integrated into their daily routine
- Suggest appropriate lifestyle and dietary changes to support healing
- Check progression, making appropriate changes over time to address higher goals
- Guide the person to a state of better health and well-being
- Empower the individual to take responsibility for their own health
- Instill confidence and strength to deal with road-blocks and obstacles of any nature that might stall or delay the healing process.
- the first goal is to relax the person physically and mentally and reduce pain
- next step will be to improve mobility and flexibility,
- then to strengthen the back and associated structures,
- then maintain that strength and flexibility
- basic training in the fundamentals of yoga philosophy and practice
- study of human anatomy & physiology
- study of principles of Ayurveda, Ayurvedic understanding of the human system, diagnosis and approach for maintenance of good health and therapy
- learn how to observe and understand an individual at physical, physiological, mental, emotional and the deeper spiritual levels,
- study pathology of all common illnesses and how they impact at different levels
- how to modify/adapt the tools and techniques of yoga to address the needs of a specific individual with a particular combination of problems.
- how to design effective practices and teach them
- how to guide the student progressively through the process of recovery.