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Address: Parimukti Yoga Center, Kanira Homes, Girkarwaddo, End of Magic Park Road, Arambol, 403524, Goa,…
Trainings l Retreats
Address: Parimukti Yoga Center, Kanira Homes, Girkarwaddo, End of Magic Park Road, Arambol, 403524, Goa,…
most people have no idea , how good their body is designed to feel. kevin trudeau…
Today in anatomy class everything just clicked together. At the start of the course it was…
Chances are, like me, if you’re a daughter of India then, you’ve let one part of your…
Today I feel more mentally stronger. I thought about how I used to feel a few…
Have you seen the new advert by Nike…the one where a group of women are working…
Yoga Therapy for Anxiety. Modern life, I mean it pretty much gears us up for anxiety doesn’t it? There’s always something going on, some stimulation, some plans needing to be made. Its very difficult to find space, peace or have a chance to fully relax. Anxiety is a state where uneasiness, worry or fear becomes excessive. Some fear in our lives is good to allow us to ready ourselves but in excess it can start to affect our mental thought patterns and behaviour. As yoga practitioners a lot of us are coming to yoga to reduce stress, to relax and to take time for ourselves. I wanted to have a deeper look at what might be best in our practice to deal with anxiety. Using yoga therapy for treating diseases like anxiety. As with depression, yoga asana and meditation in general can help by stimulating the parasympathetic nervous system (our ‘rest and digest’ system) to aid relaxation and stress reduction. In yogic philosophy we think of matter or prakriti being made up of three qualities or gunas: tamas; rajas and sattva. Anxious people generally have an increase in Rajas, the guna associated with restlessness, a stiff body and a racing mind. These people need more tamas (heavy or dense qualities) and sattva (likened to a cool breeze). Like in depression, the adrenal glands may be affected, perhaps overproducing adrenaline our ‘fight or flight’ hormone and the ‘stress’ hormone cortisol. So balancing the Manipura chakra or navel energy centre is important here to give a calming effect to the adrenal glands. People with anxiety may also have difficulty in exhaling fully so any pranayama or breathing practice where the exhale is extended will be beneficial. Ideal pranayama practices include-…
Address: Parimukti Yoga Center, Kanira Homes, Girkarwaddo, End of Magic Park Road, Arambol, 403524, Goa,…
I think these days most of us have had some experience with depression, either personally or through someone we know. For me, depression reared its ugly head in my late teens and initially I didn’t even notice. I just didn’t really like myself, so a combination of low self esteem and depressive thoughts affected who I was. I always felt low, I avoided social situations where I could and where I couldn’t I would drink alcohol to get me through. Not a great idea considering it’s a depressor! Depressed people generally have a lack of interest in things they once found pleasure in with lethargy and introversion being commonplace, so I should have seen the signs but when you’re in that dark place its sometimes difficult to see that there even could be a way out because it becomes who you are. I muddled through various treatments including medication, CBT and therapy. For a while I would feel better but inevitably I would find myself sinking back into the dark hole of depression. I came to yoga while traveling and sought it out as a way to improve my tight hamstrings, but now, four years since my last bout of depression I have yoga and meditation to thank for the change. This has led me to thinking about how yoga helped to heal me and what would the best practices be if one of my students asked me to suggest ways to help. Yoga is thought to modulate the stress response systems, causing decreased physiological arousal, decreased resting heart rate, decreased blood pressure and increased pain tolerance. There is also thought to be an increase in the amino acid GABA which helps to promote a sense of calm. So we can see that generally yoga is well placed to help with the symptoms of depression. In yogic philosophy matter or prakriti is made up of three qualities or gunas: tamas; rajas and sattva. We can imagine Tamas to be a heavy dense feeling, Rajas a feeling of heat, spice and energy and Sattva like a cool wind. Ideally these three qualities should be balanced in an individual but in depressed people we tend to see an increase in tamas the guna associated with inertia. Depressed people are also thought to have a low level of prana or life energy, which through yoga therapy we want to increase. Thinking from the point of view of yogic anatomy, we wish to stimulate the manipura chakra or the navel centre. Stimulating this chakra or energy centre can have an effect on the adrenal glands and adrenal insufficiency can cause depression and lethargy. So it makes sense that stimulating this chakra would have an effect on wellbeing. I’ve found the following asana or postures in the yoga practice help me with low moods- Surya Namaskara (Sun Salutation) due to its dynamic nature and ability to increase prana in the body. Dynamic asanas such as Camatkarasana (Wild Thing) for the same reason. Back bends such as Urdhva Dhanurasana (Upward Facing Bow Pose) or Urdhva Mukha Svanasana (Upward Facing Dog Pose) can be helpful in opening the heart and encouraging self love and self esteem. Plank or Dolphin Plank can be useful to activate the core, increase agni or the internal fire and therefore increase prana. Preparatory poses for Adho Mukha Vrksasana (Handstand) and the pose itself can be very energising and uplifting, increasing prana in the body. The postures that are good for stimulating the manipura chakra are Paschimottanasana (Seated Forward Bend or intense stretch of the west), Trikonsana (Triangle Pose) and Ardha Matsyendrasana (Half Lord of the Fishes).…