Yoga Types for Beginners: Yoga Routines & Poses You Can Quickly Start Using! by Morris Brown - HTML preview

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CHAPTER II

Why Do Yoga?

Yoga Creates both flexibility and strength along with cardiovascular health. It

creates mental clarity and focus and emotional balance. Yoga is safe for all ages

and body types. It facilitates healing from injuries and is a wonderful way to

create wellness. You weight train to gain strength, jog or do aerobics for a

cardiovascular workout, practice tai-chi to develop a sense of balance and

harmony, stretch to gain flexibility, and meditate to develop peace of mind and

relaxation. Yoga is a form of exercise that gives you everything: strength,

endurance, balance, flexibility, and relaxation. It is the only complete form of

bodywork that does it all. Indeed, yoga is more than stretching and relaxation: it

is the ultimate mind-body challenge.

Yoga increases flexibility as it offers positions that act upon the various joints of

the body including those joints that aren’t always in the forefront of notice

ability. These joints are rarely exercised, however, with yoga, they are! Various

yoga positions exercise the different tendons and ligaments of the body. The

body that may have been quite rigid begins experiencing a remarkable flexibility

in even those parts which have not been consciously worked upon. Seemingly

unrelated non-strenuous yoga positions act upon certain parts of the body in an

interrelated manner. When done together, they work in harmony to create a

situation where flexibility is attained relatively easily.

Yoga is perhaps the only form of activity which massages all the internal glands

and organs of the body in a thorough manner, including those – such as the

prostate - that hardly get externally stimulated during our entire lifetime. Yoga

acts in a wholesome manner on the various body parts. This stimulation and

massage of the organs in turn benefits us by keeping away disease and providing

a forewarning at the first possible instance of a likely onset of disease or

disorder.

By gently stretching muscles and joints as well as massaging the various organs,

yoga ensures the optimum blood supply to various parts of the body. This helps

in the flushing out of toxins from every nook and cranny as well as providing

nourishment up to the last point. This leads to benefits such as delayed aging,

energy and a remarkable zest for life. But these enormous physical benefits are

just a “side effect” of this powerful practice. What yoga does is harmonize the

mind with the body. This results in real quantum benefits. It is now an open

secret that the will of the mind has enabled people to achieve extraordinary

physical feats, which proves beyond doubt the mind and body connection.

Yoga through meditation works remarkably to achieve this harmony and helps

the mind work in sync with the body. How often do we find that we are unable to

perform our activities properly and in a satisfying manner because of the

confusions and conflicts in our mind weigh down heavily upon us? Moreover,

stress which in reality is the #1 killer affecting all parts of our physical,

endocrine and emotional systems can be corrected through the wonderful yoga

practice of meditation.

In fact yoga = meditation, because both work together in achieving the common

goal of unity of mind, body and spirit – a state of eternal bliss. The meditative

practices through yoga help in achieving an emotional balance through

detachment. What it means is that meditation creates conditions, where you are

not affected by the happenings around you. This in turn creates a remarkable

calmness and a positive outlook, which also has tremendous benefits on the

physical health of the body.

There’s no doubt that yoga has tremendous benefits to your health and well-

being. So how do you get started with your own yoga program? Let’s look at the

basic styles of yoga and what they mean.

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