Archive for November, 2008

Nov 21 2008

History of Massage: Modern times

United States: Massage started to become popular in the United States in the middle part of the 1800s and was introduced by two New York physicians based on Per Henrik Ling’s techniques developed in Sweden.
During the 1930s and 1940s massage’s influence decreased as a result of medical advancements of the time, while in the 1970s massage’s influence grew once again with a notable rise among athletes. Massage was used up until the 1960s and 1970s by nurses to help ease patients’ pain and help them sleep.
Because it is illegal to advertise or offer sexual services in most of the United States, such services are sometimes advertised as “massage”.
United Kingdom: Massage is popular in the United Kingdom today and gaining. There are many private practitioners working from their own premises as well as those who operate from commercial venues.
Massage in sports, business and organizations: The 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta was the first time that massage was offered as a core medical service. Massage has been employed by businesses and organizations such as the U.S. Department of Justice, Boeing and Reebok.

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Nov 20 2008

Therapy4u at the APL Poker

Published by admin under Events Massage Therapy, pictures

“Thank you therapy 4 U for all your hard work at our Major event. The team at therapy 4 U was fantastic and kept all guests relaxed and certainly added something extra to our event. Looking forward to working with you again in the future. – Anna Eve (APL Event Coordinator )





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Nov 18 2008

Indian Head Massage

Published by Ross under Massage Therapy

By Kamala Thiagarajan

The head is the crown of the body, the epicenter of all thought, action and life. Despite this, most bodywork therapies overlook the benefits of a soothing head rub.

Head massage, however, has always played a pivotal role in Indian life and was featured in early Ayurvedic texts that date back nearly 4,000 years. A concoction of warm oil and spices massaged in slow strokes over the scalp, accounted for an Indian woman’s long, lustrous hair, a feature that brought her much admiration in social circles. Even today, in many parts of India this ancient massage technique is still an integral part of a woman’s grooming routine - but having progressed beyond the aesthetic and superficial, it is now revered as the therapy of the future, one that can help clients effectively battle the rigors of modern living.

Spas around the world have begun to offer Indian head massage - and therapists in private practice are learning how easy, and rewarding, this technique can be.
Journey to the West
In 1973 Narendra Mehta, an osteopath and massage therapist, traveled to England from India to study physiotherapy. During the intervening years, he was dismayed to learn that most massages, even full-body massages, did not extend farther than one’s neck and shoulders. Having grown to appreciate head massage as a way of life in India, he realized how much he missed the soothing sessions administered by the local barber and relatives back home. Visually impaired since early childhood, Mehta was extraordinarily receptive to touch therapy. In 1978 he decided to return to India to research the physiological benefits of head massage, and spent the next couple of years documenting the skills and traditions of this technique, giving it his own personal flavor and expanding it to suit Western tastes. He developed a technique that combined massage of the face and ears, chakra balancing and scalp massage. He named his technique Indian champissage, derived from champi, an Indian word meaning head massage. Today the technique is known as both champissage and Indian head massage.

In 1995 the London Centre of Indian Champissage International was born, with Narendra Mehta at the helm. Today champissage is one of the United Kingdom’s most widely practiced complementary therapies for stress relief - and it’s a concept that is catching on fast in the United States and Canada.

Deep relaxation
With today’s lightening-paced lifestyles, stress and associated illnesses are our greatest maladies. Muscle pulls, migraines, tension headaches and toxic buildup in the body are all too common. Champissage, incorporating subtle chakra-balancing procedures that anyone can learn, is an effective way to rid our systems of the energetic debris of everyday life.

“The skillful placing of the therapist’s hands on the upper three chakras - vishuddha, governing the throat region and its associated organs; ajna, the third-eye point, located on the forehead; and sahasrara the master chakra associated with the pineal plexus and found at the crown of one’s head, combined with visual and auditory stimuli, allow the client’s innate healing energy to rebalance and harmony to prevail,” explains Mehta. “If a client is feeling a little sluggish mentally, I find that working with the crown chakra and the third-eye chakra simultaneously will enable them to feel more alert and able to release pent-up emotions.”

Mehta’s champissage treatment begins with massage of the upper back, shoulders, upper arms and neck to melt fatigue. This is followed by a scalp massage, which is a series of integrated techniques.

One of these, the windscreen-wiper technique, is designed to stimulate the scalp, improving blood circulation. The therapist places his hand over one ear, with the fingers splayed out over the forehead. Using the ball of the other hand, a light rubbing movement is carried out on that side of the head. It is then repeated on the opposite side.

The next technique is whole-hand friction. When supporting the head with one hand, the therapist applies firm pressure with the fingertips and heel of the other hand, moving the scalp up and down. This nourishes the hair from the roots and drains away tension.

Other techniques, such as ruffling, stroking, plucking and tapping the scalp and hair, prove to be profoundly relaxing. The techniques are performed in sequence, though a therapist may choose to spend more time on certain moves if this is likely to benefit the client. The massage then proceeds to the temples, which are rubbed in a firm, circular motion to relieve eyestrain and tension headaches.

Annet King is the director of training and development at the International Dermal Institute, an educational center generating awareness about skin care worldwide. When she first experienced Indian head massage, she felt that the relaxation effect stayed with her all day.

“It was as though I’d had a full-body massage,” she says. “I had better mobility in my upper body, a clearer head and brighter, less sensitive eyes.”

King then realized that if stress levels were reduced, natural outcomes would be glowing skin and a radiant face.

“There are specific pressure points on the client’s face, which are gently stimulated during the latter stages of the massage. These are good for boosting circulation and lymphatic draining,” she explains.

King introduced champissage into her school’s skin-care and massage training.

“Our students are very happy with the technique. They report that the massage movements are deeply relaxing for their clients and have the added benefit of being very versatile, as they can be done through clothes and with the client seated in a chair,” she says. “I personally feel that if Indian head massage really takes off in the United States, then the traditional chair massage will have some competition.”

Heads-up to therapists
The nature of this therapy makes it especially popular among both spas and private practitioners. There is no expensive equipment required and very little by way of supplies.

“When I decided to open my own bodywork studio, I wanted to offer modalities that have phenomenal health benefits that the local clientele normally wouldn’t find in southern New Jersey,” says Jennifer Jennings Gini, owner of Absolute Haven Massage & Bodywork. “Since I have a background in massage therapy and am a believer in Ayurveda, I felt comfortable offering champissage at Absolute Haven.

“I realized back in anatomy class that the cervical/thoracic area was enormously influenced by the musculature in the subcutaneous scalp,” she continues. “However, until I experienced champissage personally, I didn’t have a modality that would alleviate those physical complaints originating from those areas, yet be such an enjoyable experience as well. Champissage fit the bill perfectly, and we’ve offered it from the first day we opened.”

The biggest challenge private therapists face is getting a client past the foreignness of the modality. For this reason, sessions are often offered at about half the time and price of a traditional champissage, which usually lasts between 45-60 minutes. At Absolute Haven, the treatment costs $25 for 20 minutes and focuses primarily on the head.

“For those clients that are hooked, we just double the treatment time and include the full neck and shoulder/upper-arm areas as well,” says Gini.

Denise Galone is a professional opera singer. She experienced Indian head massage from Mehta in New York City many years ago.

“My career leaves one with great physical tension in the back and neck area from holding the chest up and expanding neck muscles for long periods of time,” she says. “This therapy was the first to give me relief of the muscular tension in those areas.

“During our session, Narendra Mehta asked me whether I would like to have a stimulating or relaxing massage,” Galone continues. “Since it was late in the night I opted for a relaxing massage. When it was over, I could barely make it to a taxi! I slept very deeply that night. The next day I couldn’t wait to have a stimulating [Indian head] massage to see the difference. I discovered an alertness and energy that I had never before experienced. Again, I slept a deep, relaxed sleep.”

This experience compelled Galone to study the techniques of Indian head massage in-depth and embark on her journey of healing. She also found that although she didn’t have the strength required for the massage profession, that hardly mattered when it came to this therapy.

Today, she holds certification in head massage from the London Centre of Indian Champissage International. “I have given relief for simple tensions, major headaches and injuries, and even extreme emotional trauma,” says Galone. “As a result, several of my clients have completely stopped or dramatically reduced their depression medication, with the consult of their doctors. There is compassion in the head work that doesn’t exist in regular body massage, so it releases deep-seated physical and emotional stress more effectively,” she says.

Tom Buteau, director of Massage Dynamics, in Cheyenne, Wyoming, traveled to India to learn the technique from its land of origin. Seated with a local barber in Varanasi, India’s pilgrimage town, Buteau realized how subtle this touch therapy is.

“The difficulty lies in determining the lightness of the touch,” he says. “The therapist must exert caution, because the concentration of sensitive points in the head region of the body can vary dramatically between two people. Too much pressure can make your client flee from the touch completely and too [little] will not open up” the marma points, or energy portals along the body.

Consequently, a slow buildup is recommended for balancing the chakra energy. This can be done by inserting movements that require greater pressure at the end of the session, when the client is better able to take it in stride.

Head massage as a spa therapy
Champissage in the West is a dry treatment, which makes it ideal not only for private sessions, but for airports, spas - virtually anyplace. However, most spas that offer this treatment will give clients the option of using Ayurvedic medicated oil. Warmed coconut, sesame, olive and vegetable oils are used in accordance with client preference.

Elemental Embrace is a spa based in Brighton, Ontario, Canada. Indian head massage is featured as Shirobhyanga therapy and was introduced on the spa’s opening day, in late 2004. The treatment lasts 30 minutes and costs $45 Canadian (about $37 American).

“It is a favorite therapy among our clientele and is often the first experienced by our guests during their stay, especially if they have traveled great distances to reach our spa,” says Jazir Teja, the spa’s director. “Once they arrive, it is common for guests to want to increase the number of therapies they experience here. Indian head massage is relatively shorter than most and we can often fit it in during busier periods.”

Ananda Yoga, Canada’s only solely Ayurvedic destination spa, in Codrington, Ontario, has offered Indian head massage since 1999. It is performed in a very authentic way here, using Ayurvedic medicinal oils like bringaraja, bramhi and amla, which are rubbed onto the scalp. It lasts for a duration of 45 minutes and costs guests $100 Canadian (about $82 American). “I believe it is popular because it is a unique stress reliever, focusing on all the marma points of the head; this with the warm oils puts the client in a state of complete relaxation,” says Jacinda Thomson, the spa’s general manager.

In the United States Indian head massage is becoming more popular at spas. The spa at the Mandarin Hotel in Miami offers this therapy as Oriental scalp massage.

“It was introduced [at] the opening in 2001 and is very popular both as stand-alone treatment and addition to other treatments,” says Pilar Spitale, the spa’s communications coordinator.

Lasting 20 minutes, the treatment costs $65 and is often combined with the application of pink hair-and-scalp mud, which is said to be cooling and soothing. Some guests prefer to combine the head massage with a facial, and end with a neck-and-shoulder rub to enhance relaxation.

More spas are getting into the act. Enhance Face & Body Spa in Hartsdale, New York, introduced a scalp, neck and face body treatment last fall. Their marketing involved mailing brochures to their best clients, incorporating the history and healing effects of Indian head massage. The 30-minute session costs $45.

As awareness grows in leaps and bounds, many more spas and therapists in private practice are sure to realize the restorative potential of Indian head massage.

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Kamala Thiagarajan is a freelance journalist in Madurai, South India. She writes about health and fitness, alternative therapy and esoteric healing, and has been published in six countries.

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Nov 18 2008

Different Types of Yoga

Published by Ross under Uncategorized

Ananda Yoga: Ananda Yoga classes focus on gentle postures designed to move the energy up to the brain and prepare the body for meditation. Classes also focus on proper body alignment and controlled breathing.

Anusara Yoga is a relatively new form of yoga (1997), which pairs strict principles of alignment with a playful spirit. Postures can be challenging, but the real message of Anusara is to open your heart and strive to connect with the divine in yourself and others.

Ashtanga (or Astanga) Yoga is the name given to the system of yoga taught by Sri K. Pattabhi Jois. This style of yoga is physically demanding as it involves synchronizing breathing with progressive and continuous series of postures-a process producing intense internal heat and a profuse, purifying sweat that detoxifies muscles and organs. The result is improved circulation, flexibility, stamina, a light and strong body, and a calm mind. Ashtanga is an athletic yoga practice and is not for beginners.

Bikram Yoga is the method of yoga that is a comprehensive workout that includes all the components of fitness: muscular strength, muscular endurance, cardiovascular flexibility and weight loss. The founder, Bikram Choudhury, was a gold medal Olympic weight lifter in 1963 and is a disciple of Bishnu Ghosh, brother of Paramahansa Yogananda, (Autobiography of a Yogi). One of the unusual but most beneficial aspects of Bikram’s yoga practice is the 95-105 degree temperature which promotes more flexibility, detoxification, and prevention of injuries. This is the only yoga style that specializes in using the heated environment.

Hatha is an easy-to-learn basic form of yoga that has become very popular in the United States. Hatha Yoga is the foundation of all Yoga styles. It incorporates Asanas (postures), Pranayama (regulated breathing), meditation (Dharana & Dhyana) and kundalini (Laya Yoga) into a complete system that can be used to achieve enlightenment or self-realization. It has become very popular in America as source of exercise and stress management. The ideal way to practice the Hatha Yoga poses (asanas) is to approach the practice session in a calm, meditative mood. Sit quietly for a few moments, then begin the series, slowly, with control and grace, being inwardly aware as the body performs the various poses selected for the practice session. Do not overdo the asanas or try to compete with others. Take it easy and enjoy.

Integral Yoga: This traditional type of yoga combines postures, breathing exercises, selfless service, meditation, chanting, prayer, and self-inquiry.

ISHTA: Developed by South African teacher Mani Finger and popularized in the States by his son Alan, ISHTA (Integral Science of Hatha and Tantric Arts) focuses on opening energy channels throughout the body with postures, visualizations, and meditation.

Iyengar Yoga, developed by yoga master B.K.S. Iyengar more than 60 years ago, promotes strength, flexibility, endurance, and balance through coordinated breathing and poses that require precise body alignment. The poses are generally held longer than in other styles of yoga. In Iyengar, you slowly move into a pose, hold it for a minute or so, and then rest for a few breaths before stretching into another. Equipment like cushions, blankets, straps, and blocks to help the less flexible also distinguishes Iyengar from other types of yoga. Although Iyengar incorporates the traditional postures, or asanas, that make up the broader category of hatha yoga, the cushions and other props revolutionized yoga by enabling everyone — even the elderly, sick, and disabled — to practice. Because of its slow pace, attention to detail, and use of props, Iyengar yoga can be especially good if you’re recovering from an injury. Iyengar is still one of the most popular types of yoga taught today.

Jivamukti Yoga: Developed in 1986 by Sharon Gannon and David Life, the Jivamukti Yoga method expresses the spiritual and ethical aspects of the practice of yoga that have been disregarded or devalued in contemporary times. It is a vigorous and challenging asana form with an emphasis on scriptural study, Sanskrit chanting, vegetarianism, non-violence, meditation, devotion to God and the role that music and listening play in the practice of yoga. Life and Gannon currently operate a popular yoga studio in New York City.

Kali Ray TriYoga: A series of flowing, dancelike movements was developed by Kali Ray in 1980. The practice also incorporates pranayama (breathing exercises) and meditation. Kali Ray runs the TriYoga Center in Santa Cruz, California.

Kripalu is called the yoga of consciousness. This gentle, introspective practice urges practitioners to hold poses to explore and release emotional and spiritual blockages. Goal-oriented striving is discouraged and precise alignment is not as important as in some other traditions. There are three stages in Kripalu yoga. Stage One focuses on learning the postures and exploring your bodies abilities. Stage Two involves holding the postures for an extended time, developing concentration and inner awareness. Stage Three is like a meditation in motion in which the movement from one posture to another arises unconsciously and spontaneously.

Kundalini practice concentrates on awakening the energy at the base of the spine and drawing it upward. In addition to postures, a typical class will also include chanting, meditation, and breathing exercises.

Power Yoga is essentially yoga with brawn. It’s the American interpretation of ashtanga yoga, a discipline that combines stretching, strength training, and meditative breathing. But power yoga takes ashtanga one step further. Many of the poses (also called postures or their Sanskrit name, asanas) resemble basic calisthenics — push-ups and handstands, toe touches and side bends — but the key to power yoga’s sweat-producing, muscle-building power is the pace. Instead of pausing between poses as you would in traditional yoga, each move flows into the next, making it an intense aerobic workout.

Restorative Yoga: In a restorative yoga class you’ll spend long periods of time lying on blocks, blankets and bolsters - passively allowing muscles to relax.

Sivananda Yoga: Like Integral Yoga, this traditional type of yoga combines postures, breathing, dietary restrictions, chanting, scriptural study, and meditation. The popular TV yoga teacher Lilias got her start practicing Sivananda Yoga.

Svaroopa Yoga: New students find this a very approachable style, often beginning in chair poses that are comfortable. Promotes healing and transformation.

Viniyoga: This is commonly used as a therapeutic practice for people who have suffered injuries or are recovering from surgery. It is a gentle, healing practice that is tailored to each person’s body type and needs as they grow and change.

Vinyasa: Focuses on coordination of breath and movement and it is a very physically active form of yoga. It began with Krishnamacharya who later passed it on to Pattabhi Jois.

White Lotus Yoga: A modified Ashtanga practice developed by Ganga White which is combined with breathwork and meditation.

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Nov 18 2008

Types of Yoga

Published by Ross under Uncategorized

There are many types of yoga and these fall basically into two types, the divisions of classical yoga techniques and the many modern styles of yoga so these are dealt with below under these sub headings

Classical Yoga Techniques
These all date back almost to the origins of yoga, they allow people to follow the type of yoga that is best suited to their temperament and life styles. All of these paths alone can lead the participant to enlightenment but in practice it is normal for there to be considerable overlap and parts of each discipline can be brought into your favoured path.

Bhakti Yoga
This is the yoga of devotion, worship and focused love. Traditionally the focus could be on a deity or on ones personal Guru. Westerners who have strong religious backgrounds would feel comfortable with this branch of Yoga as it would fit in with worship in whatever form.

Hatha Yoga
This is the form of yoga most familiar in the west, it is the main stay of the majority of yoga classes in the UK. The word Hatha is made up of “ha” meaning Sun and “tha” meaning Moon representing the positive and negative energy flows in the body. Hatha yoga regulates and balances these energy flows. Hatha Yoga involves the physical posture work, the breath control (Pranayam) and prepares the body for meditation.

Jnana Yoga
This is the path of spiritual knowledge and wisdom and would suit someone who had an intellectual temperament.

Karma Yoga
Karma Yoga is the path of selfless service, of working or performing actions without seeking any reward. Most yoga ashrams have periods of “Karma Yoga” when those staying at the ashram can help with daily tasks.

Kundalini Yoga
Kundalini yoga aims to awaken the potential energies at the base of the spine (Symbolised as a coiled snake) and direct this energy upwards through the spine and the Chakras thus bringing about increasing degrees of enlightenment. When the energy reaches the head (Sahasrara Chakra) then intuitive enlightenment is triggered.

Mantra Yoga
Mantra Yoga involves the practice of chanting words or phrases repeatedly either aloud or internally thus influencing the consciousness. The rhythmic repetition of mantras is called Japa.

Raja Yoga
Raja yoga means Royal yoga and is associated with the yoga of Patanjali who promulgated the Yoga Sutras, here he lists the eightfold path or the eight limbs of yoga. These are :-
Yama, Niyama, Asana, Pranayama, Pratyahara, Dharana, Dhyana, Samadhi.
Yama (Abstentions) are:-
Non Violence, Truthfulness, Non Stealing, Purity, Avoidance of Greed.
Niyama (Observances) are :-
Cleanliness, Contentment, Austerity, Study or Wisdom, Devotion to the Divine.
Asana (Postures):-
The physical posture work familiar in most yoga classes.
Pranayama (Breath Control):-
Control of breath and direction of Prana (Life Force Energy) within the body.
Pratyahara (sense withdrawal):-
Detaching the mind from the 5 senses
Dharana (Concentration):-
Holding the mind on a particular object or thought, Single pointed awareness.
Dhyana (Meditation):-
Prolonged concentration to the point where it becomes effortless.
Samadhi Contemplation, Union, Bliss:-
This has to be experienced to be understood, it is beyond words.

Tantric Yoga
Tantric Yoga breaks into two distinct variations the Left hand and Right hand paths.

The Left hand path is the Tantra that most people have heard about, it is a yoga found mainly in Northern India and Tibet and involves the union of male and female either actually or in the imagination.

The Right hand path is epitomised by the Bihar Yoga and Mandala Ashram below and encourages Fidelity and Celibacy. Here the emphasis is on Kriya Yoga which comes under the general heading of Tantra. see below.

Kriya Yoga
Kriya Yoga is a very systemised form of yoga from the Tantras, There are about 70 Kriyas or actions of which only about 20 are in common usage. Kriya yoga increases concentration and leads to meditation and ultimately to enlightenment but this is done more through awareness than pure concentration. Again this system is taught at Mandala Ashram. (See Below)

Yantra Yoga
Similar to Mantra yoga but involving sight and form. Yantras are colourful geometric mandalas or designs which are used for concentration ether on the Mandala itself or during the preparation of the Mandala.

Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga
A classical form of ancient origin that emphasizes the eight limbs of yoga as suggested by Patanjali in the Yoga Sutras. It develops great breath awareness and uses muscular ‘locks’ known as bandhas. These used together generate a lot of heat. It is this heat that assists in attaining some of the more strenuous or challenging stages of the practice. Surya Namaskar is used as a preparation, then the series progresses through standing, seated, back-bending and inverted poses. These classical asanas gradually come together in an extended flowing sequence known as the primary series. The benefits permeate the physical and non-physical body at every level. Sessions are always followed by savasana, that most important relaxation pose.

This form is taught locally by Vera Oates, for further information on this send an e-mail to
vera.astanga@talktalk.net

Modern Styles of Yoga
BWY-Accredited Yoga Organisations
Bihar School of Yoga
Bihar (Now called Satyananda Yoga Centre) incorporates virtually all of the classical yoga techniques, it is taught locally by Jane Cluley in Easingwold North Yorkshire.
Satyananda Yoga Centre

Mandala Yoga Ashram
A Yoga Ashram in Wales teaching in the style of Bihar as above, a wonderful place for a yoga retreat or for in depth yoga training. Mandala

Heart Yoga
Heart Yoga (Formally Yoga of the Heart) takes the classical asanas together with the philosophy and spiritual aspects of yoga and teaches them in a way that can transform the body, mind and emotions - touching the heart of our being. Heart Yoga

Viniyoga
Viniyoga (now called The Association for Yoga Studies ) involves all aspects of yoga with posture work building towards particular posture and then returning towards stillness. It involves chanting, breath control and meditation practices.
Viniyoga is taught in this area by Jenny Grogan.

Other Yoga Organisations
Dru Yoga
Dru Yoga is a graceful and potent form of yoga, based on soft flowing movements, directed breathing and visualisation. Dru’s energy block release sequences are performed with soft, relaxed joints and with an awareness of the body’s subtle energies. www.druworldwide.com

Iyengar Yoga
Iyengar Yoga is specialises in strong and precise posture work using belts, blocks and other aids in order to help the student attain the final posture.
www.iyengaryoga.org.uk

Kripalu Yoga
This form of yoga is based on the teachings of Yoga Amrit Desai from Lennox in USA, and is based on posture flows which become a moving meditation. www.kripalu.org
This style of yoga is taught locally by Marion Thomas in Darlington.

If you are teaching any of the above styles of yoga or are teaching a different style that you would like us to add please e-mail the details and if possible it will be included on this page.

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Nov 18 2008

The history of yoga

Published by Ross under Uncategorized, history

Who the first yogi really was is lost in the sands of time, but the roots of Yoga can be traced as long as 5000 years back. The earliest reference to Yoga was found when archeological excavations where made in the Indus valley - the most powerful and influential civilization in the early antique period. This sophisticated culture developed around the Indus river and the long gone Sarasvati river in northern India, on the border towards Pakistan.

Archeological findings from two of the largest cities, Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa, revealed (among other things) a portrait of a human being or god meditating in what looks like a Yoga posture. The Rig-Veda work, that describes different Yoga methods, is believed to be derived from the Inus-Sarasvati people and has been dated to 3000 to 5000 B.C.

Yoga as we know it today, is thus the result of a complex evolution that has been going on for at least 5000 years. However, according to most scholars, Yoga can’t be recognized as a complete and complex tradition before about 500 B.C.

Vedic Yoga
The oldest written records of Indian culture and yogic activities is found in the Vedas, which are a compilation of hymns and rituals over 3000 years old. The Vedic Yoga, also known as Archaic Yoga, revolves around the thought of reuniting the visible material world with the invisible spiritual world by sacrificing certain things. In order to practise these rather long rituals successfully it was necessary to be able to focus the mind to a very hight level. This inner focus as a means to enhance the sensory and human ability is the root of all Yoga.

The Vedic teachings at this point where not reserved for an religious elite, but was instead transmitted to the people by Vedic prophets, called Rishis, who had gained insight in the origin of life and it’s existence. The hymns of these prophets witness of strong intuition, wisdom and knowledge about human beings that can inspire new levels of understanding even for the people of today.

Pre-classical Yoga
This period in Yoga history spans about 2000 years, until year 200. The most central Yoga literature from this period are the Upanishades - a collection of texts revolving around meta-physical speculation - and are just like the Vedas considered as enigmatic revelations. As opposed to the public rituals of the Vedic period, the Upanishades where secret scriptures.

Some of these 200 gnostic texts are directly related to Yoga and are about the complete connectedness of all things. Yoga was now slowly finding it’s form. As Yoga and it’s secret teachings spread from teacher to student, or from guru to yogi, the concept of an individual system of thought began to take shape.

The Bhagavad Gita, that is the most well known and popular work among all Hinduic and Yogic literature was written during this period (about 500 B.C.). It is a beautiful story of a conversation between the god of Hinduism, Krishna, and a prince named Arjuna. The plot, ironically enough, takes place on a battlefield. This location is often interpreted as a metaphor for the many distractions present in our turbulent world. Prince Arjuna had put himself in a difficult position, where he must fight parts of his family and friends.

Symbolically speaking, this frustration conveys that prince Arjuna wanted some advice on how to fight the bonds that tie him to the material world, in order to set himself and his soul free. Krishna explained that it was Arjuna’s destiny and task to face this situation. He then moved on to explaining to Arjuna how he could emerge from the battle victorious, by outlining a detailed yogic path for the prince to follow; Through devotion (bhakti Yoga), a keen mind (jnana Yoga) and by giving up the ego (karma Yoga), spiritual freedom (moksha) could be attained.

Needless to say, the Bhagavad Gita is a complex work, and is meant to be studied, pondered upon and then studied some more.

Classical Yoga
The eight-limbed Yoga described in the Sutras by Patanjali is usually referred to as Classical Yoga. The Yoga Sutras where most likely written around year 100-200 A.C. and consists of about 200 aphorisms (words of wisdom). Here Yoga is presented in a systematic and approachable way, and many yogis see it as an important source of yogic understanding. Almost all serious Yoga practitioners will at some point study this literature and it has been published with commentary many times since it was first published.

Patanjali thought that every individual consists of two parts - matter (prakiti) and soul (purusha), and that the goal of Yoga is to free the soul from the material world in order to take it’s original, pure form. This is often characterized as philosophical dualism, which is quite remarkable considering that most Indian philosophy is of a non-dualistic nature. The world as it is perceived is generally thought to be different aspects of the same pure, shapeless but conscious existence.

Post-classical Yoga
The great number of independent yoga schools and forms that where developed during the period after the Yoga sutras, is usually referred to as post-classical Yoga. As opposed to Patanjalis’s Yoga, the Yoga of this era was, very much like the post-classical and Vedic traditions, characterized by an non-dualistic nature.

A few hundred years after Patanjali, the evolution of Yoga took an interesting turn - the potential of the human body now became an interesting field of study. Yogis of the past had not paid very much attention to the (physical) body, as they focused all their energy on contemplation and meditation. Their goal was to leave their bodies and the world, in order to re-unite with the shapeless reality - the soul.

The new generation of Yogis however, developed a system where different exercises - in conjunction with deep breathing and meditation, would help keep the body young and prolong life. The human body was regarded as the temple of the immortal soul, and not just as a meaningless vessel to be abandon at the first opportunity.

This paved the way for the creation of Hatha Yoga, and other branches and schools of Tantra Yoga.

Modern Yoga
Modern Yoga is said to have begun a the Parliament of Religions in Chicago, 1893. During this meeting the young Swami Vivekananda from India made a deep impression on the American he introduced to Yoga. Vivekananda became whom of the most popular members of the Parliament, and he subsequently toured the US giving lectures on Yoga. Many Yoga masters would later cross the ocean and follow in his footsteps, spreading Yoga to all corners of the continent. Yoga schools where founded and increasing numbers of people fell in love with the yogic forms of exercise. Many masters also went to Europe where the reception, for some reason, wasn’t quite as warm.

Yoga, in the form of Hatha Yoga, debuted in the consciousnesses of the American masses when russian born Indra Devi, of the called “the first lady of Yoga”, opened a Yoga studio in Hollywood in 1947. She taught movie starts like Gloria Swanson, Jennifer Jones and Robert Ryan, as well as educating hundreds of Yoga teachers.

During the 1950s one of the foremost Yoga teachers of his time, Selvarajan Yesudian, wrote the book “Sport and Yoga”, and it was through this book Yoga entered the world of sports. This book has been translated into more than fourteen languages and has sold more than half a million copies. Today we can observe many athletes and sports teams that has incorporated Yoga in their injury reducing, strengthening and focus oriented training regimens. One of the most well known examples are the NBA stars of the Chicago Bulls.

1961 Hatha Yoga was presented in american television by Richard Hittleman, and his book called The Twenty Eight day Yoga Plan sold in the millions. In the middle of the 60s, Yoga got a real promotional boost when the Yogi Maharishi Mahesh taught Yoga to the famous pop-stars in the Beatles. Many other artists and musicians where influenced to take up Yoga as well. During the 60s and 70s Yoga became a way of life for many people living on the American west coast.

On an interesting side note, Dalai lama is a great yogi from Tibet, representing Buddhism and Tibetan Yoga. He was awarded the Nobel price for peace and has inspired many westerners to learn more about Buddhism and Yoga.

Yoga today
Yoga has gained tremendously in popularity during the last few years, and today over 30 million people practise Yoga on a regular basis. Yoga is the most rapidly growing health movement of today, despite having existed for thousands of years already.

Peoples attitude towards health, spirituality, way of life and our place in society have changed quite dramatically, as people are looking for answers for their everyday problems. In these chaotic times our environment is fighting for survival and we humans suffer more and more from physical and psychological stress, with new diseases developing while old ones, that we thought we could handle with antibiotics, returns with an vengeance in the midst of out society. We can’t always control these developments, but we can learn to face them.

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Nov 18 2008

Why Practice Yoga?

Published by Ross under Uncategorized

Written by: marlonborreo

In the midst of our modern world characterized by daily stress, fatigue, and pollution, more and more people are seeking that elusive sense of relaxation and inward awareness. Hailing from an ancient tradition originated in India, Yoga has long since provided people with a refuge away from the everyday confusion and entropy, and has transported an increasing number of people to a peaceful oasis within. Though the practice of Yoga is closely associated to ancient texts, beliefs, and values, it also yields benefits useful for people’s practical daily lives. Here are some reasons why more and more people are practicing Yoga:

Yoga relaxes the body and the mind. Even in the midst of stressful environments, Yoga helps control breathing and clears the mind of cluttered thoughts, leaving only deep physical and mental refreshment.

Yoga can help normalize body weight. For people who are either overweight or underweight, Yoga Exercises can help achieve the desired weight. The principles of balance and moderation in physical activity and diet under Yoga can also lead to a healthier lifestyle.

Yoga improves your resistance to disease. The postures and movements in Yoga massage the internal organs, enhancing blood circulation and functionality, thus, lessening the risk of illness.

Yoga increases your energy level and productivity. For as quick as 20 minutes, Yoga can replenish the mind and body with precious energy needed to respond to daily tasks and challenges.

Yoga leads to genuine inner contentment and self-actualization. Meditation -one of the aspects of Yoga- focuses the mind, taking it away from the distractions of the highly-materialistic world and leading it to genuine happiness.

Yoga may seem like the fabled elixir of life - a cure-all solution to man’s daily problems and concerns such as illness. But actually, the benefits that Yogis or Yoga practitioners have been experiencing for thousands of years are only being gradually proven by medical science now.

Ready to seek an oasis from the chaotic desert of a day at work or in school? Browse through our numerous sections and discover what Yoga has to offer.

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Nov 18 2008

Yoga and Bodywork

Published by Ross under Massage Therapy, Uncategorized

Expressing Our True Nature

By Sonia Osorio

Originally published in Massage & Bodywork magazine, June/July 2005.
Copyright 2005. Associated Bodywork and Massage Professionals. All rights reserved.

Yoga and bodywork, in their complete expression, are similar fields of practice and self-study. They support one another as learning experiences and as healing systems. Both share a common foundation that focuses on the body and the breath in order to deeply understand the physiological and psychological aspects of our form and the energy systems that support it. Both disciplines also require a willingness to explore and discover our own authentic nature, which involves an ongoing commitment, daily practice, continual exploration, and a willingness to open not just our bodies, but our hearts.

Yoga is not a string of acrobatic postures or dogmatic philosophy, just as bodywork is not a litany of preset movements or academic study of the body. Both yoga and bodywork are means through which we observe the quality of our own and another’s experience in the present moment.

In the classical context, yoga has very little to do with physical fitness in the way we pursue it in the West. Rather, yoga is a system designed to unite body and mind with the divine (the word yoga means “union”), which is our true nature. Yoga cultivates awareness, which begins by being mindful of bodily sensations and breath. As we become more aware of our sensations, we also notice the reactive tendencies of the mind, and we can begin to bring them under conscious control (another meaning of the word yoga is “yoking,” which refers to reigning in our distractive tendencies). By working with and observing patterns of thought and movement, we come to understand them better, we see through them, and can therefore allow them to fall away more easily. In doing so, clarity of thought and ease of movement arise, and we come closer to our genuine expression — who we are when our habitual patterns and stories have fallen away.

Integrity of Body and Mind
The yoga postures (asanas) are an integral part of the yogic discipline, which comprises other elements considered essential to a complete practice of yoga: ethical principles (yamas), personal conduct (niyamas), breathing techniques (pranayama), sensing inwardly (pratyahara), concentration (dharana), meditation (dhyana), and connection with the universal (samadhi). This holistic approach to yoga reflects the notion that body, mind, breath, and spirit are intimately related and that to work on any one of these, is to reconnect with the others, ultimately helping us understand our connection with a universal life energy that is both in and around us.

In any bodywork session, this connection is inherently understood as we awaken sensory awareness, linking breath with touch and movement, honoring who we touch and who we are, respecting ethical and personal boundaries, releasing physical and emotional tension, and feeling our aliveness in the moment. Massage begins with the body yet often touches the deeper sensations and emotions that open those places in our hearts and souls seeking expression through our form.

All bodywork approaches strive to improve and rebalance the functioning of our body, whether through massage, deep tissue restructuring, movement reeducation, or energy work. Often, these are used in concert and involve reestablishing a conscious connection to our bodies, helping us remember a deeper and more integral connection — who we are at our core, which is both unique, yet intimately related to others and to this world. This is sometimes called our connection to the divine, to our essential self, which is often much more (or less) than we imagined it to be.

Bodywork, like yoga, is about this connection to the divine through the body. It is about a release of any preconceived notions of who we thought we were and how we believed we must move in our bodies and in this world. This is the essence of freedom — to open to who and how we are in this very moment and to accept others in the same way.

Interconnection Through Our Form
Just as there are a variety of bodywork techniques, there are many different approaches to yoga. Though each may place different emphasis on certain areas of this far-reaching philosophical system, the goal is the same: awareness and enlightenment through our form. As B.K.S. Iyengar, one the foremost living teachers of yoga, counsels, “Look into the essence and do not be misled by the names.”

Patañjali, whose Yoga Sutras were written more than 2,000 years ago, views yoga as a system of self-refinement through which we still the mind, allowing us to see things as they are and thereby achieving freedom from suffering. Describing its universal nature, he calls yoga sarvabhauma — bhauma meaning “the world,” and sarva meaning “all.” Yoga works on the individual as a whole, and by so doing, affects the whole of the world around her. Says Iyengar in his book, The Tree of Yoga (Shambhala Publications, 2002), “When your body, mind, and soul are healthy and harmonious, you will bring health and harmony to those around you and health and harmony to the world — not by withdrawing from the world, but by being a healthy living organ of the body of humanity.”

Bodywork, like alignment and integration in yoga, is about not forgetting the whole while observing and working with the specifics, allowing the parts to coalesce, to flow together effortlessly, and to reveal their deeper nature. In doing that, we can look without bias at our form and our experience and see the interconnectedness of all forms and all experience. In doing so, compassion, understanding, and awareness shine through — the deeper expression of any practice.

Jiddu Krishnamurti, described by the Dalai Lama as one of the greatest thinkers of our age, has stated in his lectures on the nature of freedom that, “When one sees life as it is, when one sees oneself as one is, from there one can move.” When we move from this place of awareness, our actions cannot help but be in integrity with who we are and become a movement toward change. To put it bluntly, if we’re not even aware of where our foot is in a yoga pose or how we’re breathing as we give or receive a massage, how can we know where we’re going in life?

Cultivating awareness is an ongoing process, and we begin by being curious and noticing small details: Where is my foot? How does it feel? How am I breathing? Where am I tense? How does this feel? Who am I, feeling this? And we continue our inquiry, which is part of any dedicated practice. Through this ongoing curiosity, we gain an awareness that gives us the means to act skillfully in our daily life and in the world. Grounded in awareness, our actions are done more consciously and naturally come from our heart. In this way, individual practice grows through practical application, motivated by what is good for us and for those around us. Gentleness and respect toward ourselves and others is called ahimsa, or non-harming, and is a basic tenet of yoga philosophy. If we honor this, we naturally awaken our compassion, and wish health and happiness for all beings.

An Effortless Approach
For centuries, consciousness has played an essential role in governing physical, psychological, and spiritual health in Eastern traditions. Yet many people pursue yoga and bodywork, seeking some definitive result, instead of experiencing them consciously. Goal-oriented as we are, we forget to use the time we devote to our bodies to simply observe where and how we are in this very moment, without judgment and, most importantly, with great compassion. It is a grave mistake to believe that a harder and deeper approach in practices whose roots are based in honoring the body will lead to more “gains,” to a “better” or faster release, or offer us a fast-track to spiritual connection.

According to Patañjali, mastery of yoga occurs when practice becomes effortless. In the West, such a concept is difficult to understand, as we often push harder and faster in order to achieve more. How often have we heard the phrase, or perhaps uttered it ourselves, “I’m trying to relax!” Effortlessness, gentleness, compassion — this is the true practice: gently easing into one experience and out of another, being in the moment without desire to cling to it, or aversion of the emotions and sensations that rise up as we enter into sensation.

Where Paths Meet
Many yogis either come from a bodywork background or are discovering its benefits to complement their practice. Massage and bodywork, like yoga, are about balancing opposites until we can feel them as complements in our bodies and in our lives: strength and flexibility, joy and sadness, shadow and light, opening ourselves and honoring our boundaries, releasing old patterns, and holding fast to our truth.

Somatic techniques redefine our kinesthetic sense, developing not just an awareness of how thought and movement patterns affect us at all levels, but on how we can reeducate ourselves to move and think in ways that are healthier and more life-enhancing. Somatic practices encourage self-awareness by allowing us to understand the source of where our holdings come from. The emphasis in sessions is often on simply observing where and how we are, and in so doing, eventually discovering new options in how we can move and think. Most importantly, the techniques provide us with the courage and confidence that we can release ourselves from what confines and restricts us. As in yoga, such releases are actually openings, movements into a larger sphere of awareness that naturally happens when we realize we’re not bound by a limited definition of self.

Somatics as Yogic Awareness
If we look at some of the current somatic approaches to bodywork, we find that, at their source, they too have touched on principles inherent in yoga.

Ida Rolf, who had a doctorate in biochemistry and a background in atomic physics, studied osteopathy, chiropractic medicine, and homeopathy to cope with her personal health issues. For more than a decade, she also studied Tantric yoga, and her work with chronically disabled people began with yoga postures. She eventually integrated her own theories about how the body’s structural alignment affects behavior and emotion, creating the now well-known sequence of 10 bodywork sessions that define Rolfing. As in yoga, Rolf’s work was about integration, with an impetus toward self-realization. She worked with the body and the breath to help people find a place of balance and thereby access their inherent well-being at all levels: physically, emotionally, and spiritually. Rolf always considered her work not simply a means to deal with the physical body, but also as a way to encourage the evolution of the individual.

Pilates is a bodywork program that focuses on improving core strength for better overall alignment, (see “Pilates for Bodyworkers,” page 60). Joseph Pilates, who developed the approach, was a German physical fitness instructor whose early studies included yoga and Zen meditation. When he was in a British detention camp for German nationals during World War I, Pilates taught self-defense to other inmates. Later, he worked in a hospital where his work evolved into a physical rehabilitation program that included equipment he designed himself. When Pilates immigrated to the United States, his work was quickly adopted by professional dancers recovering from injury and has since gained increasing popularity with yoga practitioners. Pilates’ six principles — concentration, control, centering, breathing, flow, and precision — are also an inherent part of any yoga practice. Pilates’ focus on core stabilization develops deep inner strength and awareness, in much the same way that an advanced yoga practice is about the balance that naturally occurs when inner and outer strength are in harmony.

Body-mind centering (BMC), created by Bonnie Bainbridge-Cohen, is another somatic technique that has its roots in yoga. Bainbridge-Cohen, originally a dancer, was equally influenced by Eastern and Western approaches to working with the body, including yoga, aikido, occupational therapy, and neuromuscular reeducation. BMC is based on the idea that patterns evolve as we move through our various life stages and that each system of the body is involved in this evolution. Both therapists and clients are taught to sense from the inside out, becoming conscious of the effects that thoughts and movement have on their tissues, organs, and skeletal system. In this sense, BMC’s approach is very yogic, encouraging a process of inward observation, awareness, and conscious evolution.

Like Bainbridge-Cohen, Moshe Feldenkrais integrated Eastern and Western techniques to create what is now known as the Feldenkrais Method. Feldenkrais, an Israeli engineer and jujitsu expert, suffered from severely crippled knees. He recognized that, while stretching and strengthening muscles could rehabilitate his body, what was needed for lasting change was a transformation from deep within. What was needed was to involve the nervous system. Feldenkrais developed what he called “awareness through movement” lessons, where the body is taken through slow and gentle movements that send new and healing messages to the nervous system. Eventually, the nervous system itself learns to send these healing messages back to injured or constricted muscles, tendons, and ligaments.

As in yoga, the Feldenkrais Method is about awakening our body’s intelligence at its core. As one’s yoga practice deepens, effects on various neural pathways become obvious. Pranayama and asanas are about opening the body and “clearing” the energetic pathways (nadis) as well as the central channel (shushumna), along the spinal column, to support the vital life force that arises as we learn new ways to move and breathe. “Dwell as close as possible to the channel in which your life flows,” wrote Henry David Thoreau. It’s here, at our core, where we reconnect with life — and it’s from here that all genuine movement and expression begins.

Emptiness as Opening
Can bodywork be considered a spiritual pursuit? It depends on how we approach our practice. Whether it’s giving or receiving, on a yoga mat or on a massage table, anything we do with full awareness reminds us of our spiritual connection. “To live spiritually, is to live in the present,” Iyengar says. Whether it’s through yoga, bodywork, or both, any time we come into the present moment and become more aware of our body’s alignment, movement, and thought patterns, transformation begins. Then, we realize that it’s not just where we are in our practice, but who we are as we face the various challenges that arise.

Any approach that integrates mind and body will naturally elicit a multilevel change: physiologically, emotionally, and spiritually. As this happens, we gain perspective, space, clarity, and the capacity to open to a more multifaceted view of life. We can see the immediate problem, yet also realize where it stems from, how it affects our body as a whole, how it impacts other aspects of our lives, what stories and habits we have to empty ourselves of, and where change needs to take place — in effect, where and how we can recover our happiness and well-being or support others in their discovery. As we do this, our actions begin to have an effect that is beyond ourselves.

“To pay attention means we care, which means we really love,” philosopher Jiddu Krishnamurti says. By mindfully listening to and caring for our bodies and those of others, we set the stage for true and lasting change. We wake up and find we cannot help but open our hearts. We are “care-full,” as Buddhist teacher Thich Nhat Hanh says — full of care. Awareness, in fact, is about opening in this careful way, compassionately noticing and dropping old patterns, softening, trusting, and relaxing into the present moment. Effortlessness. As we let go, we make space. Then, we remember: There is no search, no “trying” to understand, no “trying” to relax, nothing to achieve — just an opening, where we reconnect and touch once again the core of who we all are. This, in effect, is also the core of both yoga and bodywork.

Sonia Osorio is a certified massage therapist and yoga practitioner with a background in dance and journalism. She has completed Richard Freeman’s Advanced Ashtanga Yoga Teacher’s Training and studied with teachers in the United States, Mexico, and Canada. Her interest is in the psychological and social aspects of yoga as it applies to daily life, and she leads workshops in body awareness and mindfulness, as well as being a consultant on natural birth control methods. She is also a regular contributor to various healthcare publications. She can be reached at sonia@zensations.ca.

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Nov 18 2008

History of Yoga - A Complete Overview of the Yoga History

Published by Ross under Uncategorized, history

Written by: shaynebance

The saying, “What’s in the past, should stay in the past” - doesn’t work here.

We might already have an idea of what Yoga is but to understand it better, we have to know what it has become as well as its roots and beginnings. A quick look at the history of Yoga will help us appreciate its rich tradition and who knows, it might help us incorporate Yoga into our lives.

Although Yoga is said to be as old as civilization, there is no physical evidence to support this claim. Earliest archaeological evidence of Yoga’s existence could be found in stone seals which depict figures of Yoga Poses. The stone seals place Yoga’s existence around 3000 B.C.

Scholars, however, have a reason to believe that Yoga existed long before that and traced its beginnings in Stone Age Shamanism. Both Shamanism and Yoga have similar characteristics particularly in their efforts to improve the human condition at that time. Also, they aim to heal community members and the practitioners act as religious mediators. Though we know Yoga as focusing more on the self, it started out as community-oriented before it turned inward.

For a better discussion of the history of Yoga, we could divide it into four periods: the Vedic Period, Pre-Classical Period, Classical Period, and Post-Classical Period.

Vedic Period

The existence of the Vedas marks this period. The Vedas is the sacred scripture of Brahmanism that is the basis of modern-day Hinduism. It is a collection of hymns which praise a divine power. The Vedas contains the oldest known Yogic teachings and as such, teachings found in the Vedas are called Vedic Yoga. This is characterized by rituals and ceremonies that strive to surpass the limitations of the mind.

During this time, the Vedic people relied on rishis or dedicated Vedic Yogis to teach them how to live in divine harmony. Rishis were also gifted with the ability to see the ultimate reality through their intensive spiritual practice. It was also during this time that Yogis living in seclusion (in forests) were recorded.

Pre-Classical Yoga

The creation of the Upanishads marks the Pre-Classical Yoga. The 200 scriptures of the Upanishads (the conclusion of the revealed literature) describe the inner vision of reality resulting from devotion to Brahman. These explain three subjects: the ultimate reality (Brahman), the transcendental self (atman), and the relationship between the two. The Upanishads further explain the teachings of the Vedas.

Yoga shares some characteristics not only with Hinduism but also with Buddhism that we can trace in its history. During the sixth century B.C., Buddha started teaching Buddhism, which stresses the importance of Meditation and the practice of physical postures. Siddharta Gautama, the first Buddhist to study Yoga, achieved enlightenment at the age of 35.

Later, around 500 B.C., the Bhagavad-Gita or Lord’s Song was created and this is currently the oldest known Yoga scripture. It is devoted entirely to Yoga and has confirmed that it has been an old practice for some time. However, it doesn’t point to a specific time wherein Yoga could have started. The central point to the Gita is that - to be alive means to be active and in order to avoid difficulties in our lives and in others, our actions have to benign and have to exceed our egos.

Just as the Upanishads further the Vedas, the Gita builds on and incorporates the doctrines found in the Upanishads. In the Gita, three facets must be brought together in our lifestyle: Bhakti or loving devotion, Jnana which is knowledge or contemplation, and Karma which is about selfless actions. The Gita then tried to unify Bhakti Yoga, Jnana Yoga, and Karma Yoga and it is because of this that it has gained importance. The Gita was a conversation between Prince Arjuna and God-man Krishna and it basically stresses the importance of opposing evil.

Classical Period

The Classical Period is marked by another creation - the Yoga Sutra. Written by Patanjali around the second century, it was an attempt to define and standardize Classical Yoga. It is composed of 195 aphorisms or sutras (from the Sanskrit word which means thread) that expound upon the Raja Yoga and its underlying principle, Patanjali’s Eightfold path of Yoga (also called Eight Limbs of Classical Yoga). These are:

Yama, which means social restraints or ethical values;
Niyama, which is personal observance of purity, tolerance, and study;
Asanas or physical exercises;
Pranayama, which means breath control or regulation;
Pratyahara or sense withdrawal in preparation for Meditation;
Dharana, which is about concentration;
Dhyana, which means Meditation; and
Samadhi, which means ecstasy.
Patanjali believed that each individual is a composite of matter (prakriti) and spirit (purusha). He further believed that the two must be separated in order to cleanse the spirit - a stark contrast to Vedic and Pre-Classical Yoga that signify the union of body and spirit.

Patanjali’s concept was dominant for some centuries that some Yogis focused exclusively on Meditation and neglected their Asanas. It was only later that the belief of the body as a temple was rekindled and attention to the importance of the Asana was revived. This time, Yogis attempted to use Yoga techniques to change the body and make it immortal.

Post-Classical Yoga

At this point, we see a proliferation of literature as well as the practice of Yoga. Post-classical Yoga differs from the first three since its focus is more on the present. It no longer strives to liberate a person from reality but rather teaches one to accept it and live at the moment.

Yoga was introduced in the West during the early 19th century. It was first studied as part of Eastern Philosophy and began as a movement for health and vegetarianism around the 1930’s. By the 1960’s, there was an influx of Indian teachers who expounded on Yoga. One of them was Maharishi Mahesh, the Yogi who popularized Transcendental Meditation. Another one is a prominent Yoga Guru Swami Sivananda. Sivananda was a doctor in Malaysia and he later opened schools in America and Europe. The most prominent of his works is his modified Five Principles of Yoga which are:

Savasana or proper relaxation;
Asanas or proper exercise;
Pranayama or proper breathing;
Proper diet; and
Dhyana or positive thinking and Meditation
Sivananda wrote more than 200 books on Yoga and Philosophy and had many disciples who furthered Yoga. Some of them were Swami Satchitananda who introduced chanting and Yoga to Woodstock; Swami Sivananada Radha who explored the connection between psychology and Yoga, and Yogi Bhajan who started teaching Kundalini Yoga in the 70’s.

Up to this day, Yoga continues to proliferate and spread its teachings, crossing the boundaries of culture and language.

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Nov 18 2008

Yoga Gives Depression the Boot

Published by Ross under Massage Therapy, Uncategorized

News Note

By Lara Evans Bracciante

Originally published in Massage & Bodywork magazine, April/May 2005.
Copyright 2005. Associated Bodywork and Massage Professionals. All rights reserved.

Yoga alleviates mild depression in adolescents and young adults, according to a recent study published in Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine. Twenty-eight college students, ages 18 to 29, who were mildly depressed but had not undergone any treatment, were divided into a yoga treatment group and a wait-list control group. None had previous yoga experience. The yoga subjects attended a 1-hour Iyengar yoga class twice a week for five consecutive weeks.

Halfway through the study, yoga students demonstrated significant decreases in depression and anxiety, which were maintained throughout the research period. Subjects also reported decreased levels of negative mood and fatigue following yoga class. In addition, researchers found that at the end of the course, yoga students, compared to the control group, displayed higher levels of morning cortisol, a hormone often lacking in those who are depressed.

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