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| Learning To Love The Yoga We All Hate | |
| Home » Articles » Health and Fitness » Yoga | |
| Autor: | Jez Heath |
| Article Submitted On: | 2007-06-18 |
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Listen in to conversations after any yoga session, and we’re almost guaranteed to hear someone discussing this or that yoga pose that they hate and wish they never need to do again – ever. But why is it that there are certain yoga poses that we just dread? We can feel them coming, and start to hope the instructor isn’t going to do it this time. Then we inwardly cringe when the instructor even mentions that posture’s name. Simply recognising our reaction and can tell us a great deal not only about our physical abilities but also a great deal about our character and our approach to difficulties, adversity and failure. We should all observe our approach to the poses we hate. Is our approach to put in little effort and avoid doing the pose properly or try to think more about why we dislike it, to figure out if we’re doing it wrong, or if we need to put in a little more effort to get past this challenge. Whatever our approach to the poses we dislike, simply identifying which specific poses these are can tell us a lot about how to improve our practice. It hurts too much – I don’t want to do it. But if a pose is hurting because our muscles are too weak, then the only way to get past it is to work those muscles and strengthen them. If a pose is hurting because of the stretch, then the only way to get past it is to relax, extend and stretch those muscles and joints. With a little work we will eventually overcome that particular challenge, and something else will become our new dreaded pose. It’s too difficult, I just can’t do it. They call it a yoga practice As clichéd as it sounds, yoga really is a journey of discovery and development, physically, mentally and if you allow it, spiritually. The first big step in our development journey is understanding our abilities are right now. By bringing awareness to our practice we can start to know where our limitations are and focus on those areas as key development points within a balanced practice. This is the start of the journey. The rest of the journey is the continued and systematic extension of those boundaries. And the destination, the goal of all this effort? The ongoing and continued improvement of our physical, mental and spiritual health. To find out how we can provide the high quality yoga instruction you need to help you on your yoga journey, visit www.TotalYogaPractice.com
The article Learning To Love The Yoga We All Hate was Submitted by Jez Heath through Articles.GetACoder.com network. Here's the additional information: Jez Heath is helping real |
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