X Close Panel

Yoga and Mental Health

 
With its emphasis on breathing practices and meditation — both of which help calm and center the mind — it's hardly surprising that yoga also brings mental benefits, such as reduced anxiety and depression. What may be more surprising is that it actually makes your brain work better.

A sharper brain
When you lift weights, your muscles get stronger and bigger. When you do yoga, your brain cells develop new connections, and changes occur in brain structure as well as function, resulting in improved cognitive skills such as learning and memory. Yoga strengthens parts of the brain that play a key role in memory, attention, awareness, thought, and language. Think of it as weightlifting for the brain.

Studies using MRI scans and other brain imaging technology have shown that people who regularly did yoga had a thicker cerebral cortex (the area of the brain responsible for information processing) and hippocampus (the area of the brain involved in learning and memory) compared with nonpractitioners. These areas of the brain typically shrink as you age, but the older yoga practitioners showed less shrinkage than those who did no yoga. This suggests that yoga may counteract age-related declines in memory and other cognitive skills.

Research also shows that yoga and meditation may improve executive functions, such as reasoning, decision-making, memory, learning, reaction time, and accuracy on tests of mental acuity.

Get your copy of Intermediate Yoga
 
Step-by-step, Intermediate Yoga reveals 6 straight-forward practices specifically geared to help enhance flexibility, improve your balance, build strength, boost your energy, and ease stress and tension, all in the comfort of your home. These yoga practices are NOT about doing more and working harder. They’re more about undoing—relaxing, releasing and letting go. They build on basic yoga poses and breathing techniques and offer you a slow and steady route to better health and fitness that can make a world of difference.
 SHOW ME MORE →
Improved mood
All exercise can boost your mood by lowering levels of stress hormones, increasing the production of feel-good chemicals known as endorphins, and bringing more oxygenated blood to your brain. But yoga may have additional benefits. It can affect mood by elevating levels of a brain chemical called gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), which is associated with better mood and decreased anxiety.

Meditation also reduces activity in the limbic system — the part of the brain dedicated to emotions. As your emotional reactivity diminishes, you have a more tempered response when faced with stressful situations.

Drugs and talk therapy have traditionally been the go-to remedies for depression and anxiety. But complementary approaches such as yoga also help, and yoga stacks up well when compared with other complementary therapies.

A review of 15 studies, published in the journal Aging and Mental Health, looked at the effect of a variety of relaxation techniques on depression and anxiety in older adults. In addition to yoga, interventions included massage therapy, progressive muscle relaxation, stress management, and listening to music. While all the techniques provided some benefit, yoga and music were the most effective for both depression and anxiety. And yoga appeared to provide the longest-lasting effect.

A number of small studies have found that yoga can help with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). It is not used by itself, but as an add-on treatment to help reduce intrusive memories and emotional arousal and to produce calmer, steadier breathing. Deep, slow breathing is associated with calmer states because it helps activate the parasympathetic nervous system.

Discover the healing power of Yoga with Intermediate Yoga, a Special Health Report from Harvard Medical School.


Tags:

Yoga and Inflammation

How Yoga Can Help Reduce Inflammation in the Body

Inflammation is a natural immune response in the body, typically occurring when the body fights infection or heals injury. However, chronic inflammation, which can persist for months or years, has been linked to a variety of health issues, including heart disease, arthritis, diabetes, and autoimmune conditions. While traditional methods such as medication and dietary changes are commonly used to manage inflammation, yoga has emerged as a powerful tool in reducing inflammation and promoting overall health. Yoga, with its emphasis on mindfulness, movement, and breath control, offers a holistic approach to reducing inflammation by addressing both the body and the mind.

One of the primary ways yoga helps reduce inflammation is through its ability to lower stress. Chronic stress is a key contributor to inflammation, as it triggers the release of stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline, which, when sustained at high levels, can lead to an overactive immune response. Yoga, particularly practices that focus on deep breathing and relaxation, activates the parasympathetic nervous system, which helps to counteract the "fight or flight" response and reduce stress hormones in the body. Practices like Pranayama (breath control), meditation, and restorative yoga are particularly effective in calming the mind and promoting a sense of peace, thereby reducing the inflammatory response.

In addition to stress reduction, yoga encourages physical movement that improves circulation, increases lymphatic drainage, and supports the body's natural detoxification processes. Certain yoga postures, such as twists, forward folds, and inversions, stimulate the digestive system and increase blood flow, allowing for the efficient elimination of waste products and toxins that can contribute to inflammation. Moreover, regular practice of yoga enhances flexibility, reduces muscle tension, and improves posture, all of which can help to relieve chronic pain and discomfort associated with inflammation.

Yoga also supports the body's immune system in a unique way. By promoting better circulation, yoga helps immune cells travel through the bloodstream more efficiently, allowing them to target areas of the body where inflammation is present. Additionally, the practice of yoga has been shown to increase the production of anti-inflammatory cytokines, which are proteins that help regulate the immune system and reduce excessive inflammation.

Often, when people feel stressed, they tend to eat unhealthy food, drink alcohol, use drugs or seek adrenaline or dopamine causing activities.  Anything to numb out their emotional pain.  People who regularly practice yoga find they have tools like breathing practices, yoga poses, meditation and a community they can often rely upon to help reduce stress.

In addition, those who have truly found yoga to be a powerful tool for healing, often build their lives around their yoga practice.  As a result more structured eating, sleeping, and general consumption habits help create greater stability in ones life.  Someone is less likely to stay up late, eat sugary foods or consume alcohol the night before a morning yoga class.  That structure of self care plays out in many other areas of peoples lives.  They often make better decisions around destructive behavior and find the strength to create healthy boundaries in their personal and work life.

Scientific studies have also demonstrated the anti-inflammatory effects of yoga. Research indicates that regular yoga practice can reduce markers of inflammation, such as C-reactive protein (CRP) and interleukin-6 (IL-6), which are often elevated in people with chronic inflammatory conditions. For instance, studies on individuals with conditions like rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis have found that yoga practice improves joint mobility, reduces pain, and lowers inflammatory biomarkers.

In conclusion, yoga offers a multifaceted approach to managing and reducing inflammation in the body. Through its combination of stress reduction, movement, and immune system support, yoga not only helps address the physical aspects of inflammation but also promotes mental well-being. For those seeking a natural and effective way to manage chronic inflammation, incorporating yoga into a regular wellness routine can provide significant relief and contribute to overall health and vitality.


Tags:

Yoga for Better Sleep

Two years into World War II, the US military realized that due to extraordinarily high levels of stress and lack of sleep many of the combat pilots began to freeze up in flight and make potentially fatal mistakes.

To counteract that, they invited Naval Ensign Bud Winter to teach relaxation to combat pilots. Winter had previously been a successful football and track coach who worked with a professor of psychology to teach athletes how to perform better under the stress of competition.

“The end goal of the program was to teach the Naval aviators how to relax so that they could learn more quickly, speed up their reaction time, sharpen their focus, and diminish their fear. The course also aimed to teach combat aviators to be able to go to sleep in two minutes any time, day or night, under any and all conditions.” (1)

The premise of the program was based on an ingenious idea: if your body is fully relaxed, your mind will follow. Bud Winter focused on teaching the pilots how to relax physically and then “slip over the threshold into a deep, relaxed sleep.” (2) He maintained that if you can get “your mind clear of any active thoughts for just ten seconds, you will be asleep.” (2)

Stepping Out of the Stress Loop
This premise is based on science. You may remember that when your sympathetic nervous system (the “fight-or-flight” mode) is activated, the blood rushes to your large skeletal muscles to enable you to fight or run away. Your muscles tense up to prepare you for action.

It works the other way around, too. If your muscles tense up, your brain gets a message that there is danger, and in response, your sympathetic nervous system gets activated. This is often referred to as “stress loop” that we can get stuck in.

 

To get out of the loop, we need to break it by either relaxing the body or calming the mind. It is usually easier to relax the body than to stop spinning thoughts. That is why consciously relaxing your body part by part works so well to promote mental relaxation, as well.

A Yoga Practice for Deep Sleep
In the practice below we use simple movement, deep belly breathing, and meditation to gradually let go of the regrets, worries, and problems of the day. The practice also includes guided relaxation that is based on the script that Bud Winter had used with his pilots.

 

It is best to do this practice right before bed, and then follow the guided relaxation once you get cozied up in bed. If you are not asleep by the end of the practice, keep your attention in the body and continue to relax it deeper and deeper.

Bud’s program was very successful. After six weeks of active training, 96% of the aviators were able to fall asleep in two minutes or less—anywhere and anytime, including during simulated noise of machine gun fire. Bud Winter later transitioned back to teaching relaxation to athletes and produced 27 Olympians.

This type of relaxation is nothing new, especially to a yoga teacher, but learning a skill like this takes commitment and consistent practice. Isn’t this kind of outcome worth it though?


Tags: