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Hip Opening in Yoga

The hip joint
The hip joint is where the proximal end of our femur meets our pelvis. We have two hip joints, one on the right and one on the left side of our body. To create the hip joint, the knobby end of our femur, the femoral head, inserts into the indentation in our pelvis, called the acetabulum.

 

The hip joint is a ball-and-socket type joint. Ball-and-socket joints allow for movement in all directions. At our hip joints, our legs can move in all planes and in a wide range of motion. This is great when we need mobility, but we also need stability at our hip joints. Our legs, after all, have to carry our body weight when we walk and run. For that reason, we have many strong muscles and ligaments that cross in every direction around the hip joint. They help maintain the stability of the hip joint while allowing us to do powerful movements, like walking uphill, running, and kicking.

How do our hips get tight?
When we develop the muscles that surround the hip joint through sports and activities, they can get short and tight. The tension in muscles or groups of muscles, relative to muscles that do the same (agonists) or opposite actions (antagonists), can also get out of balance if we use them repetitively in certain patterns. For example, our abductors (gluteus minimus and medius) might be tight relative to our adductor group. Or, our hip flexors (rectus femoris, iliopsoas, and others) might be tight relative to our hip extenders (hamstrings and gluteus maximus).

Regularly engaging in certain kinds of sports and activities, like cycling or running, for example, can tighten muscles around our hips, restrict range of motion, and result in imbalances in tension around our hip joints. Other types of activities, like lots of sitting, can also lead to imbalances. Sitting tends to shorten certain muscles when we do a lot of it.

Why open the hips?
The hips in yoga are important joints for connecting the feet to the upper body. When we move, force travels through our ankles, knees, and hips to get from the ground into our pelvis and beyond. When we start moving, even into simpler postures like triangle, tension in our hips restricts ease of movement in the pose and can push tension into other joints like our knees. More functionally, opening the hips in yoga can allow us to sit in a more neutral position since it enables the pelvis to move more freely, possibly reducing postural compensations in our body. And that can reduce the likelihood of chronic pain patterns like low back and neck pain.

Yoga stretches our hip muscles
When we first start a yoga practice, we may encounter tight muscles around our hip joints. We may also encounter particular imbalances between groups of muscles. Depending on the specific yoga practices we’re doing, yoga practice can help us stretch tight muscles around our hips, opening our hip range of motion.

We can work on hip opening in yoga in just about all categories of yoga postures. There really aren’t any poses that don’t involve the hip joint in some way. For example, in forward bends, we’re lengthening muscles on the back of the hip joint. In backbends, we’re lengthening muscles on the front of the hip joint. There is one specific category of poses, however, that we think of when we talk about hip opening in yoga. That category is poses that include external rotation of the hip joint.

External rotation poses
External rotation poses are any of those that lead up to more extreme versions like full lotus and leg behind head. Common variations that are more accessible include standing poses like tree pose and seated poses like janu sirsasana A. Even foundational poses like triangle and side angle include some aspect of external hip rotation within the pose. In a triangle pose, we’re externally rotating the front hip. In a side angle, we’re also externally rotating the front hip joint. So when we say hip opening in yoga, what we often mean is preparing our hips with the kind of range of motion to work with postures that include a half lotus or lotus aspect, or in more extreme range of motion, a leg behind the head.

What hip muscles are we lengthening?
You might initially imagine we would want to lengthen the internal rotators of the hip, in order to more easily do external rotation. However, in yoga postures, we’re really doing a combination of movements most of the time. We rarely move only in one plane, so the direction of muscular action gets more complicated. For external rotation in seated postures when we’ve flexed the hip joint specifically, the anatomy gets a little trickier. We actually need to lengthen the deep six lateral rotator muscles and the gluteal muscles to find more ease in external rotation from this position.

How do we do hip opening in yoga?
Whether you’re preparing for more advanced postures, or you just want a more functional range of motion in your hips, I recommend you start small with accessible poses and preparation stretches. Depending on the amount of tension in your hip muscles, it can take a significant amount of time to lengthen those muscles. Going slowly and starting with more accessible poses can help prevent injury while still opening your hips.

Standing postures
In standing, accessible postures might include standing foundational postures like triangle and side angle, or simpler poses that incorporate external hip rotation like tree pose. You might also include a standing, one-legged version of the fire logs stretch that many people are familiar with. Stand a foot or so away from the wall and rest your back against the wall. Then bring one leg up and place the foot just above the knee of the opposite leg. Now fold forward until you feel a stretch along the outside of one or both hips. You can explore what happens when you lean a little to the right or left. You might find a better spot where the stretch feels more productive. After a few breaths on one side, repeat the stretch on the other side.

Seated postures
In seated postures, we can use the same approach to opening our hips to prepare for more complex yoga postures. Start with more accessible postures like janu sirsasana A. Or, try out my series of preparation stretches specifically intended to open your hips for lotus. When simpler ranges of motion feel easy, you can deepen the pose or add more complex variations as you work toward doing poses like full lotus.

Consistency
Whether you’re working on hip opening in yoga in standing poses, seated postures, or both, you’ll get the most benefit if you are consistent in your practice. If you start with smaller ranges of motion and practice consistently, you’ll build up to deeper ranges of motion over time. As you work with a hip-opening intention, be attentive to your knees. Remember that the hip joint and knee joint are intimately connected. Don’t put force into your knees to try to compensate for tight hips by forcing yourself into a pose that your body isn’t ready for yet. Take the time to do hip opening in yoga gradually.

Conclusion
Hip opening in yoga can refer to generally increasing the range of motion around the hip joints by lengthening the muscles. However, hip opening in yoga often refers more specifically to increasing our range of motion in the external hip rotation direction to prepare us for poses like half lotus and full lotus. Hip opening can help us access yoga poses, and it can help us move and sit in more functional, balanced ways.


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Yoga and Bone Health

How does yoga affect our skeletal system?

How does yoga affect balance and bone health?

Methods
The researchers searched databases to identify randomized control trials that evaluated yoga’s effects on balance, falls, fear of falling, bone mineral density, bone turnover markers, and fall prevention.

Results
Among 18 individual studies included in the review study, 12 reported that yoga or yoga plus another treatment improved balance compared to a control. One study reported a decrease in frequency of falling, and a separate study reported a decrease in the fear of falling after a yoga treatment. Three studies reported that markers of bone health were either maintained or increased after a yoga treatment.

Conclusion
Yoga helps maintain balance, may reduce falls, and may support long-term bone health.

Background
Our skeletal system gives our body part of its structure. It forms the compression members in the biotensegrity system of our body, and provides multiple essential functions. Additionally, our bones produce red blood cells, store minerals, and provide protection. For example, our ribcage helps protect many of our vulnerable organs.

One of our skeletal system’s most important functions is its role in enabling movement. Like all of our body systems, our bone health can start to show signs of deterioration as we age. Maintaining healthy bones as we age is one key to reducing fractures and other consequences of falling. Our balance can likewise decline as we age, increasing our fear of falling. Maintaining a good sense of balance as we age can reduce both actual falls and the fear of falling.

One activity that shows potential to help with all of these aspects of skeletal health is yoga. Preliminary research has shown that yoga positively affects balance. Likewise, because yoga potentially includes many types of weight-bearing poses, it seems to support maintaining bone density as well. The research team on the study we summarized here chose to explore previous research evaluating yoga’s effects on multiple aspects of skeletal health in order to report a more comprehensive picture of how yoga affects our bone health.

Research question
How does yoga affect balance and bone health?

Research methods
The researchers searched several databases to identify studies that evaluated yoga’s effects on balance, falls, fear of falling, bone mineral density, bone turnover markers, and fall prevention. They used Medline, Embase, Cochrane Central, Register of Controlled Trials, and the CINAHL databases to identify studies. They specifically searched for the keywords yoga, balance, fall risk, fear of falling, bone mineral density, and bone turnover markers. The studies were included if they were randomized controlled trials evaluating healthy participants and compared yoga interventions to either an active control or no intervention.

During the review process, the research team wanted to address several specific questions:

How does yoga affect balance?
How does yoga affect fall risk and fear of falling?
How does yoga affect bone mineral density?
Is yoga associated with any adverse skeletal issues like fractures?


Results
The research team included 18 randomized control trials in the review study. Fifteen studies evaluated the effects of yoga on balance, falls, fall risk, and fear of falling. Ten of those compared yoga with an active control, and five compared yoga with no intervention. Three studies examined the effects of yoga on bone mineral density. The types of yoga styles used in each individual study varied.

Effects of yoga on balance:
Six studies found that balance improved in the yoga treatment group compared to no intervention
Three other studies reported that yoga was as effective as stretching plus strengthening exercises, Taiji, or Tai Chi exercises in improving balance


Two studies found that yoga plus other exercises improved balance more than either treatment alone
In one study, a yoga treatment and a Tai Chi intervention each improved balance more than an exercise control treatment
In one study with an active control, it was unclear whether yoga and the control resulted in different effects on balance
There was no improvement in balance in either the yoga treatment group or the active control group in one study
There was a greater improvement in balance in one study when participants did a combination of vocal training, dancing, and breath work, compared to yoga


Falls and fear of falling
Frequency of falls decreased after a yoga intervention in one study
Fear of falling decreased after a yoga treatment when compared to before the yoga treatment and to a control group in one study
In one study, there was no difference between yoga and the control group regarding the effects on falling frequency
Bone health – bone mineral density


In one study, bone formation markers and bone alkaline phosphate (a measure of bone turnover) decreased in the control group, but were maintained in the yoga treatment group


There was no effect of yoga on bone mineral density in one study
In a different study, the effects of yoga on bone mineral density were specific to particular areas of the body. In the exercise group, but not the yoga group, bone mineral density decreased in the hip area. However, bone mineral density decreased in both the exercise and yoga groups in the lumbar spine


In a separate study, osteocalcin levels (a biochemical marker of bone formation) increased in the yoga group, but decreased in the exercise control group


Why is this relevant to yoga practitioners?


Although bone health is important at any age, we especially need to pay attention to it as we progress into our later years. This is because bone health is one essential part of keeping us active as we age. A regular movement routine supports healthy immune function, cardiovascular function, and better sleep, among many other benefits, and bone health is an important component of being able to move. The older we get, the harder it often is to maintain our movement routine as our body slows down. Our proprioception and balance can decrease as we age, increasing our fear of falling because we’re less confident of our ability to move easily. Additionally, as we get older, the pace at which we create new bone cells slows, so maintaining our bone density becomes even more important.

The review study that we summarized here suggests that yoga may have some contribution to maintaining bone mineral density, a marker of bone health. However, which yoga interventions specifically support bone health was unclear from the research that’s been conducted so far. Many smaller studies evaluated in the larger review study supported yoga’s positive impact on developing and maintaining balance, and therefore reducing falls and the fear of falling. So, yoga may indirectly support bone health by helping us feel more confident in our movements and encouraging us to keep going.

Conclusion
Bone health is an important part of aging well. A healthy skeletal system can help us confidently maintain a movement habit. Yoga can be a part of maintaining bone health, reducing falls, and the fear of falling, and therefore keep us moving as we age.


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Yoga and Consistency

Greater frequency and longer duration of yoga practice may more effectively reduce stress
Research Study At A Glance
The Research Question Asked
Does frequency and duration of yoga practice affect levels of stress and anxiety for breast cancer survivors?

Type of Study
Online survey

Study Participants (Sample)
35 total participants
Mean age was 54.83 years old
Average time after completion of acute treatments for breast cancer was 4.2 ± 2.8 years
Mean years of yoga experience was 6.6 years
Methods
Participants completed a series of questions regarding basic biographical data, specific breast cancer diagnosis, and their yoga duration and frequency. Study participants then completed the 10-item Perceived Stress Scale, the state anxiety subscale of the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, and the Self-reported Health Scale.

Results
There was no significant difference in perceived stress or self-reported health between the low-dosage and high-dosage yoga groups. However, state anxiety was greater in the low-dosage yoga group compared to the high-dosage yoga group.

Conclusion
Higher frequency and duration of yoga practice may provide greater anxiety relief for breast cancer survivors.

 
 
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Background
After the acute phase of medical treatment, breast cancer survivors may still experience significant stress and anxiety related to recovery. Processing the fear and worry associated with first surviving, and then the after-effects of breast cancer is often a significant source of stress. Additionally, managing all the changes that have occurred during the post-treatment phase of returning to daily life can be a heavy psychological burden. During this phase of reintegration, patients often seek out support for general stress relief. Non-pharmacologic therapies may be recommended for supportive stress relief during this phase.

One complementary therapy often recommended to patients to support their psychological health after completing the acute phase of breast cancer treatment is yoga. Yoga has consistently been shown to reduce stress across different styles and populations. However, a frequent criticism of yoga studies is their lack of a detailed description of the specific yoga treatment used. Without details describing frequency, duration, and yoga techniques (postures, breathing, etc.) used in a study, it’s unclear what to recommend when medical professionals want to recommend yoga to their patients. For those reasons, the research team who designed the study we summarized here, chose to examine the relationship between yoga practice durations and frequency and the stress levels of breast cancer survivors.

Research question
Does frequency and duration of yoga practice affect levels of stress and anxiety for breast cancer survivors?

Research methods
Researchers recruited 35 women from online national cancer support group web forums. All participants were 18 years old or older. They had a previous history of yoga practice, either in studio classes or a home practice. All study participants also had a previous breast cancer diagnosis.

The research team asked participants to complete a series of questions to collect basic biographical data. Those questions asked their age, marital status, ethnicity, and specific breast cancer diagnosis (Stage 1, 2, 3, 4, or metastatic cancer). Researchers next asked a series of questions about participants’ yoga duration and frequency. Study participants then completed the 10-item Perceived Stress Scale and the state anxiety subscale of the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. Additionally, participants self-reported their assessment of their overall physical health using the Self-reported Health Scale. They indicated their self-assessed physical health as very good, good, fair, bad, or very bad.

In order to analyze the data that they collected, the researchers used the yoga frequency and duration that each participant reported to calculate a yoga dosage. They then divided the range of yoga dosage across participants into a low-dosage group and a high-dosage data group. The low-dosage group included participants who reported ≤ 239 yoga hours. The high-dosage group included participants who reported ≥ 240 yoga hours.

Results
Among the 35 study participants, the mean age was 54.83 years, and their mean years of yoga experience was 6.6 years. The average time after completing the acute phase of breast cancer treatments for the study participants was 4.2 ± 2.8 years. The specific breast cancer diagnosis varied among participants. The largest number (48.6%) of study participants had received a stage 1 breast cancer diagnosis. A smaller group had been diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer (37.1%). The smallest groups had been diagnosed with either stage 3 breast cancer (8.6%) or metastatic breast cancer (5.7%).

All study participants had an average level of perceived stress based on their scores from the 10-item Perceived Stress Scale. There was no significant difference in perceived stress or self-reported health between the low-dosage and high-dosage yoga groups. However, state anxiety, measured with the state anxiety subscale of the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory was greater in the low-dosage yoga group compared to the high-dosage yoga group.

Why is this relevant to yoga practitioners?
Research already shows strong support for yoga’s positive effects on reducing stress. As yoga practitioners, we’re likely aware of yoga’s stress-relieving effects from our own direct experience. However, even though we know we feel better when our yoga practice is part of our life, it’s easy to get busy with all of our other commitments and let the consistency of our yoga practice slide. The study we summarized here reminds us that the regularity of our yoga practice matters with respect to how we experience its benefits. It’s a good reminder to make a concerted effort to be consistent with our yoga practice if we want to experience all its positive effects.


 
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Conclusion
Yoga has stress-relieving and anxiety-reducing effects. This has been supported by research across yoga styles and for many different populations. However, based on the research we summarized here, a higher frequency and duration of yoga practice may have greater positive effects, particularly for breast cancer survivors.
Reference citation
Weitz, M.V., J.R. Bloch, Y. Birati, A. Rundio, K. Fisher, S. Byrne, L. Guerra. 2023. The relationship between yoga practice dosage and perceived stress, anxiety, and self-reported health among breast cancer survivors who practice yoga. Holistic Nursing Practice. 37(6):347-355.


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Break throughs in yoga

Any long-term practitioner can tell you about the ups and downs of their yoga practice. Often they made lots of quick gains or experienced rapid change in their first few years of practice. But then the pace of change slowed down. Maybe some months, or even a couple of years went by when it felt like nothing was really changing. They seemed to be struggling with the same postures day in and day out, until one day, suddenly the posture they’d been wrestling with for years happened for the first time. What changed? In this article, we’ll explore the answer to that question. Why does change sometimes happen after a long plateau in yoga? Read on to explore some of the reasons this might happen.

This article was prompted by a question that I received from a student. They asked:
“Why does it seem like the practice gets harder (and sometimes we even “lose progress”) right before we see a breakthrough or big improvement in the practice? It seems like the growth moments are always preceded by really frustrating slides backward.”

This student asks a good question. There’s both a physiological and a philosophical answer to this question of why change often seems to follow a plateau in yoga. Since yoganatomy.com is about yoga and anatomy, we’ll explore both.

Let’s start with the physiological answer.

The physiological part
Current sports science research describes a particular way that change happens when we challenge our body. Research indicates that in order to create change we have to repeatedly challenge our system within a reasonable range that doesn’t result in injury or ask us to do more than we can recover from. And then it takes our body some recovery time to integrate the new level of effort that we challenged our body to do. What’s interesting is that the change actually happens during the recovery phase of our training, not during the phase where we’re making the harder effort. That’s true whether we’re taxing our muscles to lift more weight or stressing our cardio system trying to run faster. That process isn’t linear. It’s three steps forward, and then one step back.

A plateau in yoga might be integration
Research that studied training blocks for sports like cycling or running that train particular aspects of the sport, like short sprints up a hill for example, has documented that the changes to our physiology don’t happen for the most part during the initial challenges to our body. They happen after we’ve repeated those challenges for some period of time and then allowed our body to rest and recover. So, what you imagine to be a plateau in yoga, may in fact be the span of time when your body is integrating the new activity.

Additionally, sometimes the answer is that what we experience as a plateau in yoga is actually just very slow change. We have to take into account that the body and context that we’re practicing with are different every day. If we’re tired from a busy workweek and feeling less strong in our arm balances because of it, for example, it doesn’t mean that we’re going backward in strength. To really assess whether we’re getting stronger in a particular pose or movement, we need to look at change over some months (or in the case of some poses, years) to be able to average out the daily ups and downs and see the arc of change.

The philosophical part
While the physiological changes that we experience when we do new physical activities are part of the answer to the question of progress in yoga, this is yoga, so of course, physiology isn’t the whole answer. So now let’s explore the philosophical side of the answer to this question.

One of my favorite ways to teach is to answer student questions with another question. This gets them thinking a little bit deeper, and sometimes it points them in the direction of realizing they already knew the answer to their own question. So let’s start with a few questions. Several questions live underneath the question the student posed in their email.

What does a plateau in yoga mean?
These are some questions that come to my mind when I consider the student’s question about why a breakthrough often happens after a plateau in yoga:

What does it mean to “progress” in yoga?
Do we need to progress at all?
What does it mean to hit a plateau in yoga?
Why do we have an assumption that progress is linear?
Why do we have an assumption that progress in yoga is doing deeper or more challenging postures?
When we age and inevitably have to start giving some postures back, are we not still progressing in the sense of learning and growing in our yoga practice?


What constitutes a big breakthrough or a big improvement in the practice? Is it only doing a more complex posture or going more deeply into a posture?


What would happen if you stayed in what you see as a plateau in yoga and you didn’t regularly experience physical change? Would you get bored with yoga? Would you think it was the fault of the style or teacher and then seek out a different style or a different teacher?
Many if not most of these questions may not have an answer or may have many answers, all of which are true.

Is yoga only about progress in postures?
In contemporary postural yoga in the West, there’s often a strong emphasis on the health and wellness benefits, particularly using yoga to increase flexibility, strength, balance, and other body-related achievements. But that definitely isn’t all that yoga is, or even necessarily what’s central to the experience of yoga, particularly for longer-term practitioners.

Progress in yoga is non-linear
Because we are using our body as our object of concentration, we’re tracking our physical experience. But that doesn’t mean there is a right way for anyone’s yoga practice to unfold. Sometimes when we think we’re on a plateau in yoga, change is happening, but in a non-linear way. Every day is different. Some days your energy is up. Other days maybe you’re tired or distracted. Taking the variability into account means that progress in yoga is rarely a straight line.

Look for the subtler aspects of yoga practice
What can also be true is that sometimes we’re just looking for something shiny rather than looking more closely at the level of details evolving all around us. If we have an idea that progress in yoga means doing more complicated postures or always going deeper in a pose, then whenever we don’t have that experience we might think we’re not progressing. But yoga is more than postures of course. Particularly as we age, what keeps us interested in our yoga practice may be different. We may find we need to direct our focus more onto our breath or our concentration to notice the subtle changes from day to day in our practice.

Relax your grip
Additionally, sometimes our mental outlook can be related to how change occurs in our practice. If we’re pushing too hard, or holding too tightly to a desired result, we can sometimes get in our own way. Softening our approach and relaxing our grip on our desired results can sometimes open the door to unexpected observations when we think we’re on a plateau in yoga.

Try a new approach
Finally, sometimes what’s missing is a piece of technique or a different approach. In that case, sometimes what happens is that we stop looking for a change for a while, so we think it still isn’t possible. Then one day, something (a teacher, a workshop, etc.) convinces us to try something a little bit different and we find that something we thought wasn’t possible was possible after all.

An example of this that I see with students in my workshops is reaching the hand to the floor in revolved side angle. When students first start practicing, everything may not be open enough to get the torso and shoulder close enough to their thigh for their hand to reach the floor. So, I’ll see students make a modification that makes sense for that moment, like reaching their hand to a block instead of the floor for example. But if the block becomes a habit, and they never take the block away and just look to see if their hand is getting closer to the floor, then of course they’ll never know that they’ve progressed in that way until someone suggests they try the pose without the block and see what happens.

Conclusion
There are many reasons that we might experience a plateau in yoga. Letting go of having a specific result in practice each day, focusing on other aspects of practice like the breath, and considering a new approach to a posture all have the potential to create new insights. Additionally, sometimes change is happening in our practice. It’s just slower than we can observe or our body is still integrating the new information.


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Yoga with Blocks

Try this great all levels yoga class with Brian Granader using blocks for alignment and support.

 

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Enjoy!


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Yoga with Brian, an all levels yoga class


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Karma and War

Why does my Karma force me to see war?
This is a really great question to ask.
What seeds did I plant to see war and can I change my seeds to not see war?
From what I understand about Karma, is, if we try really really hard we probably
won't be able to change the war in Ukraine. If, however, we use the problem as the
path…meaning look at the war and think to ourselves, where is there conflict in my
life…then we can make our personal wars go away.
What can we do daily, in mediation, prayer or action, to create peace in our world?
To create peace in our homes, within our families and communities?
We eagerly go into a pigeon pose because our hips are tight. We endure the
discomfort for a few minutes because know of the freedom it will bring later.
Let's go into our own tight places to explore the discomfort to create freedom.
Have the uncomfortable talk with a friend, family member or coworker and see if
freedom can be found. Settle into the discomfort for a while and see if you can
create change.
Peace is far better than war.


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Earth Day is Everyday

Earth Day is Every Day
Earth Day came and went and now it's back to life???
Like most living things, without care they wither and die.
What can we do every day???
1. Fix leaky faucets.
2. Bring a small bag with you on walks to pick up garbage.
3. Try composting your food waste and add it to your garden.
4. Recycle all you can.
5. Turn off lights when you leave a room.
6. Consider going solar to help reduce the draw on the electrical grid.
There are many many things we can do but if we just add one or two
items to our existing list we can each have an impact on our carbon
imprint and make the world a better place


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Being the Calm in the Center of the Storm

Be the Calm in the Center of the Storm
Is it possible to not practice being calm and still and then expect us to be calm or
still when needed???...NO


One of the many things we learn in yoga is to be calm or still during a challenging
posture.


In addition, in meditation, we are often practicing being still.
In normal daily life these things are useful when we want to experience
mindfulness or a meaningful discussion or focus on work.
When life turns sideways these skills are needed.
However, if we don't have those tools in our tool belt, it's much more difficult to
pull them out when needed.


We had a medical situation with a student recently and the calmness that came
from the staff and teacher were so helpful in assisting the student during a scary
time.


So, keep practicing yoga and meditation because we never know when we will
need to be the calm in the center of the storm


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Lifes Purpose

Have you ever wondered about your life’s purpose?

I probably think about this one question quite a bit and from time to time I realize I have no idea what I want to do for the rest of my life…however when I am teaching, in nature, with loved ones or sharing a good laugh, I realize there is no place better to be.

What if we changed our worldview on life’s purpose to a much narrower perspective?

Ask the following question:  “What is my purpose right now?”

I end up feeling so free from trying to figure out the rest of my life…my purpose in any moment is to be present with whomever or whatever is happening now.  In an hour, my purpose will look and feel different because the circumstances will change.

Life will likely continue to bring all kinds of things to us.  The question isn’t about changing those things…it’s more about being present as they arrive.

My hope is this allows you the freedom to direct your attention to the moment and life it more fully, rather than spending too much time on the bigger picture…which never turns out the way we think it will anyway.

Live Better Everyone!

Brian Granader

ERYT 500 and Coach


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