Improvement Time- Yoga Tips

Improvement Time- Yoga Tips

Beginners often wonder how long it will take before postures get easier. While there’s no simple answer to that question, you will notice that if you practice consistently (on a daily or weekly schedule) rather than intermittently postures gradually become less difficult. If you find you hurt after practice, try doing shorter, more frequent sessions to improve your flexibility.

Hatha Yoga Is Preventive Medicine- Yoga Tips

Hatha Yoga Is Preventive Medicine- Yoga Tips

A regular yoga practice has many benefits, and some of them are the ones you don’t see.

The benefits of hatha yoga include the injuries not suffered because your muscles are balanced, the blood pressure that didn’t rise because you are managing stress, and the emotional arguments that didn’t occur with family members, friends, and co-workers because you have cultivated a sense of inner calm.

Any discipline of hatha yoga will, to varying extents, strengthen the muscles, reduce stress, and focus the mind and emotions.

In addition, certain hatha yoga postures are associated with specific health benefits. For example, forward bends are thought to improve digestion, as well as stretch the spine and hamstrings, and inversions such as headstands and shoulder stands promote circulation as well as build shoulder strength and core body strength.

Beginners- Yoga Tips

Beginners- Yoga Tips

When you’re starting out, the important thing to focus on during your yoga practice is the balance between body and mind. You want to perform poses to the best of your ability, without stress or strain, and to remember to breathe. Your flexibility and the duration you can hold positions will increase over time.

Be An Apprentice- Yoga Tips

Be An Apprentice- Yoga Tips

An apprenticeship is a valuable part of yoga instruction and is a requirement in some yoga certification programs. As an apprentice instructor, you ask a favorite teacher whether you can be an apprentice to him or her. You start by leading the class in the first few minutes of warming up poses, and then turn the bulk of the class back over to the regular instructor. Over a period of several classes you gradually teach more and more of the class until you finally teach an entire class yourself. This process allows the fledgling instructor to learn how it feels to direct a class and helps them to modify their technique. The regular instructor observes the apprentice while he or she is leading the class and observes whether the class understands and follows the apprentice. The instructor then gives the apprentice feedback, such as whether they need to speak louder, or slower, or whether they asked the class to hold a pose too long, or not long enough.

Make Your Downward Dog A Good Dog- Yoga Tips

Make Your Downward Dog A Good Dog- Yoga Tips

Downward-facing dog is a restorative yoga pose that is done often throughout the course of many yoga classes. This yoga pose looks simple, but there are many elements you can focus on as you hold the pose.

Some tips for a good down dog include the following:

-Keep your hands shoulder-width apart and spread your fingers while pressing the palms into the floor.

-Tuck your tailbone. Many people make the mistake of arching the low back in this pose in an attempt to stretch the hamstrings. Instead, concentrate on lifting the sit bones towards the ceiling.

-Walk your dog. Slowly alternate bending and straightening each knee to stretch your calves and hamstrings.

-Keep the outside edges of your feet parallel to each other and keep your feet about hip width apart.

-Slowly raise your toes off the floor and lower them; this motion helps to release the hamstrings and bring your heels closer to the floor.