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Monday, May 03, 2004 - Page updated at 01:35 P.M. Yoga, more popular than ever, flexes body and mind By Tyrone Beason
Ever since Oprah featured a segment on yoga and Madonna beat back her nasty side with namastes, Americans can't get enough of the ancient Indian practice. Though 5,000 years old, yoga has boomed in recent years, with private instructors, gyms, community centers, even churches offering classes to help people wind down, focus, get limber and stay fit. Yoga Journal magazine estimates that 15 million people in this country practice yoga, twice as many as five years ago. The nationally recognized instructor Aadil Palkhivala said when he opened Yoga Centers in Bellevue 12 years ago, his was the only such facility on the Eastside. Today there are dozens of yoga studios "within walking distance," he joked.
So what's behind the yoga craze? For starters, Americans are more passionate about fitness in general, instructors say. At the same time, yoga's exotic image has transformed into one that appeals to mainstream, Western tastes. More important, yoga seems to work. Yoga emphasizes stretching, building core body strength, controlled breathing, enhanced circulation and deep relaxation.
"There are very few people, from kids on up to seniors, who wouldn't benefit from it," said Dr. Peter McGough, chief of the UW Medicine Factoria Clinic. McGough noted yoga's positive effects on musculoskeletal disorders such as arthritis in particular. But while studies in India, Europe and the United States point to yoga's potential benefits in a number of areas, even some yoga supporters concede more research is needed to track its long-term effects. Physical and spiritual Yoga has become so commonplace that it's easy to lose sight of its roots and original purpose. The word itself is a Sanskrit expression that refers to a "yoke" or "union." As both a philosophy for living and a physical exercise, yoga unites the mind, body and spirit, bringing mental clarity, health and balance, its adherents say.
But most Americans practice some form of hatha yoga, which focuses on breathing exercises and striking complex poses, or "asanas," that encourage flexibility, balance, strength and good energy flow through the body. Traditionally, hatha yoga serves as a foundation for other, more cerebral types. "Hatha yoga is just the bait," Palkhivala said in his soothing, breathy delivery. "The mind is much more subtle and the emotions even more subtle." As students learn the physical techniques and begin to feel the benefits, he said, some may want to venture deeper.
Palkhivala says yoga has become popular as more and more people grapple to find a real purpose in their lives, something to aspire to. They're seeking spiritual fitness, as well as elastic hamstrings. He believes it's important for people to shop around for an instructor who can teach not just physical techniques but yoga's deeper principles. "There is an urge to find something greater than the humdrum repetition of an unfulfilling existence," he insisted. "People are beginning to ask the question, 'So what?' " Whether or not people reach an end to spiritual suffering through yoga, its physical effects alone keep people coming back. "What yoga does is it moves the body in all different directions," without the repetitive motion of say, an aerobics routine, said Joseph Rodin, director of Northwest Yoga Festival, a four-day event featuring lectures, yoga classes and performances at Seattle Center that kicks off tomorrow. "It takes your body through its full range of motion." Doctors and physical therapists agree yoga benefits a variety of age groups, body types and physical conditions, but they are reluctant to rank it higher than other forms of exercise. Some people get more pleasure from and are therefore more likely to stick with aerobics, pilates or sports, which also promote fitness and stress relief. Hot yoga
One of the hottest literally and figuratively is bikram yoga, which uses high room temperatures to loosen muscles and promote the release of toxins through sweat. Whereas the iyengar style of yoga taught at Palkhivala's studio emphasizes meditation and holding individual poses for long periods to perfect form, bikram yoga involves a set of 26 poses that flow from one to the other. The faster pace and saunalike conditions offer a stimulating cardiovascular workout. At The Sweat Box on Seattle's Capitol Hill, "Hot Yoga" instructors crank up the heat to 105-110 degrees Fahrenheit for each 90-minute class in the bikram style.
Oser said Hot Yoga helps deliver more blood to muscles, speeds the breakdown of glucose and fatty acids, improves coordination, makes muscles less prone to injury, reduces heart irregularities and burns fat. It's a total body experience, Oser said, "from head to toe, inside and out.... Your whole body is worked out every time you come in." McGough advises people with pre-existing medical conditions or who are on certain types of medication blood-pressure drugs, for example to consult a doctor before joining a particular yoga class, just to make sure the style is appropriate for them. While yoga instructors usually ask students about medical concerns before classes begin, most are not equipped to do in-depth screenings. It's up to the student to bring up any issues. A person who has especially tight hamstrings, for example, may want to avoid yoga routines that call for strenuous forward bends, because this might lead to injury. No competition Another aspect of yoga classes that may attract people is the lack of competitiveness. While yoga students strive to be more self-aware, they also work at being less self-conscious in relation to those around them. But to eliminate the social pressure altogether, some yoga students prefer one-on-one sessions. Many instructors offer classes in studios built onto their homes or in neighborhood storefronts. In settings like these, the feeling is more intimate and the embarrassment of making a mistake is minimal, since nobody's watching. Jo Leffingwell, a former Seattle theater actress, exercised patience and grace as she coached this reporter through a series of warm-up stretches, breathing exercises and iyengar poses, followed by 10 minutes of meditation and a lesson in yoga teachings, at her studio in Seattle's Queen Anne neighborhood. Leffingwell explained that just as a person's mind has tendencies and cravings that lead to an imbalanced life, that person's body has tendencies that can lead to physical imbalance, discomfort and pain. It could be shortness of breath, an inability to twist in one direction, or simple tightness in the back or legs resulting from a lack of exercise, stress or a previous injury. Yoga, she said, "shows you what the tendencies are in your body and brings you back to a more balanced state." She encourages her students, as they bend and flex into position, to take their time and truly "experience the posture." If you can't bend over and touch your ankles on the first few visits, or balance your body on one leg, that's fine. "What you're trying to do is be present in your body, moment by moment," she said. Leffingwell explained that an essential part of yoga study is learning sutras, or words of wisdom about yoga, the self and the universe, many of which have been passed along for thousands of years. Clear sight One prominent idea embodied in both the physical and mental aspects of yoga is the belief that inside each person is a being that "sees" everything clearly. Some might think of it as the conscience, or intuition.
While experts like Leffingwell, Rodin and Palkhivala are pleased that people are introducing themselves to more physical types of yoga, they say the greatest path to a healthy life is connecting with that inner being. "Yoga helps bring out what you are," Palkhivala said. "You have to face it, and sometimes it's not pleasant." But if mastering yoga poses and getting a good workout are all you're looking for, that's OK, too, he said. "The house is huge," Palkhivala said, referring to all the yoga choices people have available to them. "Where you want to live in it is your choice." Tyrone Beason: 206-464-2251 or tbeason@seattletimes.com Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company
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