Saturday, 31 March 2018
What are the Benefits of Yoga?
These are the benefits for everyone! So what are you waiting for?
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Friday, 30 March 2018
7 Ways Kids Benefit From Yoga
7 Ways Kids Benefit From Yoga
It's hard to be a kid
today!
Children deal with
many distractions, temptations, overstimulation and peer pressure. Schools are
challenged to do more with less and be creative in how they reach even the most
isolated child.
Yoga is a low-cost,
helpful tool that can have a positive impact on children.
Here are some of the
many benefits of teaching yoga to kids:
Yoga helps kids to:
- · Develop body awareness
- · Learn how to use their bodies in a healthy way
- · Manage stress through breathing, awareness, meditation and healthy movement
- · Build concentration
- · Increase their confidence and positive self-image
- · Feel part of a healthy, non-competitive group
- · Have an alternative to tuning out through constant attachment to electronic devices
In a school setting, yoga can also benefit teachers by:
- · Giving them an alternate way to handle challenges in the classroom
- · Giving them a healthy activity to integrate with lesson plans
- · Give them a way to blend exercise into their classes
Here's what your kids
can expect to learn in yoga class:
1. Awareness of the
breath
Breathing exercises
can energize kids or encourage relaxation, depending on what you teach.
Different games and techniques help kids connect to how their bodies feel as a
result of deep breathing. Focus increases, as does their breathing and lung
capacity. Stress is naturally reduced and healthy hormones are released.
2. Strengthening and
energizing
Kids think that yoga
is great for stretching, but doesn't build strength. It's important for a
teacher to include conversations, as well as exercises around how helpful yoga
is for building strength. Talking about the different muscles used in poses and
incorporating games and sequences will help build strength as well as body
awareness and coordination. Bodies that are strong digest food better, maintain
a healthy weight and can support the stress of carrying heavy loads, like a
backpack. Bodies will also breathe better, work
more efficiently and protect the more fragile joints.
3. Balancing
Balancing poses teach
children that with increased focus, you can increase attention naturally, even
in kids who struggle with different attention challenges. Poses and games
focused on balancing skills, develop an intrinsic strength, evoke a meditative
feeling, and promote stillness and quieting of the mind. This can help kids
deal with the stress of living in a chaotic world where constant stimulation is
a regular part of life.
4. Stretching and
lengthening
It's great for kids to
be strong, but a body that's only based on strength has no way to yield under
pressure. Strong muscles without accompanying flexibility can't move quickly,
pulling on bones and joints. Yoga poses stretch muscles and through integrating
breathing and movement, muscles become warm and become more flexible. They can
yield when they need to, and support tender joints in a more functional way.
5. Awareness and focus
Yoga helps create
awareness in the body through deep breathing and movement. It gives kids a way
to express themselves, build a strong connection between what they hear and
what they do. Children that have healthy body awareness are more confident and
strong, have better posture, breathe better and have a sense of quiet strength.
6. Flowing, connecting
and integrating
When we string poses
together, we give kids a taste of what it means to move with ease. It also
helps them build the awareness that all our movements are a series of
coordinated efforts between muscles, bones, joints and nerves. Older kids are
more able to isolate different muscle groups and get more sophisticated about
movements; things like keeping the arms lifted in Warrior 1, while at the
same time, dropping the shoulders to relax them. All these things together
increase a child's sense feeling integrated.
7. Meditation and
relaxation
Yoga is meditative by
nature. So whether a child is holding a balancing posture, sitting in meditation or
moving through a series of poses, there's going to be a calming, soothing
quality. Giving younger kids something to do as they rest on their mats will
help with their attention, such as suggesting they think of a favorite color or
toy. Older kids will find it easier to rest longer with less structure.
There are lots of
tools you can use to teach yoga to children. The young ones like games, doing
poses from yoga books for children and singing songs with big, expressive
movements. Older children love to create their own poses, be challenged by
balancing and learn about the muscles and other aspects of anatomy.
Excerpted from Stretched:Build Your Yoga Business, Grow Your
Teaching Techniques, Bare Bones Yoga.
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