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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Yoga for Kids, Teens, Adults, and Elders

Yoga is useful for all age-groups

Yoga is a priceless treasure now available to all.  It is a form of exercise that has become increasingly popular in recent years.  It is widely recognized as a scientific method to stretch, tone, strengthen, and relax the entire body, inside and out, rewarding the practitioner with glowing health.  Yogasanas are safe and effective for people of all ages.  Yoga is an exercise regimen that anyone can practice, no matter how old or young.  Yoga is an ancient practice that benefits every age and body type.  

Yoga for Kids:  Today’s kids are under a lot of stress as compared to the previous generation – homework, peer pressure, never-ending after-school pursuits and interests.  Yoga has been found to be very effective in addressing these problems.  The practices of yoga not only help to keep the young body strong and supple but also incorporate mental activities and disciplines that help to develop attention and concentration, and stimulate the creative abilities that are latent within the child.  

Benefits of yoga for kids

  • Yoga helps improve strength and flexibility.
  • Yoga increases concentration, focus, and attention.
  • Kid’s yoga increases self-esteem.
  • Yoga decreases anxiety and increases ability to relax
  • Yoga increased trust, compassion, teamwork and leadership skills of your beloved children
  • Yoga improved digestion and ease in gas pains for children
  • Yoga helps to release stress and breathe well
  • Yoga strengthens the immune system of kids

Parent benefits of yoga
  • Yoga improves parent and child bonding
  • Better sleep for parents  
  • Yoga reduces stress for both parents and kids
  • Yoga builds parental confidence
  • Yoga helps to calm your baby. Yes, there are yoga asanas for babies and toddlers as well.

Yoga for Teens:  The teenage years can be the most difficult years, both physically and emotionally.  A teenager’s life is continually in a state of change.  During puberty and the later teen years, enormous and rapid changes take place in the body and mind.  The yoga program for teenagers should be so designed as to minimize the negative effects of hormonal changes that they inevitably go through.  Sun salutation is an amazing asana series that would leave them both energized and calm at the same time.  The shoulder stand is wonderful for balancing the hormones, and together with the plough pose and the fish pose, it is most effective.  
More about Yoga for Teens HERE
Yoga for Adults:  The biggest problem with today’s adults is of managing stress.  It is a known fact that stress is the cause of ninety percent of aliments striking humans.  One has to juggle so many variables to keep oneself competitive in his work place.  An adult has to play many roles simultaneously, viz.  father, son, husband, subordinate, boss, etc.  This takes a toll on his work-life balance.  The practice of yoga balances the body, mind and spirit and ensures complete well being.  

Yoga for Elders:  It has been proved beyond doubt that yoga is anti-ageing.  It retards the ageing process.  No one can escape from the clutches of the ageing process.  But it is possible to avoid the ills of ageing with yoga.  One can be as fit as a fiddle even at the later years of life by doing yoga.  Most elders complain about various physical conditions including weak bones, muscle cramps, back pain, osteoporosis, joint pains, and decreased mobility.  There are several yoga exercises specifically designed to address these issues.  
  

Yoga offers a wide range of benefits depending on which point of your life you decide to practice it.  There are several variants of yoga postures and exercises intended for different age groups.  Every person, irrespective of age, can practice yoga and reap its benefits.  
This article originally appeared HERE.   Additional information from HERE.


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Friday, June 14, 2013

Mindful Kids, Peaceful Schools

By Jill Suttie UC Berkeley  

With eyes closed and deep breaths, students are learning a new method to reduce anxiety, conflict, and attention disorders.  But don’t call it meditation.  
At Toluca Lake Elementary School in Los Angeles, a cyclone fence encloses the asphalt blacktop, which is teeming with kids.  It’s recess time and the kids, who are mostly Latino, are playing tag, yelling, throwing balls, and jumping rope.  When the bell rings, they reluctantly stop and head back to their classrooms—except for Daniel Murphy’s second grade class.  
Murphy’s students file into the school auditorium, each carrying a round blue pillow deco-rated with white stars.  They enter giggling and chatting, but soon they are seated in a circle on their cushions, eyes closed, quiet and concentrating.  Two teachers give the children instructions on how to pay attention to their breathing, telling them to notice the rise and fall of their bellies and chests, the passage of air in and out of their noses.  Though the room is chilly—the heating system broke down earlier that day—the children appear comfortable, many with Mona Lisa smiles on their faces.  
“What did you notice about your breath this morning?” one teacher asks.  
“Mine was like a dragon,” says Michael, a child to the teacher’s right.  Albert, another child, adds, “Yeah, I could see mine.  It was like smoke.”  
The teachers lead the children through 45 minutes of exercises focused on breathing, listening, movement, and reflection.  At different points, the kids

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Meditation For Kids: Parents Turn To Mindfulness for Children's Progressive Development

By  at Huffington Post


As more adults turn to mindfulness practices like yoga and meditation to combat mounting stress in their own lives (91 percent of Americans experienced stress in the month of March, according to a Huffington Post survey), they're also experimenting with alternative practices to teach their kids to relax.  

Unfortunately, little ones aren't immune to the damaging effects of stress -- but they may benefit from stress-relieving practices meant to calm the mind and release physical tension.  

Boston dad Andre Kelly told ABC News that he practices mindfulness meditation with his 10-year-old son Hayden every morning before school.  Teaching kids mindfulness can go a long way in helping them boost awareness and control their moods, according to Kelly, who started a meditation program for children, Boston Buddha, to bring mindfulness programs into elementary schools.  
"The magic moment where they understand mindfulness is when they can catch themselves not paying attention.  That's their chance to control their impulsivity,"Kelly said.  "It helps them stop themselves from doing things like jumping on the couch or whacking their younger brother."  

Mindfulness -- the focused awareness on the present moment, generally cultivated through a meditation practice -- can help to curb kids' impulsivity, and research has also shown school mindfulness programs to be effective in reducing symptoms of depression and anxiety among adolescents.