Showing posts with label asanas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label asanas. Show all posts

Thursday, October 8, 2015


Yoga for your Power and Peace, Medical Yoga 

Maureen Mason MSPT WCS, CCI, PYT-C                    

Part two of nine. October 2015, Yoga mind beyond muscles.
 Celebrate PT Month with Medical Yoga!

Yoga can be useful as a philosophy and a lifestyle. Not a religion, but having tenants or sutras that are similar to religious disciplines. One may cultivate religious practices and use yoga derived strategies to augment and enhance the religious affiliation. Or use yoga as your guide to optimize your human potential. If the ultimate goal (of yoga) is enlightenment, no small topic, we see strategies to attain bliss, enlightenment, as the spiritual and energetic goal of yoga. The spiritual and energetic aspects of yoga are often overlooked in "yoga workout" classes. In my first post I referenced the 8 limbs of yoga, and today we are looking more deeply into the spiritual /energetic aspects of yoga, limbs 5, 6, 7, 8.

In Physical Therapy we use  yoga postures, or Asanas, to attain flexibility, balance, strength, and power. Yoga postures can help our clients meet their goals. Also we address the mind, and the ability of our clients to attain a sense of peace or calm, to tune down or turn off pain, as well as improve relaxation and self care. This brings us into the steps and strategies for meditation.

We must tame our dragons, our gremlins, and learn to focus our mind with uninterrupted awareness. We must withdraw from the senses, Pratyahara, and then develop our single pointed concentration Dharana. Next, Dhyana is the term for the practice of meditation that cultivates supreme focus. Ultimate calm control and letting go of the busy brain. And finally Samadhi, bliss. No dragons, gremlins, or buzzing hummingbirds.

Honestly, I am simply working on sitting up tall, un-supported, and breathing and keeping my mind on the mantras I use. I also use Christian prayers I have memorized. I am partly a hummingbird busy brain, and a dragon viewer, but some days I attain the peace and tranquility I seek in this busy life. It is amazing how much more I can perceive and sense in life, when I withdraw from the sensory realm for 5 to 30 minutes with meditation. I usually use a monotonous sound track of flute and ocean waves to cover up neighborhood and household sounds that distract me.I occasionally listen to podcasts or guided meditations as well, see links.

Many of my clients say they simply cannot concentrate to meditate, and it truly is a practice. Here are some things that may come into your mind during morning meditation; "I am hungry, my neck hurts, I need to adjust my posture, I am not breathing right, I want coffee, I feel sexy, that airplane is loud, that dog is annoying, what will I wear today, what time is it now, I am thirsty, the school shootings are horrid, the middle east seems always unsettled, the presidential race is wild, the weather is too hot for now, work will be busy today, I must call so and so for their birthday, I need to use the bathroom"…and so on. This may be in the course of 1-2 minutes! Have a sense of humor and go easy on yourself. You can keep going back to your mantra and breathing, and strive to allow yourself positive thoughts and intentions for your time there and now, your day, your family, your community, the world. 


 Here I am sitting up on a folded blanket due to tight hamstrings, and using pillows to support my knees. Take the time to get comfortable to sit upright without straining.

This is a nice site with free offerings of guided 10 minute sessions, great for mini sessions, and more extensive options for those who want to study as a free course.

Guided breath training, creating a supportive “yoga couch” if needing to lie down, and guided meditation options. Ginger is a PT, founder of Professional Yoga Therapy, and pioneer in bringing complementary evidence based methods into physical therapy practice. The associated website home page has extensive education on breath control and the diaphragm.(I am studying her methods for certification and will also be a teaching assistant at upcoming seminars. She rocks! A scholar and a humanist and a wise PT.)


The mantra:
A great text is Strength in the Storm, by Easwaren, founder of the Blue Mountain Center of Meditation in Berkeley Ca. Easwaren provides examples of how individuals of various faiths can use a mantra specific to their faith for meditation.
He advises half an hour in the morning, and evening if possible for meditation and spiritual reading. You may use his guide for selecting a mantra at http://www.easwaren.org/mantra








Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Yoga for Peace and Power, Medical Yoga

Yoga for your Power and Peace, Medical Yoga    
Maureen Mason MSPT WCS, CCI, PYT-C

                                                 

Part one of nine. October 2015, Yoga introduction. Celebrate Physical Therapy Month with us by learning some mind, body, and  spirit practices!

Yoga can be regarded as a philosophy and a lifestyle. Not a religion, but having tenants or sutras that are similar to religious disciplines. There are 8 limbs to the practice as written around 200 AD, by Patanjali:

The eight limbs, or steps to yoga, are as follows:
1.   Yama: Practice of universal morality, including non-violence to self and others, truthfulness, not stealing, restraint, and not coveting.

2.   Niyama:  Personal observances, including tapas: practices, seeking purity, and self-education and contentment.

3.    Asanas:  Body postures

4.     Pranayama:  Breathing exercises, and control of prana

5.     Pratyahara :  Control of the senses

6.     Dharana:  Concentration and cultivating inner perceptual awareness

7.     Dhyana:  Devotion, Meditation on the Divine

8.     Samadhi:  Union with the Divine


            In our modern busy culture, most people are familiar with the Asanas or body postures, and with the concept of meditation. But it is all foundation work for our spiritual development as human beings, so that we can be free of our ego and separation from the divine. You may call this bliss, a state of grace, this Samadhi. Quoting from expressionsofspirit.com:

“Samadhi refers to union or true Yoga. There is an ending to the separation that is created by the "I" and "mine" of our illusory perceptions of reality. The mind does not distinguish between self and non-self, or between the object contemplated and the process of contemplation. The mind and the intellect have stopped and there is only the experience of consciousness, truth and unutterable joy.” This is the 8th limb of yoga.

I wanted to share the foundation philosophy of yoga for body, mind and spirit, to allow people to see the process of cultivation of these habits that people follow for their development and enlightenment. Consider what you need for your life to be balanced, in body mind and spirit. Some individuals desire an athletic focused, physical challenge with yoga, with perhaps 3 minutes of rest or a mini mediation at the end. This is yoga for power. But you can also cultivate your own sense of peace, with sensory control and an awareness of your own perceptions and mindfulness. And you can cultivate a connection to the divine, Samadhi. Combine the varied disciplines of yoga for power and peace.
Here are two resources you may use for more detail.




Next up: Dhyana, meditation and uninterrupted awareness