Showing posts with label Sports & Fitness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sports & Fitness. Show all posts
All you need is enough space for a yoga mat to start a home practice.

at the studio isn't as satisfying as a daily routine. Learn new poses, good sequencing, correct form and the joy of careful guidance from your studio yoga class. Perfect your poses, deepen your commitment and enjoy better fitness and peace of mind by adding practice at home. Yoga homework isn't complicated, doesn't require much more than time and attention, and will enhance your appreciation for the benefits of your work in the studio.

Make Space
You may not have a spare room to dedicate to your yoga practice but you do need a mat-sized piece of real estate that becomes your at-home studio. Try to find an empty corner or a cleared area next to a bare wall so you have support for inversions and Legs Up the Wall pose. A serene, uncluttered, light-filled space with a simple altar, spiritual image or just a single flower, crystal or a candle helps set the right tone for a stress-relieving, focused practice that can lift you out of the daily chaos. Comfort and safety are key, so carve out enough room for more ambitious, stretching poses as well as the basic standbys contained by a yoga mat. Always practice in the same spot to build a daily yoga habit.


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Yoga Time
Life gets in the way of home practice if you let it, so schedule time for yoga and treat it like any other serious appointment. Experiment to see what time of day works best for you -- maybe a morning Surya Namaskar is your wake-up call. Mid-day on the mat might be better than a lunch break from the killer pace in your home office. A restorative yoga session after work or before bed could stretch out kinked muscles and lower your stress to healthy sleep level. There's no rule about practicing for a set class time, so if you have to grab a few minutes here and there, create the space to make that happen. Keep your mat handy for the toddler's nap time; breathe into Pranayama while you're on hold for a conference call; bookend your day with energizing backbends and tension-releasing twists.

Safety and Sequencing
Safely build a home practice with sequencing that takes you through the spectrum of warm-ups, energizing and stretching poses, and gentle, relaxing poses. A standard sequence includes opening asanas such as Easy pose for a brief meditation and Hero pose to activate large leg muscles. Several repetitions of Sun Salutations take care of stretching, strengthening and warming up. Standing poses activate major muscle groups for stamina, flexibility and strength. Choose related poses such as Extended Triangle and Revolved Triangle that work opposing muscles. Inversions -- Headstand, Downward-Facing Dog -- are demanding and energizing, as are backbends like Cobra and Bridge. Don't skip backbends if you sit at a desk all day. Twists feel so good because they ease tension in your shoulders, back and hips and, along with Forward Bends, they signal your mind to calm down. Close your practice with Supported Shoulder Stand and Savasana, Corpse pose, to completely relax and savor how refreshed you feel.

Private Coaching
It can be inspiring to have an instructor, even at home. So take advantage of free and inexpensive options for every level of practitioner from beginner to advanced. Kripalu, Yoga Journal, Yoga International, Gaiam and others offer free yoga classes and individual pose instructions online. Your library likely has numerous DVDs you can borrow. YouTube is a good source for sampling free yoga instruction. Find a favorite video instructor and invest in one or more DVDs to follow for a daily practice. Tailor your at-home yoga to your goals. Explore poses that target one part of your body that needs work -- spine stretches or hip openers -- and create your own mini-sequence. Put the poses you love in the lineup so you always look forward to hitting the mat.
Fight the signs of aging with face yoga exercises.
It's inevitable that everyone gets older, but that doesn't mean you have to look like you're getting older. Yoga instructor Annelise Hagen, author of "The Yoga Face," helps her students turn back the clock with yoga poses and exercises not only for the body but also the face. While Lion pose may be the only true yoga pose that helps combat sagging face muscles and wrinkles, Hagen has developed several yoga facial exercises to help improve your skin tone, reduce lines and increase circulation. Positive results should be noticed after three or four weeks of continuous exercise.

Roar Like a Lion

  • Typically performed while kneeling and sitting back on your heels, the facial portion of the traditional Lion pose can be performed on its own to help improve blood circulation and relieve tension in your facial muscles. Whether you choose to sit in a chair, cross-legged on the floor or stand, start by inhaling through your nose. Then, open your mouth as wide as you can, lower your jaw, stick your tongue out and curl its tip toward your chin. Open your eyes wide, look toward the ceiling and exhale through your mouth with a "haaaa" sound. Relax and repeat three times.

Lift and Tone Your Cheeks

  • The Satchmo and the Puppet Face, created by Hagen, can help tone your cheek muscles and the area around the cheekbone. To perform the Satchmo, inhale through your nose, puff out your cheeks and move the air from cheek to cheek. After 10 to 15 seconds, exhale and repeat two or three times. The Puppet Face helps smooth out the marionette lines that run from the sides of your nose to the corners of your mouth. To do this exercise, put your index and middle fingers along the lines, apply a little pressure for resistance and smile. Briefly hold the smile, relax and repeat 20 times.

Dewrinkle Your Forehead

  • Hagen recommends the Surprise Me exercise to help work the frontalis muscles of your forehead and smooth out the wrinkles. Open your eyes as wide as you comfortably can, like you're surprised, and try not to wrinkle your brow. Focus on an object straight ahead of you and hold this position for 10 seconds. Relax and repeat five times. To smooth out the frown lines between your eyebrows, purposely scowl, place your index fingers just above and midway along your eyebrow, and resist the scowl by pulling your fingers to the sides. Hold for five seconds, relax and repeat.

Pucker Up

  • To develop fuller lips, Hagen recommends working the ring muscles around your lips with the Marilyn Monroe exercise. Place your index, middle and ring fingers against your lips, apply a little pressure to create resistance, pucker and pretend to blow a kiss. Repeat several times.

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