| "Yoga
means bringing together mind, body and spirit, but in Western yoga,
we've distilled it down to body," says Shana Meyerson, an instructor
in Los Angeles. "That's not even yoga anymore. If the goal is
to look like Madonna, you're better off running or spinning."
|
Time Magazine
October 15, 2007
I was quoted in the following
article, When Yoga Hurts (October 15, 2007), as saying
that if someones goal is to look like Madonna, they are better
off spinning.
When I said this to Pamela Paul, the context was solely to make
the point that yoga is deeper than just a physical pursuit. If someone
goes in to a yoga practice with his or her mental and spiritual
intentions intact, they will have a deep, meaningful, and true yoga
practice.
That being said, in reading the rest of the articleand especially
the preceding paragraph about findings that yoga isnt effective
in building cardiovascular health, burning calories, or fending
off osteoporosisit may seem as if I am saying that yoga is
less effective than running or spinning in accomplishing physical
goals. I would like to go on record as refuting those claims.
As mentioned in the article, there are many different forms of yoga,
some more relaxing, others more vigorous. The adult practice I teach,
for example, Power Yoga/Vinyasa Flow, is extraordinarily rigorous
and physically challenging, while at the same time mentally intense
and spiritually engaging.
While its true that cardiovascular benefits are inherent and
inextricably linked to certain forms of exercise (all you have to
do to get cardio on the treadmill is show up), the cardiovascular
benefits of yoga come not from showing up, but from working the
pranayama, or controlled breathing. The reason that most yoga practitioners
are not achieving cardiovascular benefits is that they are not regulating
their breath, which is meant to be the foundation of the practice.
In Power Yoga we use the Ujjaii breath, a long, deep, and guttural
nasal breath that requires an inordinate amount of focus to maintain
throughout an hour-and-a-half long practice (the standard length
of a class) and that gives a practitioner an extraordinary cardiovascular
workout if they can, in fact, maintain it.
As far as burning calories is concerned, a full throttle Power Yoga
practice will burn about 500 calories per hour (thats 750
calories per class). That figure is comparable to what you can expect
to burn in the same amount of time stairclimbing, long considered
the king of calorie-burning exercises.
And the claim that yoga doesnt develop the muscle-bearing
strength needed to help with osteoporosis...? Id love to see
the author of that study hold a two-minute handstand or lunge and
get back to the Time Magazine readership on that finding. Not only
does Power Yoga integrate this kind of extraordinary strength, but
it is doing it in the safest, most efficient manner: by carrying
ones own body weight.
Bottom line, yes, you can hurt yourself in yoga, just like you can
hurt yourself in anything else. The main culprits of injuries are
insufficient instruction coupled by poor alignment. Not to mention
the most common injury of all: injury to the ego when people refuse
to accept their own abilities and limitations.
When Yoga Hurts
By Pamela Paul
Amy Toosley was standing in a split pose when her yoga instructor
gave her leg a little prod. "I heard the loudest pop I've ever
heard, and the instructor said, 'Ooh! Good release, huh?'"
Toosley recalls. "Not really--I could hardly walk." With
her hamstring muscle snapped, Toosley, 32, avoided yoga for the
next three months, and almost a year later, she is still in pain.
Bad-mouthing yoga seems like begging for a hit of unfavorable karma.
But with more than 14 million people practicing yoga or tai chi
nationwide, up 136% since 2000, orthopedic surgeons, physical therapists
and chiropractors across the country are dealing with the increasing
fallout from yoga gone awry. Over the past three years, 13,000 Americans
were treated in an emergency room or a doctor's office for yoga-related
injuries, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Often people get hurt because they assume that yoga is simple and
that anybody can pretzel himself or herself on demand. Edward Toriello,
an orthopedic surgeon and spokesman for the American Academy of
Orthopaedic Surgeons, says most of the injuries he sees are sustained
by "weekend warrior" baby boomers who begin yoga without
realizing that their bodies are no longer what they used to be.
"They think that yoga is an easy way to start exercising, so
they go to class once a week, not stretched out at all, and they
get hurt."
At the same time, others see yoga--a practice originally conceived
to help people achieve inner peace and tranquillity--as a way to
get a vigorous workout. More than five times as many people take
yoga classes at health clubs today as did a decade ago, and enthusiasts
have devised all kinds of variations appalling to purists: hip-hop
yoga, disco yoga, power yoga, not to mention controversial hot yoga,
or Bikram, which incites people to push themselves to their limit
in sweltering rooms in which temperatures are set at 105ºF
(41ºC).
The truth is, yoga, regardless of the form, doesn't offer a comprehensive
way to get fit. According to a study by the American Council on
Exercise, a national nonprofit organization that certifies fitness
instructors and promotes physical fitness, dedicated yoga practitioners
show no improvement in cardiovascular health. It's not the best
way to lose weight either. A typical 50-min. class of hatha yoga,
one of the most popular styles of yoga in the U.S., burns off fewer
calories than are in three Oreos--about the same as a slow, 50-min.
walk. Even power yoga burns fewer calories than a comparable session
of calisthenics. And while yoga has been shown to alleviate stress
and osteoarthritis, it doesn't develop the muscle-bearing strength
needed to help with osteoporosis.
Part of the problem is that increasingly, the people teaching yoga
don't know enough about it. Yoga was traditionally taught one-on-one
by a yogi over a period of years, but today instructors can lead
a class after just a weekend course. Though the Yoga Alliance, formed
in 1999 and now based in Clinton, Md., has set a minimum standard
of 200 hours of training for certification, only 16,168 of the estimated
70,000 instructors in the U.S. have been certified. "Yoga
means bringing together mind, body and spirit, but in Western yoga,
we've distilled it down to body," says Shana Meyerson, an instructor
in Los Angeles. "That's not even yoga anymore. If the goal
is to look like Madonna, you're better off running or spinning."
Namaste to that.
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