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Gelpo Don't be afraid that things are changing, because indeed they always are.

07/03/2022

Provided to YouTube by recordJetHey Darlin' · Mira NaitHey Darlin'℗ Weitblick RecordsReleased on: 2021-07-16Composer: Alexander Schalm SaltoLyricist: Alexand...

18/06/2021

En Médecine tibétaine, une bonne consommation de liquide n'est pas moins importante qu'une bonne Nutrition. Quelle est la bonne boisson et combien avons-nous besoin de boire? Du point de vue de la Médecine tibétaine, la quantité d'eau consommée entre les repas ne peut pas être limitée.Bien s...

16/06/2021

Yoga is a disciplined method for attaining a goal. It includes both physical and spiritual methods to control the body and mind. Yoga has gained a lot of popularity over the past few years. It has a lot of benefits and a few or none side effects. Yoga is a widely discussed topic, but the best time t...

16/06/2021

B.K.S. Iyengar, the doyen of yoga calls ‘Brahma Muhuratam‘ the best time for yoga. But, how many of us can get up at 3.40 A.M. and start our yoga practice?Not many, and certainly not me. What then should I, you, she and they do- Forget about yoga or look for another time more suitable for it?Lot...

09/06/2021
13 Best Yoga Stretches to Do Every Day to Ease Stiffness and PainFor many, yoga is a path to physical health. A solid, c...
09/06/2021

13 Best Yoga Stretches to Do Every Day to Ease Stiffness and Pain

For many, yoga is a path to physical health. A solid, consistent practice can improve your strength, flexibility, coordination—and even your mental well-being. While all of these benefits are appealing, it can be difficult to know how to start your own practice. This is especially true if you're not comfortable going to a studio.

The image of yoga on social media can be incredibly daunting. Some of the most popular yoga ambassadors are praised for doing acrobatic stunts and complicated stretches (which is awesome for them!). But because of that, sometimes people assume yoga is only for those who are super athletic or flexible—or who are of a certain body shape and/or race.

Does doing yoga make you a Hindu?For many people, the main concern in a yoga class is whether they are breathing correct...
09/06/2021

Does doing yoga make you a Hindu?

For many people, the main concern in a yoga class is whether they are breathing correctly or their legs are aligned. But for others, there are lingering doubts about whether they should be there at all, or whether they are betraying their religion.

Farida Hamza, a Muslim woman living in the US (pictured above), had been doing yoga for two or three years when she decided she wanted to teach it.

"When I told my family and a few friends, they did not react positively," she recalls. "They were very confused as to why I wanted to do it - that it might be going against Islam."

Their suspicions about yoga are shared by many Muslims, Christians and Jews around the world and relate to yoga's history as an ancient spiritual practice with connections to Hinduism and Buddhism.

Last year, a yoga class was banned from a church hall in the UK. "Yoga is a Hindu spiritual exercise," said the priest, Father John Chandler. "Being a Catholic church we have to promote the gospel, and that's what we use our premises for." Anglican churches in the UK have taken similar decisions at one time or another. In the US, prominent pastors have called yoga "demonic".
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One answer to the question of whether yoga really is a religious activity will soon be given by the Supreme Court in the country of its birth, India.

Last month, a pro-yoga group petitioned the court to make it a compulsory part of the school syllabus on health grounds - but state schools in India are avowedly secular. The court said it was uncomfortable with the idea, and will gather the views of minority groups in the coming weeks.

So is yoga fundamentally a religious activity?

"Yoga is such a broad term - that's what causes a difficulty," says Rebecca Ffrench, the co-founder YogaLondon - a yoga teacher academy - and the philosophy tutor at the school.

There are different forms of yoga, she says, some of which are more overtly religious than others. Hare Krishna monks, for example, are adherents of bhakti yoga, the yoga of devotion. What most people in the West think of as yoga is properly known as hatha yoga - a path towards enlightenment that focuses on building physical and mental strength.

But what "enlightenment" means also depends on tradition. For some Hindus it is liberation from the cycle of reincarnation, but for many yoga practitioners it is a point where you achieve stillness in your mind, or understand the true nature of the world and your place in it.

Whether that is compatible with Christianity, Islam and other religions is debatable.

To those in the know, for example, the yogic asanas, or positions, retain elements of their earlier spiritual meanings - the Surya namaskar is a series of positions designed to greet Surya, the Hindu Sun God.

Diagram depicting the Surya Namaskar
image captionThe Surya Namaskar or Sun Salutations
"It's got a trace from history of a religious pathway," says Ffrench. "However, is something religious if you don't have the intention there? If I was to kneel down does that mean I'm praying - or am I just kneeling?"

This was what Farida Hamza anxiously asked herself while she was doing her yoga training, which was held in a Hindu temple.

"I felt very guilty but in the end, I had to trust that Allah understood my intentions," she wrote on her blog. "I let them know I did not want to take part in any rituals and they were so respectful of how I felt."

Yoga classes vary. While some feature the chanting of Hindu sutras, others will make vaguer references to a "life force" or "cosmic energy". A session might end with a greeting of "namaste" and a gesture of prayer. There will probably be a moment for meditation, at which point participants may be encouraged to repeat the sacred word "Om", which Buddhists and Hindus regard as a primordial sound which brought the universe into being.

But other classes may make no overt reference to spirituality at all.

That's the way things are in Iran, where yoga is very popular. It has managed to flourish in a country with Sharia law and an Islamist political system, by divesting itself of anything that could be construed as blasphemy. Yoga teachers are careful to always refer to "the sport of yoga" and are accredited by the Yoga Federation, which operates in the same way as a tennis or football organisation.

Classes tend to be slower than in the West with much discussion about the physical benefits of each position. As with other sports, yoga competitions are held, judged by specially invited international yoga teachers.

Similar prohibitions on spiritual yoga exist in Malaysia, where a 2008 fatwa - a religious ruling - resulted in a yoga ban in five states. In the capital Kuala Lumpur, the physical activity is permitted but chanting and meditation are forbidden. Clerics in the world's most populous Islamic nation - Indonesia - make a similar distinction.

Yoga has been repackaged in the US as well.

Children at nine primary schools in Encinitas, California, take part in classes twice a week based on a style of yoga called ashtanga yoga. After some parents complained - US schools, like Indian ones, are secular - the Sanskrit names for the postures were replaced with standard English names and some special child-friendly ones, such as "kangaroo" "surfer" and "washing machine". The lotus position has been rebranded "criss-cross apple sauce", the Surya namaskar has become the "opening sequence" and the organisers insist that it is all just a form of physical exercise.

Students in their yoga class in Encinitas, California
image captionStudents in their yoga class in Encinitas, California
Some parents remained unconvinced though, and a Christian organisation, the National Center for Law & Policy (NCLP) took up their case. In September this year, the San Diego County Superior Court ruled that although yoga's roots are religious, the modified form of the practice is fine to teach in schools.

The NCLP is appealing. Dean Broyles, the organisation's president and chief counsel sees movements like the Surya namaskar, regardless of what they're called, as "deeply symbolic rituals that express and instil religion through repetition".

The reason many people in the West think yoga is non-religious, Broyles says, is that it falls into a theological blind-spot. "Whereas Protestant Christianity focuses on words and beliefs, ashtanga yoga's focus is practice and experience," he says. Religious intentions may not be there to begin with but practising yoga might lead them to develop.

To an extent, this point of view is endorsed by Hindus themselves. The Hindu American Foundation recently ran a campaign called "Take Back Yoga". Sheetal Shah, from the organisation, says someone raised in an "exclusivist" tradition like Islam or Christianity who becomes very interested in yoga may eventually experience some conflict with their religious beliefs.

So, for American Christians who don't like the idea of yoga, there are alternatives, including PraiseMoves.

This exercise regime combines Christian worship with stretching exercises. As the class adopts a posture, they recite a verse from the Bible. In this way, bhujangasana or the cobra pose becomes the vine posture, with a corresponding verse from John 15:5. "I am the vine and you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing."

"The word yoga is a Sanskrit word that means 'union with god' or 'yoke'," says Laurette Willis, the founder of PraiseMoves. "And as a Christian, it's a different yoke - Jesus said: 'My yoke is easy, my burden is light.'"

For someone who has set about drawing people away from yoga, Willis couldn't have a clearer idea of the opposition's terrain. Her mother was a yoga teacher and she started doing it when she was seven, often acting as a demonstration model for the class. She did yoga for 22 years, eventually becoming a teacher herself.

Laurette Willis in her "Jars of Clay" position
image captionLaurette Willis in the Jars of Clay position "But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellence of the power may be of God and not of us" (2 Corinthians 4:7)
But she says that on 25 February, 2001, at 10:35 in the morning, while she was working out to a video tape, God gave her the idea for PraiseMoves. She sees it as a process of redeeming or "buying back" yogic postures for God. Just as a musical scale can be used to make good or bad music, so the repertoire of positions in yoga can be put to Christian use.

Despite the similarities between PraiseMoves and a yoga class, Willis says she wants her classes to ruminate, not meditate.

"People leave yoga classes saying 'I feel so good. I feel so tranquil.' Well I believe that tranquillity is not peace - the peace that God gives - but it's almost a numbness.

"You've been told the whole time to 'Empty your mind! Empty your mind!' And what we do instead is fill your mind with the word of God."

But for some Muslims, Christians and Jews, yoga is attractive precisely because it supplies a mysticism they feel is lacking in their own religion.

Estelle Eugene co-runs the Jewish Yoga Network and for 20 years has taught yoga to Jewish and non-Jewish people in London.

"I've found with general Judaism here that it's difficult to find a spiritual side that I relate to," she says. "So the yoga helps me to do that. And it enhances my respect and understanding of Jewish practices that I hadn't fully understood previously."

She says she makes small adjustments to yoga where she feels there is a conflict with Judaism. She never attends or holds a class on the holy day, Saturday, and she prefers classes without the chanting of mantras.

Eugene recently ran a Day of Jewish Yoga, which explored ways of combining yoga with Judaism. One of the sessions combined yoga with practices to help participants reach kavanah, the meditative mind-set seen as an essential for Jewish prayer and rituals.

On her website, a testimonial from Rabbi David Rosen, the former chief rabbi of Ireland, says yoga offers "much blessing and enlightenment" and arguably helps "recapture Jewish wisdom and practice which may have been lost".

An Iranian yoga teacher - who wishes to remain anonymous - told the BBC that her religious students sometimes report that they pray with more concentration after practising yoga. "They say when we go to Mecca, we feel we are able to make a deeper pilgrimage because of the yoga," she says. "Our minds and our bodies move closer to our faith."

This is not as contradictory as it might seem, according to Rebecca Ffrench.

"Something that is interesting about yoga is that whilst it is spiritual, it doesn't stipulate a specific religion," she says. "Even in the devotional forms of yoga, it says you can use any object of devotion you like, be it Ganesh, Krishna, Jesus or Allah."

She adds that atheists can also perform yoga - they can fix their attention on the "wonder of the universe" or perhaps the complexity of the DNA helix.

Farida Hamza, meanwhile, is convinced that yoga and Islam are not only compatible, but overlap significantly. The ethical precepts of yoga - captured in the principles of yama and niyama - share many essentials with the five pillars of Islam, she argues.

"Each pillar that we follow in Islam, or the duty that we have to do, is sort of existent in yoga. Simple things like - you give alms to the poor. Well, a yogi is supposed to do service. You have to be honest, you have to be non-violent - all of these are in Islam and in yoga.

A Muslim man praying and a yoga pose
image captionLeft: sujood (part of Muslim prayer). Right: someone doing yoga
"The way we pray as Muslims, each pose that we do is a yoga pose," she adds. "So Muslims that hate yoga are probably doing yoga without realising it." Muslims even join their middle finger and thumb together during prayer, similar to a yoga mudra, she says, though she doesn't believe Islam came from yoga or was influenced by it.

Born in India but raised in Oman, Hamza sees her path towards yoga as part of a plan drawn up by Allah. "I am grateful for the joy I felt when my hamstrings opened," she says. "And my big toe stretch, or the first time I did a standing bow - it took me two years to do a standing bow.

"But I did it and that is Allah's grace - he blessed me with that."

Yoga and Islam appeared on the BBC World Service. Listen again on iPlayer or get the Heart and Soul podcast.

You can follow the Magazine on Twitter and on Facebook.

Related Internet Links
YogaLondon
National Center for Law and Policy
The Hindu American Foundation
PraiseMoves
The Jewish Yoga Network
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.

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I read more than 50 scientific studies about yoga. Here's what I learned.I’m a yogi. I'm also a skeptic. Sometimes I won...
09/06/2021

I read more than 50 scientific studies about yoga. Here's what I learned.

I’m a yogi. I'm also a skeptic. Sometimes I wonder if the two can go together. I cringe whenever an instructor claims I'm "wringing the toxins" out of my organs with a twisting pose, for instance. Still, after eight years, I keep going back. Post-yoga, I feel calmer and more aware of my body, and this seeps into everything I do: how I work and relate to others, how I eat and sleep.

The most recent survey suggests more than 20 million Americans practice yoga, making it one of the most popular forms of exercise. Even Vladimir Putin, a devotee of "macho sports," added downward dog to his repertoire.

How long should I practice yoga to get any worth while benefits out of it?It is an age of instant results. We want every...
09/06/2021

How long should I practice yoga to get any worth while benefits out of it?

It is an age of instant results. We want everything quick and fast. Good- no harm. But our focus should always be on action not on results; actions will automatically produce results.

See some results are in instant and they are of short term nature. Like if you eat food right now your hunger will be satiated instantly but not for all times to come. For that you will have to keep eating. So you never question as to why am I eating now - morning only I have eaten.

Same is the case with yoga. If you do now, you will be benefitted for now but you have to keep doing it in order to realize long lasting effects. If it is good, and yes of course it is good, then why not continue with it. It takes care of our overall health- physical, mental, emotional and spiritual.

So if you are doing yoga

You will feel energetic throughout the day.

Your digestion, respiration will be good

Mentally you will feel much lighter and refreshed and rejuvenated.

These are the instant effects, you do today and you feel today.

Long term effects are

It develops strength stamina and endurance in your system.
It develops flexibility in your joints and muscles so that your range of motion increases and blood and oxygen supply reaches to all parts of the body
It enhances your immunity- you don’t fall sick every now and then particularly with change of seasons.
Brings balance and stability in life.
Keeps your mind cool calm and relaxed.
Alleviates tension anxiety and weariness
Changes your thought pattern; from negative to positive; from unruly to orderly.
Strengthens positive emotions like love, compassion and friendliness
Strengthens your parasympathetic nervous system.
Changes attitude towards your life.
So why worry about time period, just make it a habit.

To be specific about your question about time frame it is difficult as it depends on so many things.

Your faith in practice

Your sincerity in learning and doing things properly

Present condition of your body and mind and whether you are having any medical issues.

Wherefrom you learn it and how long you practice it.

Then again yoga is an experiencial science . Your experience and my experience, results you get and results I get from the same practice will be different as we are two different and unique bodies. We are not machines where output is the same if inputs are the same.

Good luck

813 viewsView upvotes · Answer requested by Mayank Kumar

How to Design the Perfect Yoga Space at HomeGot a tiny apartment? You don't need to give up yoga—you just have to be a l...
09/06/2021

How to Design the Perfect Yoga Space at Home

Got a tiny apartment? You don't need to give up yoga—you just have to be a little flexible.

SO YOU'RE NOT a human Tetris piece and can't seem to wedge yourself anywhere in your tiny home for a badly needed session of yoga. Good news: You can make it work, even if you're separated from your regular yoga studio. It doesn't take much to get started. I spoke with Jessamyn Stanley, founder of The Underbelly and author of Every Body Yoga, for advice on how to begin turning your home into a one-person yoga studio.

Get Motivated with These 20 Home Gym Design IdeasDo you enjoy working out but don’t want to pay for an expensive gym mem...
09/06/2021

Get Motivated with These 20 Home Gym Design Ideas

Do you enjoy working out but don’t want to pay for an expensive gym membership? With a little creativity, the right equipment, and some extra space, you can create the perfect gym right in your home! Whether you have an unused attic or a small shed outside, our home gym layout tips and organization hacks will make it easy to design a fitness room you’ll love!

What Are the Benefits of Having a Home Exercise Room?

Convenience
If pushing your way through a crowded gym sounds less than appealing, then building a home gym will be a worthwhile project. Along with location convenience, having your own gym at home means you can control cleanliness, choose the music, and spend as much time on the treadmill as you want.

Affordability
While the initial cost of making a home gym can be high, you’ll save money on a fitness membership in the long run. The average gym membership in the U.S. is around $60 a month, and almost 67% of those memberships are unused. That’s not counting unique fitness options like CrossFit and Pilates, which can be even more expensive. Fortunately, a home gym setup doesn’t have to be pricey! Look for used equipment and accessories for your fitness room that are high quality for a low price.

09/06/2021

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