performance anxiety in a group of young professional musicians. (As a former dancer, I know from experience how anxiety can psychologically cripple a performer, regardless of skill or experience!) Subjects who took part in a 2-month program of yoga and meditation reported significantly fewer episodes of performance anxiety, general anxiety and tension, depression, and anger.
Researchers believe that by reducing stress and anxiety, practicing yoga actually affects the way your body responds to stress—lowering your heart rate and blood pressure and regulating your breathing. It may also increase heart rate variability, which helps your body better react to stressful situations.
In 2008, researchers at the University of Utah presented results from a study on yoga and pain. (People who have a low tolerance for pain are also more prone to stress.) The scientists used MRIs to watch how participants’ brains physically reacted to pain and stress. The results were exciting because they showed an unequivocal physical result of yoga on the body’s stress-management system: Not only did the subjects who practiced yoga exhibit the highest tolerance for pain, but their MRIs also showed the lowest pain-related brain activity.
In 2005, German researchers asked 24 women who described themselves as emotionally distressed to take two 90-minute yoga classes a week for 3 months. Women in a control group were told not to begin an exercise or stress-reduction program during the study period. At the end of the study, the women in the yoga group reported less stress, depression, anxiety, and fatigue, along with improved energy and well-being.
I could list study after study showing how yoga will improve your mental state, but it would fill an entire book. Besides, I suspect you know intuitively that even the simple act of resting your attention on your breath, instead of following your racing thoughts, has the power to bring you back to your center. Whether you are mildly stressed from daily tasks or dealing with tons of anxiety, the techniques in this chapter can take the edge off and get you back to feeling calm and focused. Improved sleep, less anxiety, and a boost in energy are just some of the benefits you’ll enjoy.
MAKE TIME
Tell me you haven’t found yourself thinking that you’ll slow down and destress when you find the time. How crazy is that? If you haven’t “found” the time yet, you’re not going to. You have to make the time. Start with 30 seconds here and there, then gradually make longer practice a priority.
Anxiety
We’ve all had symptoms of anxiety at some point in our lives: Sunday-night insomnia, butterflies before a first date, a racing heart during a meeting with the boss. Whether you’re raising a family, working toward advancement in your career, or pursuing a degree, anxiety can find a way to ruin a big moment or make a goal that much harder to reach. Not only that, but busy lives can make anxiety feel like a chronic condition. The fact is, you’ll get things done more efficiently and feel less anxious if you take a few moments to unwind. Do this routine twice a week to release tension so you can find your way back to calm.
the
ROUTINE
Try the following sequence, staying in each pose for 5 deep inhales and exhales, unless otherwise noted.
Standing Forward Bend, Neck Release
Squat Hang
Crow
Squat Twist Bind
Do to one side, then repeat on the other.
Boat Twist
Stay here for 1 full inhale and exhale. Switch sides and repeat. Continue switching for 20 breaths.
Tabletop
Seated Open-Leg Forward Bend
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Sage Secrets
| LIFE AND BREATH
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THE INDIAN MYSTIC KNOWN as Osho teaches that an anxious person feels separate from the world, with everyone conspiring against them. Trees and birds don’t spend their days worrying; worry isn’t helpful to them. It’s also not helpful to us. Anxiety goes away with understanding. When we understand that existence takes care of all of
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