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Yoga
Adapts for Changing Times
Hot
yoga. Tot yoga. Power yoga. Disco yoga. Yoga Kickboxing. Fat-blasting
yoga.
Years after the ancient Eastern
discipline caught on big in the western world, yoga is proving
to have a suitably limber foothold in here. Not only are more
people taking up yoga, but it is being geared towards our modern
lifestyles. There is yoga for dieters, for jocks, even for new
moms and their babies.
"Yoga is evolving to meet cultural
needs," said Yoga Alliance president Hansa Knox Johnson. "We have
people who have different kinds of energies. Some of them are
go-go, some are kind of more restless, some are more heavy, sedentary.
So different yogas are appropriate for different kinds of people."
Yoga has been gaining steam in
this country for years. A study released last summer by the magazine
Yoga Journal said about 15 million people in the United States
practiced yoga a 29 percent jump from the previous year.
The yoga boom probably peaked a year ago, according to The Yoga
Research and Education Center, but researchers there still expect
interest to remain at higher levels.
Yoga has benefited from the same
baby boomer-fueled fitness trend that fills kickboxing classes
and aerobics studios. But increased interest in alternative health
practices has helped too. Yoga is often championed as a way to
bring peace of mind in a jangly world.
"Our biggest spike in enrollment
came right after 9-11," said Deborah Foss, executive director
of the Albany Kripalu Yoga Center. "I think people were so stressed
out, they were looking for a place to calm down."
Relatively few Americans had immersed
themselves in the 5,000-year-old discipline when Foss took her
first yoga class in 1989. In the years since, a lot of people
have been attracted to aspects of yoga: the postures, the controlled
breathing, the meditation and the aim of uniting mind, body and
spirit. Today, yoga reaches all sort of demographics, from football
players to school children to prisoners.
And with more people taking up
yoga, more styles of classes cropped up.
Are you athletic? Power yoga might
work. Don't mind a good, purifying sweat? Bikram Yoga, sometimes
called hot yoga, is typically performed in rooms heated to around
100 degrees. Pregnant? Aqua yoga can make movement easier.
Foss favors Kripalu Yoga, which
she teaches under soft lights with slow stretches and sweet incantations
of "Ommm." But the center offers classes that run the spectrum
in terms of physical demands.
Some latter-day yoga offshoots
would seem alien to a practitioner from 5,000 years ago, particularly
those who focus on the quest for a better body.
Some purists sniff at the likes
of "yoga for kickboxing" and trendy yoga wear like "Om earrings"
and "Yoga chick" tops with Buddha prints. The fear is that turning
yoga into a commodity or merely a physical training tool can obscure
its higher purpose.
"The whole thing is to integrate
your body, mind and spirit," Foss said. "When we Westernize everything
and the culture is so built upon competition and big, better,
more sometimes we lose the essence of the practice."
But Foss also notes "there's not
one right path."
Foss and some other yoga veterans
view it this way: While being able to put your leg behind your
head is not the ultimate goal of yoga, many forms of it can lead
practitioners to other dimensions of yoga.
"Yoga has been around for 5,000
years, and this is just a wave. And if it brings more people to
the practice of yoga and they discover yoga's deeper dimensions,
then it's a good thing," said Trisha Lamb Feuerstein, director
of research for the Yoga Education and Research Center.
Then there's what Feuerstein calls
"yoga hybrids and mutants." She found "Yogilates" (a blend of
yoga and Pilates); Yo-Chi (yoga plus T'ai Chi); Boga (boxing and
yoga); and Smoga (yoga for smokers).
Some of these hyphenated yogas
test the patience of even inclusive sorts like Johnson. Yoga has
its own philosophy, as do other serious disciplines, and mixing
them isn't always a good thing, she said.
With the proliferation of so many
flavors of yoga, Johnson foresees a new backlash-driven focus
on classic yoga. But she also believes yoga will continue to adapt.
"That's really the ideal of yoga,"
she said. "It's for all of this to coexist peacefully."
___
On the Net:
Yoga Alliance: http://www.yogaalliance.com
Yoga Education and Research Center:
http://www.yrec.org
Albany Kripalu Yoga Center: http://www.akyc.org/
Reference
Source 102
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