Yoga fit: pain has no place in yoga

October 7th, 2007    Subscribe To Our Feed

If you’re new to yoga, it’s very hard to get your head around the fact that the more slowly and mindfully you do your yoga exercises, the more likely you are to achieve your aims of a healthier body, and healthier mind.

“When Yoga Hurts” notes:

… 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.

Take beginners’ classes first

With yoga becoming so popular, many yoga “teachers” are physical exercise instructors who’ve taken a yoga course. Since yoga is an entire philosophy, it’s unlikely that anyone who’s been practicing yoga themselves for less than three years can teach the discipline.

So one of the first questions you should ask the instructor at your new yoga studio is “how long have you been doing yoga?” Next, ask whether the studio has an orientation class for new students. If you don’t get the answers you expect, don’t attend the studio. It’s better to learn basic yoga from a competent instructor in a book or from a DVD than to receive bad instruction.

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