Here’s an excerpt from an article in Yoga Journal on the subject of Metabolic Syndrome and Body Burden. It explains how Restorative Yoga actually helps with healthy body image:
“The notion of relaxing as a weight-loss technique seems ripe for a Jay Leno one-liner, but the idea has serious scientific merit. Here’s how it works: Chronic stress makes the body churn out too much cortisol, the body’s primary stress hormone. Cortisol affects both the adrenal glands and the immune system. Ultimately, the extra cortisol nudges the abdomen into opening its fat depots and storing more fat than it would otherwise.
“Restorative yoga isn’t aiming to get you to lose weight per se, but by reducing stress, you’ll automatically be putting less weight on your belly,” Kanaya says.
In the end, however, the biggest challenge in establishing yoga as an antidote to metabolic syndrome may be undoing yoga’s reputation as a practice limited to the lithe and willowy. “When people think of yoga, they think of difficult postures that aren’t accessible for people who are overweight,” Kanaya says. To address that misconception, Kanaya went straight to one of restorative yoga’s biggest advocates, Judith Hanson Lasater.
Healing Through “Real” Rest
Lasater sees restorative yoga as a way to fill a yawning gap in the national psyche—an inability to rest. Americans, she says, mistake resting for vegging out in front of the TV: “That’s not restful; that’s dull.” Restorative yoga, with its emphasis on supported poses, allows the body to enter the deep, restful state it craves. “When you stop agitating it, the body starts to repair itself,” Lasater says.
Some cardiologists are beginning to see the value of restorative yoga for their patients. Mehmet Oz, M.D., backs the notion of yoga for the treatment of metabolic syndrome.
“We know that meditation is effective in managing metabolic syndrome, but meditation is really, really hard for most Americans,” he says. “Yoga is the next best way to get that Zen experience.” He agrees with Innes’s hunch that the secret is yoga’s soothing effect on the jangled nervous system. “By relaxing your joints, you create that metaphor for your mind to relax too.”
But aren’t all styles of yoga relaxing? Lasater says any yoga is better than no yoga, but she thinks today’s yoga has lost touch with its restful roots. “Restorative yoga is a formal way of getting people to just stop and be.””
When there’s a sacred space created to breathe together to honor ourselves – it’s a ritual that enriches our lives while… maybe shedding few inches off the waistline in so doing … without that being the intent nor the goal. It’s just a mere by-product; a bonus. And for all of us, it’s that time you deserve, the time you carve out with intention, to nourish and heal, restoring our ojas. Let’s accept that invitation to clear our mind and return to that state of pure inner child. It’s pure magic in a tribal setting. *
*Tribal setting ? Why? Well… when done solo, no denying has its own benefits, tendency is for one to agitate because there is no gate-keeper guarding your space and time. You feel vulnerable at times and that’s not a show of weakness – it shows you are in tune with the natural order. In ancient times, and in natural world still, there always was one who kept the night watch, while others slept, that gatekeeper would guard the tribe from any possible intrusion, any unexpected harm… That protector allowed only the invited to enter… we need that one who keeps “guard” in order to truly “relax”. It’s instinctive. Then, also, left to our own singular devices, there’s that tendency to get lethargic and melancholy… it’s that nap taking that could be either good or not so good – lucky you, if that nap is refreshing but for many that nap creates even more dullness and low energy. Having someone to tenderly and gently rouse you out of a nap… maybe a neighbor with a smile …can be precious… and actually …a very natural longing. It’s coded into humanity.
One reply on “”
[…] ← Previous Next → […]