The Peace and Love Lifestyle

Transforming minds, nurturing bodies, and cultivating a happier, healthier you.

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Group Pick-Me-Up Yoga Classes

Group Classes that are hosted at Team Bailey Fitness 3711 W Camp Wisdom Rd, Dallas, TX 75237

The Goal Of Our Pick-Me-Up Yoga classes is to:

  • Reduces stress and anxiety
  • Helps to promote mindfulness
  • Improves joint mobility
  • Improves flexibility
  • Elongates and stretches tight muscles
  • Can promote feelings of deep calm

‘Yin is an incredible amalgamation of yoga postures and Chinese medical theory of energy channels (meridians)’, says de Menthon. ‘The benefits stem from the stimulation of certain energetic pathways that run through our bodies. Due to the intensity of our modern lives, we tend to disrupt the fluidity of our energy which, in Chinese medicine, is explained as “stagnant” energy or “depleted” energy.

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Description

While Yang yoga practices (Ashtanga, Vinyasa) physically target the ‘superficial’ muscles, in Yin yoga, we target the deep connective tissues of the body – the ligaments, joints, bones, and deep fascia networks. A Yin class usually consists of a series of passive floor poses held for up to 5 minutes or more. These poses mainly work the lower part of the body – the hips, pelvis, inner thighs, lower spine. These areas are especially rich in connective tissues.

On an energetic level, Yin yoga improves energy flow and enhances the flow of chi in the organs. However, the practice also offers huge mental and emotional benefits too, as we’ll find out.

Who is Yin yoga for?

Yin yoga is for you if you are tired and craving energy or you’re over-stimulated and have too much energy.

Our world bombards us with stimuli, 24/7, keeping our minds constantly busy with processing all the information that’s thrown at it. Whether the information is valuable or rubbish, it doesn’t matter; the mind still needs to deal with it. Eventually, we get used to that level of stimulus and start to crave it if things become quiet. So we end up browsing, looking for stuff; it doesn’t matter what, as long as we fill the gaps.

Any form of dynamic yoga caters to this aspect of keeping ourselves busy. Although the mind may calm down as a result of active exercise, we’re still feeding the part of us that craves intensity and wants to be stimulated. We just happen to have found ourselves a healthier stimulus! I’m not encouraging you to cut out the dynamic yoga, just try to balance all the on-the-go aspects of life. A great way to do that is by practicing Yin yoga.

Yin yoga and the body

Yin yoga works on the yin tissues – also known as the connective tissues. Connective tissue responds best to a slow, steady load, which is why we hold the poses for longer. If you gently stretch connective tissue by holding a yin pose for a long time in this way, the body will respond by making it a little longer and stronger – which is exactly what you want.

Different Yin yoga poses stimulate and remove blockages in the myofascial meridians in the body, which in turn balances the body’s internal organs and systems. Yin yoga requires the muscles to relax around the connective tissue in order to get a stretch, so not every yoga pose can be done safely or effectively when practicing Yin style yoga. Thus Yin asanas have different names.

For example, Baddha Konasana (Bound Angle pose) in a Yang yoga class involves lengthening the spine, stretching the muscles of the back and engaging the muscles of the legs and abdomen to fold the torso towards the legs. However, in the Yin style version which is known as Butterfly, the muscles are relaxed and the spine naturally rounds so that the head comes towards the knees, rather than the feet, as the body releases.

Yin yoga and the mind

Becoming still in a pose and staying for a while creates those gaps that I referred to earlier. Keeping the gaps empty creates space for anything that wants to come up. This could be anxiety, happiness sadness, boredom…any emotion or feeling you suppress with all busyness in your life. Yin yoga gives you the time and space to allow emotions, thoughts and feelings you have kept in the shadows, to surface.

Generally speaking, during a Yin yoga class, you will be encouraged to allow all those feelings to be there, but not to identify with them. To observe but not get caught up in them. It costs the body a lot of energy to keep things suppressed, so the release you feel from letting it all come out can be just as big.

You learn to observe only the pure physical sensations of emotions, without getting caught up in the stories about those emotions.

These stories are usually related to why we feel such and such, whose fault it is etc. Just observing the physical sensations, without giving ‘juice’ to the stories, allows those emotions and physical sensations a way out of your system. This helps to clear the mind of these often unconscious emotions, and thus gives your system an opportunity to work through the blockages those emotions have caused in the body. What a wonderful and much-needed release!

Tips for practicing Yin yoga

  • Find your appropriate edgeMove slowly and gently into the pose. Don’t go straight to your “maximum” in the pose and never stretch so far as to cause pain.
  • Stillness: consciously try to release into the pose, and to remain still, without fidgeting or shifting position too much.
  • Hold the position: start with holding a pose for 1-3 minutes and progress to 5 minutes or more.

Start Now

Roll out your mat and Join The Peace And Love Lifestyle at Team Bailey Fitness every Wednesday at 6pm.

With love,

Antonio Mcdonald