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Yoga:
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Yoga is Self Improvement
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by Paul Jerard
After five thousand years of written documentation, Yoga may well be
the oldest self-improvement system that ever existed. We don’t know
what Yoga knowledge may have been lost before man started to record
it. In the time period beyond 5,000 years a fair amount of knowledge
would have been passed on by word of mouth, and as a result, some of
it would be missing.
There are many different types of Yoga, but all of them contribute
to mankind’s self-improvement. So, mankind has been a work in
progress for thousands of years and has organized systems to
constantly improve. Let’s look at some Yogic principles that are
often recognized as “modern” self-improvements.
Activate your mind and body together through daily Yoga practice.
The mind is more powerful than the sum of its thoughts and it must
be controlled. The mind that is allowed to wander usually produces
random and unproductive thought.
In varying degrees, most styles of Yoga tie the physical postures,
proper breathing, and focused concentration, together, in one single
session. This constant bonding of mind and body, creates inner
harmony. This in turn, results in a productive mind-set. This gives
the average Yoga student an advantage in productivity,
organizational skills, creativity, and self-preservation.
You can enhance positive energy with daily Yoga practice. After each
Yoga session, many students commonly mention how good they feel.
Yoga classes, or Yoga sessions, give the practitioner a chance to
discard negative feelings, worries, tension, and stress. This gives
the average Yoga student a simple way to prioritize life’s daily
problems.
As a result of this, the Yoga student is able to set and prioritize
goals. Whether it is a serious goal or a whim, ideas that produce
seeds of thought become reality, especially when followed by action.
This formula will produce even more bursts of positive energy within
the mind, resulting in a productive and positively charged mind-set.
Yoga students should be taught to identify, and when possible,
remove negative energy from within the mind. Negative thinking is
contagious and should be purged or quarantined, just like a disease.
Identify those people who have it. If possible help them, but if
not, avoid or isolate them. Negative thinking produces nothing of
value and contributes to self-destruction. Therefore, you should
learn to identify or leave negative surroundings that will stifle
your self-improvement efforts.
Finally, listen to your heart and this will tell you if a decision
is right or wrong. Some people call it a “gut feeling,” but you can
feel it, "in your heart," if a decision is morally correct, and
know, if you can live with your actions.
Paul Jerard is a co-owner and the director of Yoga teacher training
at: Aura Wellness Center, in North Providence, RI. He has been a
certified Master Yoga teacher since 1995. He is a master instructor
of martial arts, with multiple Black Belts, four martial arts
teaching credentials, and was recently inducted into the USA Martial
Arts Hall of Fame. He teaches Yoga, martial arts, and fitness to
children, adults, and seniors in the greater Providence area. |
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