|

"Health
is harmony; disease is a disturbance of harmony." -Alcmaeon
The body, mind and spirit are inexorably
connected. We can become unbalanced, stressed or depressed when we lose sense of this connection; within ourselves and with
each other. This disconnection can manifest in a variety of ways-- some fairly innocuous. Maybe you eat too much when you're
stressed or bored at work. Maybe you're sleeping poorly because of some disruptions in your life.
Here I've listed
a few practices that can help you to reconnect to your healthy, joyful self.
BREATHING
EXERCISES Breath is life. It is our source of vitality and it reflects and regulates the heart rate, blood pressure
and immune system. In respiration your heart rate naturally increases as you inhale and decreases as you exhale in a
process known as sinus arrythmia. This phenomenon accounts for yoga's focus on prolonged exhalation. By very slowly, gradually
expanding the length of time it takes you to exhale you are slowing the heart rate and lowering the blood pressure.
Even if you don't have time for yoga you can take 5 minutes out of your day to improve your health and mood with a very
simple breathing exercise.
Sit comfortably with your spine straight and your back supported. Close your eyes and
begin inhaling, filling your belly up, allowing it to expand. Draw your breath up into the lungs and then *sniff*,
pull the breath into your head. As you exhale: relax your face, your throat, your shoulders and gently pull your navel back
to your spine, squeezing the breath out of you. Keep your eyes closed and try to follow your breath in your minds'eye.
Watch your breath traveling the length of the spine; bringing oxygen, energy and vitality to every part of you. Fill yourself
up completely and empty yourself entirely. Make yourself a fluid vessel. Invite the breath into the body. "There are two graces in breathing: drawing in air and discharging
it. The former constrains, the latter refreshes: so marvelously is life mixed. Thank God when he presses you, and thank him
again when he lets you go." -- Goethe
|