Yoga for self care

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PRIORITISING SELF CARE
We wear busyness like a badge of honour and looking after ourselves is often at the end of our ‘to do’ list. When I’m busy, self care is the first thing that gets dropped from my day, even though I know it is when I need it the most. Sometimes we need reminding how important self care and making a point of prioritising it is. If we put self care at the top of the list all the other jobs would be much easier – we would feel restored, cared for, content and ready for the rest of the day. Self care not only benefits us, it also benefits everyone we encounter throughout the day. Andrea Ferretti, host of the Yogaland Podcast defines self care as “the conscious act of taking care of your needs so that you can best serve your purpose in the world’. Life without self care is all outward energy without receiving anything back in return.

Do you have a self care routine? What does your self care routine look like for you? Write down a list of your go to self care tools. When you are like a hamster stuck in a wheel you will find it hard to remember what will help you. Work out what your obstacles to self care are to help you recognise them. You need a written message to your future self to remind you that you know exactly how to help yourself find balance again.

THE ROLE OF YOGA IN SELF CARE
Yoga is at the top of my list. It is the ultimate expression of self care, it helps you pause to check in with yourself and allows you to move in a way that will support you in your life off the mat. On the days I practice I notice my energy is better, my moods are more balanced, I am more focused and productive throughout the day and I sleep better. I look after myself and probably look after others better too! Yoga helps you sprinkle self care throughout your day, it reminds you that looking after yourself is an essential part of life, not a luxury.

HOW TO WORK OUT WHAT YOU NEED
Your yoga practice can help you take ownership of your wellness. Personal practice is where the magic happens. In your personal practice you are addressing your unique needs and tailoring to what you specifically need. When you step on your mat take a few moments to work out how your practice can help you today. Ask yourself these questions:

  • What do I need physically?

  • What do I need mentally?

  • What are my energy levels?

  • What is my mood today?

  • What are my limitations or injuries?

  • What is the rest of my day like?

  • Where do I need mobility?

  • Where do I need stability?

You may not have the answer to all the questions but it will help remind you if you have an injury you are minding, if you need to go easy because you have a full day ahead, or if you are dealing with something else in life that might require you to be extra kind to yourself.

When I practice I use one if my ready made sequences, or I go through the 108 Asana and either pick a peak pose that I’m curious to try and build a sequence, or pick a selection of poses at my level of experience.

EXPLORING YOGA FOR SELF CARE IN YOUR PRACTICE
Yoga works best when it is approached with a commitment to consistently getting on your mat, even if it is just for 10 minutes. You need to invest some time to get the wealth of benefits yoga gives in return. Everyone has different favourite poses and poses that suit them better than others. Consider this sequence is a starting point for building your self care flow. It is a gentle sequence full of nourishing poses that you can hold for a little bit longer and explore what your reactions to them are. Notice which poses you are enjoying and which challenge you physically and mentally. Start to build a picture of what your yoga practice looks like. Keep a note of poses that give you instant yoga good vibes.

ALIGNMENT CUES
Along the bottom of the sequence are a selection of ‘extra poses’ that you can slot in or substitute with other poses, so you can start to create your own unique flow tailored to your needs. You can also use these poses to create variety in your practice and continue to use this sequence for several practices.

Have a read of the tips below and either print out the sequence or save it onto your device:

  • Before you start to move, place one hand on your heart and one hand on your belly and take three gentle breaths to help you settle.

  • Remember to take time in each pose to notice your reaction to it and use a slow calm breath to find your stamina.

  • Consider adding Salabhasana/Locust at the end of each mini flow as a lovely way to strengthen and reset your spine.

  • If you are adding poses you can come into Downward Facing Dog/Adho Mukha Svanasana and then get ready to take your pose, or add them into their appropriate section ie Trikonasana into the end of one of the standing mini flows, Salamba Sarvangasana/Shoulderstand towards the end of the seated section.

  • Incorporate at least 2 minutes for Savasana at the end of your practice using a standard Savasana or the supported version in the extra poses section.

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Ruth Delahunty Yogaru

Ashta Chandrasana - Crescent Moon

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KEEP IT SIMPLE
Your favourite yoga pose doesn’t have to be one of the big poses that takes years to master. The poses we see on social media are beautiful to look at, and can be quite aspirational, but don’t really reflect the poses that are the essence of the practice. The magic begins the minute you step on your mat with the simpler poses that are often overlooked as not much more than warm up poses. This month's pose is one of my favourite poses that you’ll encounter in almost every yoga class - Ashta Chandrasana/Crescent Moon or more commonly known as high lunge.

THE BENEFITS OF ASHTA CHANDRASANA/CRESCENT MOON
The muscles of the legs are the biggest muscles of the body. As a standing pose Ashta Chandrasana/Crescent Moon builds focus, heat, stamina, strength; increases circulation, metabolism; and improves posture, spinal health and coordination. This pose is more challenging than you’d expect and with the extended leg position it requires plenty of muscle activity to keep you balanced.

Yoga is not just about stretching – it’s about equal amounts of stretching and strengthening. Even within the stretching element, containing the stretch and finding the strength of the muscle first will give you a more supported injury free practice. In Ashta Chandrasana/Crescent Moon the temptation is to release the muscles that support the hip joint, and let the weight of the upper body sink the hips down as low as they can go. In this position you have lost the support of the muscles in the hip joint and are more likely to overstretch muscles. A more supportive version of the pose is to come to 80% of your full range of motion, firm the buttocks muscles of your back leg and hug your outer hips to the midline. Feel strength in the muscles that are flexing and a contained supported stretch in the muscles that are extending. Get familiar with how this feels and how this principle might feel in all your yoga poses throughout your practice for a more sustainable lifelong practice.

EXPLORING ASHTA CHANDRASANA/CRESCENT MOON IN YOUR PRACTICE
This sequence has six rounds of Ashta Chandrasana/Crescent Moon and gives you plenty of opportunities to find your strong leg muscles. The feet are a crucial part of the pose – press down into the ground and draw your hip bone back into their sockets as you hug your outer hips to the midline. Grounding down through your feet will trigger strength in your legs and your spine, while hugging to the midline will stabilise and help you balance in this wide legged position. The sequence starts with a series of standing poses with the feet together to help you find your connection with the ground before you move into Ashta Chandrasana/Crescent Moon where the feet are much further apart and your balance is challenged.

Before you come up to high lunge make sure your feet are at least hip distance apart – like you’re feet are on train tracks. The wider your feet are the easier it is to balance when standing. In the second round of Ashta Chandrasana/Crescent Moon you will start with a bent back leg and lift your pointy hip bones at the front of your pelvis up to find the stretch in the hip flexors. Then gradually move to straighten out the back leg any amount without letting the hip bone tilt forward again.

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ALIGNMENT CUES
There are lots of standing poses in this sequence. Take breaks if you need to and either stand in Tadasana/Mountain for a few breaths or come to the ground in between mini flows and take a child's pose or a few rounds of cat/cow to ease out any built up tension.

Have a read of the tips below and either print out the sequence or save it onto your device:

  • From Adho Mukha Svanasana, inhale, step your right foot between your hands, exhale here.

  • Inhale, press into your feet to come up, reach your arms up high, shoulder width apart or palms together. Stack your front knee over your front ankle.

  • Press out through your left heel, firm your back leg, lift the thigh of your back leg up, hug your outer hips to the midline.

  • Press into your feet and push the floor away, firm your left buttocks.

  • Lift your pointy hip bones up to stack your pelvis perpendicular to the ground.

  • Draw your navel towards your spine, broaden through your collarbones, lengthen through your spine to the tip of your crown, gaze forward or to your fingertips.

To save the images for personal use click and hold down the image until the ‘save image’ option appears; on Mac hold down ‘control’ and click the image to get the option box; on PC right click on the image to get the option box. Scroll down in the ‘option box’ and click ‘save image’.

Ruth Delahunty Yogaru

Immune system flow

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THE IMMUNE SYSTEM
The immune system works 24/7 to defend us against disease, infections and viruses. It is very effective but also benefits from a helping hand. The immune system likes the body to be balanced to work at its best. We know that life balance and lifestyle choices help overall health and wellness, but in a nutshell what are four steps you can take to get straight to the point of supporting the immune system.

  1. Eat well - eat plenty of whole plant foods, fermented foods and fibre.
    Whole foods are packed full of vitamins and minerals to power up the immune system. The gut is where we ingest the outside world. For this reason 70% of the immune system is found in the gut. The gut microbiome feeds on fibre (prebiotics) and thrives on fermented foods (probiotics). A strong and diverse microbiome supports the gut immune system and helps prevent any harmful bacteria entering the body through the digestive tract.

  2. Keep moving - move every day and throughout the day. Exercise increases the heart rate and boosts circulation around the whole body. This helps the body eliminate unwanted toxins that can hinder the immune system. Exercise also helps you get a good night sleep.

  3. Mind your mind - take time out to slow down.
    Short term stress is natural and something our bodies are built to deal with. But longer periods of stress overloads the body with stress hormones. Stress hormones suppress the effectiveness of the immune system making you more susceptible to illness. Which is why you are more prone to head colds and cold sores after a prolonged period of stress.

  4. Value sleep - have a good sleep routine.
    When you sleep your body rebuilds and replenishes its energy stores. Your stress hormones are lower while you sleep which gives the immune system optimally 8 hours to build stronger.

THE BENEFITS OF YOGA ON THE IMMUNE SYSTEM
At a glance yoga fits into the ‘keep moving’ category. Yoga is a gentle exercise which promotes good circulation and increases the function of the lymphatic (white blood cells and toxin removal) and endocrine (hormone production) system to keep them working more efficiently. Yoga actually ticks all boxes of the above four steps to a strong immune system.

Stress relief is one of yoga's most well known benefits and is often what attracts people to the practice. Yoga reduces physical and emotional stress in the body by tapping into the parasympathetic nervous system (rest, digest & restore response) through the breath. Lengthening and slowing our breath is both very calming for the mind and builds healthy lungs.

In yoga you learn how to breathe into your belly, this breath is very calming and helps to quieten a busy mind. When you have a regular practice you are training your brain to tap into the rest, restore and digest response. So when you are ready to go to sleep at night you can use this calming breath to find that same response and fall asleep faster, sleep longer and fall back asleep if you wake at night.

Where does ‘eat well’ fit in? When you start to practice yoga you naturally become more in tune with your body. You are more inclined to make more informed food choices either in the light of ‘ahimsa’ (non harming) of the world around you or just because it makes you feel better. Yoga also promotes good gut health by stretching and compressing the whole digestive system and encouraging peristalsis (waves of muscular contractions) to remove unwanted waste and toxins from the body, enabling your digestive system to concentrate on absorbing all the nutrition from food.

TWISTS, BACKBENDS & INVERSIONS
Twists, backbends and inversions are the most powerful poses to practice when working with the immune system. In yoga philosophy texts it is said that twists ‘destroy disease’. When we twist we temporarily constrict blood flow and when we release the twist a surge of fresh oxygenated blood rushes back. This twist and release action massages and stimulates the organs and helps the digestive system with maximum nutrition absorption; the respiratory system to build strong lungs; the liver and kidneys to remove toxins; and the lymph system to support white blood cell production. The same principle applies to backbends which stretch the front of the body and stimulate the organs of the abdominal and chest cavity. Backbends are particularly good for expanding lung capacity and opening the chest region. The higher the lung capacity the better our ability to feed all the cells of the body with fresh oxygen.

A healthy gut also has a strong link to our moods and emotional well-being. Stress leads to gut issues and gut issues lead to stress. 95% of serotonin (the happy hormone) is produced in the bowel. Stimulating the gut through twists and backbends release these happy hormones into the system and relieve stress, tension and anxiety and allow the body to concentrate on other jobs like building its defences.

Inversions boost circulation and increase blood and lymph flow which helps clear bacteria and toxins from the body and plays a vital role in building a strong immune system. Inversions are hidden everywhere in the practice. An inversion is any pose where the heart is above the head. Along with the obvious poses like handstand and headstand there are lots of opportunities to take inversions in standing forward bends, Adho Mukha Svanasana/Downward Dog, Setu Bandha Sarvangasana/Bridge and restorative poses like Viparita Kiranai/Legs up the Wall.

Hip openers are strong stress relieving poses and are also very beneficial for the immune system. There are certain poses that are considered formal ‘hip opener’ poses but in reality most yoga poses are hip openers which are either ‘opening’ the inner hips (Virabhadrasana II/Warrior II, Utkata Konasana/Goddess, Upavistha Padottanasana/Wide Legged Forward Fold, Malasana/Squat, Badhakonasana/Bound Angle) or ‘opening’ the outer hips (Gomukasana/Cow Face, Ardha Matsyendrasana/Half Lord of the Fishes, Garudasana/Eagle, Ananda Balasana/Happy Baby). Apart from Urdhva Hastasana/Upward Salute, Salamba Sarvangasana/Shoulderstand and Savasana/Corpse Pose all of the poses in this sequence are opening the hips to some degree.

EXPLORING IMMUNE SYSTEM FLOW IN YOUR PRACTICE
This sequence is designed to work on the inner mechanics of your body. As you move through the practice travel inwards and visualise the parts of your inner body that are being gently invigorated. There are plenty of inversions throughout this practice. Taking an inversion is like turning up the volume on your circulation. You are reversing what it is used to and sending more oxygenated blood to the brain which is why they can be very invigorating. If Shoulderstand is not comfortably part of your practice you can either pick an inversion that you prefer or skip it.

ALIGNMENT CUES
Allow yourself to arrive gently onto your mat, place your hands on your belly and take a few breaths to connect with your breath before you start moving. If you notice you have lost your breath though your practice come back to the ground and find your breath again. Start with some warmups on your back to open the hips and start preparing the spine for backbends. Move slowly and mindfully and be prepared to invest a bit of time and patience to allow yourself to gently build up your practice to the stronger poses of the sequence.

Have a read of the tips below and either print out the sequence or save it onto your device:

  • You can decide to take an open twist where you twist away from your front leg or a deeper closed twist where you twist towards your front leg.

  • If you have bricks take your cat/cow with your hands raised on the bricks. This gives you a bit more space to comfortably open the chest a bit more.

  • Before each mini flow come to the top of your mat and take a ½ Surya Namaskara which you will find in the first row.

  • Incorporate at least 2 minutes for Savasana at the end of your practice to assimilate the practice and get yourself mentally ready for the day ahead.

To save the images for personal use click and hold down the image until the ‘save image’ option appears; on Mac hold down ‘control’ and click the image to get the option box; on PC right click on the image to get the option box. Scroll down in the ‘option box’ and click ‘save image’.

Ruth Delahunty Yogaru