Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

A Presentation By: Joan Cabacungan

Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 14

Yoga

A presentation by: Joan Cabacungan


What is Yoga?
• Yoga is a mind and body practice with a
5,000-year history in ancient Indian
philosophy. Various styles of yoga combine
physical postures, breathing techniques, and
meditation or relaxation.
• One of the systems of orthodox Hindu
philosophy, Yoga, which is Sanskrit for
“union,” seeks the union of the individual
with the divine by means of exercise,
breathing, posture, diet, and meditation.
YOGA SUTRA
• The “Yoga Sutra,” a 2,000-year-old
treatise on yogic philosophy by the
Indian sage Patanjali, is a guidebook on
how to master the mind, control the
emotions, and grow spiritually. The
Yoga Sutra is the earliest written record
of yoga and one of the oldest texts in
existence and provides the framework
for all modern yoga.
• Yoga is well known for its postures
and poses, but they were not a key
part of original yoga traditions in
India. Fitness was not a primary
goal. Practitioners and followers of
yogic tradition focused instead on
other practices, such as expanding
spiritual energy using breathing
methods and mental focus.
• The word “Yoga” essentially
means, “that which brings you to
reality”. Literally, it means
“union.” Union means it brings
you to the ultimate reality, where
individual manifestations of life
are surface bubbles in the process
Philosophy
• To convey its spiritual message and guide sessions, yoga often uses the imagery
of a tree with roots, a trunk, branches, blossoms, and fruits. Each “branch” of
yoga represents a different focus and set of characteristics.
The six branches are:

Hatha yoga: This is the physical and mental branch designed to prime the body and mind.
Raja yoga: This branch involves meditation and strict adherence to a series of disciplinary
steps known as the “eight limbs” of yoga.
Karma yoga: This is a path of service that aims to create a future free from negativity and
selfishness.
Bhakti yoga: This aims to establish the path of devotion, a positive way to channel emotions
and cultivate acceptance and tolerance.
Jnana yoga: This branch of yoga is about wisdom, the path of the scholar, and developing
the intellect through study.
Tantra yoga: This is the pathway of ritual, ceremony, or consummation of a relationship.
Chakras
• The word “chakra” literally means
spinning wheel.

• Yoga maintains that chakras are


center points of energy, thoughts,
feelings, and the physical body.
According to yogic teachers, chakras
determine the way people experience
reality through emotional reactions,
desires or aversions, levels of
confidence or fear, and even physical
symptoms and effects.
There are seven major chakras, each with their own focus:
• Sahasrara: The “thousand-petaled” or “crown” chakra represents the state of pure consciousness. This chakra is
located at the crown of the head, and the color white or violet represents it. Sahasrara involves matters of inner
wisdom and physical death.
• Ajna: The “command” or “third-eye chakra” is a meeting point between two important energetic streams in the
body. Ajna corresponds to the colors violet, indigo, or deep blue, though traditional yoga practitioners describe it
as white. The ajna chakra relates to the pituitary gland, which drives growth and development.
• Vishuddha: The color red or blue represents the “especially pure” or “throat” chakra. Practitioners consider this
chakra to be the home of speech, hearing, and metabolism.
• Anahata: The “unstruck” or “heart” chakra relates to the colors green and pink. Key issues involving anahata
include complex emotions, compassion, tenderness, unconditional love, equilibrium, rejection, and wellbeing.
• Manipura: Yellow represents the “jewel city” or “navel” chakra. Practitioners connect this chakra with the
digestive system, as well as personal power, fear, anxiety, developing opinions, and tendencies towards an
introverted personality.
• Svadhishthana: Practitioners claim that the “one’s own base” or “pelvic” chakra is the home of the reproductive
organs, the genitourinary system, and the adrenal gland.
• Muladhara: The “root support” or “root chakra” is at the base of the spine in the coccygeal region. It is said to
contain our natural urges relating to food, sleep, sex, and survival, as well as the source of avoidance and fear
Types and styles of yoga may include:

• Ashtanga yoga: This type of yoga uses ancient yoga teachings. However, it became popular during
the 1970s. Ashtanga applies six established sequences of postures that rapidly link every
movement to breath.
• Bikram yoga: Also known as “hot” yoga, Bikram occurs in artificially heated rooms at
temperatures of nearly 105 degrees and 40 percent humidity. It consists of 26 poses and a
sequence of two breathing exercises.
• Hatha yoga: This is a generic term for any type of yoga that teaches physical postures. “Hatha”
classes usually serve as a gentle introduction to the basic yoga postures.
• Iyengar yoga: This type focuses on finding the correct alignment in each pose using a range of
props, such as blocks, blankets, straps, chairs, and bolsters.
• Jivamukti yoga: Jivamukti means “liberation while living.” This type emerged in 1984 and
incorporates spiritual teachings and practices that focus on the fast-paced flow between poses
rather than the poses themselves.
• Kripalu yoga: This type teaches practitioners to know, accept, and learn from the body. A student of Kripalu learns
to find their own level of practice by looking inward. The classes usually begin with breathing exercises and gentle
stretches, followed by a series of individual poses and final relaxation.
• Kundalini yoga: Kundalini means “coiled, like a snake.” Kundalini yoga is a system of meditation that aims to
release pent-up energy.

• Power yoga: In the late 1980s, practitioners developed this active and athletic type of yoga, based on the
traditional ashtanga system.

• Sivananda: This is a system based on a five-point philosophy. This philosophy maintains that proper breathing,
relaxation, diet, exercise, and positive thinking work together to form a healthy yogic lifestyle. Typically uses the
same 12 basic asanas, bookended by sun salutations and savasana poses.

• Viniyoga: Viniyoga can adapt to any person, regardless of physical ability. Viniyoga teachers require in-depth
training and tend to be experts on anatomy and yoga therapy.
• Prenatal yoga: Prenatal yoga uses postures that
practitioners have designed for people who are
pregnant. It can support people in getting back
into shape after pregnancy as well as supporting
health iduring pregnancy.

• Restorative yoga: This is a relaxing method of


yoga. A person spends a restorative yoga class in
four or five simple poses, using props like
blankets and bolsters to sink into deep relaxation
without exerting any effort in holding the pose
Yoga is a five-millennia-old
practice that has changed
over time. Modern yoga
focuses on stretches and
poses designed to stimulate
inner peace and physical
energy.

Ancient yoga was less about


fitness and more about
mental focus and expanding
spiritual energy.
•Thank You!

You might also like