Using Yoga to Enhance Coping and Spiritual Development

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Transcript of Using Yoga to Enhance Coping and Spiritual Development

Using Yoga to Enhance Coping and Spiritual Development

Dr. Christina Jackson

Yoga means “to yoke” or “union”

Person and the divine reality/GodBody-mind-spirit

What is yoga?

A set of practices, including postures (asanas), breathing (pranayama), meditation (dhyana), and moreThough not a religion, provides tools to prepare for spiritual enlightenment, facilitate religious experience and practicePatanjali’s Eightfold PathThese practices can enhance acceptance and serenity

Patanjali’s Eightfold Path (the 8 limbs of yoga)

Yamas:Niyamas:Asana:Pranayama:Pratyahara:Dharana:Dhyana:Samadhi:

Ethical guidelinesSpiritual observancesPhysical posturesBreathing exercisesTurning senses inConcentration/focusMeditationUnion, enlightenment

Different styles of yoga…

…focus on different aspects of the eightfold pathHatha yoga focuses on asanas and pranayama to achieve self-realizationKarma yoga is a path to self-realization through selfless work and service to othersBhakti yoga (devotion to God) consists of meditation and prayer. The emphasis on devotion can be applied to any religious/faith practice. A robust body of evidence shows health benefits for those who belong to faith communities.

Yamas

Ahimsa:Asteya:Satya:Brahmacharya:

Aparigraha:

Non-violence/harmNon-stealingTruthfulnessModeration/Sexual

restraintNon-greed/hoarding,non-attachment

Niyamas

Saucha:Santosha:Tapas:Svadhyaya:

Ishvara Pranidhana:

Cleanliness/purityContentmentDisciplineStudy of self or

scriptureDevotion/surrender

to God

Postures (asanas)

Experiencing the body in new ways enables the practitioner to view the body and the world differently, thus gaining insight Seated awareness and body scanMindful practitioners take the practice “off the mat” and into all aspects of life

From The Mystic Heart by Wayne Teasdale

“Yoga and the martial arts allow us to experience our connection with the natural world directly and intimately by stimulating our awareness of life energy that flows through us. Yoga is a spiritual practice…and places the person in a unique position to receive many insights and to access states of consciousness [usually] beyond reach…”

Breathing awareness (ruach)

Ujjayi breathInhale fully through nose, exhale fully through mouthDiaphragm drops into belly“Ocean sound” at back of throat (as if fogging a mirror)

Key Spiritual Issues

Meaning and PurposeLove and BelongingHope Guilt

Faith/Belief/DoubtForgivenessMysteryTranscendence

Any disruption to physical or mental health triggers spiritual concerns

An 18 year old high school track star tears a knee ligament. Surgery seems successful, and extensive rehabilitation begins. The student becomes increasingly irritable and withdrawn. Motivation to participate in physical therapy declines. The youth makes a suicide attempt. What body-mind-spirit issues/crises is this youth exhibiting?

Bodily response

PainReduced mobilityReduction in production of “feel good” peptides such as endorphins, serotonin, norepinephrine (our internal apothecary)Withdrawal from these natural “drugs”Mood instability

Yoga can be practiced by anyone at any time!

Even altering breathing patterns alters production of neurotransmitters and hormones (endorphins, serotonin, dopamine)Seated yoga experienceStretching, breathing, physically resisting in new ways becomes an “edge” experience and stimulates positive physiologic changes (PNI or psychoneuroimmunology)

Molecules of Emotion ~ Dr. Candace Pert

Mind responses

LossFearPossible guilt or blameDisruption in goals and rolesReordering of daily schedule and rhythmDepressionAnxiety

Quell the inner critic and ANTS!

“Yoga slows down the fluctuations of the mind”

~ Patanjali

Spiritual responses

Why did this happen? (meaning & purpose) Am I being punished? (guilt)Will I still fit in with my peers (fellow athletes)? Where will I belong now? (love and belonging)What can I do with my life now? What does my future hold? (M & P)

Self-study (svadhyaya)

Illness/disability offers an opportunity Asking existential questions invites one to go deeper, to examine perspectivesFinding your “dharma”- what is meaningful, what is your path and higher purpose?But many seem unreceptive…

Yoga practice is experiential and without using words…

It invites pause, enhances receptivity, and increases awareness of inner wisdomEnhances insight“Be still and know that I am God” ~Psalm 46But exactly how can we become more still?

The Power of Pranayama

Slow, deep breathing >Soothes the nervous system >Calms and shifts the mental environment >Enhances feelings of compassion, creativity, sense of connection, intuition, and receptivity to spirit >Healing and spiritual growth

Abdominal breathing

Compare movement over belly and ribcage (are you a reverse breather?)

Follow your breath in and out -experiment with Pratyahara (withdrawal of the senses to inward focus) and Dharana (concentration) during this breathing exerciseAttention to spine and hips during the breath- what happens to them?

Complete (3-part) breath

Expand belly, chest, shoulders on inhalationExhale fully and slowly with awareness of deep abdominal muscles

What does the research show?

Improvements in psychological health measured as well being, mood, self-esteem, stress/anxiety reduction, sense of equanimity and balance in daily life, improved cognitive function, improved relationships and quality of life.Fosters spiritual growth measured as forgiveness, empathy, and transcendence of suffering and negative experience

Community (Sangha)

A valuable yoga concept found with increasing frequency in researchEffectiveness of group support in health outcomesDr. Dean Ornish’s work on those with heart disease and prostate cancerDr. Jon Kabat-Zinn’s work using MBSR for myriad health challenges

Cancer and yoga

Many studiesOngoing researchImprovements in body, mind and spiritual aspects of persons leading to improved immune function, cognitive restructuring and greater serenity

The relationship between yoga and science“Ultimately, science and yoga should not be

seen as competing. What yoga does well complements modern medicine’s strengths, providing more options for people in need of healing. While…yoga and medicine provide very different perspectives on health and disease, viewing the world through both paradigms can help you see reality more clearly and help you make more skillful choices” ~Timothy McCall, MD in Yoga as Medicine

Essential equations:

Pain + Resistance = Suffering

Loss of Function+Resistance= Suffering

(function= role, mobility, ability)

Postures, breathing and meditation address resistance…

Restless thoughts (monkey mind)FearPast experiencesAutomatic negative thoughts (ANTS)Feelings of isolation (vs connection)

Use awareness to ‘tune in’ to all aspects of self and shift resistance

BreathBody scan ‘head to toes’FeelingsThoughtsEnergy levelBack to the body- release of tension through head, neck and shoulder movements

Pain + Resistance = Suffering

So, yoga practices reduce resistanceThoughts and emotional responses can inhibit or promote healingEven in the presence of ongoing pain or dysfunction, suffering will be reduced

Quick techniques for chaplains/healthcare professionals to use for self-care

Breath awareness and body scan to enhance mindfulness and full therapeutic presencePalming over eyes to release stressThird eye focus to access higher purpose and set intentionQuick coherence technique to stimulate flow of compassion

Quick bedside techniques to shift illness experience > reduce resistance > lessen suffering

Synchronize your breath with client’sTeach belly breathing 4-2-4, 4-2-8Teach palming exercise to relieve tensionHead, neck and shoulder movementsPositioning, eg. lowering chin when lying on backGuided imagery to access ‘special place’ of healing, and explore meaning “Where in your body are you feeling this emotion?” “What does this mean to you?”“What color is your pain? What color would it be if it was gone? Can you transform it?”

Create a healing environment

MusicNatureAesthetics (beauty)Build loving community (sangha)

Health as expanding consciousness…

Nursing theory developed by Margaret Newman, PhD, RNNon-judgment about illness experience- detachment from outcomesOpenness to growth in mind, body and spirit as a result of illness and at end of lifeCan be a stretch for many of those in our careWe can create that space for them, imagine, and hold them in the light

“…every yogi has grown old, and even though they are in remarkably good health, they still get sick and die...As these inevitable changes come, a yogi can be content with the fact that the physical body he or she has worked so hard to balance and gain subtle control over is really a temporary phenomenon.”

~ Richard Freeman, Yoga Workshop, Boulder, CO