Category: Yoga for over 40’s

  • Yoga and Ayurveda as a Therapy

    Yoga and Ayurveda as a Therapy

    Traditionally Yoga and Ayurveda compliment each other and form a complete therapy for body, mind and spirit. Likewise the focus is on each person as an individual. Together we look at your strengths and weaknesses, current lifestyle and digestive challenges as well as your physical posture and condition. Yoga and Ayurveda combined is a complete lifestyle with tips and guidelines that will change your life.

    Surprisingly most people do not know what they put into their body via their senses – mouth, ears, nose, eyes, skin and mind actually effects their health! This means they can be poisoning themselves daily and wonder why they are suffering. In the world of technology there is a saying garbage in garbage out – GIGO. However your childhood experiences can play out in your present day behaviours. 

    Yoga for over 40s online

    Ayurveda is a proven and ancient wisdom

    Modern day treatments only take just a piece of this ancient wisdom as a cure for an imbalance. This is temporary and disempowering, creating a costly dependence on the therapist. Zoe our Senior Yoga Ayurveda therapist has incorporated this ancient wisdom into her life for the past 30 years.

    Zoe lives and breathes Yoga and Ayurveda. She will help you to diagnose your dosha and provide recommendations to integrate into your every day life. Receive the guidance and support to return to a state of balance. We use only naturally sustainable methods with no nasty side effects.

    A personalised Yoga Ayurveda therapy program encourages and support you to set up a daily practise. Also we show you how to eat food that suits your digestive system. Undigested food becomes toxic in the system and affects the body as well as the mind.

    Yoga and Ayurveda

    What is Yoga Ayurveda Therapy?

    Therapeutic yoga appears to be extremely safe and adjusted to each student. Beyond medical conditions, the yoga therapist factors in the client’s overall level of fitness, stamina, frailty, and specific needs. Yoga and Ayurveda therapy looks at the lifestyle and desires for therapeutic outcomes.

    Yoga Ayurveda therapy uses various yoga practices such as poses, relaxation breathing and meditation. This helps people with a wide variety of health conditions, both physical and psychological. It can be a useful adjunct to medical care or, in some cases, in place of conventional approaches.

    yoga ayurveda therapy

    Typically, private Yoga Ayurveda therapy consultations include the following:

    It is important to differentiate between a general yoga class conducted by a yoga teacher and yoga therapy. In this way, Yoga Therapy is similar to other healthcare modalities. In the one-on-one setting, the level of assessment can be detailed. This allows for a tailored treatment plan to suit the client.

    Clients who may be frail or for whom standard yoga practices may be contraindicated benefit from the individual approach. Also the patients themselves must do the practices to gain the benefits, all that is required for successful yoga therapy is :-

    1. Conducting an intake consultation or reviewing an intake form. As well as reports from healthcare practitioners that include current treatment, including medications etc.

    2. Assessing the current health condition based on Yoga Ayurveda therapy principles

    3. Identifying underlying causes of the presenting condition from the Yoga Ayurveda therapy perspective

    4. Discussing any lifestyle or digestive challenges

    5. Conducting a physical strengths and weaknesses assessment

    Yoga therapy usually involves a number of consultations with the yoga therapist. Follow up sessions allow the therapist to refine the plan to ensure the student has been practicing in an appropriate way. As well as address any new concerns that may have arisen in the interim. In the process of teaching the routine to the client, the therapist will sometimes determine they need to make modifications.

    yoga ayurveda therapy

    Common challenges to follow Yoga Ayurveda Therapy guidelines

    A common challenge in yoga therapy is patient compliance. A few words from the referring clinician may help motivate patients to continue their yoga program. Yoga therapy is usually an adjunctive therapy. Likewise they should continue with their other treatments under the care of their healthcare practitioners.

    Yoga therapy consultations are typically several days to a few weeks apart. A yoga therapy program with recommendations to practice (at home, work, or elsewhere). As well as the program may be written or video recorded to support the patient. Many clients have three or four consultations over a number of weeks.

    In some instances, a healthcare practitioner and yoga therapist may believe that a patient is best served by regular therapeutic sessions. These can happen once a week over a number of months.

    benefits of yoga

    Healthcare referrals for Yoga Ayurveda Therapy

    Healthcare providers do not need to have an in-depth understanding of yoga to make skilful referrals to yoga therapists. A yoga therapist will safely adapt practices to meet the needs of individual students. Also different yoga approaches vary enormously, it is generally not incumbent on the referring clinician to specify which yoga tools to avoid, rather the yoga therapist.

    If the referring clinician provides general guidelines about his or her concerns, the yoga therapist can figure out which practices should be omitted or modified. For example; a patient with diabetic retinopathy, the yoga therapist could be advised to avoid any practices that increase intraocular pressure.

    Ayurveda everyday tips

    Yoga means union between the mind and body

    For optimal health and wellbeing, integrate Yoga and Ayurveda into your daily routine. Learn to listen and respond to your bodies needs with love and respect. Learn how you can blend Yoga into your life without too much effort and reap the benefits.

    To give is to receive and I believe it is wise to share your knowledge only to those who are honest open and willing to receive.

    Yoga therapy pain relief

    Call Zoe on +61 407 956 071 for more information – we love to hear from you. Or email bondiyogatherapy@gmail.com

  • My Yoga Ayurveda morning routine

    My Yoga Ayurveda morning routine

    Do you have a morning routine for keeping your body in good condition? I know the cat wakes me up around the same time every day wanting to be fed. My Yoga Ayurveda daily routine changes with the seasons and with me as I change. Ayurveda is about being in tune with the seasons, times of day and your stage of life. This way my practice has changed throughout my body strengths and vulnerabilities, digestive system, strength and clarity of my mind, responsibilities and for my deeper spiritual growth. Our Good Morning Yoga Therapy “live-online” class is a great way to start the day.

    Sleep is best between 10pm and sunrise

    The best quality of sleep is between 10pm and sunrise and it is at this time the restoration occurs. When I don’t get enough sleep my body gets stressed as I am traveling on my nervous system which is a vulnerable area for Vata. When I miss my sleep window and fall asleep when naturally tired, by over stimulating my brain looking at a digital screen my sleep quality weakens. Poor sleep quality has a flow on effect to staying in bed. This then affects the bodies natural urges. Resulting in missing out on the peristalsis brings attention to need to evacuate the body.

    Ayurveda tells – do not withhold the bodies natural urges. According to Ayurveda we recognise the 14 natural urges of the body should always be respected. They are as follows:-

    flatulence,

    defecation,

    urination,

    belching,

    sneezing,

    thirst,

    hunger,

    sleep,

    cough,

    breathing rapidly with exertion,

    yawning,

    tears,

    vomiting

    and ejaculation.

    Laughter and hiccups are classified as secondary urges that should also be respected. To suppress these is called prajnyaparadha, or crimes against wisdom. This “crime” is a suppression of your body’s innate wisdom about what it needs to do to function well. To deny that wisdom is a direct offence to your physical, mental, energetic and spiritual body.

    Feed the cat before he bites

    Our Yoga Works for Over 40s live-online yogi Sexy Rexy is a Pita. That means he lets me know when he is hungry and if he doesn’t get fed when he wants to his Pita will rise. The bile will secrete from the gall bladder into his stomach and he will burn with rage. When this happens I have learnt I will get a bite on the arm just to get me out of bed! The Pita energy is vexatious to a Vata. A Vata person instead of going to anger as the Pita type can tend to do, they go into fear. Once the fear is triggered the vibration starts in the body that then moves to an over working of the mind.

    Morning is a good time for me, to look after me and show gratitude I have a cat!.

    Rexy Sexy cat

    Ayurveda morning routine drink recipe and fruit snack

    Ingredients

    1 lemon

    1/2 teaspoon turmeric

    1/2 teaspoon of freshly grated ginger or

    1 teaspoon of ginger powder

    Sprinkle of black pepper

    3 cardamon pods

    Method

    Boil the jug, squeeze the lemon, add the ingredients and drink while still warm

    Four pieces of fruit away satiate my taste buds for sweet. I will choose orange to sweeten my palate, pawpaw (papua) to increase my digestion for pineappe

    Being of Vata constitution the tastes that suit my body are sweet, sour and salty.

    Lemons effect on Vata, Pita and Kapha doshas

    Lemons have a strong sour flavour, a vivid zing that puckers the lips. The potent lemon flavour has an equally strong effect on the body. Consuming the juice encourages saliva in your mouth which makes your mouth watery. It also encourages secretions in stomach and digestive tract organs, improving taste and digestion while freshening the breath. Lemon Juice softens stools as well, aiding regular elimination. The juice in hot water is a mild morning laxative choice for many, helping to keep your gut clean. It has been found that lemons nourish deficient blood plasma and help rebuild fluids.

    Lemons are a way to calm down Vata, detoxify balance Pitta, but may stimulate aggravated Pitta, and Kapha dosha. The sour, and heating effects of lemons have sour after digestion effect which is of particular benefit to Vata dosha.

    Kapha Pita and the effects of Lemons

    The heavy, moist quality of the Earth element is what can aggravate Kaphas, though it is less aggravating to Kaphas than to Pitta. Kaphas need to avoid sour in the case of an acute Kapha imbalance, like a head cold, but otherwise, Kapha’s can actually benefit from the sour tastes stimulating qualities in small amounts. The ginger and pepper is warming as it good however they may find the cardamon a little too grounding, as they are challenged to move their energies away from the earth.

    For a Kapha they need to stay away from the sweet tastes but Pita can also consume sweet but it is not good for the Kapha. Pita will possibly not like the hot lemon drink as they are already heated and they could substitute with lime and go easy on the black pepper and ginger. It is important to be aware of how the body reacts to what ever you put into it and this is where a Yoga therapy practice provides this connection.

    Note: Lime should not be used when one has a cold, congestion and/or cough.

    Yoga for over 40s online

    Practices to sooth the soul, cleanse and strengthen the body

    Yoga and Ayurveda morning routine aims to fit into your life and making time to schedule your daily routine will set your day up the right way. Each morning unless I have an early appointment or it is the weekend I will do 12 rounds of Surya Namaskar. Surya Namaskar (Sanskrit: सूर्यनमस्कार IASTSūrya Namaskār), Salute to the Sun or Sun Salutation, is a practice in yoga as exercise incorporating a sequence of some twelve gracefully linked asanas.[2][3] The asana sequence originated in the Hatha Yoga tradition on 9th century in India. The basic sequence involves moving from a standing position into Downward and Upward Dog poses and then back to the standing position, but many variations are possible. The set of 12 asanas is dedicated to the vedic-hindu solar deity Surya. In some Indian traditions, the positions are each associated with a different mantra.

    For each round I have a prayer, mantra or affirmation. This helps me know where I am up to and really set the tone for my day. The prayers and mantras are very grounding and where I can really set the tone of my heart for the day. If I don’t have enough time for a longer practice here is a snippet below of what I do.

    Find out more about how we combine Yoga and Ayurveda as a therapy and join our ‘live-online’ Yoga Ayurveda Therapy and our Yoga Therapy for Pain relief here.

  • Yoga Ayurveda together are complete

    Yoga Ayurveda together are complete

    India’s traditional, natural system of health and medicine Yoga and Ayurveda has been practiced for more than 5,000 years. Yoga is the union between the mind and the body. Ayurveda is the science of life. Both are traditionally practiced together. One-on-one without the other is only half the benefit. Together they provide a naturally sustainable method to maintain health and wellbeing.

    Yoga is a science, a philosophy of life.

    By practicing Yoga Ayurveda therapy we enhance our physical well-being, mental peace, harmony, moral elevation and become spiritually uplifted.

    Each person is unique

    Sam pidgeon pose

    Ayurveda states disease comes in six stages and Yoga provides the bridge to listen to our bodies messages. 

    Ayurveda holds that specific disease conditions are symptoms of an underlying imbalance. It does not neglect relief of these symptoms, but its main focus is on the big picture. With Yoga and Ayurveda we learn to listen deeply and restore balance. Likewise we begin to create such a healthy lifestyle that the imbalance won’t occur again. 

    Yoga is a conduct, an attitude and an approach, as well as an art of living.

    Cameron trikonasana

    Consideration for each persons individuals dosha (body type) Vata, Pita or Kapha. With this knowledge a the natural healing approaches and recommendations for daily living are determined. This method is in alignment with modern science which views individuals as unique in the universe, with a unique DNA.

    Take responsibility for your health with Yoga and Ayurveda therapy

    Ayurveda teaches us to take responsibility for our health. We have so many options to choose from and choosing wisely will enable you to live a full life. In contrast poor choices makes life smaller. As the years go by without listening to what we need, we are left to rely on others.

    Every day of our lives, every hour of every day, we can, and do, choose either health or illness. When we choose wisely, nature rewards us with health and happiness.

    When we persistently choose unwisely, nature, in her wisdom, eventually sets us straight. Unfortunately she makes us sick and gives us a chance to rest and rethink our choices.

    Living in harmony with nature, the seasons and your body is living a balanced life. You will learn to listen deeply to your body and choose food, places, people and things that suit your dosha.

    Yoga Ayurveda combined

    About Zoe Campbell

    Zoe is a Yoga Ayurveda therapist and the founder of Computer Coach Australia. Juggling life as a mother, carer and business woman Zoe has worked with technology for over 30 years. She can guide you to implement Yoga and Ayurveda into your daily life.

    Zoe Campbell Yoga Ayurveda therapist

    We invite you to learn more about the following services:-

    Yoga Therapy Private practices,

    Yoga Therapy for Pain release,

    and Yoga Works for Over 40s live-online classes here.

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