JUST BREATHE: How Yoga Can Release Stress and Tension
By Amanda Gabrielle and Raymond Aaron
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About this ebook
Just Breathe offers a wealth of information. Amanda introduces you to the fundamentals of yoga breathing, poses and meditation to start strengthening your body and mind. She shows you the many ways yoga can enhance and encourage feelings of good self-esteem and alleviate the stress we all are feeling in today's demanding world. Her simple step-by-step approach, along with diagrams and tips to help you create your own yoga practice are an invitation to make yoga part of your life.
For more that 30 years, Amanda has taught yoga to people of all ages and abilities. She shares the benefits of yoga in a way everyone can enjoy and understand. You can use the tools within Just Breathe to develop your own unique strategy to cope with these challenging times and to live a healthy and happy life.
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JUST BREATHE - Amanda Gabrielle
Chapter One
Stress Less with Yoga
In our natural state, we are glorious beings.
– Marianne Williamson
Happiness Is Basic to Human Nature
Happiness is a basic goal of our human nature. However, it is easily forgotten in our hectic lifestyles. Stress undermines our health and well-being. To realize this innate goal, we must deal constructively with stressors that we are met with in everyday life. No one is exempt from this reality. Luckily, yoga can help! We were not created to live worried, bitter, upset, tense, or stressed lives. It is a fundamental desire of every human being to live in a state of happiness, health, and fulfillment. Our natural state is to live as glorious beings.
We must establish a positive outlook in life, with a strategy—a strategy for being optimistic in life, with the development of contentment that allows us to make the best of any situation. It is important that when bad things happen, you deal with them in a positive and balanced way. Yoga is especially suited to gain control over stress responses.
Yoga is a tradition of skillful, conscious living that has been around for thousands of years and has held its value over time. It is as valuable today as it was in ancient times. For me, the joy of yoga initially was in the form of its physical helpfulness, but it also led the way to enhancing my emotional hardiness and mental well-being. I have found that my yoga students are looking for emotional and spiritual connection as well as the physical aspects. But they are also seeking ways to manage their day-to-day stresses.
What You Need to Know about Stress
Stress has existed as long as humans have, for it is part of our machinery. It gives valuable signals to us as to the choices we make and the directions we take. Some stress is normal and can help us. But people don’t realize what is building up in their bodies and minds with too much stress, whether it is from lack of sleep, stress on the job, or trying to live up to some illusions. There are more people living unhappy lives than I would care to compute. Since 9/11, people have been fearful. They feel insecure and unsteady about the world’s situation. The present-day coronavirus (COVID-19) has left us feeling vulnerable. People have been isolated, feeling anxious, and depressed. This makes people negative. It is easy to go around worried about our future and all the difficulties over which we have little or no control. It is easy to get stressed over finances or frustrated with loved ones. We are tempted to feel guilty about our past mistakes and be bitter about what did not work out. And then we wonder why we don’t enjoy our lives, why we are not passionate about our dreams, and why we can’t sleep at night. It is because there are so many problems created by life itself, and it is so overwhelming and stressful that we have difficulty finding the joy and happiness we all deserve.
The Price We Pay
Stress has many causes, and world fear makes people tentative and insecure. We devote ourselves to jobs that allow us no time off. We spend hours a day commuting. People struggle financially. We are bombarded with images of perfection, especially with our youth. They must be too thin and too perfect!
There is this constant encouragement to be competitive (at such young ages) and always striving to be better than the next one. Even as we get older, there is the illusion of remaining young. Major life changes, such as divorce, death in the family, moving, or retirement, are some things in life that we cannot avoid. And we can’t avoid change such as technology. But with change comes consequences, some positive and some not. For example, I have seen people indiscriminately enraptured with technology, much the way that we can be with food. Our diets—the very foods that shape and fuel our bodies—have shifted more toward processed foods, a phenomenon from which we are only now starting to recognize the drawbacks. Social media, a huge component of technological change, is quite like the shift toward processed food. In that, we are drawn away from a genuine experience that holds the value of life experiences and replaces it with only a processed
virtual experience that cannot provide the same tactile and developmental experience as an authentic interaction. Unless you make the world stop in its tracks and behave the way you think it should, we need to find a way to carve out an oasis and find the peace in us and around us.
Some stress is expected and can help us. But people don’t realize, with too much stress, what is building up in their bodies. Back in the caveman days, when you would meet a woolly mammoth, you would fight it or flee the situation. It is our sympathetic nervous systems that deal with the fight or flight response. It is a very primitive reflex in the body that deals with stressful situations. With continuous stress, what happens in our bodies is that we get stuck in this revved-up
situation, and it becomes so familiar to us that we likely do not consciously realize what is happening to