Why Yoga Is Important
Every year, you hear more people start doing yoga. Maybe it's your friend, a coworker, or a family member. Something truly magnetic about the practice makes everyone instantly attracted to it.
Although it's getting more and more popular, yoga is much more than just a trend. Even if people go to their first class because they've seen others do it - that's not why they stay.
When you go for your first yoga practice, you might think it will improve only one aspect of your life. Perhaps you do it for its physical benefits or because you want to incorporate some type of spiritual practice into your life. But soon, you realize it seems to affect every aspect of your being - and that's precisely what it is intended to do.
The True Importance Of Yoga
Old yogis understood that humans are physical, mental, and spiritual beings. They developed yoga to help harmonize all three levels of our beings. True yoga in India didn't develop only around physical exercise. It was primarily a spiritual practice focused on developing virtues that help us reach our highest potential and find purpose in our life.
Still, even if you only practice the physical postures or asanas, you will see a change in all three levels of your being. That's not only a promise coming from the subjective experiences of practitioners... it is also something that we can and have proven by science today.
Physical yoga practice is a form of education about living a better life. On the mat, we become aware of our body and our movement. We connect to our breath and learn to control it. The breath serves as a sort of bridge between our physical body, our mind, and our spiritual self. You can experience that as soon as you start controlling your breath. And you don't have to believe us to our word - you can try it right now.
Start deepening your breath. That means your inhales and exhales get longer, and you activate all the organs involved in the breathing action. As you inhale, lift both your belly and chest and try to make your exhalation longer than your inhale. Only after a couple of moments will you experience a sense of calm. Your thoughts will be quieter, and you will enter a state of meditation. Try closing your eyes, and breathe for a minute or two.
Now, in only a few moments of conscious breathing, you have experienced the true importance of yoga. Without any preparation - you have managed to connect your body, mind, and spiritual presence.
When we start practicing yoga regularly, we learn of this control over our bodies. We discover we can calm ourselves down, heal our pains, and become aware of the present moment. This happens even if we're not aware of it, but it does become more significant when we are conscious of what we're doing.
First, you learn to connect your breath, movement, thoughts, and emotions during a one-hour yoga class. Then you can begin to take that skill and incorporate it into your daily life off the yoga mat.
That's the true importance of yoga. When you learn this vital knowledge, you will see the benefits in your everyday life, and your well-being will improve.
With yoga:
- You are healing yourself
- You are building your spiritual practice
- You are improving your mental health.
With yoga, you gain back control of your own being. That empowerment makes it so important, especially in this fast-paced time in which we live today.