by Anya Bean
Your Yoga studio |
High-octane activities such as skiing, hiking, running, biking, and surfing have always been my idea of exercise. Growing up playing hockey and ski racing made me avoid any kind of meditation or mindfulness at all cost. Past yoga experiences always found the clock capturing my attention more than the exercise, thinking about anything but the stretch, the pose, or the breathing. No talking? For an entire hour? No thanks. Yoga has always seemed a new-age fad—a cop-out for actually exercising. Then one of my girlfriends proposed a challenge: a different activity every month for a year, with October’s activity being yoga.
With each day of the yoga
challenge, yoga has become more of an addiction to body and mind. The results have been amazing—increased strength, presence of mind, and improved sleep, to name a few. To
every athlete, irrespective of sport or discipline: implementing yoga will enhance your ability. For ski racers: all skiers’ hips are tight.
When a group of skiers gets together and sits with their legs crossed, it is
pathetic.
Yoga can strengthen your ski legs |
Consistent practice of the various yoga poses helps
build strength and balance. Core stability is enhanced and subsequently reduces
overuse injury by strengthening the muscles surrounding the more utilized
muscles, creating a more balanced overall strength. By practicing yoga, balance
is improved. Better balance and coordination means enhanced control over the
body, which for any athlete, leads to better technique and form.
The physical benefits of yoga for the athlete
are huge, but they’re nothing in comparison to the more abiding benefits. Most
people, particularly athletes, tend to think of yoga as boring. Everyone at MSU
is busy and if another activity is added to the schedule, it better be worth
it. In order to benefit from yoga, one must commit to the hour they are
practicing. Others, mostly non-athletes, think of yoga as a way to tighten the
core, flatten the stomach, and tone that butt. Sure, it does that, but so can
many other exercises,right?
Improve your body and mind |
Yoga was a routine designed not to give you a
nice butt, but to improve your ability
to quiet and control the impulse of the mind, and to center focus and
promote serenity by silencing the endless mental chatter.
When you look at the highest levels of sport,
all athletes are talented. They train hard, they practice technique, and they
do everything they can to take them to the top level. Many athletes are
forgetting a crucial part of the puzzle: a sound mind. Yoga can not only
improve sleep, reduce stress, quell negative mental chatter, and manage fear,
it can change the entire approach to training and racing.
By incorporating yoga into your schedule, you
will become better at what you do whether you are a competitor, a recreational
athlete, or a couch potato.
Here’s one of our favorite yoga studios:
Intro Month: $30
Single Class $10
10 Class Card: $75
Month Unlimited: $75
Auto Monthly: $65 (no
contract, no fees)
Student Auto Monthly:
$50 (with valid high school or MSU student ID ONLY)
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