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new year’s resolutions

Enquiries Into Yogic Philosophy

How to: Keep Your Fitness Resolution

January 12, 2015

It’s the start of Week 2 of 2015.  Most people’s New Year’s resolutions comprise majorly of fitness resolutions.  People who bought state of the art running equipment last year want to run their first marathon this year.  Some others want to come down 10 dress sizes.  Lots of people hope that the new year will magically infuse them with the willpower to achieve their goals.  They hope that new year resolutions  are somehow different.

And most people who had fitness on their resolutions list may not even have started working on their goals.  Because most people who state ‘I will lose 10kgs in 2015’ spend more time visualizing clothes they want to wear and dreaming about the shrieks of admiration/jealousy emanating from their friends.  So lost are they in this visualization and dreaming activity, that they completely forget to plan how they are going to accomplish these feats.

And because there hasn’t been any proper plan in place the first week of the year may IMG_20141026_122003[1]have been a repetition of the first week of the last year for many people.  Dealing with the early morning getting ready for office frenzy.  Sleeping late after finally switching the TV off.  Coffee-fuelled days and restless nights.

The thing is, waking up early and going for a refreshing walk, having a wholesome breakfast, reading something interesting before falling into a blissful sleep isn’t really difficult.  Nor is it difficult to workout EVERY SINGLE DAY.  The difference between frazzled and flow-like-the-river days is just planning.  Yes.  So those who dream of losing 10 kgs can do so if they plan how they will go about doing it.  Is it really feasible for them to get up at the crack of dawn every day for an hour long intense workout?  Or would it be more practical to workout for three weekdays and then both days of the weekend.  Can you really follow through on your goals like no sugar, rice, coffee, chocolate etc, or would it be easier to cut out one thing first and then  move on to more.  Rome wasn’t built in a day, and a healthier, fitter, happier you will also need consistent effort over several weeks.IMG_20141231_160302[1]

However, I do come across many people who have a balanced approach.  There’s a girl whose been coming to class for a couple of months now.  When I asked her about her new year’s resolutions she said just fitness, which is just an extension of the way she’s currently living.  She eats well and tries to work out frequently.  She tries not to overdo things.  So the other day when she messaged me to tell me she won’t be able to make it to class I told her to relax.  However, she came to class and said she would try to follow along to the best of her ability.  She had pulled a muscle and wasn’t too sure about practicing that day.  But I saw her energy levels consistently increase during the session and there was peace and smiles during the savasana.  Later on  she messaged me to thank me for the session because post yoga she felt energized and the muscle she felt she had pulled felt more relaxed.

That’s when I realized why this woman was achieving the fitness goals she had set for herself.  She was achieving them because she was working on them a day at a time.  A yoga session at a time.  A meal at a time.  And consistently making the choices that would contribute to achieving the larger picture she has in mind.  That’s the key to success for fitness resolutions.  Keep the larger picture handy, but focus on the small steps.  This way you won’t be overwhelmed by the 10kg goal.

So when it comes to keeping fitness resolutions, sweating the small stuff yields the results you want.IMG_20141030_223059[1]

Enquiries Into Yogic Philosophy

Is Your Health Just Gold Plating?

December 30, 2013

A chance conversation in yoga class recently got me thinking about the definition of health.  We talked about the misconceptions prevailing today, and how these are fuelled by the life and times that we live in.  As the year comes to a close, we can all take a look at our health again and make the right kind of resolutions for the next year.

How frequently have you met people who have decided that some condition is a part of their lives forever now?  People who have resigned themselves to living with something such as a chronic back ache, allergies, chronic headaches or migraines, joint pain etc.  People who don’t go swimming because of a cervical condition.  People who can’t travel for long distances in a train or a car because of backaches.  People can’t climb the stairs in their own houses because of ankle/joint pain!  And what’s worse is that many people have accepted these problems as a part of their lives instead of issues that must be addressed.

So, if your health gets in the way of going through life pain and medicine free, then you’re not healthy.  I have a friend who feeds her kids really well, she’s worried to death about their hygiene and their school work.  But every fifteen days I hear that they are running fevers.  Both children fall sick around the same time…and when they’re not sick then she is!  Now, she’s doing everything she can to maintain good health…but for some reason I feel that if children aren’t climbing trees and running around getting into trouble…then there’s something wrong.  Imagine kids who are bundled up under blankets with thermometers when they aren’t doing homework.  Will they make for well-rounded adults?

Similarly if every time you have to go on vacation, you think of all kinds of conditions you could get (allergies and the like) and end up taking a bunch of tablets and capsules with you, then you’re not healthy.  By all means take along your first aide kit, but if you’re planning on reaching for it daily, then your health is interfering with you having a good time, and being on vacation 100%.

Also, the thin are not necessarily the healthy.  How thin you are, or how hot and young you think you look, is not a sign of how healthy you are.  Because good health is a combination of many factors.  Good health is related to how far you can walk, how long you can move your body to songs you like (and some that you don’t like), how quickly your body recovers from injuries playing sports that you enjoy, how well you sleep after a long day, how much you can smile even when you see your ‘to do’ list increasing, how much of a spring there is in your step, how bright the shine in your eye…you get the drift.

So you may be a 40 yr old who doesn’t look a day above 25, exuding hotness, but if your body is constantly sick, your mind constantly irked, then all that youth and hotness is just gold plating, not real gold.

And so, as the year draws to a close, it’s a good idea to do an appraisal of the state of your health.  It’ll help you make the right resolutions for next year.