Paul Klee. A Guardian Angel Serves a Small Breakfast (Ein Genius serviert ein kleines Frühstück) from the yearbook Die Freude: Blätter einer neuen Gesinnung (Joy: Papers for a New Consciousness). 1920
Paul Klee: A Guardian Angel Serves a Small Breakfast
 

 

Beecher Hill Yoga
Hinesburg, Vermont

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Yoga Therapy Notes
Yoga for Anxiety

 

Yoga for Anxiety



 


The stress response to danger:
Fear keeps us alive...when it is a response to a present and real threat to our safety. You are well designed to respond to threat: Your breath and heartbeat get faster. Your muscles tense. Blood flows away from digestion. Your bowels may loosen. Your blood sugar rises. Your senses heighten. You are pumped and ready for the famous fight or flight response.                                                                    
We are also designed to return to equilibrium, to relax once we have fled or successfully fought the threat.

The stress response to triggers:
Our brains are designed to remember threats that we've encountered and to react to them quickly when we encounter them again. This happens below the radar of cognition, your "thinking" brain.  For example-- A dog chases you. Your brain remembers: dog = threat. Two weeks later, you see a different dog and feel a rush of fear in your body before your "thinking mind reminds you that the new dog is cute, on a leash and not a threat.

The good news is that you don't have to slowly think things through before running for your life when you are in danger. The bad news is that you have a trigger that isn't susceptible to distinctions or context. And you will be extra vigilant about dogs.

The stress response to thought:
 Abstractions--language and thought--can also trigger fear. You read a sign: "beware of the dog" and you feel a rush of fear. You remember the terrible experience of the dog chase. You wonder if there will be dogs on the walk you are taking with your friend. 

What we think and our own internal language can trigger the same stress response as a saber-toothed tiger.W

What is anxiety?
Anxiety is the activation of the stress response in the absence of a real and present threat...and we've all experienced it. We anticipate a presentation or a difficult conversation, and we feel the muscle tension, the fast pulse or short breath.

But at the moment there is nothing to either flee or fight.
Evening on Karl Johan
Edward Munch: Evening on Karl Johan,1892

Anxiety as a problem:
Anxiety can feel awful, even feel life-threatening. Anxiety requires a lot of psychological and physical energy. Anxiety directs your awareness away from the present. Without an threat conquer or escape, it's hard to turn off the relaxation response.

When anxiety is chronic or when it prevents us from moving toward our valued goals it can be a problem.

 


                                    

 

 

 

 

 

 

           
        Yoga offers tools to address anxiety.

Focused awareness releases us from trigger thoughts.
Your Yoga practice, whether for asana or meditation, requires you to direct your attention. Perhaps you are consciously following your breath or attending to sensation  or repeating a mantra. When your attention is directed , you are no longer engaged with anxiety-producing thoughts. The signs of anxiety subside,  as you no longer focus on these thoughts.

Breathing calms the fear response.
Pranayama (Yoga breathing) slows the breath. The hyperventilation that often comes with anxiety brings too MUCH oxygen into your bloodstream. When the ratio of oxygen to carbon dioxide rises, your nervous system responds with many of the 'symptoms' of anxiety. And when the breath slows and softens, the ratio of oxygen to carbon dioxide returns to normal. This signals your brain and nervous system to reverse muscular tension, blood vessel constriction, etc. 

Alternate nostril breath is particularly helpful if you suffer from anxiety. Practice 5-7 cycles of this breath 4-6/day, whether or not you are feeling anxious.
                    
Yoga postures release tension and ground us.
Feeling connected to the ground increases our sense of safety. Try the standing postures, like the Warrior poses. Allow your feet to sink more deeply into your footprint. To relieve anxiety, it is important to have your lower body be strong and engaged with the ground, so your upper body can soften and open.

Your asana practice, done with conscious breath and awareness, releases muscular tension. Work actively at your 'edge'  gradually deepening into the postures. Also, alternate vigorous effortful postures like plank or gate pose with 'letting go' postures like child pose or seated forward bend.

Integration of body, mind & spirit helps us use our resources.
Sometimes when you are anxious, you feel "beside yourself" or "out of your mind" or "spaced out."  These are expressions of  a disconnect between mind and body that can leave you feeling as helpless as if you were asked to drive a car without being able to sit in the driver's seat.

In the same way, when anxious, you may feel isolated, empty, or separated from the world and the people around you. This deep sense of separation from Self and the Universal can be truly frightening.

When you practice Yoga, you integrate and connect your mind, your body and your spirit. This is a natural outcome of a consistent practice.

When your mind, body and spirit are integrated, you can move toward equilibrium and balance.

Practice reinforces commitment.
There is nothing we can do to avoid all suffering. But we can make a commitment to identify our values and goals and aim toward them.

We may have to suffer anxiety as we take the actions necessary to live a valued life. We don't, however, have to perpetuate the thoughts or language or sensations that trigger that anxiety.

This is not an easy commitment. The discipline of Yoga is training for commitment. Whether it's every day or every week, you spread your mat and begin your practice.  As many times as your mind wanders in meditation, you return your awareness to breath.

Paradoxically, accepting your anxiety and focusing on your 'valued goals' will very likely reduce that anxiety

 


 

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Beecher Hill Yoga  **

Laura Wisniewski, M.A., C.Y.T., R.Y.T.
Hinesburg, VT  05461
Phone:  {802} 482-3191
E-Mail:  BHY@beecherhillyoga.com
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