Thursday, October 19, 2006

Yoga and Cancer


In a courtyard at the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center women stretch and pull as their yoga instructor calls out different postures.

Daniela Ellis, a Yoga Instructor directs, "take one step at a time, one breath at a time." Ellis says holding the different postures releases muscle tension, which can help ease stress.

In fact, a recent study by the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Texas found women with breast cancer who practiced yoga were in better general health and felt less fatigued than women in their situation who did not practice yoga.

Daniela Ellis says, "yoga helps with the overall circulation of the lymph and the body assisting the immune system in healing the body."

Rehmann, also says yoga can help with scar tissue build up from radiation and surgery.

Not only is yoga a great physical activity, but it's also a good exercise for the mind and the spirit."

Susanna Rehmann, a Yoga Student says, "any kind of exercise I this is really wonderful. It helps, it lifts your spirit and makes you feel good."

Susanna has been taking yoga here for three months. She does not have cancer, but enjoys the healing environment of M.D. Anderson.

Rehmann said, "it helps in being more flexible and also building strength and that's very important-to be both flexible and strong."

That's good advice for anyone with or without an illness.

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

"Bikram Choudhury Yoga Inc" agrees to fines

LOS ANGELES — A company operated by an Indian yoga guru pleaded no contest to three safety violations at one of its studios and agreed to pay more than $8,000 in fines and penalties.

Bikram Choudhury Yoga Inc., founded by Bikram Choudhury, pleaded no contest Tuesday to misdemeanor operating without a fire permit, failing to provide required parking for customers and operating the studio without a certificate of occupancy.

Choudhury, 60, became a multi-millionaire popularizing "hot yoga" in America. In exchange for the plea, prosecutors dropped charges against him, the city attorney's office said.

Choudhury was given a year to correct the violations at his West Los Angeles studio. When the company meets safety standards, the court record will be expunged, said Choudhury's attorney, Victor Sherman.

Sherman said that entering the plea and agreeing to pay the fine is cheaper than fighting the case.

Choudhury said he plans to move his world headquarters to Honolulu.

Indian yoga guru in New York

New York: Indian yoga guru Swami Ramdev was invited to New York as a guest at a United Nations-sponsored program against poverty, organized by the Millennium Campaign. This was his first visit to the United States, but yoga guru Baba Ramdev already has plenty of fans in this country.

"Swami ji’s message was very clear that we only take responsibility for ourselves, our own health for the state of our country. That very much was in line with the program against poverty initiative, which is asking each country to take responsibility for the state," UNDP Global Media Coordinator, Anand Kantaria said.

The Indian community in the US quickly took advantage of the yoga guru's visit to organize lecture sessions in New York, New Jersey and Chicago. Visitors to the New York event held at the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan campus in Manhattan included recent converts and the merely curious.

"I think it's amazing that he's taking an ancient Indian tradition of ayurveda and yoga and teaching it to people who can't afford care, and also those who can't afford the time," Co-Chairman, Hinduja TMT, Ramkrishan Hinduja said.

"What's interesting to me is his openness to scientific principles. I'm a physicist, also a medical doctor, and I do research in nano-technology. I'm interested in studying the scientific aspects of yoga to find out how it works," President & CEO, Nanobiosym Diagnostics Anita Goel said.

After getting a warm response from the NRIs, Swami Ramdev has promised to make another extended visit to the US next year.

"Yoga's Bad Boy" fined by Los Angeles court

A Los Angeles court has fined the yoga studio run by renowned Indian guru Bikram Choudhury for violating building and fire regulations, justice officials said.

The court fined Bikram Choudhury Yoga Inc more than 8,000 dollars after the company pleaded no contest to charges including operating without a valid permit.

Choudhury is the founder of 'Bikram Yoga', where practitioners perform yoga in a room heated at 110� Fahrenheit and which is practiced and endorsed by celebrities like Raquel Welch and Julia Roberts.


Delgadillo said the yoga magnate, who jets all over the world opening new studios and teaching classes, repeatedly flouted notices from the city's Fire and Building and Safety departments. Inspectors said the studio had insufficient fire exits, given how many students sometimes squeeze into its mirrored classrooms.

Choudhury's yoga system consists of a sequence of 26 postures performed twice in a room heated to between 100 and 105 degrees. After pioneering what is believed to be the world's first yoga franchising operation, he made headlines last year for a legal fight over his claim to a copyright on the poses that would have prevented others from teaching his style. The dispute was ultimately settled. Because of his aggressive business tactics and brash behavior, he was dubbed "Yoga's Bad Boy" by Yoga Journal.

When the city first filed charges, Choudhury said he had been a victim of a five-year campaign of harassment by employees in the city's Building and Safety Department.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Students melt away stress with yoga


While some people enjoy the slow-paced traditional forms of yoga, others combine the tree pose with 5-pound weights and Justin Timberlake to stay in shape.

Yoga sculpt combines traditional yoga poses with weight training and dance music, all in the style of a fast-paced aerobics class.

The class was designed in Denver and has been taught at CorePower Yoga studios in Minnesota for almost a year. Jennifer Hauge, 42, is one of the yoga sculpt instructors at the studio on Washington Avenue Southeast.

She said adding weights to yoga just makes sense. he said adding weights to yoga just makes sense.

"You're getting two things done at once," Hauge said. "It's a combination of mind and body."

The beginning of the class is similar to other types of yoga, concentrating on breathing and slow stretches. Hauge told the noon class Thursday to "let your morning go" as they transitioned from one pose to another with a "swan dive," gracefully bending over and touching the floor.



Then the music sped up, the bass was pumping and it was time get to work. Students chose among a variety of 3- to 10-pound weights, and Hauge energetically directed the class between moves and reps.

"I like to do a little something for everybody," she shouted to the class. "And some of us wanna burn calories."

The students' faces cringed while they pushed their bodies through a series of lunges, jumps and reaches while, at the same time, half of the room smiled through their sweat.

"Did I say four more?" Hauge said to the class with a smirk. "I meant eight."

Chelsea Tieszen said she takes the class because she loves challenging her body's limits.

"You may hate your teacher during the class because you just want to relax," she said. "But I love the way I feel after the class; it's a complete release."

Finding a minute to relax might seem difficult for some students this time of year with midterm tests and assignment due dates to manage.

Dr. Gary Christenson, director of mental health at Boynton Health Service, said students generally have multiple stressors and the challenge is finding a balance. College itself is a stressor, he said.

"Stress is the input on the equation," he said. "The output can be anxiety, changes in appetite, poor concentration, loss of sleep and clinical depression."

Christenson said exercise like yoga is a great way to prevent stress from becoming damaging to one's health, helping lower general levels of stress and allowing time to "get away."

Tieszen said that when she's having a stressful week, exercise is a great remedy.

"I've always hated running, so I've made yoga my main form of exercise," she said.

Although she enjoys the yoga sculpt class, Tieszen said she still prefers the more traditional forms of yoga. Concentrating on alignment and technique make her feel more in tune with her body, she said, and the fast pace of sculpt sacrifices that mental challenge.

Jeanne Bain, a Boynton yoga instructor, teaches free traditional hatha yoga classes for University students, faculty and staff members. She said although her class is spiritual, not fitness-based, she appreciates all forms of the practice.

"Whatever gets people exposed to yoga is a good thing," she said.

Bain teaches a couple times a week and said the class attendance depends on how stressed people are. More people show up in the beginning of the year and during finals week.

About 25 people participated in the Friday lunch hour class at Boynton, slowly stretching in silence while the leaves rustled in the wind outside. Many of the students in the class had never tried yoga before.

Hauge said beginners are welcome in yoga sculpt as well, as long as they're prepared to work hard. CorePower yoga offers the first week of classes free and a student discount thereafter.

Marketing and entrepreneurship junior Katelyn Benson said although the class is pricey for her student budget, the way it makes her body and mind feel is worth the money.

"Once you try (yoga sculpt), you're hooked," she said.

Yoga helps make you limber, stronger and calmer

There is much to like about yoga. It helps make you limber, and stronger and calmer. It's even used to ease medical conditions and prevent injury. And just about anybody can do it.

Yet yoga can lull you into not paying attention. And it's hardly as simple as it looks. There are so many forms, teaching styles, demands, levels of understanding and shades of quality in instruction. In a sick way, some allow competition to creep in. Yoga magazines, showing off human pretzels, can send the same sort of look-at-me messages as those abs-and-buns fitness covers.

As with any physical challenge, you must pay attention to your limits.

According to a U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission report, there were more than 3,700 yoga-related injuries costing a total of nearly $11 million in medical care in 2004. The most common injuries involve repetitive strain, overstretching the neck, shoulders, spine, legs and knees.

The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) believes the rewards of basic yoga outweigh the risks as long as participants exercise in moderation and according to their own flexibility and strength levels.

''Yoga can help improve strength, balance and flexibility and may be beneficial for certain bone and joint problems like carpal tunnel syndrome, tennis elbow and arthritis,'' says Dr. Nicholas DiNubile, an orthopaedic surgeon and AAOS fellow. 'However, the old adage of `no pain, no gain' does not apply to this activity.''

DiNubile says serious muscle damage and related injuries can occur if people, especially those with pre-existing musculoskeletal ailments or conditions, don't take proper precautions.

Injuries don't solely hit beginners, says Brad Jones, a Seattle rolfer and a longtime yoga practitioner who has struggled through periodic back trouble.

''Hyper-mobility develops in areas like SI (lower-back) joints, necks, wrists and shoulders,'' he says. ``This can lead to chronic pain. It is like when you bend a piece of plastic back and forth repeatedly. Eventually it becomes very weak and breaks. Complementing yoga with some other forms of strength training is important in my mind.''

Yoga and meditation to battle chikungunya

Take to yoga, pranayama and meditation besides controlled breathing techniques to take on chikungunya. This is the advice from the Experts of Yoga.

Encouraged by the efficacy of its techniques in treating people with symptoms of Chikungunya, a mosquito-borne disease that can prove fatal, the group has decided to start special camps all over India to cater to people suffering from the disease.

The camp will offer yoga, pranayama and meditation apart from the Sudarshan Kriya, the unique breathing technique taught Ayurveda.

"We have been studying the effects of our techniques on people with symptoms of Chikungunya for a few weeks. It has been observed that people who regularly practise Sudarshan Kriya, pranayama and meditation are not only less prone to the disease but also recover faster if they get an attack," An Official said in Bangalore.

Said Renuka Dugani, a physician from Hubli, one of the worst effected areas in Karnataka: "Many of my patients showed remarkable recovery soon after they underwent the Yoga. The improvements are so apparent that now I prescribe the workshop to every patient that comes to me with symptoms of Chikungunya."

Explaining how yoga, pranayama, meditation and Sudarshan Kriya help cure the disease, yogacharya Dinesh Kashikar said: "Pranayama is a very effective antidote for fever as it cools down the body and restores balance. Yoga asanas loosen up joints and provide relief from body pain, which are the dominant symptoms of Chikungunya."

"The Sudarshan Kriya and accompanying meditations strengthen the immune system and allow the body to fight back," he added.

But even their activities spread in Cherthala taluk, People are dying due to Chikungunya. Actually they are try to cheat poor people by misleading them to "sree sree tricks"