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Wilderness Yoga and Outdoor Sports
Stretch and breathe in the outdoor
experience with Michelle Anderson.
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I invite you to embark on an experiment.
The next time you are preparing to practice yoga, instead of going
to the studio or the living room, take a deep breath and walk
outside. Head to your back yard, to a park or go into a wild area
close by, maybe a national park or a wilderness area. Once there,
find yourself a comfortable flat spot, removing twigs and stones,
lay out your yoga mat and sit in silence for a moment attuning
yourself to the Earth.
As you begin your yoga practice outside, notice how your body
feels and observe your mind and your breath. As your practice
continues, notice the shedding of extraneous thoughts and ideas
and how the sounds, smells, and feelings of nature surround you.
Become aware of the deepening of your breath. Observe your asanas
(yoga postures). Notice the difference in your balancing postures
as your feet are rooted into the Earth and your focus is on a
still point. Attend to the feeling of Savasana, (corpse pose),
lying on your back, legs apart, hands comfortably at your sides,
sky unfolding before you. Experience Child’s Pose, sitting
on your heels, chest and forehead supported by the Earth, as you
exhale tension and stress and inhale relaxation and peace. Notice
how this yoga practice is fundamentally different than a yoga
session done inside.
Now let us take the experiment a little farther. You are ready
to go biking, rock climbing, hiking or kayaking and before heading
out directly into your sport you find a beautiful spot outdoors
at the base of the climb or beside the river. Here, you focus
your mind, deepen your breath and practice yoga. After completing
your pranayama (breathing exercises), asanas, relaxation, and
meditation you retain the peaceful feeling within and begin climbing,
running, or hiking. While practicing your sport, observe how your
body responds. Notice the depth and type of breathing you are
doing, notice the control of your mind and the feel of your muscles,
tendons and bones. Notice the quality of the activity. Where is
your attention?
Yoga is the unity of mind and body, the union of the inner and
outer worlds. The richer and more peaceful the surroundings are
while practicing yoga, the clearer and more profound the practice
could be. In my experience, practicing yoga outside adds a depth
of awareness, attunement, and joy to my session that continues
to affect me beyond the day. Practicing yoga before climbing,
backpacking, and hiking has become a natural development to stretch
my body in preparation for the sport and more profoundly to focus
my attention to the peaceful silence within. Yoga, pranayama,
relaxation and meditation inform many aspects of outdoor sports.
Yoga postures teach us to soften those muscles that we do not
need for the asana, thus helping the practioner to economize their
energy and relax the body. As we settle into more difficult asanas,
free of self judgment, we learn to embrace our resistance, letting
our bodies adjust to the challenge. When biking swiftly down a
steep single track trail, kayaking through challenging rapids,
or climbing a demanding route, we physically remember the yoga
practice, relaxing the muscles that are not needed for the sport
and integrating the body, mind, spirit, and breath. The practice
of pranayama is another remarkable tool for an athlete. Breath
control is essential for endurance, focus, and awareness. In a
challenging sport, one may experience fear. The first response
to fear is to limit one’s breathing. In these moments, one
needs to deepen and slow down their breath, inhaling and exhaling
thorough the nose. When the concentration is on the breath, there
is no room for other thoughts; there is only the experience of
the moment. Breathing exercises energize the body, oxygenate the
blood and focus the mind.
Relaxation is sometimes overlooked when engaging in active sports.
Savasana (corpse pose) teaches us, in the span of one or two breaths,
how to completely relax the body, and release tension. By doing
this often, you actually create muscle memory. When climbing,
running, swimming, or participating in sports, one can access
this memory and completely relax the body using breath and awareness.
By practicing Savasana throughout the activity, the body integrates
the benefits of the sport and decreases fatigue and lactic acid
build up.
Practicing yoga in the wilderness will deepen and enrich your
experience. Incorporating your practice with a sport of choice
will bring a noticeable difference in your body awareness, your
breath, and your relationship to nature.
Michelle Anderson is a certified Sivananda Yoga Insturctor
and cofounder of Life Centering Adventures (www.
Lifecenteringadventures.com), combining yoga backpacking and
rock climbing for families, groups, and individuals. Michelle
lives in Asheville, NC with her husband Joseph and son Jacob.
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