Preksha Yoga: Preksha Yoga to Treat Drug Addiction

The psychoactive drugs or street drugs are being taken in a deliberate attempt to elevate mood (euphorigens) and produce unusual state of consciousness up to the state of hallucination. All these drugs exert their actions directly or indirectly by altering the normal functions of neurons.

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Preksha Yoga: Preksha Yoga to Treat Anxiety Disorder

Stress, fear and anxiety all tend to be interactive. The principal components of anxiety are psychologic (tension, fears, difficulty in concentration, apprehension) and somatic (tachycardia, hyperventilation, palpitation, tremor, sweating). Other organ systems, e.g. gastrointestinal, may be involved in multiple-system complaints. Fatigue and sleep disorders are common. Sympathomimetic symptoms of anxiety are both a response to a central nervous system state and a reinforcement of further anxiety. Anxiety can become self-generating, since the symptoms reinforce the reaction, causing it to become spiral.

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Yoga to Cure Cervical Spondylosis – Samakonasana

We have met several friends, relatives and acquaintances who complain of Cervical Spondylosis. But very few know that the yoga exercises explained in the ancient texts of India, when regularly practiced have a lot of offer to those who are suffering from such joint related illnesses.

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Eight Yoga Poses to Beat Stress

1. Deep Breathing Meditation

You can practice deep breathing for just a few minutes or for as long as an hour – listen to your body and enjoy the relaxation!

Start out sitting in a comfortable position. It could be cross-legged on the floor, like in the photo above, or you can sit in a comfortable chair or lean up against a wall to support your back. Place your thumb and pointer fingers together gently, with your palms facing up, and start out by taking a few deep breaths, taking your time on the inhale and exhale.

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Five Reasons to Take Up Yoga

Chances are, you live a life filled with demands. You have a job that involves meeting lots of obligations and responsibilities. You may have a family that depends upon you for support. You have bills that are due like clockwork every month. There seems to be little flexibility in this life, yet you are expected to meet these tasks.

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Pranayama: Need for Breath Control Exercises

Breathing is the only major operation over which every human being has some conscious control. Other important operations like the heart-beat or digestion are beyond the control of most persons. If we define a single breath as made of one inhalation (taking in air) and exhalation (letting out air), a person takes 13 to 15 breaths per minute on an average; the total number of breaths per day ranges roughly from 18,720 to 21,600.

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Pranayama: What is Prana? What Does It Do?

In the allopathic system of medicine, a healthy person is one who is not suffering from any disease. Since it is claimed that almost every disease is caused by virus, bacteria or allergy which are infinite in number, every person is prone to some disease almost all the time and a healthy person is rare! The treatment is purely passive, you swallow the prescribed tablets or undergo surgery!

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Pranayama: Important Definitions, Abdominal or Diaphragm Breathing and Mudra or Finger Positions

1. Inhale means to take a breath-in.

Exhale means leaving out the breath.

Inhaling means breathing-in throughout the movement.

Exhaling means breathing-out throughout the movement.

2. Inhaling should be silent, smooth and without jerks.

3. Always inhale when energy is required, e.g., raising arms from chest level above shoulders, lifting weights etc. Always exhale when less energy is required for the performance of the action.

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