Yoga Training Jackson MS

A yoga practice can strengthen what Jungian analyst Marion Woodman calls "the connection to our souls"—yoga gives your soul space to find rhythm, to be held, and finally, just to be.

Joyflow Yoga, Metro Jackson
(601) 613-4317
2002 Pinehaven Dr
Flowood, MS
Yoga Styles
Beyond body, beyond mind, be...joy. Enjoy vinyasa with a playful spirit and self-acceptance, grounded in principles of alignment.

Matworks Yoga & Pilates Club
(601) 624-6356
408 Monroe Street
Clinton, MS
Yoga Styles
Hatha

Yoga Teacher
(601) 605-3342
3046 Tidewater Circle
Madison, MS
Yoga Styles
Ashtanga, Hatha, Iyengar, Power, CC

Joyflow Yoga
(601) 613-4317
2807 Old Canton Rd
Jackson, MS
 
Joyflow Yoga, Metro Jackson
(601) 613-4317
2002 Pinehaven Dr
Flowood, MS
Yoga Styles
Beyond body, beyond mind, be...joy. Enjoy vinyasa with a playful spirit and self-acceptance, grounded in principles of alignment.

Butterfly Yoga
(601) 594-2313
3025 N. State St.
Jackson, MS
Yoga Styles
Anusara

Evelyn Magee, RMT#1161 at Body Benefits
601-397-9642 or 601-991-9904
731 S. Pear Orchard #30 in the Odyssey Shopping Center
Ridgeland, MS
Yoga Styles
Traditional Thai Yoga Therapy

Studio Om Yoga
(601) 353-0025
710 Poplar Blvd
Jackson, MS
 
Butterfly Yoga
(601) 594-2313
3025 N State St
Jackson, MS
 
Barefoot Yoga,LLC
(662) 404-5131
119B South Ward Street
Senatobia, MS
Yoga Styles
Hatha.Ashtanga Vinyasa Flow, Restorative

Yoga in Times of Excessive Bleeding

Provided by: 

By De West

Whether you experience heavy bleeding during your period, after childbirth, following a miscarriage, or in the flooding of perimenopause, these gentle yoga sequences provide a safe and practical way to stem the tide, get some relief, and connect to what‘s going on inside. If you feel exhausted and weak from excessive bleeding, rest completely. Otherwise, a good rule of thumb for doing yoga is to practice with awareness and breathe all the way down into your uterus. Avoid standing poses (which tend to zap your energy), unless you use the wall for support. For example, doing Half-Moon Pose (Ardha Chandrasana) at the wall, a restorative pose par excellence for myriad menstrual concerns, will give you a sense of openness in your pelvic region, bring space to your abdomen, and produce a drying effect on your uterus.

But heavy bleeding often moves beyond the physiological, carrying with it an emotional component: the desolation of losing a baby, the trauma of childbirth, the passing of one‘s fertile years. A yoga practice can strengthen what Jungian analyst Marion Woodman calls "the connection to our souls"—yoga gives your soul space to find rhythm, to be held, and finally, just to be.

During times of grief, depression, and acute suffering, however, doing anything that requires thinking—even yoga—can hurt. Painful thoughts inevitably start crowding in, elbowing each other for prominence. Even yoga, with its slow, deliberate, and precise movements, can seem like too much mindfulness. The beauty of vinyasa (flow) yoga is that we can connect with a light touch, without fixating. These mini-sequences, with the postures connected together by the breath, favor a continuum of creative movement over a final destination or pose. Just the reminder of impermanence we need to prevent getting stuck in our inner muck.

Standing flow series
1a. Triangle Pose (Trikonasana) Stand with your back to the wall and step your feet about 4 feet apart, with your heels 3 to 4 inches away from the wall. Turn your right foot out 90 degrees (parallel to the wall) and turn your left foot in slightly. Stretch your arms out to the sides, exhale, and keeping your spine elongated and back against the wall, extend your trunk to the right and place your right hand on a block. Stretch your left arm up in line with your shoulders. Breathe deeply without strain for 6 to 8 breaths.

1b. Half-Moon Pose (Ardha Chandrasana) On an exhale, bend your right knee, pick up the block with your right hand, and move it about 1 foot in front of your right foot in the direction your toes are pointing. Walk your left foot halfway in toward your right foot. As you inhale, lift the left leg until it is parallel to the floor and straighten your right. Your left leg, hips, head, and shoulders should rest against the wall. As you turn your belly and chest toward the ceiling, stretch your left arm up. Stay here for 6 to 8 breaths, relaxing your abdomen, pelvic floor, and vaginal wall. Retu...

Author: De West

Copyright 1999-2009 Natural Solutions: Vibrant Health, Balanced Living/Alternative Medicine/InnoVisi...

Click here to read more from Natural Solutions