Sunday, July 31, 2022

Yoga for Excellence in Sports

 

Yoga for Excellence in Sports

The need for yoga in sport today:
Many people enjoy sporting activities both for pleasure and as a means of achieving fitness, to tone up the body and feel invigorated, which in turn leads to mental relaxation. However, as sport is becoming more and more competitive, sports have also become a career with an emphasis on material gain and the desire to win at any cost. Success in sports are not just personal achievement but it becomes achievements of the country too, especially in events like Olympic or World Championship. Therefore, it is important to find solutions to the changing sports scene of today. A sports person needs four basic qualities: speed, skill, strength and stamina for the success. To achieve these, in professional sports the daily life of a sports person calls for discipline in training, a balanced diet, a balanced lifestyle and an inner focus and determination. To this another element can also be added - yoga. Although people are using yoga, especially physical part but the approach of Satyananda yoga or Bihar Yoga is most holistic and integrated. As sport is not a purely physiological phenomenon, but a complex interplay of the mind and body, so yoga is an ideal means of reaching and maintaining the peak of physical and mental performance.

 


More than just asana:
To date, sports science has been mainly concerned with asana. The practice of asana can
contribute greatly to the success and well-being of all sports people. However, it is not only asana that can help in this way. In yoga the mind is also trained to reflect from moment to
moment and not to be caught in the movement of the moment. The trained mind is in a state of quietness, which develops inner awareness, thus refining practice and performance. Ultimately,the  result of the event is not within the athlete's control. A sense of detachment from the fruits of labor is needed to preserve equanimity of mind. "Never be affected by success or failure" is how Lord Krishna motivated Arjuna to fight and ultimately achieve his goal in the Bhagavad Gita. Focus should be on action in present moment, not on results.
The breathing practices of pranayama as taught in Bihar Yoga are very important for an athlete. As well as optimizing the control and capacity of the breath, they help one to realize that energy is not purely physical in nature, but there are untapped resources that can be brought into play, which helps relieve mental and physical strain. The practice of pranayama can help to develop capacity to carry more oxygen and allow internal organs, especially heart to adjust according to the high pressure situation. Breathing technique balances autonomic nervous system and can continuously supply energy to body and brain for maintaining efficiency of the organs.
Pratyahara is called the withdrawal of the senses. It leads to a sense of detachment which removes accumulated stress and prevents further excessive build-up, particularly in the heat of competition. Stress is ever present in any sport; it is part of the stimulation of competition and one of the reasons we participate. It is needed for proper stimulation of the body and mind, but if the response is in excess, or too little, the person and performance will suffer.
Stress at any level has to be successfully managed. Yoganidra can be easily used for physical and mental relaxation after high intensity training or match. It can be used for the rehabilitation and healing for quick recovery from injury. Yoganidra can be powerful for conscious and unconscious training, which can help during match to execute the skills naturally with more confidence.
Dharana, the ability to focus continually at one point, has the potential to help the athlete bring the body and mind to a state of total poise and stability in all levels of experience. When the athlete is so absorbed in the art, perfection flows; the distinction between the self and the sport is lost. He or she excels. Understanding the limitations of the mind and the body in the context of the limitlessness of consciousness, the athlete can strive to reach the chosen goal. Sports person always get distracted or have feeling of over confidence or lack of confidence or pressure to perform and then it leads to failure or underperformance .  technique of Trataka can be very effective to concentrate on personal performance according to the need without any distarctions.

One of the most important aspects for the sports person to understand is the SWAN principle.
SWAN is an acronym where 'S' stands for Strengths, 'W' for Weaknesses, 'A' for Ambitions, and 'N' for Needs. This is a technique of contemplation or meditation which allows a close analysis of those qualities that can make the difference between success and failure. It is necessary to assess one's strengths accurately and how they can be expanded and become most effective. Similarly, knowing and understanding one's weaknesses and how they can be overcome is very necessary, and can help in the approach to a training program. Ambitions have to be understood in the sporting context in order to be realistic about one's aims and desires. Knowing one's needs, what is essential, can help to get the best out of sporting activities and realize the true nature of success. Applying this principle can save time and extra effort and one can be more accurate and efficient.

Preventing injuries:
Preventative steps play an important role in saving an individual's sporting career. The barriers of ignorance, misconception and too much eagerness to reach the top level in the shortest duration of time should be addressed by education amongst coaches and players
equally. Yoga is useful for all types of sports to help prevent injuries in the first place. First, there is extra agility, which helps to avoid damage, provides more strength and improves a player's ability to react to a situation. Then, yoga helps a sports person to feel and understand the body processes more accurately, thereby learning what the body needs. By understanding  this, an athlete can work on areas that need attention with confidence and accuracy. By various yogic practices individual can train their specific body parts like muscles, ligaments, tendons, nerves, internal organs and also can keep them relax after training without feeling tired or exhausted. This boost performance of a player and reduces the chance of injury.

Types of practices:
Yoga's role is a special one. Yoga postures work all sides of a limb and help to knit the muscle fibers, building resilience to injury. By anticipating areas of the body that are subject to stress, sports people can use yoga effectively to pre-strengthen areas of concern.
Yogic practices can be used in different ways, for different specific sporting purposes, and can be categorized as: yoga supplemental practice, yoga compensation practice and yoga regeneration practice.

Yoga supplemental practices:
These are an important means of preparation in each sport because to a certain extent, while contributing to good health, through specialization most sports create a form of imbalance. Supplemental training means practicing activities or sports other than a particular chosen sport in order to develop overall fitness. Such a balance cannot usually be achieved with the practice of just a single sport. Being well removed from a competitive environment, yoga exercises and breathing practices address the nature of balance in a holistic way and help sports people to experience and understand their body, energy and stamina in an entirely different way. With simple physical postures and movements with awareness players can create balance in whole physical and mental body to avoid injury and perform with full potential during play or match.

Yoga compensation practices:
As a result of long-term sports training, muscular imbalance can develop in the body. Muscle groups become imbalanced through a combination of overloading some body parts, through one sided training, and weakening others, through lack of involvement or use. Such one-sided loading produces disturbance, which can lead to damage, and injury. The task of these practices is to correct and compensate for this muscular imbalance by a regular and systematic practice of compensation exercises. Bihar Yoga's practices are ideal in this respect, because integration, balance and harmony are keywords of its yoga practices. They correct the one-sided effect of training by promoting general harmonious development of the body and by improving the whole physical system.

Yoga regeneration practices:
Sports training tends to be very intensive over an extended period of time. This again can lead to a form of imbalance where muscles or the body as a whole become weak through overexertion. Successfully completing long and intensive training for achieving top performance depends largely on the extent to which the athlete can regenerate his or her physical and mental strength after training. Regeneration is a remedial process for regaining strength and for the prevention of injuries. These are based on the principle that after contracting for a specific time period in an isometric movement against specific resistance, muscles will release and relax, but that this is only effective if done consciously. Again, Bihar Yoga practices offer the natural remedy because asanas are based on the gentle stretching of
muscles, which induces relaxation and increases the blood supply, which releases residual tension and speeds regeneration. It is a natural counterbalance to the muscular effort of training and competing .In these three more specialized categories of the use of yoga practice for sports people, it is necessary to consider each situation individually, so the advice of a trained yoga teacher is
necessary.

Groups of yogic practices and their benefits:
In Bihar Yoga, many practices are beneficial for sports people. They include the three sets of preparatory practices, Pawanmuktasana parts 1, 2 and 3; backward and forward bending asanas; Surya Namaskara; inverted and balancing asanas; shatkarmas; pranayama; and
relaxation and meditation techniques:


Pawanmuktasana 1 (PM1): This group of asanas removes stiffness from the joints and helps the muscles to become flexible. Coordination between bones, muscles, joints and ligaments improves so that they work naturally and spontaneously. Problems in the knee joints, hip
joints, ankle joints, shoulder joints and wrist joints can all be remedied by these asanas, which minimize the injuries of different joints. This group of practices can be used for supplemental, compensation and for regeneration too.


Pawanmuktasana 2 (PM2): This group of asanas strengthen the abdominal muscles and organs. They improve the digestive system, which is important for the proper functioning of other systems of the body. These asanas are also beneficial for games that require a lot of
stamina. This group of practices holds the body firmly and helps to move  with power and confidence.

Pawanmuktasana 3 (PM3): This group of asanas improves the energy flow within the body, and breaks the neuromuscular knots especially in the pelvic region where energy tends to stagnate. They are is very important for the removal of stress from the lower back and pelvic region and are particularly useful for sportswomen, because they strengthen the reproductive system and help to relieve menstrual difficulties.

Backward, forward bending and twisting asanas: These increase the strength and flexibility of the spine. The spine is responsible for posture, the free flow of energy, nervous activities and body reflexes. Balance of the whole body depends on the power and flexibility of the spine and adjacent muscles. By practicing these groups of asanas, players can minimize the problem of back pain. Much accumulated stress tends to stagnate in the spine, especially in the lower region or at the neck and shoulders, so backward and forward bending followed by one or two twisting asanas will relax the spine and give the feeling of alertness. Psychologically, backward bending asanas prepare the players to face any situation with courage and optimism; forward bends help to let go and go with the flow; and twists gently
squeeze out hesitation and uncertainty.

Surya Namaskara (salute to the sun): This is a complete practice in itself. Players can use it for overall fitness, and as a warm-up before any sport. It prepares the body for handling stressful situations. It is an effective way of loosening up, stretching, massaging and toning all the joints, muscles and internal organs of the body. It stimulates and balances all the systems of the body.


 


Inverted asanas: These encourage a rich supply of blood to flow to the brain and reverse the effect of gravity on the body. During the practice of an inverted asana, the breath becomes slow and deep, maximizing the exchange of carbon dioxide and oxygen, which encourages correct respiration. The liver, spleen, stomach, kidneys and pancreas receive a powerful massage, helping them to perform their functions more efficiently. Blood and lymph which has accumulated in the lower limbs and abdomen is drained back to the heart, then circulated to the lungs, purified and re-circulated to all parts of the body. The enriched blood flow also allows the pituitary gland to operate more efficiently, tuning the entire endocrine system.

Balancing asanas: These induce physical balance by stilling unconscious movement. They develop the brain centers that control how the body works in motion thus developing the connection between the mind and body. They increase the co-ordination of movements
between different parts of the body, which develops the sense of poise and balance. They fine-tune the efficiency of the use of energy both in action and stillness. As the moving body attains balance it becomes increasingly free to rely on other more subtle forces to support and
propel it. In this way the body conserves its own energy and achieves grace and fluidity of motion.


Shatkarmas: Of these six cleansing practices, four are considered important here: neti, kunjal, laghoo shankhaprakshalana and trataka.
Neti cleans and clears the nasal passages, giving clarity of mind and sharp reactions. It induces calmness, and balances the body-mind relation by helping balance both hemispheres of the brain.          Kunjal (regurgitative cleansing) helps to reduce fear of failure and enhances courage to face changing and challenging situations. It can induce confidence in players, so that they can express themselves properly and give their best without holding back through fear or anxiety.
Laghoo shankhaprakshalana (intestinal cleansing): Sports people should do this practice under the guidance of a qualified teacher. It cleanses the whole intestinal tract and clears out impurities and toxins from the body. This practice induces freshness of mind and body. It
keeps the digestive system functioning properly.

Trataka (concentrated gazing at one point): All games require the ability to develop one- pointed concentration and awareness. This practice not only enhances concentration and one- pointedness away from distractions, but it also increases awareness, intuitive knowledge and discrimination or decision making capacity at the moment.

Pranayama: Breathing: practices are one of the most effective means of increasing lung capacity, energy and stamina, and control over involuntary muscles, enhancing concentration, and balancing emotion. When practised systematically for some time, the awareness develops
that energy is not purely physical in nature and that efficient management of the pranic energy can be developed through control of the breath.Practices such as abdominal and yogic breathing, and kumbhaka (breath retention) can increase lung capacity. 

Nadi shodhana (alternate nostril breathing) also increases capacity as
well as being the main practice for balancing the pranic energy by stimulating both hemispheres of the brain equally. 

Bhastrika (rapid breathing from the abdomen) generates heat and vitality and raises the natural energy level; it makes the 'second wind' more accessible in sport after near-exhaustion .

Cooling practices like sheetali and sheetkari are good in a hot summer season.

Bhramari(humming bee breath) and ujjayi (psychic breath) can be used before any match to induce relaxation and reduce mental stress, bringing calmness and quietness of mind.

Abdominal breathing is also one of the most simple and effective pranayamas, which can be done at any time to enable one to be in the present moment.
Yoganidra: This is the systematic method for inducing complete physical, mental and emotional relaxation developed by Bihar Yoga. It works at three levels simultaneously – the conscious, subconscious and unconscious. Due to the depth of relaxation, the level of
awareness and focus increases. The level of receptivity is also greater, so it is helpful for learning skills and techniques. For example, there are a number of stages in the practice, one of which is the process of visualization. While the body lies in a state of physical sleep, the mind is awake and relaxed. In these circumstances it is possible to learn and rehearse moves mentally by visualizing them. There is a stage in yoganidra where a resolve is made which can increase willpower and single-mindedness to achieve success on the field. Players can develop the appropriate state of mind, so that at the time of need they can balance their physical, mental and emotional
states. Electrical stimulation of specific parts of the hypothalamus, limbic system and amygdala, the so-called primitive brain, is found to elicit specific emotional responses, including rage, fear and aggression. For most players, these negative feelings can be hard to control during high levels of stress. In yoganidra, players are asked to submit voluntarily to strong emotions, while preserving a state of deep relaxation and witnessing the whole process. This helps to
remain balanced and in control in any situation.
Antar mouna: This is a meditative practice that systematically develops the awareness to become all-inclusive and alert. It is particularly effective for those people whose performance
is not consistent. It develops the awareness so that they can minimise mistakes and injuries. They can watch their own and others' performances with honesty, which helps them to develop themselves and their performance. Antar mouna helps one come to terms with and release fear of failure. It clears the mind and prepares it to adapt to or face any situation. After doing this practice, players feel inner stillness and most of the distractions such as spectators, performances of opponents and pressure from other players, can be dispelled.

The potential:
The potential of yoga in sport has not yet been fully explored. On one hand, sports are highly demanding and competitive; on the other, yoga seems to move in the opposite direction with its apparent emphasis on a relaxed approach and detached state of mind. However, the state of mind and physical preparedness that yoga brings is exactly the same state that the most successful players speak of when at the peak of their performance. Who cannot perform at their best if they are relaxed, ready and confident? And who cannot gracefully accept victory or defeat if their body, mind and spirit has the equanimity of a yogi. Actually yogi and sports person are not two different personality, but they are having same quality of balanced body, mind and emotion.  Yoga trains the player’s mind, muscles and motion, and these three acting in perfect unison could easily snatch the victory from the jaws of defeat.


 

 

Yoga for Excellence in Sports

  Yoga for Excellence in Sports The need for yoga in sport today: Many people enjoy sporting activities both for pleasure and as a mean...