Practising yoga outdoors
Yoga is a science over 5,000 years old. The sages used to practise yoga outdoors in the lap of nature even though going green was not a concern at the time.
Going green has now become a necessity and yoga is one of the few practices that can be done outdoors.
This goes a long way in minimising energy consumption too.
Yoga needs no equipment and the attire is simple.
Hence, the consumption of electricity for machines, lights and air-conditioning can be eliminated completely. It can also be practised any time of the day.
Breathe in the freshness
There is no better place than the outdoors to practise yoga.
By not utilising machines, air-conditioners and lights, as are found in a studio-gym environment, yoga helps you go green.
The fresh air benefits the yogi tremendously, especially because there are many breathing exercises, or pranayamas, that can be practised.
Pranayama teaches one to breathe correctly and helps to get the respiratory system in order while also purifying the body by releasing toxins.
The ethical principles of yoga — the ten yams and miasmas — include ahimsa (non-violence), aparigraha (generosity) and saucha (purity).
These are key aspects that are meant to be practised on the yogic path.
Non-violence is minimising the harm caused to other living things.
However, it also means building the positive qualities of honouring and revering Mother Earth.
By practising yoga, we learn to serve, heal and protect the environment, and treat it as an extension of ourselves.
But only once we learn to honour our bodies, can we learn to honour Mother Earth.
However, there is another element at work outdoors too — negative ions. These negatively charged particles in the air are found in great numbers in forests and places near oceans, rivers and streams.
Negative ions make you feel alert and invigorated and reduce anxiety and depression.
According to researchers, this is because they increase our capacity to absorb and utilise oxygen, so it can reach our cells and tissues faster.
Here are asanas that can be practised outdoors.
Trikonasana (Triangle pose)
Veerabadrasana (Hero's pose)
Vatayanasana (Arched moon pose)
Natarajasana (The Statue)
Eka Pada Pranamasana (One-legged prayer pose)
Sahaj Pranayama
— Bharat Thakur is the founder of Bharat Thakur's Artistic Yoga. For questions on yoga, write to dubai.artisticyoga
@gmail.com. For more information, log on
to www.bharatthakur.com. An avid golfer, Bharat Thakur is also the creator of the Yoga-for-Golf Workshop. For queries,
please write to info@yogaforsports.net