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	<title>Free Yoga Classes &#187; Asanas</title>
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		<title>What is Hatha Yoga?</title>
		<link>http://www.free-yoga-classes.com/2009/11/what-is-hatha-yoga.html</link>
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				<category><![CDATA[Hatha Yoga]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Asanas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Breathing Techniques]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Meditation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pranayama]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yoga poses]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Hatha Yoga Definition
Hatha yoga is the most widely practiced form of yoga in America. What most people in West refer to as simply &#8220;yoga&#8221; is actually Hatha Yoga. It is the branch of yoga which concentrates on physical health and mental well-being. Hatha Yoga is a system of yoga introduced by Yogi Swatmarama, a yogic [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Hatha Yoga Definition</strong></p>
<p>Hatha yoga is the most widely practiced form of yoga in America. What most people in West refer to as simply &#8220;yoga&#8221; is actually Hatha Yoga. It is the branch of yoga which concentrates on physical health and mental well-being. Hatha Yoga is a system of yoga introduced by <em>Yogi Swatmarama</em>, a yogic sage in the 15th century in India. Hatha yoga uses bodily <em>postures</em> (<em>asanas</em>), <em>breathing techniques</em> (<em>pranayama</em>), and <em>meditation</em> (<em>dyana</em>) with the goal of bringing about a sound, healthy body and a clear, peaceful mind. There are nearly 200 <em>hatha yoga postures</em>, with hundreds of variations, which work to make the spine supple and to promote circulation in all the organs, glands, and tissues. Hatha yoga postures also stretch and align the body, promoting balance and flexibility.</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-18" title="Hatha Yoga" src="http://www.free-yoga-classes.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/Hatha-Yoga-224x300.jpg" alt="Hatha Yoga" width="224" height="300" /></p>
<p>The origins of hatha yoga have been traced back to the eleventh century A.D. The Sanskrit word ha means &#8220;sun&#8221; and tha means &#8220;moon,&#8221; and thus hatha, or literally sun-moon yoga, strives to balance opposing parts of the physical body, the front and back, left and right, top and bottom. Some yoga masters (yogis) claim that hatha yoga was originally developed by enlightened teachers to help people survive during the Age of Kali, or the spiritual dark ages, in which Hindus believe we are now living.</p>
<p>Yoga was brought to America in the late 1800s, when <em>Swami Vivekananda</em>, an Indian yogi, presented a lecture on yoga in Chicago. Hatha yoga captured the imagination of the Western mind, because accomplished yogis could demonstrate incredible levels of fitness, flexibility, and control over their bodies and metabolism. Yoga has flourished in the West. Americans have brought to yoga their energy and zest for innovation, which troubles some Indian yogis and encourages others, as new variations and schools of yoga have developed. For instance, <em>power yoga</em> is a recent Americanized version of yoga which takes hatha yoga principles and speeds them up into an extremely rigorous aerobic workout, and many strict hatha <em>yoga teachers</em> oppose this sort of change to their philosophy. Other variations of hatha yoga in America now include <em>Iyengar</em>, <em>Ashtanga</em>, <em>Kundalini,</em> <em>Kripalu</em>, <em>Integral</em>, <em>Viniyoga</em>, <em>Hidden Language</em>, and <em>Bikram yoga,</em> to name a few. <em>Sivananda yoga</em> was practiced by <em>Lilias Folen</em>, who was responsible for introducing many Americans to yoga through public television.</p>
<p>The original philosophers of yoga developed it as an <em>eight-fold</em> path to complete health. These eight steps include moral and ethical considerations (such as honesty, non-aggression, peacefulness, non-stealing, generosity, and sexual propriety), self-discipline (including purity, simplicity, devotion to God, and self-knowledge), <em>posture</em>, <em>breath control</em>, control of desires, concentration, <em>meditation</em>, and happiness. According to <em>yogis</em>, if these steps are followed diligently, a person can reach high levels of health and mental awareness.</p>
<p>As it has subsequently developed, hatha yoga has concentrated mainly on two of the eight paths, <em>breathing </em>and <em>posture</em>. Yogis believe breathing to be the most important metabolic function; we breathe roughly 23,000 times per day and use about 4,500 gallons of air, which increases during exercise. Thus, breathing is extremely important to health, and prana, or life-force, is found most abundantly in the air and in the breath. If we are breathing incorrectly, we are hampering our potential for optimal health. <em>Pranayama</em>, literally the &#8220;science of breathing&#8221; or &#8220;control of life force,&#8221; is the yogic practice of breathing correctly and deeply.</p>
<p>In addition to breathing, hatha yoga utilizes <em>asanas</em>, or physical <em>postures</em>, to bring about flexibility, balance and strength in the body. Each of these postures has a definite form and precise steps for achieving the desired position and for exiting it. These postures, yogis maintain, have been scientifically developed to increase circulation and health in all parts of the body, from the muscular tissues to the glands and internal organs. Yogis claim that although hatha yoga can make the body as strong and fit as any exercise program, its real benefits come about because it is a system of maintenance and balance for the whole body.</p>
<p>Hatha Yoga tries to achieve balance between body and mind, as well as attempts to free the more subtle spiritual elements of the mind through physical poses or Asanas, Breathing Techniques or Pranayama, and Meditation.</p>
<p><strong>Annotation</strong>:</p>
<p><em>Asanas</em> are various body positions designed to improve health and remove diseases in the physical, causal, and subtle bodies. The word &#8220;asana&#8221; is Sanskrit for &#8220;seat&#8221;, which refers not only to the physical position of the body but also to the position of the body in relation to divinity. They were originally meant for Meditation, as the postures can make you feel relaxed for a long period of time. The regular practice of Asanas will grant the practitioner muscle flexibility and bone strength, as well as non-physical rewards such as the development of will power, concentration, and self-withdrawal.</p>
<p><em>Pranayama</em> is derived from the words &#8220;<em>prana</em>&#8221; (life-force or energy source) and &#8220;<em>ayama</em>&#8221; (to control). It is the science of breath control. This is an important part of Hatha Yoga because the yogis of old times believed that the secret to controlling one&#8217;s mind can be unlocked by controlling one&#8217;s breath. The practice of Pranayama can also help unleash the dormant energies inside our body.</p>
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