A Mat & A Wall - Your New Best Friends
Veronica Greene is the founder of Little Greene Yoga® and offers Certified Teacher Training packages for Teen – Mind & Body; Children’s Yoga (3-8yrs & 8-12yrs) and Postnatal Yoga.
The past year has been the hardest year that most of us have ever encountered. For teenagers this is amplified not only by the threat of the Covid Virus but also the uncertainty of your future – when will schools be opening; will they close again; will you get to sit exams; when will you see your friends etc.
Even if you don’t physically feel stressed you have been in a state of constant ‘alertness’ or state of ‘fight or flight’. This ‘fight or flight’ response is how your body should behave when under threat but it should also be able to down regulate and return to a state of calm, within a reasonable time frame. Unfortunately, the past year has seemed never ending as we are all bombarded with new information and constant changes to restrictions. This constant stress response in your body can leave you exhausted, unable to concentrate, motivate yourself or even worse in a continuous state of anxiety.
What should you do to calm?
The automatic response, when you feel this nervous energy or lethargy, is to seek forms of exercise that will make your body move and your heart pump faster. While this provides a form of ‘release’ and will give you a temporary endorphin high, it will also keep your nervous system upregulated!
What you need is something which will release tension and down-regulate your nervous system to find your natural state of ‘rest and digest' or more simply put – a state of calm! The more often you find this state the easier it will be for your body to switch between the two.
Medical research, using diagnostic imaging, shows that if a physical movement is performed slowly, with greater awareness to the placement of your limbs and the sensations in your body, then this will stimulate the Vagus Nerve (a cranial nerve) to trigger your relaxation response.
This following yoga routine will achieve such a response. The movements are slow and strong. The use of a wall (if you don’t have a free wall use the back of a door) allows you to work harder and connect deeper into the major joints of your body. This connection will help you open your chest, build strength in your upper body, arms and legs. More importantly it will activate your body’s relaxation response.
The Routine
The routine is designed as a slow flow sequence, using a wall. Build up slowly – you’ll be amazed how much stronger you will become with each repetition. Take a rest in child’s pose between postures, if required. Listen to your breathing which should be slow and rhythmical and don’t forget to do the last 2 postures!