Iowa Wesleyan College
The Iowa Source
Home arrow Articles arrow Health and Beauty arrow Does Yoga Wreck Your Body?
Print E-mail

Does Yoga Wreck Your Body?

A Response to the New York Times Article

by Betsy Rippentrop

yoga pose, betsy rippentrop
Betsy Rippentrop, Ph.D., teaches yoga classes at Heartland Yoga in Iowa City.

The New York Times published an article last week entitled "How Yoga Can Wreck Your Body." Its gist was that yoga is creating lots of injuries, and that most people should not be doing yoga at all. It was the most read article of the week, and had over 800 comments online. One of the main criticisms of the article was that it was highly sensationalized and biased because all forms of exercise—and life in general—can create injuries.

As yoga continues to gain popularity, there will be more injuries: this is undisputable.

However, yoga has something all other forms of physical fitness do not have, and that is encouragement to mindfully and actively listen to the signals and sensations of the body. Yoga is not designed to be a competitive sport or to push you to endure great physical strain. It also demands us to be present, not zoned out. Have you noticed the lack of mirrors at Heartland? It was a conscious choice designed to reduce our tendency to get pulled out of ourselves and to lessen the comparisons we make.

We are reminded in yoga to base our practice on ahimsa, or non-violence. We come to it with an attitude of compassion and gentleness toward self, not a need to push through the pain. Pantanjali, in the Yoga Sutras, encourages us to balance effort (sthira) with ease (sukha). There is hard physical work, yet it must be balanced with a sense of ease and equanimity or we miss out on the real sweetness of the practice.

It is my belief if we come to our yoga practice consistently practicing ahimsa, staying mindful of the sensations in body and mind, and working to find the balance between effort and ease, we will be far less likely to hurt ourselves. And as a bonus, we may even gain deeper wisdom of self. What other form of exercise can do that?  

Namaste.

Betsy Rippentrop owns Heartland Yoga in Iowa City.

Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websitesTwitter! Facebook! Free social bookmarking plugins and extensions for Joomla! websites!
Comments (1)Add Comment
...
written by downfromtheledge, January 13, 2012
I think your point of being mindfully aware of our body's sensations and limitations should inherently be a part of the teaching. However, I can definitely see the point of that article. Yoga instructors aren't doctors, and "many teachers lack the deeper training necessary to recognize when students are headed toward injury," as the author quoted.

Human tendency is to do what the teacher says. Without drawing attention to the potential for injury, people would continue to go in thinking yoga is all benefits, no risks.

My first time doing yoga was in an after-school session in another teacher's classroom, by an instructor with who knows what training. During a partner stretching session, my leg/buttock/hip area got over-stretched (and, i think, torn). I have had muscle imbalances in that area ever since that injury, along with 4 years of chronic pain.

I agree with your article, but I'm also glad they wrote theirs!
report abuse
vote down
vote up
Votes: +0

Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
smile
wink
laugh
grin
angry
sad
shocked
cool
tongue
kiss
cry
smaller | bigger

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy
< Prev   Next >

Follow us on facebook