The Benefits Of Yoga For Office Workers

Written by Lydia Lacey

Yoga has become increasingly popular in the corporate world – and for good reasons too.  Proven to be beneficial for overall physical, mental and emotional well-being, yoga is the ideal practice for any professional in the corporate world looking to de-stress, be healthy and happy. With corporations such as Apple, Nike and Google, along with numerous companies in London incorporating yoga into the work week for their staff, it’s clear that yoga has something vital to offer to your everyday office worker.

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Sitting for long periods of the day has now been equated to smoking, in terms of the damage it has to your health. Inactivity in conjunction with stress from work can literally strip years off your life, unless necessary action is taken. Fortunately, practicing yoga can counteract the variety of negative health effects an office job can bring. This includes:

Poor posture & Immobility

Many workers that are hunched over their desk for the majority of the day experience some form of back or neck pain. Sitting hunched forward for long periods shortens the pectorals (chest muscles), whilst weakening the trapezius (muscle round the lower back of the neck). This is damaging to the spine, and serves to create a hunched over posture. In addition, the hip flexor muscles are also shorted, becoming restrictive and inflexible. Immobility in the hips is the leading cause for falls in the elderly, which is why it is important to retain physical flexibility as you age.

Yoga both stretches and strengthens your chest, back and hips, and is the ideal practice to counteract the negative effects being seated for most the day has on your body. By targeting these areas, yoga serves to not only improve posture, but resolve a great deal of back/neck pain too.

Stress & Unhappiness

Through simply stretching, your body releases dopamine – a chemical within the brain that increases feelings of happiness. As stress is naturally stored within the muscles of the body, stretching relaxes both the body and the mind, as they’re both intimately connected.

In addition, through yoga, you learn how to slow down and expand through the breath, which has a relaxing effect on the sympathetic nervous system, essentially switching your mind from fight/flight mode, to relaxation mode. This is a helpful technique, in moments of stress and/or anxiety in the workplace.

Weight Gain

Sitting for long periods of the day not only weakens your abdominals, but it also compresses the stomach too, which slows down digestion – typically leading to weight gain. Sitting for long periods of the day can also lead to bloating, cramping and constipation, which is a great source of discomfort for many.

Fortunately yoga not only engages and strengthens the abdominals, but also aids digestion too. Twisting postures tone and stretch the abdominals, serving to massage the internal organs and promote blood flow, which aids digestion and detoxifies the body.

Could Yoga Benefit You?

There are a series of yoga poses and stretches that can improve virtually any health problem created by office inactivity or stress. Whether it’s insomnia, poor circulation, immobility or back pain, there will be a yoga pose that can aid in overcoming the problem. As nothing is more important than your own health and happiness, it is important to look after your body the best way you can.

To find out more or to book a corporate class with Lydia, click the contact link here.

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Dealing With Anxiety Through Meditation

Written by Lydia Lacey

I was about 17/18 years old when I first started practicing yoga, after experiencing a debilitating lower back injury through martial arts, my physiotherapist recommended I take up the practice. After a few sessions, the pain from my injury completely subsided and I was officially hooked to my yoga practice. Initially however, I never really paid attention to the breathing element of yoga and I had absolutely zero interest in meditation. Reflecting back on my younger narrow-minded self, I associated breathing techniques and meditation as something that only weed smoking hippies dressed in psychedelic patterns would practice – not something I considered cool back then!

It wasn’t till a couple years later that I was open to the idea of practicing meditation or breathing exercises. As a natural over-thinker prone to anxiety – incorporating meditation into my routine really was life changing. Better late than never!

The basis behind yogi breathing

The idea behind breathing techniques is that you can control your state of mind with the flow of your breath. The mind, body and breath are intimately connected, so our thoughts and physiology can be influenced via our breathing pattern (this has been scientifically proven too). If you think about people that suffer from stress or anxiety, you’ll notice that in their most anguished states, these people suffer from a short, sharp and erratic breathing pattern. So in times when your emotions get the best of you, pause and take a moment to acknowledge your breathing, and remind yourself that you can take back control over how you’re feeling by simply slowing down and expanding your breath. This can switch off the panic or stress response we have built in our minds, as slow breathing has a calming effect on our nervous system.

Think of it this way, your mind is either the key to happiness and bliss or the barrier to it. Your mind can be either productive or destructive. There is no source outside of you that is responsible for how you feel and respond to situations. Once you recognise this reality, you empower yourself to change your mind and your state of emotions.

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How breathing influences your physiology

Slow, deep breathing can in moments of stress switch us from the sympathetic (fight or flight response), to the parasympathetic nervous system (relaxation response). In moments of intense panic, anxiety or stress, the sympathetic nervous system sends signals through the automated nerves to the adrenal glands, which produce adrenaline. Adrenaline causes the heart rate to increase and the breathing to become more rapid. This is exactly the opposite of what you want to achieve during bouts of anxiety and stress. By breathing rapidly, you are confirming to your body that you are in a state of stress, and your body will respond by releasing the hormones relative to your current state of being. It’s a destructive circle that can easily spiral downwards at the worse moments.

Fortunately however, we are not helpless to this process. By taking deep breaths, we can start to slow down and reverse this response in moments of anxiety by dampening our body’s production of stress hormones. By stimulating the parasympathetic nervous system, we bring ourselves into a relaxed state of being, both physically and mentally.

By voluntarily changing the rate, depth, and pattern of breathing, we can change the messages being sent from the body’s respiratory system to the brain. In this way, breathing techniques provide a portal to the autonomic communication network through which we can, by changing our breathing patterns, send specific messages to the brain using the language of the body, a language the brain understands and to which it responds. Messages from the respiratory system have rapid, powerful effects on major brain centers involved in thought, emotion, and behavior.

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Taking control of your breath

So the breathing pattern I practice at home (and teach at my yoga classes) goes like this:
Inhale in through the nose and exhale out through the mouth. Once you get into this flow after a few breaths, start to invite your inhalations down a little bit deeper while simultaneously slowing down your breath.

Then when you’re ready, start to follow your exhalations all the way through to the end, so there is no more air to expel from the body. This will naturally create space within the lungs for a fuller breath of fresh air by ejecting any stagnant oxygen from within the body. Following this complete exhalation, take a deep inhalation once again in through the nostrils and this time; try to inhale slowly to your full lung capacity as you inhale past the chest, into the lower stomach. As you take these deeper breaths, think of it as you’re trying to fill all of that lung space by inhaling fully.

So now, continuing with this deep breathing pattern, start to slow your breathing rate down to 3-4 seconds for both your inhalations and for your exhalations. During this time frame, you are both inhaling fully on your inhalations and exhaling completely on your exhalations.

Generally, our breathing doesn’t tend to go past the chest area in our regular day to day breath, but when you breathe deeply and fully, your stomach, chest and collarbones will start to expand and rise as it fills with oxygen.

Final Thoughts

I never realised until I started practicing meditation, the ways in which overthinking and anxiety could restrict you in so many areas of life. From limiting my interaction in social settings to preventing me from making bold leaps in the right direction with my career, to simply causing me unnecessary worry. Anxiety at its worse steals your peace away from the present moment, often blocking suffers from progressing forward in many areas of their lives too.

Daily meditation makes you all the more reflective on where your own overthinking and negative thought patterns are really the only things that are holding you back. Deep breathing exercises in moments of anxiety, worry and/or panic can enable you to restore a sense of calamity into your state of mind and emotions, putting you in control over how you feel at any given time.