| "Yoga for kids is, at
its essence, meant to be fun," says instructor Meyerson. "While
adults use yoga to release their minds, children use it to release
their energy." |
LA Parent Magazine
May 2003
A Calming Trend
By Claire Bloom
Perhaps it is inevitable that yoga classes for kids blossom,
as the demand for adult yoga has put the exercise form into the
mainstream, with yoga spreading from studios to gyms, schools and
into the home through video. Yoga experts say parents are seeking
a physical workout as well as peaceful respite from a heightened
sense of threat from today's troubled world affairs, and highly
scheduled lives. Yoga practice is now used across the country by
teachers, organizations such as the Boys & Girls Clubs that
work with at-risk children, and even in prisons.
A Calm and Upbeat Mind
For children, practitioners say, yoga's physical and mental benefits
are the same as for adults: improvement of strength, balance, flexibility,
coordination, focus, and the ability to deal with stress. Children
of the fast-paced, media-saturated 21st Century can turn to yoga
as an avenue for relaxation, they say.
Kid's yoga classes generally include the traditional stretching,
poses and focused breathing, but expand the process to include games,
music, stories, and open discussion
.
The non-competitive nature of yoga also offers an opportunity to
embrace all body types, which are generally narrow for specific
sports, even for such individual activities such as ballet or gymnastics.
Shana Meyerson, owner of mini yogis, a mobile
yoga "studio" for kids, says that yoga's greatest benefit
to children is its ability to boost self-esteem.
"In yoga practice a child cannot be
wrong," says Meyerson. "The child does not have to worry
about being picked last for the team or being ridiculed if she can't
'perform' as well as other children. Children who usually shy away
from physical activity suddenly have a physical outlet in which
they can succeed and shine."
Not Your Mom's Yoga
Yoga classes for kids should be designed specifically with their
young age in mind, but the most important class element should be
a sense of amusement, yoga experts say. Classes for kids typically
feature creative games, background music and stories, and sometimes
incorporate art and theater. Traditional children's games are integrated
into classes bearing playful, yoga-esque names, such as "Swami
Says," and "Red Lotus/Green Lotus."
"Yoga for kids is, at its essence,
meant to be fun," says instructor Meyerson. "While adults
use yoga to release their minds, children use it to release their
energy."
In classes designed for children, students are encouraged to talk
and give feedback. Instead of placing emphasis on the physical details
of poses, yoga for kids tends to be more relaxed and improvisational
.
Yoga can also foster a child's creativity in a number of ways,
say yoga experts. The exercises teach students how to focus their
minds, hushing the noises of the world and allowing creative thoughts
to flourish. By using creative names for poses, usually those of
an animal, bird or insect, kids can engage their imaginations
.
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