training session
Prevention of injuries when entering regular training
Prevention of injuries is one of the most important components of proper training. Starting the load after the break, it is necessary to take into account the specifics of the damage already received. This is true not only in professional sports, but also in amateur sports. Novice athletes ignore the rules for entering the training regimen after a break and can acquire serious health problems.
injury prevention
Prevention of injuries when entering regular training
It is advisable to immediately consult a doctor after receiving injuries. Continue reading
The foundation of perfection in bodhi yoga
The psycho-emotional impeccability of a yoga is, first and foremost, the art in all circumstances to maintain optimal energy relationships with the outside world and with oneself.
The practitioner conducts a strategic inventory of his life. He makes a list of all the negative emotions that he experiences and in general everything that he does. And then he decides what should be changed from the above in order to give himself a break in the expenditure of energy.
Only those behavioral structures that are not essential for survival and well-being are subject to a strategic inventory.
In the strategic list, a sense of self-importance, self-pity and fear of death appear as the most energy-intensive factor, hence the efforts to eradicate them. Continue reading
Yama and Niyama – the foundation of good practice
Yama (control of mind and behavior) and Niyama (psycho-emotional and bodily purity) are the first two stages of yoga and the condition for its effective practice.
By practicing the Pit, we take control of actions in relation to the world. Here are five limitations:
1) Ahimsa – non-violence against anyone and for anything, including in relation to oneself and to the natural order in the world;
2) Satya – a rejection of lies, primarily self-deception;
3) Asteya – rejection of the desire to possess what does not belong to us;
4) Brahmacharya – restraint, refusal to indulge your passions, desires and weaknesses;
5) Aparigraha – refusal to accept gifts and good deeds. Complete self-sufficiency, readiness to always rely only on one’s own strength.
Without self-regulation, one cannot achieve higher states of consciousness. Five rules: Continue reading