Yoga, as a practice, offers numerous benefits to one’s physical as well as psychological health. In general, the psychological aspect of life holds far more significance than just being physically healthy. (1)
A person can eat healthily, practice certain yoga poses, and exercise to promote physical well-being. Doing these also provides limited mental benefits, such as calming the mind, easing stress, etc. However, to bring about a sense of wholeness, compassion and love require you to be aware, observe, and constantly learn throughout life.
Importantly, the spiritual and moral aspects of yoga didn’t fully reach the West, maybe because the Western mind appreciated materialistic wealth as a fundamental way of living. What had reached was a highly disciplined system of physical exercise that helped them physically and mentally to a certain extent to use their time more productively.
Practicing yoga, particularly asanas and pranayama, can benefit your mental health significantly:
1) Eases stress and anxiety
Doing yoga poses with the proper structure improves your body’s flexibility. They also help alleviate pain by releasing physical blockages like muscle knots, tension, and emotions.
Pranayama (breathing exercise) is highly effective in overcoming anxiety, as there is a relationship between anxiety and breathing patterns. A day of practicing pranayama won’t help much with your chronic anxiousness, but a consistent daily practice with awareness can undoubtedly improve your breathing and, in turn, ease anxiety. (2)
2) Promotes relaxation and emotional strength
Verbal communication and language do help in dealing with emotional distress, but body-based techniques like yoga have a vital role to play too. The chronic fight or flight response creates long-term stress in the body in the form of muscle tension and stiffness. (3)
Yoga poses and other breathing techniques are great relaxation tools. At the same time, when meditation is added to this, your emotional health will highly become independent and less prone to outward circumstances.
3) Increased creativity and intuition
As your muscles get stronger each time you lift weights, in the same way, your brain cells develop new and fresh connections that positively change the structure of your brain. (4)
A section of the brain that holds memory and learning improves greatly and also strengthens the one which plays an essential role in attention, awareness, and thinking.