How to Become Regular in Your Yoga Practice
By Dada Vedaprajinananda
People come to yoga looking for various things: peace
of mind, stress reduction, improved concentration, and weight loss.
Yoga can help you to accomplish all of this, but "yoga works,
if you work!" You have to do the practices on a regular basis
in order to get the results.
If you have bought some books on yoga and meditation,
don't let them gather dust while you sit around thinking that maybe
one day you are going to practice.
Yoga postures and basic meditation exercises are simple
enough to learn. In fact, I teach them to children and they pick them
up quite easily. So, I am sure that you can learn what to do fairly
easily and quickly. The big problem for most people is to establish
the habit of doing the practices on a regular basis. Here are a few
tips which may help you to do your yoga and meditation on a daily
basis.
1. Start with Firm Determination:
Yoga begins and ends in the mind. Take a determination that you are
going to give yoga a fair try and you are going to practice, because
it is important to you. Close your eyes, and think "For the next
three months I am going to do it every day."
During the course of time, whenever you start thinking,
"Oh today I don't want to do my yoga exercises", remember
your initial determination and stick to it.
2. Do it Together With some Friends:
Learning how to give and share is an important part of yoga, so don't
keep "yoga" to your self. If possible find one or two friends
who would benefit from practicing yoga, and do it together with them.
The good thing about practicing with others is that if a day comes
when you are not motivated to do the practice, the enthusiasm of your
friends will carry you along and you will do the practice with them.
3. Make a Regular Schedule and Stick to It:
Yoga is not like tennis or some recreational sport which you will
do if the sun is shining and you feel like doing it. To get the true
benefits from yoga you have to do it every day. So, free some space
in your busy schedule and "reserve" this time for your practice
of yoga and meditation.
If you get up a bit earlier in the morning, then you
will have a nice quiet time to do your yoga before the rest of your
neighbors wake up. In the evening, do your best to keep some time
free for yoga before your evening meal.
Once you have set your schedule, stick to it as best
you can.
4. Do Your Practices With A Free Mind:
It is not enough to reserve time for yoga, with your body doing the
exercises but you mind continuing to worry about other things. When
you stop to do your yoga and meditation, you should remember that
the next 30 or 40 minutes has been reserved for yoga and for your
development. Don't jump up to answer the phone, or respond to every
minor disturbance. This period of time is for you.
If you begin to think about all your other responsibilities
and problems, gently drop these thoughts and imagine that your problems
are tucked away along with your shoes at the corner of the room, or
better yet in another room. (You shouldn't be practicing yoga with
your shoes on!)
5. Be Patient: Sometimes you will
feel the effects of the yoga and sometimes you will not feel anything.
Don't worry about the immediate effects, continue to practice. It
takes a while before the most profound results of yoga are realized.
It took you many years to build up your present personality
and physical structure. You can't change it overnight. But the good
news is that you don't have to wait many years to change yourself
because the regular and systematic practice of yoga postures and basic
meditation can help you to make great changes in a period of six months
to one year.
So, hang in there, start practicing, continue
practicing and slowly but surely yoga will help you to realize your
most important goals.
Dada Vedaprajinananda has been practicing and teaching
yoga and meditation for the past 35 years. He is the founder and associate
editor of New Renaissance
Magazine, and is the author of "Yoga
Weight Loss Secrets," an ebook guide to yoga-based
weight reduction.