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Where Are All
the Men?
Guys have the world to gain by practicing
yoga. So what's holding them back?
Yoga originated in northern India more
than 5,000 years ago. Archaeologists have found statuettes
of men in yoga poses that are estimated to be 5,000
years old.
A world turned upside down—that's
yoga for most of us men. We still run most of the government
and hit the major league home runs, but yoga is a woman's
domain. According to a 2005 Yoga Journal market study,
77 percent of the yoga practitioners in America are
female. Anecdotally, longtime teachers who regularly
crisscross the nation hosting workshops, believe the
numbers might be even more skewed.
So I asked highly qualified doctors,
scientists, and veteran yoga teachers exactly why so
many men stick to yoga's sidelines. I also polled members
of that rare breed known as the male practitioner—from
pro athletes to busy investment managers—to find
out how they came to embrace yoga. In the end, I discovered
social, physical, and emotional realities that discourage
men from practicing. I also heard about the moments
of inspiration that got men over such barriers—and
ideas about what might help other men make the leap,
too. If you're a man who's hesitated to try yoga—or
you know a man you'd like to introduce to the practice—read
on.
Social Obstacles: Yoga Takes
a Brave Man
Getting men to identify with yoga has long been a challenge
in this country. It doesn't matter that yoga, since
its beginnings in India thousands of years ago, has
mainly been taught and studied by men. Restrictive American
immigration laws of the early 1900s stunted the spread
of Indian culture on these shores, and only a handful
of influential yogis arrived here through the decades.
Physical Hurdles: Overcoming
Groins and Gray Matter
Get a man past his reservations about asana time with
the ladies and he'll still have a well-founded reason
to drag his feet to a studio: Yoga can be painful.
Men, it seems, are naturally tight.
Boys and girls may be born equally limber, with an ability
to comfortably put their feet behind their heads. But
by adolescence, boys generally lose flexibility faster
than girls, and as boys become men, the differences
in flexibility tend to grow.
Physical Benefits
One man attributes his daily vitality and still-strong
golf game to Warrior Pose variations that open his shoulders,
hips, and back. "My handicap was 10 as a kid and
I'm still at about 13," he says. "Not bad
for a guy who works all the time."
Emotional Challenge: Try Beating
Yourself
Even if a guy turns a physical corner and starts adapting
to yoga's demands, he may still miss out on many of
the practice's benefits. Yoga's internal rewards—everything
from better focus to less stress—are the hardest
for men to realize.
With yoga practice the freedom
comes in. You can let go. You realize that the bigger
game you're playing in life isn't about competitiveness.
It is about being your true self and practicing that.
Read what other men think about Yoga HERE
Read the Full Article HERE
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