Yoga Studios Bowling Green KY

Yoga's gentle, mindful and controlled movements can provide a non- or low-impact workout for people in almost any physical condition. Yogic exercises—and there are many—can ease tense muscles, improve flexibility and enhance strength, balance and endurance. Click here to continue reading this article ...

Yoga Center
(270) 746-9400
905 Cosby Rd
Bowling Green, KY
 
Align Pilates LLC
(270) 904-4019
952 Fairview Ave
Bowling Green, KY
 
Melissa Klein RYT, CYI
(859) 552-5139
Georgetown Pavilion 103 N. Colonial Heights
Georgetown, KY
Yoga Styles
Hatha, Hot, Pilates, Vinyasa, Power & Co

Ashby's Yoga, TMAA, inc.
(270) 264-1925
1729 Sweeney St.
Owensboro, KY
Yoga Styles
Hatha

YogahOMe
(859) 655-9642
715 Fairfield Ave
Bellevue, KY
Yoga Styles
Vinyasa

Hot Yoga Bowling Green
(270) 793-0011
730 Fairview Ave
Bowling Green, KY
 
Serenity Now
(859) 647-7780
8761 U.S. Highway 42 Suite B
Union, KY
Yoga Styles
Ashtanga, Kundalini

Lexington Healing Arts Academy
(859) 252-5656
272 Southland Drive
Lexington, KY
Yoga Styles
Hatha, Vinyasa, Yin

Radiant Fitness, LLC
(859) 485-1238
990 Eads Road
Crittenden, KY
Yoga Styles
Hatha, Ashtanga, Vinyasa, Yin Yoga

Paducah Yoga Center
(270) 575-0211
627 Broadway
Paducah, KY
Yoga Styles
Hatha in the Vinyasa, Iyengar, and Resto

Yoga

Provided By: 

Article Medically Reviewed By:

Jonathan Fields

Founder/Director Sonic Yoga New York, NY

Overview

What Is It?
Yoga is a physical and mental practice that involves the body, mind and spirit.

Yoga is a physical and mental practice that involves the body, mind and spirit. The practice, which originated in India, is designed to enhance awareness, create a mind-body-spirit balance, cleanse, heal and strengthen the body, liberate the true self and, as practiced today, improve fitness. The most common form practiced in the United States is Hatha yoga, which includes specific movements or postures (asana), various breathing techniques (pranayama) and is often complimented with, meditation (dhyana).

Yoga's gentle, mindful and controlled movements can provide a non- or low-impact workout for people in almost any physical condition. Yogic exercises—and there are many—can ease tense muscles, improve flexibility and enhance strength, balance and endurance.

No one seems quite sure when yoga began, but it goes back thousands of years. Stone carvings in the Indus Valley depicting yoga positions date back 5,000-plus years.

Traditionally, yoga was a spiritual practice, its goal being union with the absolute or the divine. The various exercises we associate with Hatha yoga were performed to prepare the body for long periods of meditation. The word "yoga" means to join or bind together, and the practice joins together the body, mind and spirit. (On a spiritual level, it can refer to the union of the individual with the absolute truth or true self [Atman].) It's often associated with Hinduism, but yoga predates the religion. Hinduism has incorporated elements of yoga into its practices, as have other religions.

As it's typically practiced in the West, the focus is more on the physical fitness aspects. (Of course, it can be a spiritual experience, if you choose to use it as such.)

Yoga is now practiced around the world for its psychological, physical and spiritual benefits. Americans have practiced it for more than 100 years, but it gained popularity in the 1960s as young people developed a taste for all things Eastern. According to results of a 2008 survey conducted by the Harris Interactive Service Bureau on behalf of Yoga Journal, 15.8 million Americans, or 6.9 percent of U.S. adults, are believed to practice yoga.

Although this report focuses on Hatha, here are some other types of yoga:

  • Raja: Called the "royal road," its focus is primarily on meditation; it incorporates exercise and breathing practice with meditation and study.
  • Jnana: Called the path of knowledge or wisdom, it is the path of yoga that uses the mind to get beyond the mind by asking questions such as, "Who am I?" What is reality?" and "What is permanent and unchanging?"
  • Bhakti: The path of love and devotion focuses on devotion to and concentration on the guru or chosen deity and often includes chanting.
  • Karma: In the yogic system of action and serv...

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