Chair Yoga
21st June 2010Featured, Lesson Plans, Reflections7 CommentsThe enthusiastic yoga students above just completed their chair yoga session at the Hearth, an independent living facility where my mother-in-law lives. She is more likely to attend the class if I accompany her, so I have been able to enjoy and learn from instructor Karen Suppies’s yoga flow. She has tailored her class beautifully around her students’ interests and memories. To provide a focus each week she brings in a tangible item: a vase of yellow flowers or a bowl of red raspberries, for example. The class has a conversation about the item to center and then begin to breathe and move together. YInyasa flows include rowing their boats, leaning back in recliners, squeezing lemons between their shoulder blades, and marching to Yankee Doodle Dandy. There are lots of smiles and we really move, adding ties and light weights for additional stability and strength. Thank you Karen for sharing your ideas so freely with me! Some of her ideas have seeped into my classes…
After nine months of teaching chair yoga at the West Haven Veterans Center, I have finally created a default lesson plan as well. My students are eager to learn a consistent series of postures so they can practice more easily on their own. I know I will keep bringing in a variety of readings and music and tinker with the centering and breathing practices. As I continue to experiment with props and postures (and borrow ideas from Karen) the asanas will evolve. I’m always curious to see what arises in the moment, and I hope my students appreciate a few surprises.
We have be focusing on using our senses as tools to bring our attention back to the present moment. In the lesson plan below I recommend two meditations. In the first, a visual meditation, we rub our hands together until we feel warmth and energy in our palms and fingers and then cover our eyes. The objective is to soothe and still the eyes, gazing through the darkness at an imaginary point in the far distance. Fixing our gaze often stills the wanderings of our minds as well. Do you unconsciously tense up when you focus? Relax all the muscles of your face, especially all the muscles around your eyes, cheeks, and jaw. After a few breaths we close our eyes and remove our hands, adjusting to the light behind our lids before blinking our eyes open.
Chanting A-O-U-M, the second meditation, focuses our senses of touch and hearing on the healing vibrations of the sacred Sanskrit syllable, OM. The vowel “a” vibrates in the back of our throat and the rear portions of our brain. “O” and “u” vibrate further forward across the upper palate of our mouths and up into more regions of our brains. “M” buzzes our lips and into our cerebrum, the thinking portion of brains. Chant in a relaxed manner, listening to the OM resonating in your head without straining either to make the sound or to listen to the sound. This isn’t singing. Let go of judgment! Can you feel the vibrations sweeping across your scull, relaxing your mind?
All chanting serves as a pranayama as well. With each long exhalation, we empty our lungs of stale air. The deep inhalation between repetitions replenishes our oxygen supply and energy. Long, smooth exhalations also soothe the nervous system, inviting our bodies to heal and function properly. Relaxation practices bring our hormonal, digestive, circulatory, and immune systems back into balance.
Once in a while a gentle, relaxing posture flow is very restorative, even if you normally prefer a more vigorous practice.. Regularly teaching chair yoga has helped me recognize the benefits of short sensory meditations and simple, repetitive movements on my own nervous system. Print the following Chair Yoga PDF and take it to work for a refreshing practice at your desk. Yoga really can be practiced almost anywhere!
Click here: Chair Yoga PDF
This lesson plan is two pages long, but I thought the attention to detail might be helpful. Volunteer to pose for my camera and I’d be delighted to illustrate the class!
7 responses to "Chair Yoga"
11:30 on June 24th, 2010
I recently got this amazing yoga chair called Soul Seat. I’ve never felt better at the end of a long work day. It lets me focus on keeping my hips flexible all day long. I no longer lose the ground that I had gained the day before on the yoga mat. In fact, I’ve been working at the computer now for hours and can hop right up without the usual stiffness in hamstrings or quads!
21:54 on June 24th, 2010
You make an important point that the kind of chair or stool we sit on all day makes a difference for our posture and comfort. I sit in a stool that has a wooden seat shaped like a tractor seat and find that I can sit comfortably for extended periods of time. I know others love to sit on exercise balls. Good luck with your creative design.
17:48 on August 6th, 2010
Sun Salutations are not always the easiest for me. Thanks for mentioning chair yoga. I found that Leeann Carey has a great free yoga video on a modified sun salutation. Your readers might want to check it out: http://planetyoga.com/yoga-blogs/index.php/free-yoga-video-modified-sun-salutation/
21:16 on August 6th, 2010
Thank you Anjeanette. Leeann Carey’s posture breakdowns are lovely. She teaches each pose as part of a constellation of postures, using very clear verbal instructions to accompany her demonstrations. Her technical support is far greater than mine and I’m happy for her and for all of us that can benefit from her efforts.
13:32 on June 8th, 2011
Can anyone suggest a cost effective alternative to the Soul Seat. I would love one, but the $700 price tag makes it completely out of the question. I sit at a computer all day long. I have taken the back off my office chair which has helped a little with my posture and keeping my abs from turning to complete mush, but I still need a way to sit in Lotus or easy pose at my desk. One that isn’t going to set me back > half a paycheck. Any suggestions would be great – thank you -
9:34 on June 16th, 2011
Cheryl, Don’t bother with a fancy seat. Simply find one with a solid surface, folding chairs are often fine, and sit on the edge with your feet flat on the ground and your spine tall, balancing your shoulders over your hips. Don’t lean on a back rest or arm rests. If you prefer to sit cross-legged in Sukhasana, you can roll or fold a towel to place under your hips to gently tip your pelvis. Make sure your work surface, table or desk, is the correct height relative to your chair. Your elbows should be able to hang down so your shoulders can relax while you write, read, or tap on a keyboard…. Scan your body from time to time to relax unnecessary tension. Let me know if this helps…. My favorite work space is at a stool by my kitchen counter as I can sit tall and relax my shoulders.
8:53 on June 27th, 2011
Yes, Martha, this is a big help. I managed to find an office chair with a large seat area, and have taken the back off that. The missing part of the puzzle, which you suggested, was placing the towel under my hips. That has made my posture pretty much right where I’d like it to be. Thank you!