Children's
Yoga Can Help Families Focus on Fitness and Fun
How
Things Used to Be – Only a Few Short Decades Ago (Only 4 Short Decades Ago!)
When I
was young, my father used to joke around with us children and say “When your
mother was pregnant, she must have been startled by a kangaroo because you children never stop bouncing around!”
All the children in my neighbourhood were
active. We ran endlessly around the
neighbourhood playing Hide & Seek, the older boys played Football on the
street in the summer and Hockey in the winter.
The girls did Gymnastics, swinging like monkeys on the Monkey Bars and
Swing Sets and doing cartwheels and handstands on the grass. What we all had in common was that we never
stopped moving and we could all see our ribs. We would rather run than walk and were
constantly being told to “slow down”.
There was only 1 chubby child in my entire school - although ironically
by today’s standards, he would be considered a “standard size” child. There were only a few kids’ movies that you
could watch at the cinema and there wasn’t too much to watch on TV - not that
it mattered because we were only allowed to watch 1 hour of TV a week, and we
exercised that right by watching Saturday morning cartoons.
During university I knew I wanted to be a
teacher and I worked and volunteered in different children’s programs. The children were as active as I had been as
a child – nonstop
running around and having fun.
There were 1 or 2 children whose parents packed their lunches with just
a few too many treats and they were a few pounds heavier than the other
children but still just as active.
How
Things are Now – The Huge Generation Difference
What I find astonishing about children
today, is how inactive
and unhealthy they are. I
currently go into daycare centres, schools, youth groups and yoga studios, to
teach yoga to children. I have been
working with children my whole life and the trends in this generation of
children are disturbing. These are some
of the surprising things I have witnessed, heard and have been asked by
children:
- In a daycare at 9:30 in the morning, children ages 2-4 telling me they are tired after doing 3 yoga poses – less than 5 minutes of activity.
- Children ages 2-4, who I have been seeing on a weekly basis and who have learned the names of the yoga poses from the "What I Can See, I Can Be"yoga book - request the “Mouse Pose” (Child’s Pose) before we even begin the yoga class. When I ask why they want to do that pose, they inform me that they are tired – and I can see that they ARE physically tired.
- Children ages 4-5, after a few minutes of moderately active yoga, asking to stop because they are starting to sweat! This is something that they haven’t experienced before and they are not use to sweating and find it uncomfortable.
- Going into school classrooms and seeing children ages 6-9 with stomachs that look like “Muffin Tops” or “Pot Bellies”, similar in size to men who have well developed “Beer Guts”.
- Going
into elementary schools and discovering 1/4 to 1/3 of the children are
either overweight or obese, have laboured breathing just sitting or
standing, and are inflexible.
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| Inactive children eating processed fast food, passively watching TV. |
from the grocery store are too tempting for tired parents to resist when they are in a hurry and need to feed hungry children.
How We Can Ensure Our Children Stay Healthy for a
Lifetime
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| Janet Williams doing Yoga with Children in the Park |
Children are taught what to value and children learn to value what adults’ value. To save this upcoming generation from a life impaired and impacted by obesity, Type II Diabetes and Heart Disease, it means that adults are going to have to get active with their children!
How Adults Can Lead By Example
Yoga is an excellent activity to do as a
family because it can be a “Whole Family Affair” done by all generations –
children, parents, and grandparents. Children
as young as 2 and Grandparents as old as 102 can all participate. This intergenerational activity doesn’t
require any special equipment, can be easily done in the living room, and can
be easily incorporated into the daily routine.
Just like brushing teeth is taught to
children as a daily activity, starting or ending the day with “Family Yoga
Time” can be made to be part of the daily routine. Yoga
is the perfect activity, compared to what faces most Hockey Moms and Dads - getting up to drive their children to a 6:00am
hockey practice, standing in the cold arena holding onto a cup of hot coffee
trying to stay warm, and watching their child get pushed around the rink.
Leading children by example and doing yoga with them every day can help ensure your children stay active and healthy for a lifetime.
Bio: Janet Williams is a
Certified Primary/Junior Teacher, Yoga Instructor and the author of the book “What
I See, I Can Be: A Guided Yoga Flow for
Children”. She has created easy
to use kids yoga resources and training courses for teachers and parents so
that they can do yoga with their children in schools and homes. www.ChildrensYogaBooks.com
Helpful Tips & Ideas at:
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/childrensyogabooks
Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/childrensyoga
YouTube: www.youtube.com/childrensyoga
Twitter: www.twitter.com/childrens_yoga
Helpful Tips & Ideas at:
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/childrensyogabooks
Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/childrensyoga
YouTube: www.youtube.com/childrensyoga
Twitter: www.twitter.com/childrens_yoga




It is going to take a conscious effort in our homes and in our schools.
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DFB Pokal: Stuttgart 2 Freiburg 1
ReplyDeleteStuttgart will face runaway Bundesliga leaders Bayern Munich in the DFB Pokal final after a 2-1 victory over Freiburg.
Wednesday’s semi-final was decided in an early flurry with all three goals coming in the opening half-an-hour with Austrian winger Martin Harnik scoring the decisive goal for Stuttgart.
Stuttgart will take on Bayern in the DFB Pokal decider in Berlin on June 1 hoping to claim their first German Cup since 1997.
Freiburg headed into the semi-final in Stuttgart sitting fifth in the Bundesliga, seven positions ahead of the hosts, and hoping to keep their cup run going as they looked to win the first major trophy in their history.
But it was Stuttgart who struck first with Ibrahima Traore flying down the left in the ninth minute before cutting the ball back to Arthur Boka to side-foot home from near the penalty spot. as reported by Indo Eleven.
The visitors struck back in the 13th minute as a number of sharp passes around the halfway line eventually saw Max Kruse release Jan Rosenthal through on goal and the German midfielder held off Boka before scoring from the edge of the penalty area.
Stuttgart were back in front in the 28th minute, however, when Christian Gentner’s volleyed cross was headed in at the back post by Harnik.
The home team held on in a tense second half that saw four yellow cards dished out as the match became spiteful.
Source : www.indo11.com