The YogaFit Athlete: Up Your Game with Sport-Specific Poses to Build Strength, Flexibility, and Balance

The YogaFit Athlete: Up Your Game with Sport-Specific Poses to Build Strength, Flexibility, and Balance

by Beth Shaw
The YogaFit Athlete: Up Your Game with Sport-Specific Poses to Build Strength, Flexibility, and Balance

The YogaFit Athlete: Up Your Game with Sport-Specific Poses to Build Strength, Flexibility, and Balance

by Beth Shaw

eBook

$14.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Bring the strength and breathing power of yoga to the sports you love—and seriously up your game!

Yoga routines designed specifically for swimming, running, cycling, golf, tennis, baseball, football, volleyball, basketball, skiing, snowboarding, weight lifting, kickboxing, boxing, CrossFit, and more!
 
“Your body can either help you achieve your goals or get in the way of you living your best life. By practicing yoga and meditation, you can make your body work with you, not against you.”—Beth Shaw
 
Whether you’re a professional athlete, a weekend warrior, or a pick-up game enthusiast, yoga can dramatically affect your athletic performance and improve your alignment, balance, core stability, strength, flexibility, agility, endurance, lung capacity, and mobility. In this motivating and practical guide, celebrated fitness expert Beth Shaw provides short, sport-specific yoga routines designed to help counter tight muscles, overuse injuries, and musculature imbalances. By adding a quick yoga routine to any workout, you will increase your overall strength and health, and achieve your personal best.
 
Inside you’ll find
• fully illustrated, sport-specific yoga routines that engage the core, enhance your play, and reduce the risk of injury
• essential warm-up and cool-down movements to complement any athletic endeavor
• simple breathing exercises to steady your breath and calm your nerves during competition
• meditation techniques to help clear your mind and bring laser focus to your goals
• guided imagery and visualization exercises to improve performance
• strategies for coaching yourself and others

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780804178587
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Publication date: 04/05/2016
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
File size: 45 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Beth Shaw is the president and founder of the world-renowned YogaFit® training systems, the largest yoga school in the world, as well as the author of YogaLean and Beth Shaw’s YogaFit and the creator of more than a hundred bestselling yoga and fitness DVDs and CDs. Shaw works with the NFL as well as many sports teams and athletes. A sought-after international presenter, Shaw travels the world spreading the message of health and wellness. She lives in Los Angeles, California.

Read an Excerpt

I.

The Fundamentals of the YogaFit Approach

Chapter 1

Gaining Physical and Mental, Strength Through YogaFit

The impact of yoga is never purely physical. Asanas, if correctly practiced, bridge the divide between the physical and the mental spheres. Yoga stems the feelings of pain, fatigue, doubt, confusion, indifference, laziness, self-­delusion, and despair that assail us from time to time. . . . Yoga illuminates your life. If you practice sincerely, with seriousness and honesty, its light will spread to all aspects of your life.

—­B.K.S. Iyengar

Overall body strength is a building block of success regardless of your sport or athletic activity. No amount of weight lifting with free weights will give you the strength that is achieved by holding up your own body weight in yoga. (Though adding some weights to your yoga practice each week is a fantastic idea and combination—­see part III for poses that include light weights.) Consistent practice of the various yoga poses builds strength and improves lean muscle mass. Through specific poses, you can concentrate on muscle groups that are underutilized or stretch out your overtrained and maxed-­out muscles. Which muscles you need to strengthen and which you need to stretch and rest varies from sport to sport, so you can and should adapt your yoga practice to serve your specific athletic needs.

Physical strength will improve your endurance, surely something to be prized in sports such as cross-­country or triathlons. But it’s not just physical power that guides an athlete over the long haul; mental endurance is also key. Part 5 of this book gives you specific techniques for harnessing the power of your own mind. When you learn to tune in to your body and mind, everything can be a meditation—­sports included. Yoga helps you learn how to pace yourself and focus on the moment, not on how long it’s going to take to finish. It also develops a powerful foundation in your core, which is essentially the nucleus of your balance and movement.

Almost everything you do in life activates your core, and almost everything in yoga works on your core strength. When core stability is enhanced, it reinforces the supportive but otherwise underdeveloped muscles surrounding the more utilized muscles, creating a more balanced and optimal strength. Strong and stabilized core muscles in turn help with overall performance. Yoga helps strengthen all of the stabilizing muscles that are vital in protecting your joints and spine, among other things. People tend to miss these in other physical workouts, but your new yoga practice will bring them to life in order to enhance your body’s overall functioning.

The core guides your balance, and your ability to balance through different movements can make or break your game. After all, balance is necessary whether you are shifting your feet closer together or farther apart, lowering your body to the earth, standing tall, jumping, swinging, or generating force. If your balance is on point, it gives you a solid ground to work from and helps maximize movements and prevent falls and injuries. Many of the poses in the sport-­specific sections of this book work your core; I have also included a stand-­alone section of core poses so that you will be sure to get some core engagement.

If you play tennis or golf, you know the value of range of motion. With improved joint and muscular flexibility—­gained through yoga poses and stretching—­your body’s overall structure is improved, and your joint and muscle pliancy will foster greater range of motion or an increase in the performance latitude for a particular movement or series of movements. For example, a swimmer with supple shoulder and hip joints is able to capture and pull more water than a swimmer with a more limited range of motion. The result is more forward movement per stroke as well as enhanced muscular economy.

There is some dispute about the advisability of excessive stretching (for runners in particular), but I remain a huge advocate for when it is done after a workout, finding that the more I work to maintain my flexibility (something that wanes with age), the less likely I am to suffer from an injury caused by an overuse of or a strain to the muscles.

Intense engagement in sports can be a huge strain on the body, and it is important to balance that with rest and recovery. Restorative yoga helps your body recover from any particular strain on the body, whether it’s an injury or some other physical ailment. Yoga helps put athletes back together after a tough game or workout. By slowing down, you are allowing the body to heal and to tell you where it’s tight and where future injuries may be brewing. Yoga also elongates all of the muscles that athletes spend so long contracting, so it is a great counteraction.

To quell the mind of your own mental chatter and of that around you is not easy, especially in a high-­pressure moment. Yoga improves your control over that noise to create a center of focus and to promote serenity by silencing surrounding pressures, both internally and externally. When your mind learns to move with ease and stop forcing movements, you will prevent injuries and your body will open with your mind, increasing your flexibility, both mentally and physically.

the fundamentals of the yogafit approach

At YogaFit, we teach what we call “The Essence,” which is comprised of seven areas of focus intended to help you be safe and comfortable on the mat. As much as adhering to the Essence components will help you on the yoga mat itself, I think you’ll find that there are off-­the-­mat benefits too. As you embark on the sport-­specific poses later in the book, keep these seven components in mind:

1.Breathe

Most often, we are just passively breathing, unaware and disconnected. The goal of taking specific time and focus to breathe, as in a yoga class, is to be deliberate or purposeful with your breath. Mindful breathing calls attention to your breath quality and how it affects your body and psyche; quick and shallow versus slow and deep, for example. YogaFit emphasizes deep diaphragmatic and controlled breath to improve your quality of breathing. In turn, as you improve, you not only reap the health benefits (such as reducing stress and symptoms triggered by stress), but you can improve oxygen efficiency.

Professional athletes are often tested for their CO2 maximum. This test measures the amount of oxygen used by the whole body in a specified amount of time (milliliters of oxygen per minute per kilogram of body weight). This information helps to determine optimal training levels and performance potential. With specific training, and in order to improve performance, an athlete will gradually push their anaerobic threshold (or lactate threshold), which is the exercise intensity at which lactic acid starts to accumulate in the bloodstream. Full diaphragmatic breath helps to improve or maximize lung capacity, which aids in more efficient breathing, meaning the efficient use of oxygen that helps us reach optimal performance.

Oxygen fuels strength, movement, and cardiovascular endurance. Oxygen is the “what,” the air you breathe in rest and during activity. Your CO2 Max is the “how,” a measurement of how your body utilizes the air you breathe in and converts it to energy. A strong and efficient CO2 Max will enable you to perform longer while maximizing the oxygen you take in with each breath. Work on the breath ability, and your CO2 measurement will improve.

Breath is also an innate tool to keep you calm and focused. When you inhale and let it go, it slows down the central and respiratory systems and helps shed nervous energy, which brings attention to the moment at hand. Think about it: Before taking the penalty shot, before leaping off the platform for the perfect dive, before preparing for that super lift, or whatever it may be, you can get “in the zone” with a long, deep breath. Look closely at professional athletes, and you’ll see them do this as well. Intentional breathing gives you a specific moment of focus while relaxing your nervous system.

2.Feel

Tapping into your body and understanding what you feel could mean the difference between incurring and avoiding an injury. It all begins with breath, and once you are breathing more purposefully, you increase your body awareness. The purpose here is to notice what sensations the body experiences. Take your time and tune in—­what do you feel right now and where? Do you feel calm or anxious, tense or relaxed? In yoga you want to feel something in every pose, no part of your body is just hanging out; instead, everything is energetically engaged.

3.Listen to your body

With this awareness of the sensations in the physical body, what are you to do? Everything you feel can be used as a guide. In her book Your Body Speaks Your Mind, Deb Shapiro explains that “every symptom is the way the body communicates; it is like a word or a message.” You can use these messages to determine how far you can take your training or how long you can hold a pose in yoga. During your yoga practice, you can choose a pose option (whether it’s modified or not) to incur more or less sensation according to your body’s message. For instance, you may dial up the sensation for more intensity or dial it back for less. When on your yoga mat, choose according to what you truly need in the moment and in conjunction with your current training regimen. You may choose a more intense yoga practice in order to expand, grow, and progress into new abilities or accomplishments. Or you might choose a gentler yoga to take care of your aching body. This careful listening and choosing will reduce the chance of incurring an injury or aggravating an existing one.

4.Let go of competition

To tell an athlete to let go of competition is like telling a writer to not worry about words! As an athlete you are trained to compete—­plain and simple. However, on the yoga mat, you have the chance to set the competition aside and live in that stress-­free moment to focus on the poses. On the mat, there are no officials keeping score on pose execution, nor is there anyone around competing to hold a pose longer. It is you and your mat. Stepping onto the mat, athletes can embrace the moment and the yoga practice for themselves while focusing only on pose benefits and alignment.

5.Let go of judgment

This can be quite intense for an athlete. If you’re a pro, you’ve got judges, fans, critics, and sponsors to worry about. As a weekend warrior, you’ve got your best friend, your spouse, or maybe even your children to impress or think about. Often there is an image to uphold or a level of performance to meet or exceed, and as a result you do what you can to achieve perfection in the spotlight, whether it’s actual or imagined! You may even judge your peers, which is negative energy. However, on the mat and in the studio you can and should let go of judgment.

Practice your poses with a kind, compassionate heart, and use the positive mantras to encourage and appreciate yourself. Practicing yoga is a chance to encourage, not judge, yourself: “I am experiencing this pose with ease and confidence,” or “Where I am at is where I am supposed to be.” Be creative and be kind to yourself.

6.Let go of expectations

Letting go of expectations is about being open to possibility. Anticipate everything, expect nothing. You may come to your yoga mat with expectations that do not serve you. Instead, let go of any expectations of what the yoga experience will be and what your body can or will do. I love to say that “there is no perfect pose.” However, there is a perfect pose for each body—­the one that is necessary in each moment. Embrace the mat, be open and trust your body to do exactly what it can, which will make yoga far more enjoyable and beneficial.

Expectation usually keeps you attached to your desired outcome. If you hold on to an outcome you didn’t expect, it disrupts your focus and sets you back, costing you valuable time in sports. Anticipation welcomes many ways to your desired outcome, such as a new personal record, a gold medal, or the Grey Cup. Like a soccer or hockey player anticipating the many possibilities of where the ball or puck will be next, anticipation keeps you ready and on your toes for the next possibility. NHL star Wayne Gretzky said, “A good player plays where the puck is. A great player plays where the puck is going to be.”

7.Stay present in the moment

Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, today is a gift—­that’s why it’s called the present. Have you heard those words before or something similar? It is true, the past has happened, it is history. You can learn from it, but you cannot change it. The future is beyond your reach, and it’s a mystery what will happen. The present moment, on the other hand, is the only moment you really have any control or influence over, and for an athlete the present moment is crucial to effectively respond to what is happening.

So how do you stay in the present moment? On the mat, you simply bring yourself back to your breath—­bringing The Essence full circle. As well as an innate tool to increase awareness of the physical body, breath is also your tool to be in the present moment. The body does not judge a breath it took yesterday or last week, and the body certainly is not going to worry about the next breath. The body is always present to the breath, so when you draw your attention to your breathing, you are drawn into the present moment.

PEP talks

In YogaFit, we practice giving PEP (Praise-­Encourage-­Praise) Feedback to others, and it is important to utilize this tool and apply this in your own internal dialogue when you’re coaching yourself (for more on becoming your own coach, see Part 5). Through PEP Feedback you can build a safe dialogue with yourself and consider it a pat on the back or a moment of encouragement when you’re feeling overwhelmed or frustrated.

PEP starts with a positive statement, then encourages you with a strong “help statement,” followed by another positive statement. Most people find that understanding PEP as it pertains to how you speak to others—­teammates and coaches, for starters—­is the way to ease into communicating this way with yourself. Below are the PEP guidelines when speaking to others, which you can utilize to inspire your teammates and those around you.

Principles of Giving Constructive Feedback

Table of Contents

Introduction xi

The Underpinnings of Yoga xiv

1 The Fundamentals of the Yogafit Approach 1

Chapter 1 Gaining Physical and Mental Strength Through Yogafit 3

The Fundamentals of the YogaFit Approach 6

PEP Talks 10

Being Your Own Coach 13

Chapter 2 Getting Ready For Yoga 15

Safe Yoga 19

Warming Up, Working Out, and Cooling Down 21

Finding Your Routine 23

2 The Poses 25

Warmup Flow Sequences 26

Sport-Specific Poses 43

Cool-Down: Final Stretch and Flex Sequence 227

3 Key Components of Sports Success: Core and Balance, Restorative Yoga, and Weight Training 239

Core and Balance Poses 240

Restorative Yoga Using Props 259

Weight Training with Yoga 278

4 Breath 289

5 A Visualization, Guided Imagery, and Meditation 299

Visualization and Guided Imagery 303

Meditation 304

Guided Practice 308

Acknowledgments 313

Index 315

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews