Yoga for People in Wheelchairs

Posted: April 20, 2013 at 2:45 pm


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Fit folks bent like pretzels. Gymnast-types on their heads. Women and men evoking the warrior posearms to the sky, head up, one leg bent in front and the other in a deep stretch backward. This is how many people perceive yoga, so where could a wheelchair possibly fit? How could legs with little feeling, if any, deliver the balance and strength that these poses demand? Well, it's not really about the poses. People need wheelchairs for a wide range of reasons and fall on a spectrum of abilities, but just like everyone, they can reap the benefits of yoga by focusing less on the postures and more on the principals of yoga and mind-body relationship. We'll explain.

Rather, Matthew Sanford will explain. Sanford is a yoga teacher, public speaker, author and founder and president of Mind-Body Solutions, a national nonprofit with the mission to "transform trauma, loss and disability into hope and potential by awakening the connection between mind and body." Sanford became paralyzed from the chest down at age 13 in a devastating car accident, and now he teaches yoga to those of all abilities through his classes and DVDs, and here, in the advice below. His words have been edited.

Could you describe this mind-body relationship?

We're all living on a continuum. If you tickle the bottoms of my feet, I don't feel it; I don't get the same level of sensation through my whole body as someone else does. Similarly, when you're really busy or stressed out, you bump into things more; you're not as present in your body. Right now, if you lean back and slouch in your chair, you'll feel less in your legs. If you sit up straight and tall and press down through your heels, you feel more in your legs. I define mind-body connection as where the mind experiences the body, and it's in constant flux. People in generalnot just people in wheelchairsaren't paying enough attention to what they're feeling within their bodies.

Why is it important to pay attention to what's happening in our bodies?

It improves the quality of living, and it's a great way to manage stress. This doesn't just mean paying attention to the pain in your body, but trying to have good experiences within your body, too. When people are riddled with chronic diseases or other issues, or even aging, they end up only listening to the pain or what's wrong in the body, as opposed to also listening to what feels good. That's natural for all of us.

How does mind-body connectedness relate to yoga for people with disabilities?

A lot of my work and approach to adapting yoga for people with disabilities and in wheelchairs is predicated on the fact that there are many sensations that are more subtle in the mind-body relationship than just those when you flex a muscle. These subtle sensations are affected by your breath, alignment and posture, as well as how well you move and how grounded you are. That level of awareness is never going to make me walk again, but it's going to help me feel wholelike I'm living in my whole body. Our bodies stay healthier when they move; they feel more vibrant. So how do you live in your body fully if you're not able to exercise and move in the same way as everyone else? That's where our approach really starts happening.

And what's that approach?

The principles of yoga do not discriminate. In our approach to working with someone in a wheelchair, we think about what's universal to every pose, regardless of how complicated it is. Rather than specific poses, we focus on the sensationsthe sensation of feeling grounded, sensation of feeling balanced, sensation of expansion and sensation of rhythm. If you start thinking about what the yoga poses are teaching you and what's universal, we can make yoga happen in almost every posture.

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Yoga for People in Wheelchairs

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April 20th, 2013 at 2:45 pm

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