'Relax Into Yoga for Seniors' has 6-week plan for flexibility

February 21, 2017 at 10:13PM
Donna Pointer, right, a yoga instructor for 30 years, gives words of encouragement to 76-year-old Webster Smith doing a stretch, as she leads a group of senior citizens in her weekly class on Tuesday, April 4, 2006 at the Senior Center in Ann Arbor, Mich. (AP Photo/Tony Ding) ORG XMIT: NY722
Donna Pointer, right, a yoga instructor for 30 years, gives words of encouragement to 76-year-old Webster Smith doing a stretch, as she leads a group of senior citizens in her weekly class on Tuesday, April 4, 2006 at the Senior Center in Ann Arbor, Mich. (AP Photo/Tony Ding) ORG XMIT: NY722 (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Plagued by stiff or painful joints as we age, some of us consider yoga. We sign up for a "gentle" yoga class but find ourselves pushing too hard to keep up, feeling inadequate, becoming more rigid instead of more relaxed. So we try a yoga video, which we can do alone at home. But there's still that incredibly flexible teacher on the screen, effortlessly making us feel tense and clumsy.

In contrast, there's something soothingly achievable about the new book "Relax Into Yoga for Seniors: A Six-Week Program for Strength, Balance, Flexibility and Pain Relief."

Maybe it's the illustrations, simple black-and-white line drawings of slightly pudgy people in baggy T-shirts and pants doing really simple maneuvers.

Maybe it's the large type with lots of open space (the book is a largish paperback) or the way it stays open so we can prop it up to follow as we practice. Maybe it's the refreshing lack of jargon, either medical or spiritual.

Whatever it is, it goes down easily. Authors Kimberly Carson and Carol Krucoff, who specialize in therapeutic yoga and who run a teaching network called Yoga for Seniors, guide you through six weeks of step-by-step, manageable exercises.

Everything you do the first week can be done lying on your back in bed — a three-part breath sequence to "reset" your state of mind, a range-of-motion sequence to gently stretch your neck, arms, legs and spine, and a period of mindful relaxation.

The next week, you get some simple standing poses. The next week, you drop those and try a few things sitting down. And so on.

While some of the poses and exercises have classic yoga names (mountain, warrior, etc.), others just describe what the motion — for example, the "as-if chair" exercise involves sitting upright in a chair, tensing your thigh muscles as if you were going to stand and then relaxing.

When you've gone through the six weeks, the authors suggest you create your own routines from the menu of dozens of exercises you've learned.

And look! You're doing yoga.

Nancy Szokan , Washington Post

Portrait of a woman in her 60s sitting on floor meditating. Senior woman with eyes closed in meditation with hands in om gesture. istock
Portrait of a woman in her 60s sitting on floor meditating. Senior woman with eyes closed in meditation with hands in om gesture. istock (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
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