Why exercise outside?
May 26, 2009 by thetiniyogini · Leave a Comment

The sun is out, a cool breeze brushes against my skin and it’s almost as if the air outside is giving me a personal invitation to breath deeper. I sit cross legged, looking out at 40 yogis with their eyes closed with the most serene looks on their beautiful faces. The warmth of the sun rests on my shoulders, the waves are crashing, the birds are singing and it’s only 8:30 in the morning. How can the rest of the day go wrong when this is the way I start my Saturday morning? We humans tend to spend most of our lives indoors, breathing in recycled processed air that stays at about 71 degrees 24 hours a day. We trade the warm healing rays of the sun for synthetic lighting, not even realizing what we are doing to our bodies both inside and out. So many problems can result from this never changing indoor environment, never allowing the body to prepare for the seasons of change that naturally exists for a reason. This false information is further reinforced by the standard high sugar diet and the prolonged exposure to unnatural light that in the natural world only occurs in the late summer months. When we step outside we allow our body to know what time of day it is and what time of year so that it can fittingly tell us when to sleep and how to eat. The drop of temperature and feeling of cool air on our body during the winter or warm sunlight on our face in the spring communicates important and suitable information to our genes so that our body can serve us better. Being outdoors for part of the day helps reset circadian rhythms, balances hormones and increases healthy weight loss. One sure way of doubling the benefit of an exercise routine is to bring it to the great outdoors and that is exactly what the city of Huntington Beach is beginning to offer to the community with their outdoor yoga classes offered at the park and beach. Exercising outdoors allows for an amazing sense of connection to the open-air environment. The benefits of the sun’s rays and fresh air provide not only improved physical health, but also spiritual and emotional wellbeing. Yoga practitioners around the world are stepping outdoors to let the sun and the wind enhance the benefits of the Indian healing technique. People are finding a connection to a deeper place internally when they can actually touch the earth with their body. There is a close relationship between the natural environment and the practice of yoga. The sages named the yoga poses after animals, trees, mountains and crescent moons. There is an innate bond to the environment that begins to take place when the body is exposed to these elements. Try and recall the feeling you get while watching the sun setting, taking a walk along the seashore, gazing at a bird soaring over a mountain top or simply feeling cool fresh air brush across your face. A person starts to feel a connection between themselves and the earth. It is both energizing and restorative. Some common benefits of yoga regardless of where one may practice are a strengthening of muscles, the massaging of internal organs, a calming of the central nervous system, an ability to clarify thought processes, increase in a lowering of blood pressure and a release of bent up emotions. Link these benefits to an open space filled with birds, wind and the sounds of nature and the possibilities are too many to number. Life tends to slow down when there are no mirrors or walls in your way and the ability to connect to yoga images is enhanced when they are right there in front of you. Pick up a yoga mat, take off your shoes and leave your worries at home. Release yourself to the open air and the outdoor world of health and wellness that’s been waiting for you.


