Yoga for a Healthy Heart in Honour of February – Heart Month

 

heartinhandHeart health is important for us all!  Although fatal and damaging heart attacks are devastating, heart disease doesn’t only involve classic myocardial infarction.  It also takes the form of conditions such as high blood pressure, congestive heart failure, atrial fibrillation and venous insufficiency.  The body and mind can gradually die away, often with a significant amount of associated pain.  Many people suffer a great deal for the last ten years of their lives due to chronic cardiovascular disease.  And when a person is being treated for other serious diseases such as cancer, having heart disease causes all kinds of serious complications or even precludes many forms of treatment.  What’s even more surprising is that a significant number of people don’t realize that they have a “heart problem.”

The costs to people with cardiovascular disease and their families, and society as a whole, are huge.

Today, heart disease and stroke take one life every 7 minutes and 90% of Canadians have at least one risk factor.   – http://heartmonth.heartandstroke.ca

I became familiar with Dr. Dean Ornish and his then-controversial work, Program to Reverse Heart Disease, in 1995, just shortly before my mother’s untimely death from heart disease at age 51. Since then I have learned a great deal more.  As a matter of fact, contemplating my life’s purpose in the wake of my mother leaving her body, I realized that life was (and is) too short to live mindlessly now for some imagined future benefit, and that I wanted to share with others some of what I gained from practicing yoga.  Not long after, I commenced my formal teacher training and left my desk job as an IT management consultant.

Me and Nischala in 2009.

Me and Nischala in 2009.

One of my teachers, Nischala Joy Devi, then a swami at Satchidananda Ashram, tells me that Dean Ornish was a photographer when he first met Swami Satchidananda.  It was their mutual guru who encouraged Ornish to become a doctor.  A major part of Dr. Ornish’s eventual program came from what he learned living at the ashram and was fleshed out by Nischala, including adoption of a yoga practice.  This Yoga Journal article by Dr. Timothy McCall outlines the basics of Dr. Ornish’s program and is very easy to read!

And I urge you to do on-line assessment of your cardiovascular risk here.

In support of Heart Month, and just because I would like to offer it, I’ll be running a 2 1/2-hour workshop on Thursday, February 13, 2014 called, “Yoga for a Healthy Heart”.  Please consider attending.  Time:  6:30 – 9 PM   Place: Shaganappi Community. Cost is $35 and all proceeds after costs will be donated to this year’s Heart Month campaign, MAKE HEALTH LAST.

This restorative therapeutic yoga session, is founded primarily on the work of Dr. Karandikar, a physician from Pune, India who has been formative in the work of my teacher, David McAmmond.  It employs blankets and bolsters to maintain the body in a number of positions that are known to be supportive of the physiology of the circulatory system, the heart, and the nervous system.
Heart BedIf you can’t make it to the yoga workshop, please consider making a donation: My Heart and Stroke Donation Webpage.

The foundation has set aggressive goals that will help reduce Canadians’ rate of death from  heart disease and stroke by 25% — and their overall risk factors by 10% — by 2020.  Your gift can help us change the future. – Heart Month 2014 brochure

Did you know that the first successful open heart surgery on a patient in Canada (in 1954) used a technique that was developed through a Foundation research grant?  I actually have met a scientist whose work is funded by the Heart and Stroke Foundation on my neighbourhood canvassing rounds!

My Heart and Stroke Donation Webpage

Thank you for taking the time to get down here!  You deserve a pat on the back, and a heart-healthy break!

Permanent link to this article: https://yoginsight.com/yoga-for-heart-health-in-honour-of-february-heart-month/