Yoga for Chronic Pain ... WTF?: Take Control, Combat Pain & ROCK Your Life
Yoga for Chronic Pain ... WTF?: Take Control, Combat Pain & ROCK Your Life
- Author: Parker, Samantha
- Condition: VeryGood
If you're living with some type of chronic pain, at one point in your journey your doctor probably advised you to start doing yoga. And at one point you said, "WTF?" As in, "My doctor told me to do yoga. WTF? How is that going to help?"
Or maybe you've gone to a yoga class on your own because you read online that it would be good for your back. So, you went to a yoga studio and a typical class and you found yourself saying, "WTF? This is my first class. How the hell am I supposed to bend like that?"
Or you have gone to a yoga class, completed the class successfully only to get home and several hours or a day or two later, you're in more pain than when you went to the class! WTF? I thought the class was supposed to help me, not hurt me?
Relief from chronic pain with yoga is possible. In this book, certified yoga therapist Samantha Parker explains how traditional poses can be modified, and gives readers keen insights into what is physically happening to the body while practicing yoga. She also dives deep into what is actually causing your chronic pain, so you can combat it at its true source!
Parker takes away the mystery and presents the practical side of yoga, so you can come away from a yoga session and implement what you did on your yoga mat that day for the rest of your day, week and possibly life.
Based on more than 5,000 hours teaching yoga and developing innovative movement therapies for critically injured soldiers, this book is for anyone who suffers from chronic:
- Lower back pain, hip problems, sciatica, and bad knees
- Migraines and other headaches, stiff neck, fatigue
- Sprained or weak ankles, and many foot ailments
- Bursitis, tendinitis, and rotator cuff problems
Chronic pain affects 100 million Americans, and yoga can be a long-term viable alternative to addictive prescription drugs.
If you have been practicing yoga in more traditional ways, and it's not working for you, what have you got to lose by approaching yoga from a different perspective?