Remove your Grief through Yoga Teacher Training

Author: Shivashakti Yoga

There are numerous healing methods learned during yoga teacher training sessions, but some of the most confusing issues humans face are emotional in nature. Grief touches everyone at some point in their life. The loss of a loved one is an overwhelming blow for someone, while career obstructions such as firing or layoffs can send others into a nose-dive of sadness. Grief is generally caused by loss, which is sometimes as real as a person or as abstract as our beliefs about ourselves or our prospects about our life. We must experience deep feelings like grief for them to go through us and dispel, but the pain they generate makes us hesitant to do this.

Our human nature is one of power and action; we assume to control our lives, and when things don't go our way, we see it as a failure. This makes it even tougher for us to accept the loss and the grief that arises with it. When you rebuff grief, it must go anywhere. Unresolved grief generally stores in the body. For some people, it makes physical pain, feeling of pinching or stiffness in the shoulder area, as if their body tries to curl into itself and protect the heart.

Numerous people develop to continue digestive problems or fatigue following a deep loss. The interesting thing about these objections is that many people never know that there is a connection between their physical illnesses and their emotional situation. With yoga, the body and mind connection becomes clearer, and people generally find that as they move through the asanas, their body will release some of the grief and tension it is holding for the mind. Yoga class is a secure place for people to let their feelings arise and watch them dispel. It is not rare to see yoga practitioners openly crying during a class as emotions and feelings can arise unpredictably for us all.

Yoga is a path toward understanding and acceptance of all parts of your life, including grief and loss. Yogic philosophy has a less personal take on loss; for some people, life is full of sorrow, and our affection to people and things will certainly compound that suffering. After joining retreats and yoga teacher training intensives about detachment, I can honestly admit it is not possible for most of us to remain free. Living a life of joy and love, involved with the world and the people in it will logically lead to grief and loss. Before rejecting life altogether, we can take comfort that it is not our failure but rather the unavoidable nature of things that have caused this outcome.There are numerous healing methods learned during yoga teacher training sessions, but some of the most confusing issues humans face are emotional in nature. Grief touches everyone at some point in their life. The loss of a loved one is an overwhelming blow for someone, while career obstructions such as firing or layoffs can send others into a nose-dive of sadness. Grief is generally caused by loss, which is sometimes as real as a person or as abstract as our beliefs about ourselves or our prospects about our life. We must experience deep feelings like grief for them to go through us and dispel, but the pain they generate makes us hesitant to do this.

Our human nature is one of power and action; we assume to control our lives, and when things don't go our way, we see it as a failure. This makes it even tougher for us to accept the loss and the grief that arises with it. When you rebuff grief, it must go anywhere. Unresolved grief generally stores in the body. For some people, it makes physical pain, feeling of pinching or stiffness in the shoulder area, as if their body tries to curl into itself and protect the heart.