(probably not the best kind of yoga because it was a fast series of movements). Though I personally have no qualms with yoga, I have Christian friends that consider yoga a spiritually compromising activity. The Bible says the best thing to do in circumstances like those is to respect how it makes them feel so no yoga for me
(A variety of thoughts, put mainly as questions - this is no place to answer them, if at all per pm.)
I know where you're coming from. When people are stuck between and confusing the Law (& Fear) and The Love. Between blind obedience to them or 'overtaxing' them, a middle path may be successful & loving from there to Love in Freedom in slowly convincing just by uncompromisingly showing Passion.
Treatments: Where do we draw the line? Yoga, acupuncture, tai chi / chi gong but also homeopathy, even "wrong' herbs, meditation, Emotional Freedom Technique, relaxation exercises, psychotherapy ... or the radical form of
any "human" treatments.... Would we need to be considerate if it makes others feel bad if we use human treatments instead of relying on prayer...?
Bible: Where did Paul draw the line when it came to beliefs much nearer to home, whilst Peter 'had respect how it made people feel'? Peter refrained from eating meat, because others feared it might have come from culturally dubious sources, started keeping circumcision as prerequisite. Paul chose Freedom rather than Fear. "
Check out everything, and keep only what's good."
Yoga: What we call "yoga" isn't yoga at all. It isn't even Westernized like Western Buddhism. Usually they are just simple exercises completely stripped of all ancient philosophical mindset. Any breathing or relaxation or mindfulness done are like the exercises - "soul-less". If these reach our soul then not any kind of "Yoga soul" (which is a term which doesn't fit), but our very own soul with its own mindset. Real Yoga is actually 'only' the philosophical mindset and any exercises are just one expression of that, a tool. So doing yoga instead of Yoga is actually just "exercises" - a tool good for the body, for the mind, but neutral for the soul. Imagine a book of exercises without labels. Techniques aren't affixed to a culture. The nun Hildegard of Bingen in the 12th Century was a brilliant herbalist as well as all rounder ('polymath') for music, poetry, natural history, theatre, leading and establishing monasteries.
A friend gave me a yoga back exercise DVD-book when fibro started. First I scoffed it off, then seeing nothing else was helping, I had a go and realized actually most of the exercises were good for me, at least for reducing or preventing local pains. Some time I started wondering how these can be real yoga, knowing a bit about it and that many of these were just normal physical therapy exercises that I'd learnt in the 80s for my back. Then I looked in the introduction and that said: this wasn't - exercises taken here and there, called yoga to give a sort of direction based on a kind of exercise people expect.
Someone was glad when I said I often pray during acupuncture and it's good for me if I remember. Same there - that can be also done out of Fear... or Freedom.... Which of these has a Basis?
So I switched over to pilates and the Wii Sports games. But tasks based on muscle exertion just wear me out and usually turn into a bad flare. Sometimes I get lucky and the flares are just half flares and sometimes no flare. But I am leary of doing anything one might call exercise - house stuff keeps me plenty exhausted. Walking is super boring to me. Even if it wasn't Id still conserve my energy for essentials and not traditional exercise...
Not sure - sounds like you haven't discovered all the enormous middle field yet?
Or pacing, in tune with your sweet spots? Examples:
Walking is boring to you: I can't even do that usually... But
: when I stopped going to my PT in January, I managed to do >5 hours of self-applied physical therapy every day, most just while sitting, often typing, some in bed to be able to lie or sleep better. Anything with slightest exertion I did (& do) just a few minutes, with longer breaks, but many times during the day. Like a smokers' break. After a while I realized most of this isn't necessary, as my local pains stayed down to 5-10%, so now I only need 1-2h a day of "PT" and they've stayed down. Mainly stretches and exercises, but also incl. "relaxation" and breathing exercises of several kinds, lying with a cushion under my hunchback, massage gun, and very occasionally I can manage a 4-7 minute workout. I don't know how come, but I've kept all my muscles.
Combining both the 'moral' and the 'capability' aspects:
So I wouldn't do yoga or tai chi or qi gong
classes or
longer stints anyway. Just a few exercises and stretches which are good for me. ;-). Acupressure: Just press on some of the points. And discover for yourself if these help or not. What's wrong with discovering how our body works?
And if anyone still asks me if it is necessary to do these "strange" things, I ask:
Please can
you tell/give me an alternative I haven't tried yet that will help me? I'd be glad to do it! Or ... do you
want me to suffer?