The practice of yoga has become a massive, widespread industry — approximately 20 million individuals practice yoga in the US and the activity is a $10 billion-per-year industry. And it’s not without it’s merits. Studies suggest it not only promotes physical fitness but also mental well-being. To put it bluntly, taking up yoga makes a lot of sense for those trying to better their lives.
Technically speaking, what we call yoga is somewhat of a misnomer. Yoga is a term that encompasses a wide variety of mental, physical, philosophical and spiritual elements that originated in India approximately 5,000 years ago. The yoga we predominantly practice in the western world is called Hatha yoga, one branch of yoga that focuses on physical poses that promote physical wellness — meant to beget both mental wellbeing and spiritual awareness.
Hatha yoga itself is believed to have originated around the 11th century, but its roots in western culture only date back to the late 19th century. Tirumalai Krishnamacharya is known as the father of modern yoga. He taught yoga in Mysore, India where he garnered interest in the practice among his young students by emphasizing the physical elements of the practice while adding western gymnastic techniques to his teachings.
Many of Krishnamacharya’s students were integral in bringing yoga to the west. One student, a Russian woman who went by the name Indra Devi and was Krishnamacharya’s first female student, helped spread his teachings in the west when she taught her own gentle yoga practices in Los Angeles in the 1940s. Another student, K. Pattabhi Jois taught westerners who came to study with him in Mysore in the ’60s and ’70s. Jois created his own Ashtanga style yoga, which he taught to celebrity students like Sting, Madonna and Gwyneth Paltrow.
Krishnamacharya’s students, and their subsequent students, have made yoga the widespread practice that it is today. And though popular versions of yoga tend to shy away from yoga’s humble, more spiritual origins, its emphasis on wellness — both of the mind and body — remains very much intact.
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