Yoga for Cancer
Welcome, this is a blog to encourage you to join me in a daily practice of Yoga. It is for anyone who would like to take an active role in recovery.You may be new to Yoga, or just new to Yoga during Cancer treatment! Please listen to your body, and only try movements that feel right for you. Your feedback, by way of comments, ideas, questions and information will be gratefully received.
Tuesday, October 16, 2018
Thursday, April 9, 2015
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Surprised!
It's amazing to come back to the blog and realise just how many people have been viewing the posts!
I hope that my experiences, and the gift of using Yoga techniques to return to health can be of help to even more viewers.
It's now 3 years since I was diagnosed and it feels like another life time!
I will put up another video which I hope will encourage others to practice Yoga and reap the benefits of this powerful discipline (path).
I hope that my experiences, and the gift of using Yoga techniques to return to health can be of help to even more viewers.
It's now 3 years since I was diagnosed and it feels like another life time!
I will put up another video which I hope will encourage others to practice Yoga and reap the benefits of this powerful discipline (path).
Friday, August 31, 2012
Wake up to Yoga... Wake up to Life
This morning I set out to share a lively more upbeat session with you.
Well... it's taken all day to work out a way to record it and put it up on You Tube...
I'm not feeling so lively and upbeat now!
It's great tho' to get back to the site and I hope that you will enjoy the practice.
Please view the video first, and then go into it at your own pace. The standing poses are great for building strength and steadiness in the legs and back. You will feel more awake and ready for whatever wonders the day will bring.
Nemaste.
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Classes in Contemporary Yoga
will start again from September 18th in my new venue (see below).
will start again from September 18th in my new venue (see below).
Contact me if you would like to book a place on either
Tuesday, Wednesday, or Friday morning: 10.30am-12.30pm.
New- Tuesday Evening Class at 7pm-8.30pm ( good back care routine)
Tuesday, Wednesday, or Friday morning: 10.30am-12.30pm.
New- Tuesday Evening Class at 7pm-8.30pm ( good back care routine)
Tel 085 726 5827 or email; info@sighleyoga.ie
All information will soon be on my website www.sighleyoga.ie
The Institute of Psychosocial Medicine
2 Eden Park, Summerhill Road, Dun Laoghaire, Co. Dublin, Ireland
|
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Life goes on...thank God.
It's now a year since I finished treatment, and already it feels like a different chapter of my life.
Ivy, my second grandchild is now nine weeks old, and such a pleasure to be with, along with her two and a half yr.old sister Faye.
Yoga fills my days- teaching Contemporary sessions in the mornings, and Yoga for Pregnancy two evenings a week.
Must get back behind the camera and record another video.
Life is good, and I'm so grateful to be well and able to enjoy each and every day.
Ivy, my second grandchild is now nine weeks old, and such a pleasure to be with, along with her two and a half yr.old sister Faye.
Yoga fills my days- teaching Contemporary sessions in the mornings, and Yoga for Pregnancy two evenings a week.
Must get back behind the camera and record another video.
Life is good, and I'm so grateful to be well and able to enjoy each and every day.
Saturday, December 31, 2011
A Quick Fix -15 min. daily practice.
Enjoy this simple sequence of Yoga postures. The first part is with music, and no instruction. It allows you to get into a flowing rhythm of movement that takes you home, back into your body. Then, you will
be guided into deeper stretches to loosen the hips and shoulders, free the spine, and calm the mind.
If practiced in the morning, this Quick Fix will create the energy needed for the activities of the day ahead. However, an evening practice will help to settle the mind and prepare the body for a good night's sleep.
Always check with your doctor before starting any new exercise routine.
A reminder of daily medication during treatment. |
An everyday practice (15 mins practice)
Sunday, September 25, 2011
Back to work!
I'd love the feedback, so that I could be creative, and come up with some ideas for you.
I've just realised that the email info@sighleyoga.ie is not working at the moment due to changes being made on the website. So, please email me again with any requests for a practice at sighleyoga@gmail.com
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Guest Post from Jillian McKee
Yoga Harmonizes Body, Mind and Spirit During Cancer Treatment
The practice of yoga has been around for centuries, but its popularity has grown dramatically in the West in the last few decades. It's no wonder -- yoga has been shown to have numerous holistic healing benefits. The regular practice of yoga improves one's overall flexibility, balance and concentration. It also lowers stress levels and promotes a calm, balanced, centered feeling. In a nutshell, the practice of yoga promotes a deep and sustained feeling of inner peace in body, mind and spirit.
Much has been said lately about the importance of the ability to "be present" in life. Yoga definitely helps increase this capacity. In fact, it is difficult not to "be present" in one's body while engaged in the practice of yoga. Many of the poses require focused attention, concentration and balance, which encourages keeping one's awareness in the here and now. This practice then naturally carries over into the rest of life, even when the practitioner is not engaged in yoga.
Yoga has proven extremely valuable and helpful in fighting and overcoming cancer. There is no doubt that yoga improves quality of life during cancer treatment, even in terminal cancers such as mesothelioma. In some cases, it can even raise mesothelioma life expectancy. In addition to promoting healing, it can also minimize the stress and side effects of chemo and radiation. A gentle yoga practice during cancer treatment helps the body to process and alleviate toxins more efficiently, improves circulation, lowers pain levels and also reduces anxiety and depression.
A recent article on the ABC news website referenced a study funded by the National Cancer Institute's Office of Cancer Complementary and Alternative Medicine. They reported that yoga dramatically helped to reduce the side effects of cancer treatments in patients, particularly insomnia and fatigue. From the article:
"Sleep disturbances and fatigue are an enormously burdensome problem among cancer survivors... In the trial, 410 patients who had completed cancer therapy were split into two groups: one that participated in a four-week-long, twice-weekly yoga program, and one that did not. Compared to how they felt beforehand, the survivors who participated in the yoga program afterward reported improvements in sleep quality and fatigue. Yoga participants also used less sleep medication than they did before the program, while non-yoga participants actually increased their use of sleep medication. Patients were enthusiastic about the classes, and 86 percent attended more than half the sessions."
Thank you Jillian for this post. Nemaste Sighle
Patients practicing at Henry Ford Hospital in Michigan |
The practice of yoga has been around for centuries, but its popularity has grown dramatically in the West in the last few decades. It's no wonder -- yoga has been shown to have numerous holistic healing benefits. The regular practice of yoga improves one's overall flexibility, balance and concentration. It also lowers stress levels and promotes a calm, balanced, centered feeling. In a nutshell, the practice of yoga promotes a deep and sustained feeling of inner peace in body, mind and spirit.
Much has been said lately about the importance of the ability to "be present" in life. Yoga definitely helps increase this capacity. In fact, it is difficult not to "be present" in one's body while engaged in the practice of yoga. Many of the poses require focused attention, concentration and balance, which encourages keeping one's awareness in the here and now. This practice then naturally carries over into the rest of life, even when the practitioner is not engaged in yoga.
Yoga has proven extremely valuable and helpful in fighting and overcoming cancer. There is no doubt that yoga improves quality of life during cancer treatment, even in terminal cancers such as mesothelioma. In some cases, it can even raise mesothelioma life expectancy. In addition to promoting healing, it can also minimize the stress and side effects of chemo and radiation. A gentle yoga practice during cancer treatment helps the body to process and alleviate toxins more efficiently, improves circulation, lowers pain levels and also reduces anxiety and depression.
A recent article on the ABC news website referenced a study funded by the National Cancer Institute's Office of Cancer Complementary and Alternative Medicine. They reported that yoga dramatically helped to reduce the side effects of cancer treatments in patients, particularly insomnia and fatigue. From the article:
"Sleep disturbances and fatigue are an enormously burdensome problem among cancer survivors... In the trial, 410 patients who had completed cancer therapy were split into two groups: one that participated in a four-week-long, twice-weekly yoga program, and one that did not. Compared to how they felt beforehand, the survivors who participated in the yoga program afterward reported improvements in sleep quality and fatigue. Yoga participants also used less sleep medication than they did before the program, while non-yoga participants actually increased their use of sleep medication. Patients were enthusiastic about the classes, and 86 percent attended more than half the sessions."
Thank you Jillian for this post. Nemaste Sighle
Friday, August 12, 2011
Quackometer
Since I was diagnosed last September with breast cancer I have been inundated with well meaning people, often people I hardly know telling me " to eat this "and "try this form of treatment" - it cured my friend!
It was difficult enough to come to terms with a medical route to recovery without hearing so many other voices of "try this instead".
At one point, while I was feeling delighted to be completing Chemotherapy, someone (who was selling a treatment ) told me that " Chemotherapy and Radiation doesn't work " but I needed this other treatment if I wanted to be well.
I am aware of the fact that the medical route doesn't cure, or even help everyone. Each individual will experience a unique journey with cancer. I know that there are many who have found their way back to health with a change of diet, and complimentary treatments instead of conventional treatments.
However, I get angry about food supplements, and treatments that make all sorts of statements, and can suggest a cure for cancer when often there is no research to back up these claims.
I've always enjoyed a healthy diet, and over the years have explored many wonderful healing arts. Yoga has however remained my first love.
Now, when someone suggests I try this or that I go on the Internet to see and check out a site on quackery! So far... it has saved me a fortune!
Please do let me know if you have experienced pressure of this kind, or whatever views you may have about the post.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)