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 Home > Opinion > Story

Published - Wednesday, July 09, 2008

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GRAY MATTER: Yoga in Olympicsmight be a stretch

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While I was at work early Sunday morning, I was listening to Sporting News Radio on WKTY. It was about 6 o’clock when I heard a report of a new sport lobbying to be added to the Olympics by 2020. I thought this one might be too big of a stretch to make it, but the sport, if you will, is competitive yoga.

When I first heard the words “competitive yoga,” I pinched myself to see if I was awake. After all, it was 6 in the morning. I’m not usually awake at that hour. I was hoping I was in a sleep-deprived trance, meditating on the virtues of bringing back the Yugo — remember those little cars?

Alas, I was not dreaming. “What a crazy idea,” I thought. How can yoga be a sport that can produce quantifiable results and be popular enough for people to want to be world-class yoga participants?

Why not make dodgeball the next Olympic sport? What about golf and restrict it to amateurs? Then the rest of the world could compete for a gold medal beside Tiger Woods. How about an Olympic competition that features contestants doing the limbo on rollerskates? That would be fun to watch.

Later when I got home, I realized I heard the report correctly after Googling it. There really is a movement to bring competitive yoga to the Olympic Games. I clicked on an article that appeared in the Washington Post in January about a 31-year-old physician named Sonja Wyche. She represented the Washington, D.C., area in the Bikram yoga championships in Los Angeles.

National Public Radio also had a report air last Friday on their All Things Considered segment. April Baer of Oregon Public Radio reported on the rising trend of competitive yoga within Bikram yoga, a more intense version. However, she found that other yoga practitioners aren’t so keen on the idea of yoga as a competitive sport, saying competitive yoga misses the point that yoga is supposed to be relaxing.

But what would comprise a yoga competition? Apparently, the competitors, or practitioners, would contort themselves into seven positions — five standard positions and two freestyle positions. They would be judged in roughly the same manner as figure skaters in style, grace and beauty. Elements of strength and balance would also play large factors in a judge’s scoring decision.

I’m sure the argument will continue among non-practitioners and practitioners of yoga alike as to whether yoga is or should be a competitive sport. My mind is still trying to balance how it can be a sport, let alone one that should be included in the Olympics.

As for competitive yoga being a part of the Olympic Games, the International Olympic Committee will have to meditate on that.

Columnist Tim Gray, a West Salem resident, can be reached at tim.gray.matter@gmail.com.
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Swami Jnaneshvara Bharati wrote on Aug 2, 2008 12:37 AM:

" YOGA IS A SPORT?
Video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btN8jxcoOT8

Millions of people practice Yoga. Yoga is now the fastest growing sport in America according to Yoga Journal magazine. They say that over 10 million people practice Yoga.

Sport? Yoga is a sport? No. Yoga is no mere sport. Yoga means "union." It is the joy of union of the individual self with the Self of All. It is pure consciousness, Purusha, which is complete unto itself. It is the union of Atman, the Self, and Brahman, the Absolute Reality. It is the union of Shakti, the feminine essence with Shiva, the masculine essence.

Yoga deals with relationships, senses, body, breath, mind and the union beyond. Yoga is complete. It is whole. It is integration. It is the highest bliss. Yoga is like the wave knowing it is not separate from the ocean. Yoga is divine union. It is not mere sport. Yoga is the path. Yoga is the goal.

Modern Yoga Versus Traditional Yoga:
http://www.swamij.com/traditional-yoga.htm "

Tiger Beaudoin wrote on Jul 6, 2008 5:53 PM:

" People may laugh, but until you've tried Bikram Yoga, they may not realize that it's more strenuous and requires more concentration than some Olympic sports - there's an interesting perspective from a leading Bikram Yoga teacher:
http://www.bikramfinder.com/profiles/blog/show?id=2113492%3ABlogPost%3A662 "


The comments above are from readers. In no way do they represent the views of the Coulee News.

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