Monday, May 6, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Yoga and meditation continue to attract attention from B.C. workplaces and institutions

Darpan News Desk, 18 May, 2017 11:48 AM
  • Yoga and meditation continue to attract attention from B.C. workplaces and institutions
From easing the symptoms of breast cancer treatments to coping with stress and anxiety, the number of studies showing the benefits of meditation and yoga are constantly growing and organizations throughout Canada, including B.C., are taking notice.
 
According to the Carleton University’s independent newspaper The Charlatan, several schools across Canada, including Vancouver, have recently implemented mindfulness practices into school or after-school curriculum, some of which are being considered for the replacement of detention periods.
 
Vancouver-based consultants offer businesses the opportunity to implement corporate yoga and meditation specialized programs into the workplace.
 
The Canadian Mental Health Association has a Getting Loud for Mental Health annual campaign that includes holding yoga and meditation classes on site at workplaces.
 
Students of the Isha Foundation’s Inner Engineering Program are not at all surprised that schools, health organizations and workplaces are either implementing programs or at least talking about the benefits yoga and meditation provide.
 
Greater Vancouver resident and electrical and computer engineer Prasad Sristi, who is the analytics business unit vice-president of a U.S. based software services company, is a recipient of Inner Engineering who says the program has changed his life. 
 
Sristi found the meditation taught during Inner Engineering to be the most effective for him as they gave him increased energy, he maintains.  “With my tough travel schedule and having to work with a global team across time zones, I'm very thankful to have this tool that enables me to maintain a sense of calmness in my internal world irrespective of what happens in the outside world,” says Sristi.
  
Classified as one of the world’s most respected and contemporary gurus, Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev, a New York Times bestselling author, advisor to the United Nations and one of India’s 50 most influential people, has offered the program to thousands around the world, who have reported feeling many positive results from the experience.
 
To attend Isha Foundation’s Inner-engineering completion workshop offered at the Vancouver Convention Centre May 27 and 28, register at https://innerengineering.com/ieo/newadmin/forms/megaSham.php
 

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Multiple Sclerosis: Canada’s Invisible Disease

Multiple Sclerosis: Canada’s Invisible Disease
Four months after completing the Vancouver Marathon, Linda McGowan, a Vancouver nurse and mother of two, was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS) in 1983. She was barely 35 at the time. 

Multiple Sclerosis: Canada’s Invisible Disease

Living and Breathing With Asthma

Living and Breathing With Asthma
Asthma is a long-term lung disease marked by breathing difficulties that occur when airways become inflamed and subsequently narrowed or blocked.

Living and Breathing With Asthma

A Playground Workout For Your Inner Child

A Playground Workout For Your Inner Child

Breathe some fresh air into your fitness routine that’s not only free but fun as well &...

A Playground Workout For Your Inner Child

May is National Sunshine Month

May is National Sunshine Month
Research shows increases in sun exposure correlates with positive health outcomes

May is National Sunshine Month

Diabetes is leading cause of non-traumatic lower limb amputations

Diabetes is leading cause of non-traumatic lower limb amputations
Time to act to save limbs and improve lives.

Diabetes is leading cause of non-traumatic lower limb amputations

New study shows higher levels of vitamin D can lower risk of cancer

Published in the journal PLOS ONE and authored by a team from Creighton University, University of California, San Diego and GrassrootsHealth, the research found a 67% reduction in risk for all cancers in women with vitamin D levels > 100 nmol/L (40 ng/ml) compared to womenwith vitamin D levels < 50 nmol/L (20 ng/ml). 

New study shows higher levels of vitamin D can lower risk of cancer