
You Wish! by Stefan Dimitrescu
by Nina
I recently saw a post on Facebook with the title “5 Yoga Poses for Longevity.” To be honest, it made me so annoyed that I didn’t even read it—something I’m currently regretting because I’m morbidly curious now about which 5 poses they chose. Instead, I quickly scrolled past it because I wanted to resist the temptation to leave a negative comment.
But it stuck with me, and just thinking about that title still makes me a tiny bit angry. Why? Because I think it really harms yoga to make false claims like this! No matter which 5 poses they did choose, there are absolutely no poses or practices in yoga that can guarantee you’ll have a long lifespan. Full stop. And click bait about yoga that simplifies, misleads, and downright lies is only going to make people distrust yoga’s legitimate benefits, which, of course, are many.
There has been a long history of these kind of false claims from prominent New Age health gurus out there stating that you can “reverse aging,” choose your “biological age,” or “change your relationship with time” with yogic practices, so it kind of triggers me when I see people continuing to promote this yoga snake oil. As someone married to a scientist who worked at an institute for the study of aging and who has also worked with a number of doctors and other scientists, I can tell you that right now that is no proof that there is anything at all out there that can slow aging much less “reverse” it.
But you may now be wondering, if yoga cannot increase your lifespan or slow aging itself, what exactly does the “healthy aging” part of “Yoga for Healthy Aging” actually mean and why have we been writing about it all these years? I addressed this very issue many years ago in my post Yoga for Healthy Aging is Not Science Fiction: A Real-Life Mission Statement.
But I think this topic is worth revisiting, especially in light of the very recent post claiming that there are poses for “longevity.” Briefly, in the post Yoga for Healthy Aging is Not Science Fiction: A Real-Life Mission Statement I defined the concept of “health span.” A health span is the amount of time that is your lifespan minus the amount of time you spend in ill health (often referred to as “morbidity.”).
Lifespan – Morbidity = Health Span
So your health span this is the period in your life during which you are generally healthy and free from serious or chronic illness. I’m sure we all know some people who have had a long health span, either dying suddenly or maybe having only a year or so of ill health near the end of their lives. That’s the ideal, a long health span! But we all also know people who lived for years in a very debilitated state, perhaps in a nursing home. That means they have a shorter health span with many years of suffering and/or loss of independence, which is obviously not what we hope for.
This is where yoga comes in! By using yoga to for physical conditioning, including maintaining strength, flexibility, balance, and agility, and for managing chronic stress, which has a particularly negative affect on health and causes many diseases, we can help keep our bodies as healthy as possible for as long as possible. How to do this with yoga has been one of the main focuses of our blog since the very beginning. See What is Healthy Aging, Anyway? and Opening Your Yoga Toolbox.
But although we have often advised you to practice yoga regularly with the goals of attaining a longer health span and maintaining your independence, we also believe it is important to keep in mind results are never guaranteed.
I’m 71 now, and at my last checkup, my doctor complimented me on my good health, saying that I was taking good care of myself. Well, you know, I am taking good care of myself, and my yoga practice, including meditation as well as asanas, is a big part of that. However, instead of taking full credit for my good health, I said to her:
“Well, I think it is due to three different things: good genes, good self-care, and good luck.”
I said it lightly, but I actually think this is very important to keep in mind. After all, if someone has a gene that causes them to experience ill health for a number of years, for example, my sister-in-law has a gene that causes polycystic kidney disease, no amount of self-care with yoga or anything else can fix an incurable disease. My sister-in-law does take very good care of herself—she was a nurse—but her disease is progressing and she’ll soon need to go on dialysis. And I’m also serious about the luck issue. I wrote a post Bad Luck and Cancer several years ago that says scientists do blame “bad luck” for some cancers and explains how things can just go wrong in our bodies due to random mutations. Yes, sometimes bad things like cancer and other diseases just do happen. (My doctor did agree with my statement, by the way.)
So here at Yoga for Healthy Aging we have always recommended that at the same time that you work toward staying healthy by using the tools in your yoga toolbox you should try to let go of all thoughts of success or failure and simply focus on your practice. This is the basic yogic attitude that is conveyed in the classic yoga text the Bhagavad Gita.
Self-possessed, resolute, act
Without any thoughts of results,
Open to success or failure.
This equanimity is yoga. —Stephen Mitchell
Taking this approach means that even while you are actively engaged in working toward your goals of lengthening your health span and maintaining your independence—or any other goals you set for yourself—you also practice acceptance of your life in the real world as it unfolds. Cultivating equanimity through a combination of active engagement and acceptance is what provides you with lifelong wellbeing, as you navigate through all the stages of your life.
For me, maintaining emotional stability as we age is the most important aspect of healthy aging. For even if we manage to have a long health span, we will certainly have to go through poor health at some point. And even if we can prolong our independence into old age, we may eventually have to face the loss of that, however briefly. In addition, even if we are ourselves blessed with long and healthy lives, we’ll all have to deal with losing people we love. So being able to handle the challenges ahead with balance and grace is crucial. But I also believe that this is where yoga has its greatest strength. Stress management practices help reduce stress, anxiety, and depression. And meditation, yoga philosophy, and yogic tools for working with our thoughts can help us keep grounded and strong. At least that is my fervent hope.
You can read more about these topics in Chapter 1 of the book Yoga for Healthy Aging: A Guide to Lifelong Well-Being.
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Nina,
Thank you for this post and your thoughts. Most of my students are 50-80 and I love and respect each one of them. We talk about aging gracefully but I think you have captured it so well. There is so much out there now (books, vitamins, exercises etc.) all trying to combat aging meanwhile it’s another chapter in the journey of life.
I love all of your posts!
Thank you and Namaste,
Sharon
Thanks, Sharon! I’m so glad you liked this article and that you like our posts in general. Thanks for taking the time to comment!
You make good points here. However, I would hope the article itself would have qualified this a bit, something about how yoga might *help* us to live a long and healthy life.
I think some might view the title “Yoga for Healthy Aging” differently – does yoga guarantee that we will be healthy as we grow older? Of course not – as you said, it’s part good self-care, but also good genes and good luck too. I think we as yoga teachers can minimize false claims, but we as consumers also have some responsibility to look further than the surface.
I’m very confused by your comment that the article should have included something about how yoga might help us to live a long and healthy life because I really thought I had included the right amount of information about that for this particular blog post (which is focused and short). The topic of how yoga can help us live and long and healthy life is so large we wrote a whole book about it! In this post, I did make a few general suggestions of how yoga can help (physical conditioning, stress management) and provided some links to where to get more general information on how yoga can help on the blog. I also provided a link to where you can purchase the book. For those who cannot afford the book, almost all the information in the book is on the blog for free and you only have to use the Search function on the blog to look up any topics of special interest, including topics like blood pressure, brain health, heart health, respiratory health, sleep, pain management, anxiety, depression, etc. along with the basic tenets of healthy aging: strength, flexibility, balance, agility, stress management, and, most important of all, equanimity. You can also learn about what happens as we age by searching on the topic of “aging.” We’ve been writing for 12 years about yoga for healthy aging so there is a ton of information here. Take the time to explore, please.
Fantastic article, Nina. Great perspective and wise points.
Thanks also for the reminder about “health span” –the amount of time that is your lifespan minus the amount of time you spend in ill health (often referred to as “morbidity.”)
and this simple and easy-t0 remember equation: Lifespan – Morbidity = Health Span
It’s also important to remember that if and when we do get ill, yoga helps us have more acceptance and self-compassion for our bodies, and that contributes greatly to mental health and well-being.
—Leza Lowitz
Nina, True Dat!!! – – – as we say in slang to emphasize a totally+ true statement.