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6 Reasons Yoga’s Great for Guys
By Denis Faye
All right, gentlemen—how often have you been in this situation? It’s Thursday afternoon and you got off work a little early. It’s been a stressful week and you could use a good sweat. You try to get a few friends together for some hoops, but no luck, so you pop in a P90X® workout.

Which one do you pick? I’m betting most of you went for Shoulders & Arms or Chest & Back. A couple of you iconoclasts might have slid Plyometrics into the DVD player. But odds are none of you picked Yoga X. And why not? Well, despite the fact that Yoga X features Tony Horton, the most manly of all manly men, and despite the fact that it’s a gruelingly difficult 90 minutes, when presented with this ancient practice, most men choose to listen to their inner caveman and come to the same conclusion: Yoga is for girls.
And that’s just sad, because the truth is that yoga probably has more to offer the typical brute-force-lovin’, emotion-repressin’, stretch-avoidin’, pain-ignorin’ American male than it does to any other human being on the planet. Here’s why . . .
Women dig guys who do yoga
If you’ve seen the Mel Gibson film What Women Want, you know that the first thing Mel does when he gets the power to read women’s minds is hit the yoga studio. Yoga has its own language, and if you speak that language fluently, you’re in. Next time you’re at a party and you overhear three babes talking about their yoga preferences, slide in with, “Normally, I prefer hatha, but sometimes I do a little kundalini, you know, just to take off the edge.” You just got yourself three dates. I guarantee it.
Yoga works your stabilizer muscles
Basically, we have two kinds of muscles, big ones that move you around and smaller ones that keep the big ones from moving the wrong way and injuring you. These smaller ones are called stabilizer muscles. They aren’t as sexy to look at as your pecs, your abs, or your biceps, but they’re just as important. While yoga may not necessarily give you huge guns, it’ll strengthen the stabilizer muscles that’ll make sure you don’t injure yourself while you’re doing the heavy lifting to earn yourself those guns.
You can do yoga whenever
Most physical activities call for certain conditions. Basketball requires other players. Surfing requires waves. Skiing requires snow. Lifting requires 48 hours between workouts. Yoga, however, only requires a little free space and some comfortable clothing. That’s it. It’s the ideal filler exercise when you don’t have the personnel, environment, materials, or time you need to do something else.
Yoga promotes body awareness
One of the main things new yoga practitioners, both men and women, complain about is the fact that yoga is booooo-ring. When you first start, this may be true, but if you stick with it, things’ll change. With other activities, you’re forced to pay attention to what’s happening around you. With yoga, the trick is to stop looking for those external stimuli and start looking internally. I’m not talking about the whole hippie spiritual thing; I’m talking about feeling how your body is reacting to the poses. This increased body awareness can translate to a more intuitive ability to improve in other physical pursuits, as well as a heightened awareness of what’s happening internally when you incur a sports-related injury. With a little time, you might even be able to work toward lessening the effect of such damage before it even has a chance to happen.
Yoga builds your stamina
If you own the P90X ONE on ONE® yoga DVD Fountain of Youth, you’re probably familiar with one particularly painful sequence in which Tony appears to forget he is in chair pose as he gabs away with Mason for what seems like hours. As they chat, you’re forced to wince, swear, and do your best to breathe into the pain. I hate Tony at that point, yet I love him in the long run for helping build my stamina. For me, stamina lessons learned with yoga make the paddle out to the lineup so much easier when I’m surfing. It has similar benefits across almost all other sports. “Basketball is an endurance sport, and you have to learn to control your breath,” explains legendary player Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. “That’s the essence of yoga too.”
Yoga increases focus
This combination of body awareness and stamina reap a third benefit: increased concentration. This is especially useful for you athletes out there, given that concentration is the ultimate guard against smack talk. Basketballers, golfers, and soccer players alike love to drop the occasional well-placed put-down in the middle of that crucial shot. Try mastering the Warrior III pose, which requires you to extend both hands and one foot while balancing on the other foot flawlessly for 60 seconds. The Zen state you achieve doing that will help ensure that those pithy little playing-field put-downs bounce right off you.
Now that you’ve learned more about yoga, you may be concerned because the whole it-makes-you-more-manly-and-attractive thing seems like it’s being diluted by the whole sensitive-self-aware-lover-boy thing—which may not be quite what you were shooting for when you started up with P90X in the first place. But the truth is, yoga can be as tough, demanding, and punishing as any other physical activity out there. It’s a win-win. So unroll that mat and pretzel up. As Tony Horton once said to me, “You coming to yoga with us, dude? You know you need it.”
When participating in a yoga practice, poses can be grouped into approximately 11 series, each having a personality or purpose in gaining perspective, breath, movement, and awareness!! So, in following Baron Baptiste, he suggests these in an order:
1. Integration Series: Presence
2. Sun Salutes: Awakening
3. Warrior Series: Vitality
4. Balance Series: Equanimity
5. Triangle Series: Grouding
6. Backbending Series: Igniting
7. Abdominal Series: Stability
8. Inversion Series: Rejuvenation
9. HIp Series: Opening
10. Forward Bending series: Release
11. Surrender to Gravity Series: Deep Rest
This is simply wonderful!! I have separated these series myself, before knowing of Baron’s insights and can wholeheartedly agree his description of what is occurring is absolutely correct!! Do these in a sequential order and you will find a new light and energy in your body as you dissolve the many walls!!
Namaste!
Many days I wake up stiff and tight and wonder what I might feel like if started doing some strnuouys poses, like backbends and then I begin my practice and forget I’m 56 years old. I feel younger and inevitably the power of my praactice takes over and I feel ageless!!
As I get older, I have to be careful of the tricks my mind can play on me and for good reason must be careful. But the more yoga I do as I age, the more I listen to my body and offer what it might be asking for. So the practice becomes more integrated, much stronger and balanced. I try never to take my bofdy for granted as it has been through many things like trauma, injury, illness, and normal every day living!
One thing that comes with age is gratitude and less judgement. The enjoyment of fluid poses that take my body where it is needing to go and to rid myself of self-criticism and narrow-mindedness. I really do experience more contentment. THings will roll off my back better and in ways it didn’t before. Plus, I start looking at things from a different point of view.
Yoga helps us go through a process of change. Hopefully change with grace and ease. But mostly, not, it is challenging and awakens your intellect to your weaknesses that exist. But because of the understanding and nurturing that comes with your practice you are able to relax into the challenge and savor when it is good. It is just a good ride on a beautiful wave!! As we come to accept that the less stressful we will feel and much more relaxed.
The key, Practice! The other key, Patience!! It may not be effortless yet, but in time, it will be!!
Many Blessings all!