WASHINGTON
By HAYA PANJWANIAssociated Press
Chair yoga adapts traditional yoga for older adults and those with physical limitations. As older adults embrace active lifestyles, chair yoga has surged in popularity. Developed in 1982 by Lakshmi Voelker, chair yoga modifies poses for use in a chair, making yoga more accessible. Chair yoga benefits older people, especially women prone to osteoporosis, by improving flexibility, strength and balance. Chair yoga also helps manage arthritis and osteoporosis pain. Chair yoga offers relaxation and stress management benefits through breathing and mindfulness. In an episode of โThe Story Behind the AP Storyโ podcast, AP Lifestyles Writer Leanne Italie explains chair yoga’s origins and how it works.
WASHINGTON (AP) โ Chair yoga modifies traditional yoga poses to suit older adults and those with physical limitations. But as AP Lifestyles Writer Leanne Italie explains, that doesnโt mean itโs any less of a workout. As older adults embrace active lifestyles, chair yoga has surged in popularity.
In this episode of โThe Story Behind the AP Story,โ Italie explains the origins of chair yoga, its benefits and how it works.
Haya Panjwani, host: Hi, Iโm Haya Panjwani, and Iโm the host of โThe Story Behind the AP Story.โ Today weโre joined by Leanne Italie, a lifestyles reporter for The Associated Press. Hi, Leanne. How are you doing?
Leanne Italie, AP lifestyles reporter: I'm great. How are you?
PANJWANI: Iโm great. Thank you for asking. Today weโre going to talk about chair yoga. What is it?
ITALIE: Yeah, sure, so chair yoga has a really sort of interesting and important history. Traditional yoga done on the floor on mats is over 5,000 years old, but chair yoga is a relatively new offshoot.
In 1982, a yoga instructor named Lakshmi Voelker noticed that a student of hers in a traditional yoga class who was in her 30s and suffered from arthritis was having trouble getting down on the floor. So, Voelker decided to adapt some poses for use in a chair. And she has since sort of become the guru of chair yoga, and she has written, since co-written a book about it.
Chair yoga has really gone a long way in boosting the accessibility of yoga itself to many age groups, including older people and people who have physical limitations.
PANJWANI: Are there any communities that benefit from chair yoga in particular?
ITALIE: Absolutely. I mean, chair yoga is great for anybody who wants a gentle workout, but itโs not easy, and there are many, many benefits. So, obviously, it has a lot to offer older people, particularly older women who are prone to osteoporosis, and itโs a gentle and safe way to improve your flexibility, your strength and your balance. It helps minimize the risk of falls and fractures.
Thereโs not a body part that it really doesnโt help. It helps the spine, the hips, the legs, all engaged. It also helps your core, helps you strengthen your core and your back, and it can help manage stiffness and pain associated with a lot of conditions, including arthritis and osteoporosis. Itโs not difficult to adapt traditional yoga poses for a chair, which I found kind of surprising, because, you know, yoga looks so daunting sometimes, and there are so many โ thereโs a spiritual aspect to yoga that a lot of people donโt realize, you know, in the West. You know, in addition to all the physical benefits, you know, there are relaxation benefits thereโs, you know, stress management benefits, like from the breathing and the mindfulness aspect of yoga. So, all of that can be adapted to a chair as well.
PANJWANI: How is chair yoga linked to better well-being or fall prevention?
ITALIE: Yeah, I mean, while thereโs a lot of research on regular traditional yoga, there is some research that breaks out chair yoga in particular. One study from 2012 found that 15 minutes of chair yoga significantly improves physical and psychological markers for stress. And then another study in the April 2023 journal Healthcare indicates that chair yoga went a long way to counter knee osteoarthritis in women 65 and older. There are other benefits, too, like for instance, office workers who spend a lot of time hunched over screens can just do chair yoga right there in their chair at their desks, and that can really improve posture.
PANJWANI: Your story talks about the divide between men and women who do yoga. Why is that?
ITALIE: I find this really, really interesting, and in the story that we did on chair yoga, we asked some longtime yoga participants, practitioners, what they thought — some women in their 70s and their 80s whoโve been doing yoga for 40, 50 years, why are there not more men in your classes? And they said, well, thereโs no one definitive answer here, and thereโs no way to avoid a massive generalization on who men are as a group. But, you know, so you do get different answers depending on who you ask. But, data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention do show that women are more than twice as likely as men to practice yoga.
You know, ancient yoga over the many thousands of years was exclusively reserved for men. And then it became popular in Western culture in the 1960s and โ70s as part of sort of the hippie counterculture movement and the New Age movement. And marketing started to skew to women in the โ80s and โ90s. And that sort of was an outgrowth of the growing fitness industry in the West and the rise of workouts like on VHS tapes and DVDs that people could do at home.
PANJWANI: Thank you for listening to โThe Story Behind the AP Story.โ To listen to previous episodes, visit apnews.com.