Broga yoga for men - more
macho, less mantra
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[April 27, 2015] By
Dorene Internicola
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Men who crave the
benefits of yoga but recoil at sharing the experience with a room full
of women are turning to Broga, a rugged take on the 3,000-year-old
practice of movement and breath.
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Broga celebrates the physical over the spiritual, and strength over
flexibility. Experts say it sets men free to flex tight hamstrings
without hearing invocations to Hindu deities or feeling inept next
to a woman twisted like a pretzel.
“I consider myself an athletic guy, but have never been flexible and
didn’t like the thought of embarrassing myself in front of a group
of women," said financial analyst Eric Wright, 22, of San Jose,
California.
Wright and his male colleagues use the video streaming service
Grokker to practice.
“On Wednesdays we have a standing Broga appointment and anywhere
from five to eight others will join me,” he said.
Grokker founder and C.E.O. Lorna Borenstein said more men are adding
yoga to their exercise routines as a cross-training tool for
flexibility and improving recovery time.
“Men are a little late to the party,” she said, “but we’re seeing
more men in the workplace who find time to do yoga together a few
times a week."
Yoga instructor Robert Sidoti, based in Martha’s Vineyard,
Massachusetts, is the creator and co-founder of the trademarked
Broga Yoga, which so far has trained some 200 Broga instructors in
at least 22 states.
Sidoti taught his first Broga class in 2009.
“A lot of guys were saying 'I can’t touch my knees, let alone my
toes. I would never go to a mostly women class and do things I’m no
good at,'” said Sidoti, whose sequences are designed with men’s
bodies in mind.
“We rarely go into poses that require deep forward bending, twisting
and binding,” he said, adding a High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT)
sequence is included.
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Broga talk is also anatomically driven.
“It’s not so much about feeling your heart center as feeling the
stretch across your chest,” Sidoti explained.
Jessica Matthews, senior adviser for health and fitness education at
the American Council on Exercise, said most men tend to view yoga as
a workout rather than a spiritual practice.
“They celebrate the physical,” said Matthews, who is also a yoga
teacher.
Wright said Broga has improved his hamstring flexibility.
“Four months ago I couldn’t touch my toes and today I can almost
reach my palms to the ground,” he said.
(Editing by Patricia Reaney and Gunna Dickson)
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