Center of balance

The Rev. Julie Poore aims to help people achieve personal goals during her yoga classes

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OST photo by AMY HANSEN The Rev. Julie Poore, left, and Elisabeth Reynoldson perform the "tree" yoga pose during Poore's yoga class at Feb. 28 at Osceola United Methodist Church.

"It makes me take time to relax and breathe and forget about the craziness of the day," she said.

Reynoldson has been coming to the yoga class for six months. Her favorite pose is the back-bending "up dog" pose.

Best of your ability

During Poore's classes, she makes it known each pose is about strengthening each person's own body and limits, and not worrying about how much more other people in the class can bend or stretch.

By doing this, Poore helps ensure people know yoga is something that all ages can do.

"That's really important to me," she said. "That's part of how I was taught, too, … because it's really about listening to your own body, and it's about listening to your mind and taking your body where you can go. And, I really and strongly believe that anybody can do yoga. We all have to find that way to do it."

Each person working to the best of his or her abilities is one of the reasons Poore has her yoga chair class. She said even if people aren't able to get down on the floor, there are other things that can done in the chair or standing with the chair.

"It's really exciting to me to hear people say, just in the short time that we've been doing it, the changes they see for themselves," Poore said. "Some people are sleeping better. Some people don't have as many headaches, or they're just feeling better in general."

She added, not everybody can do everything. The goal is to figure out what your body can do, and challenge yourself without injuring yourself.

Benefits

Yoga does have health benefits, Poore said. She said people have found they sleep better and there are studies of yoga reducing stress and blood pressure, as well as strengthening the body, digestive system and sense of balance.

As for the poses Poore likes the most, she said "triangle," which stretches the legs and spine, and "tree," which is balancing on one foot.

"When I get it, to have that feeling of just really being centered," Poore said. "I feel very like a tree. I feel very rooted, but I feel very tall and just kind of that whole line of balance. And, that's part of what this is, not just prayer position, it's about the connection of your left and your right side of the body and balance."

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