Namaste All Day: Kids Yoga

By now, weโ€™re all pretty familiar about the perks of yoga. It promotes our overall health and well-being, reduces stress, and helps us โ€œfind our center.โ€ The practice has been trending in the past decade and schools have even implemented it to help guide childrenโ€™s focus and self-regulation.

Research has shown positive outcomes from regular yoga practice, including:

  • Increased attention, decreased hyperactivity, and faster task completion in 5-year-olds who completed yoga 2x/week
  • Mental and emotional benefits in children ages 5-18 years, including decreased anxiety, boosted concentration and memory, improved confidence and self-esteem, and improved academic performance
  • Brain scans revealing reduced activation of the amygdala (the part of the brain responsible for emotions and arousal levels) in 6th graders
  • Improvements in attention as well as decreased oppositional behaviors, restlessness, and impulsivity following 20 sessions of yoga with boys diagnosed with ADHD
  • Improvements in imitation and play with peers in children with ASD following 10 months of yoga 5 days/week

Sounds good on paper, but yoga with kids can be intimidating. โ€œAm I doing this right? Can kids even do these poses?โ€

Itโ€™s not just a bunch of poses and breathing. Although that notion is partially true, thereโ€™s more to it. The goal of yoga is to grow self-awareness, connecting the mind and the body to the present moment. Itโ€™s because of this broadness that makes participation in its practice easy.

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Beginner In-Sync Activities

Of course it’s *NSYNC. We’re Millennials…

The girls came down with some long-lasting fevers and coughs this past week, so weโ€™re finally coming around to our In-Sync activities. Itโ€™s hard to get your kids moving, when all they want to do is sleep it off on the couch. But now weโ€™re up and running and trying something new.

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Child(ish) Reads: Growing an In-Sync Child

Since April was National #OTMonth, I wanted to switch gears from our usual parenting library. So for this edition of Child(ish) Reads, I bring you โ€œPatti reads an OT bookโ€.

I asked Mary for a few title recommendations on occupational therapy concepts that could help the everyday parent understand child development, and I landed on:

Growing an In-Sync Child: Simple, Fun Activities to Help Every Child Develop, Learn, and Grow
by Carol Kranowitz and Joye Newman

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