From:harpersbazaar.com
Excuses, excuses. There are as many reasons to skip a workout as there are ways to get your sweat on. And while sometimes they are of the logistical sort (It's too snowy to get to the gym!), and some are the physical kind (I'm injured!), many times they are purely in your head and have everything to do with the mood you're in.
So says Rupa Mehta, founder of the popular Nalini Method fitness studio in New York City. A combination of Pilates, barre, and strength training moves, Mehta has identified the seven most common moods that people encounter and how to tailor your workout to actually dovetail with these emotions! "The goal is to tap into what you're feeling," says Mehta. "Not avoid them. Once you isolate what you are feeling you can channel it into something useful and positive."
Mehta's new book, The Nalini Method: 7 Workouts for 7 Moods is a step-by-step fitness guide through seven different workouts for these seven discrete moods. Yes, she's come up with seven ways to workout— each one tailored to the specific baggage you're carrying with you as you slip into your leggings.
Not even sure what your mood is? No problem. Mehta makes it fairly easy to pinpoint what you're feeling—with a checklist of emotions and examples of common thoughts for each mood—and gives you a succinct mantra for each 20 to 30-move workout, with one move flowing, yoga-like, into another.
Fun fact: Mehta didn't make up these mantras based solely on her own life's wisdom: each one is based on a life lesson repeated many times over the years by her parents, Nalini and Pinak.
ANGER
This routine taps into all that adrenaline already coursing through your system, helping you harness it into a fast-moving, challenging workout that's super-efficient. After all, when you're mad you need an outlet and you don't want to waste a second of time, says Mehta.
Mantra: "The solution is born before the problem."
What you'll do: Energized moves including jumping jacks, jump squats, lunges, and push-ups.
ENERGY
Use your energy wisely, writes Mehta, by finding the balance between letting go and holding on. Relish a vibrant, active workout.
Mantra: "Let go. Live Love."
What you'll do: Revved up stuff including burpees, planks, bent-knee push-ups, and crunches.
STRESS
When you're tied in knots with too much too do, try moves that will help you "turn off your mind chatter and your repetitive, debilitating thoughts," says Mehta. The centering and meditative nature of this workout will help lighten some of the weight (figurative weight; emotional stress weight) that you're carrying around. Using a wall for support gives both literal and figurative support when you need it most.
Mantra: "Shut up. Sit. Smile."
What you'll do: Centering exercises including wall squats, wall planks, wall L-stands, and downward dogs at the…you guessed it…wall.
CHILL
Mehta designed this routine's flow to tap into your blissed-out state of mind, so you can enjoy just being in the moment. This is a relaxed and loving routine you might find yourself easing into after a long day at the beach or at even the day after a fabulous party, when you're still a teeny bit hung-over.
Mantra: "Love yourself dearly. Be yourself completely. Treat yourself occasionally."
What you'll do: Flow through moves including standing meditations, sun salutations, chair poses, seated twists, lying spinal twists, and happy baby.
HAPPINESS
Given that happiness often makes you feel light and buoyant, this workout capitalizes on those feelings to heighten your sense of reaching for the sky.
Mantra: "Thank you."
What you'll do: Standing marches, clap squats, boxing jabs, knee raise jogs, plank Spidermans, triceps dips, twisting bicycle abs and "knee dancing" (harder, but more fun, than it sounds).
DOUBT
On a day tinged with self-doubt, moves that allow you to "slowly build your self-confidence will lift the weight of the world off your shoulders," says Mehta. "By the end of the workout you'll feel your internal and external strength."
Mantra: "No one can take away your happiness."
What you'll do: A slyly progressive series of poses that start slow, with mellow stuff like cat/cow, and then moves like forearm planks, one-legged down dog, lunges, warrior 1 and warrior 2.
ANXIETY
Sometimes the best way to loosen the grip of anxiety is through the distraction of hard, focused work. "Constant motion plus challenging balance poses will keep your mind from dwelling on what's eating at you for a while, so you will end the workout feeling energized, yet calmer and more centered," says Mehta.
Mantra: "Don't magnify success or failure."
What you'll do: Settle in for some intense, muscle burning chair poses—including chair pose squat jumps, chair pose heel raises—plus some wobble-inducing warrior 3 poses, standing splits, and three-legged planks balances.
From:harpersbazaar.com
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