
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Where is western medicine part of the problem with stress and preventable disease
Can anyone actually promise practices that will increase longevity or how long you live? And if not, should we just do whatever we want and not worry about doing yoga or our taking care of our health?
Are there any paradoxes that you have discovered in working on the ideas of Yoga for Healthy Aging? (e.g. that restorative practices can actually assist in weight loss!)
Should yoga students just wait until they start to feel "old" or develop an age-related chronic illness such as high blood pressure before they start to learn these specific techniques?
And what do we do with the reality that we will all age, we will all suffer some period of ill health and eventually die? Does yoga offer us any ways to address this with an even mind and spirit?
I rap with Baxter Bell about healthy aging:
What you’ll get out of tuning in:
Links:
Show Highlights:
Favorite Quotes:
BIO:
Baxter Bell, MD, C-IAYT, eRYT500
Cofounder of the Yoga for Healthy Aging blog and co-author with Nina Zolotow of the upcoming book "Yoga for Healthy Aging", Baxter is a medical doctor and medical acupuncturist, as well as a certified yoga teacher and yoga therapist. Baxter practiced as a family physician from 1989 to 2000. Then, in 2001, he completed the 18-month, 680-hour Advanced Studies Program at Piedmont Yoga Studio in Oakland, California, with Richard Rosen, Rodney Yee, Mary Paffard, and Patricia Sullivan. In 2000, he completed his 300-hour medical acupuncture training. In 2017, he was certified as a yoga therapist by the International Association of Yoga Therapists.
Based in Oakland, California, Baxter was director of the Deep Yoga Teacher Training at Piedmont Yoga Studio for seven years and is currently serving as an adjunct faculty member on teacher training programs and therapeutic yoga trainings around the country. He teaches locally in the San Francisco Bay Area, offering regular yoga classes to the general public as well as specialty classes for those with back pain and adults with disabilities, and teaches workshops and retreats worldwide with an emphasis on yoga for healthy aging and how yoga can be used therapeutically to improve health and well-being. He also combines his experience as a family physician with his training in medical acupuncture in his complementary medical practice in Oakland, where he focuses on acupuncture and therapeutic yoga. He is featured in the Yoga Journal: Yoga for Stress DVD as well as on the Practice Channel at YogaUOnline.com. To find out more about Baxter or to contact him, visit www.baxterbell.com, and to view his instructional videos (including for many of the poses in his upcoming book) visit his YouTube channel “Baxter Bell Yoga.”
Where is western medicine part of the problem with stress and preventable disease
Can anyone actually promise practices that will increase longevity or how long you live? And if not, should we just do whatever we want and not worry about doing yoga or our taking care of our health?
Are there any paradoxes that you have discovered in working on the ideas of Yoga for Healthy Aging? (e.g. that restorative practices can actually assist in weight loss!)
Should yoga students just wait until they start to feel "old" or develop an age-related chronic illness such as high blood pressure before they start to learn these specific techniques?
And what do we do with the reality that we will all age, we will all suffer some period of ill health and eventually die? Does yoga offer us any ways to address this with an even mind and spirit?
I rap with Baxter Bell about healthy aging:
What you’ll get out of tuning in:
Links:
Show Highlights:
Favorite Quotes:
BIO:
Baxter Bell, MD, C-IAYT, eRYT500
Cofounder of the Yoga for Healthy Aging blog and co-author with Nina Zolotow of the upcoming book "Yoga for Healthy Aging", Baxter is a medical doctor and medical acupuncturist, as well as a certified yoga teacher and yoga therapist. Baxter practiced as a family physician from 1989 to 2000. Then, in 2001, he completed the 18-month, 680-hour Advanced Studies Program at Piedmont Yoga Studio in Oakland, California, with Richard Rosen, Rodney Yee, Mary Paffard, and Patricia Sullivan. In 2000, he completed his 300-hour medical acupuncture training. In 2017, he was certified as a yoga therapist by the International Association of Yoga Therapists.
Based in Oakland, California, Baxter was director of the Deep Yoga Teacher Training at Piedmont Yoga Studio for seven years and is currently serving as an adjunct faculty member on teacher training programs and therapeutic yoga trainings around the country. He teaches locally in the San Francisco Bay Area, offering regular yoga classes to the general public as well as specialty classes for those with back pain and adults with disabilities, and teaches workshops and retreats worldwide with an emphasis on yoga for healthy aging and how yoga can be used therapeutically to improve health and well-being. He also combines his experience as a family physician with his training in medical acupuncture in his complementary medical practice in Oakland, where he focuses on acupuncture and therapeutic yoga. He is featured in the Yoga Journal: Yoga for Stress DVD as well as on the Practice Channel at YogaUOnline.com. To find out more about Baxter or to contact him, visit www.baxterbell.com, and to view his instructional videos (including for many of the poses in his upcoming book) visit his YouTube channel “Baxter Bell Yoga.”