The Impact of Emotions on our Health
The impact of emotions on our health cannot be underestimated. Emotions play a vital role and have a huge impact on how we feel, on our zest for life, and in creating the internal situations that can lead to health or disease. The health of the mind and the body are inextricably interlinked with one affecting the other and vice versa.
All forms of energy within the body have an emotional association whether it be a healthy, positive manifestation or one that is negative and distorted. It can be helpful to look at the Chakra system to see how positive or negative energy can affect the body.
Ayurvedic medicine embraces the philosophy that disease has a psychic foundation. Illness starts in the mental field, and so it’s important to maintain a high level of ethical standards and integrity in one’s life in order to prevent disease.
So what is an emotion? The definition is a strong feeling deriving from one’s circumstances, mood, or relationships with others. Feelings arise as an energetic balance to the events in our lives.
We all go through ups and downs, experiencing a wide range of emotions throughout our lifetime. However, if the emotions experienced are either long-lasting or very intense then they can become causes of disease within the body.
Emotional associations of the organs
There are 7 main emotions and excess of any of them can impact on the organs of the body.
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Anger – affects the Liver and gallbladder.
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Joy – affects the Heart
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Sadness or grief – affects the Lungs and Heart and large intestine
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Worry – affects the Lungs and Spleen and large intestine
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Pensiveness – affects the Spleen and stomach
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Fear – affects the Kidneys and gallbladder
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Shock – affects the Heart
Meridians and the organs
In the context of Yin Yoga, when we look at the meridians that are most directly affected by the practice we start to see the how, by activating and stimulating the specific meridians, we are able to balance the emotional body.
YIN MERIDIANS
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Spleen – helps balance worry, over thinking/creativity, fairness, openness, self-esteem
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Liver – helps balance anger/kindness, compassion
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Kidney – helps balance fear, paranoia/ courage, willpower, wisdom
YANG MERIDIANS
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Stomach – helps balance anxiety, worry / fairness, openness, creativity
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Gall bladder – indecision, timidity/ decisiveness, courage, initiative
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Urinary bladder – inflexibility, fearfulness/ hopeful, calm, peaceful
The body remembers
All that happens within the body and mind is stored by the very tissues of the body, whether or not you consciously remember a particular trigger, event, emotion, etc. Emotions such as fear, anger and sorrow produce a contraction within the body on many levels – physically, emotionally, mentally, energetically, and this contraction is also manifested by a restriction of the breath. Our resistance to feeling these negative emotions maintains the energetic contraction and builds up within the body producing energetic scars which we can carry for a lifetime. Unless one consciously undertakes to release this stored up catalogue of our life’s emotions, they remain trapped within the tissues.
How does yoga help to balance the emotions?
When you relate the role of the emotions on the body to the philosophy of yoga (the Sutras of Patanjali), we start to understand that the principal aim of our yoga practice is to control the fluctuations of the mind/emotions. It was clearly understood thousands of years ago that with a calm and stable mental realm, a practitioner would not be disturbed by outside influences. This is achieved through an 8 step path outlined by Patanjali called Ashtanga which includes the following stages:
Yamas – abstinence, restraint or one’s ethical conduct
Niyamas – observances for developing spiritual discipline
Asanas – postures to create a healthy body
Pranayama – learning to control the breath or prana, the vital life force energy
Pratyahara – withdrawing of the senses from outside distractions
Dharana – developing mental focus and concentration
Dhyana – practicing meditation
Samadhi – attaining a higher state of consciousness