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The Lived Experience of a Yoga Practice ‘Off the Mat’: Key Qualitative Findings from a New Zealand Study of Yoga Practitioners

aut.relation.issue1
aut.relation.journalAmerican Journal of Qualitative Research
aut.relation.volume8
dc.contributor.authorReynolds, Wendy L
dc.contributor.authorPreez, Elizabeth du
dc.contributor.authorHarris, Nigel K
dc.date.accessioned2024-02-07T23:16:01Z
dc.date.available2024-02-07T23:16:01Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.description.abstractThis study explored the influence of yoga on practitioners’ lives ‘off the mat’ through a phenomenological lens. Central to the study was the lived experience of yoga in a purposive sample of self-identified New Zealand practitioners (n=38; 89.5% female; aged 18 to 65 years; 60.5% aged 36 to 55 years). The study’s aim was to explore whether habitual yoga practitioners experience any pro-health downstream effects of their practice ‘off the mat’ via their lived experience of yoga. A qualitative mixed methodology was applied via a phenomenological lens that explicitly acknowledged the researcher’s own experience of the research topic. Qualitative methods comprised an open-ended online survey for all participants (n=38), followed by in-depth semi-structured interviews (n=8) on a randomized subset. Quantitative methods included online outcome measures (health habits, self-efficacy, interoceptive awareness, and physical activity), practice component data (tenure, dose, yoga styles, yoga teacher status, meditation frequency), and socio-demographics. This paper highlights the qualitative findings emerging from participant narratives. Reported benefits of practice included the provision of a filter through which to engage with life and the experience of self-regulation and mindfulness ‘off the mat’. Practitioners experienced yoga as a self-sustaining positive resource via self-regulation guided by an embodied awareness. The key narrative to emerge was an attunement to embodiment through movement. Embodied movement can elicit self-regulatory pathways that support health behavior.
dc.identifier.citationAmerican Journal of Qualitative Research, ISSN: 2576-2141 (Print); 2576-2141 (Online), Modestum Ltd, 8(1). doi: 10.29333/ajqr/14089
dc.identifier.doi10.29333/ajqr/14089
dc.identifier.issn2576-2141
dc.identifier.issn2576-2141
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10292/17206
dc.publisherModestum Ltd
dc.relation.urihttps://www.ajqr.org/article/the-lived-experience-of-a-yoga-practice-off-the-mat-key-qualitative-findings-from-a-new-zealand-14089
dc.rightsThe journal publishes all work under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0). All articles in the journal are open-access and may be freely downloaded and shared in their original version for any non-commercial purpose, provided that the journal is properly credited. Whenever possible, shared versions should directly link to the journal (ideally by the link to the digital object identifier [doi]). Authors retain unrestricted copyright and publishing rights to their articles. Authors grant the Publisher (Center for Ethnic and Cultural Studies) a license to publish the article and identify itself as the original publisher. Authors also grant any third party the right to use or reuse the article freely as long as its original authors and citation details are identified.
dc.rights.accessrightsOpenAccess
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subject3504 Commercial Services
dc.subject42 Health Sciences
dc.subject35 Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services
dc.titleThe Lived Experience of a Yoga Practice ‘Off the Mat’: Key Qualitative Findings from a New Zealand Study of Yoga Practitioners
dc.typeJournal Article
pubs.elements-id537328

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