Practice of the Month
Garbhasanskar workshop guides expecting mothers on the path of conscious motherhood 
The Garbhasanskar Workshop, organised by iPregatips in collaboration with AYG Academy, an Associate Centre of the Indian Yoga Association (IYA), was held on 10 December 2025 at 6:00 pm. The session welcomed expecting mothers into a warm, nurturing, and insightful learning environment focused on conscious...
Shiv Darshan Yoga Vidyalaya conducts Maruthi Maha Yajna for World Peace 
Shiv Darshan Yoga Vidyalaya, an Associate Centre of the Indian Yoga Association (IYA), organised a sacred Maruthi Maha Yajna for World Peace, conducted with deep reverence by Swami Gambhirananda. The event witnessed heartfelt participation from devotees who gathered in large numbers to invoke peace, harmony,...
Easy Yoga Studioz touches lives through community wellness initiatives 
Easy Yoga Studioz, an Associate Centre of IYA, collaborated with the Lions Club to conduct wellness programmes for senior citizens, hospital staff, and children from boys’ and girls’ orphanages. Over two days, tailored sessions were conducted for different age groups, with over 200 participants benefiting...
CYE conducts skill training programme on Yoga and Health Management 
The Centre for Yoga Education (CYE), an Associate Centre of IYA, organised a Two-Day Skill Training Programme on Yoga Skills and Health Management under RUSA 2.0 at Alagappa University, Karaikudi, on 23–24 October 2025.The programme commenced with a welcome address by Prof. S. Saroja, followed...
YogAI 2025 explores the Interface of Yogic Science and Artificial Intelligence at WCSC 
Vethathiri Maharishi College of Yoga Research Centre, a unit of the World Community Service Centre (WCSC) which is a Member Institute of IYA, organised its first International Conference – “Yogic Science through Artificial Intelligence (YogAI 2025)” on 13–14 December 2025. The conference was preceded by...
Yogis Trust hosts three-day Yoga and Meditation camp in Courtallam 
Yogis Trust, an Associate Centre of IYA, organised a three-day Yoga and Meditation Camp from 12–14 December 2025 at the serene premises of Ramakrishna Ashram, Aintharuvi, Courtallam, Tenkasi District, Tamil Nadu. Participants from various regions across Tamil Nadu attended the camp with keen interest. Each...
Students experience the spirit of Karma Yoga through seva at Chiranjiv Foundation 
Students of Chiranjiv Foundation, an Associate Centre of IYA, enthusiastically participated in a Karma Yoga Practical Activity on 7 December 2025, gaining firsthand experience of Nishkama Karma—selfless action performed with devotion and responsibility. The students engaged in meaningful activities such as: Gardening and soil preparationPlantation...
Gramin Upkar Sansthan promotes Surya Namaskar among youth in Ranchi 
Gramin Upkar Sansthan, Ranchi, an Associate Centre of the Indian Yoga Association (IYA), successfully organised Surya Namaskar yoga sessions on Sunday, 14 December 2025, at Vaishnave Prabhat Shakha, Gayatri Nagar, Pirra, Kathitand, Ranchi, Jharkhand. The session was conducted under the guidance of Shri Ajay Dubey,...
Rajasthan SCC hosts Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar 
On the auspicious occasion of the Jaipur visit of Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar ji, Chairman of the Indian Yoga Association, the Rajasthan State Chapter Committee of the Indian Yoga Association extended a warm and heartfelt welcome to him. Being in the divine presence of...
Krish Yoga Vidhyaalaya hosts 3-Day transformative workshop 
Krish Yoga Vidhyaalaya, an Associate Centre of the Indian Yoga Association, successfully organised a transformative three-day yoga workshop in collaboration with Puvidham Rural Development Trust in Dharmapuri. The first day, held on 10th October 2025 at the Krish Yoga Vidhyaalaya campus, focused on an immersive...



Book your PRINT copies

[wpforms id=”2536″ title=”false” description=”false”]
14 Jan 2026

Blog

CYCLE PROGRAM – Yoga Therapy for Holistic Rehabilitation by Prof. Dr. R. Elangovan
CYCLE - Continuous Yoga Chikitsa Learning and Education, Yoga Events & Activities

CYCLE PROGRAM – Yoga Therapy for Holistic Rehabilitation by Prof. Dr. R. Elangovan 

A brief Report by Yogasadhaka Nilachal

Introduction
The CYCLE (Continuous Yoga Chikitsa Learning and Education) program continues to bring together experts who share new insights in yoga therapy and healing.

In this session, Prof. Dr. R. Elangovan offered a fresh and practical look at rehabilitation through yoga showing how it can go beyond physical recovery to restore total well-being. He emphasized that true healing means rebuilding balance in body, mind, and spirit, making yoga therapy a complete system for modern health and rehabilitation.

He emphasized that rehabilitation is not about returning to normal, but about restoring balance and wholeness in body, mind, and spirit. His message was simple yet profound:

“Yoga therapy helps rebuild life, not just muscles or movement.”

Prof. Dr. R. Elangovan ji is one of India’s most respected figures in yoga education and therapy. A teacher, researcher, and institution builder, he has dedicated over four decades to advancing the academic and therapeutic dimensions of yoga.

Currently serving as an Executive Council Member of the Indian Yoga Association (IYA) and Secretary of its Tamil Nadu Chapter, he has been instrumental in bringing yoga therapy into universities, hospitals, and public health systems.
He was the first Professor of Yoga under the Government of Tamil Nadu, has guided more than 50 PhD scholars, and authored seven influential books. Dr. Elangovan highlighted how yoga’s ancient framework aligns with modern physiology, especially in addressing the growing burden of chronic, lifestyle, and psychosomatic disorders.

New Dimensions in Yoga Rehabilitation

  1. From Therapy to Rehabilitation Science
    He proposed that yoga therapy should no longer be viewed merely as supportive care but as a core system of rehabilitation, capable of addressing neuromuscular, emotional, and cognitive dysfunctions.

“Rehabilitation is not recovery, it’s renewal,” he said, describing yoga as a process of retraining both body and consciousness.

  1. Updated Diagnostic Perspective
    For the first time in a CYCLE lecture, the traditional Darśana, Sparśana, Praśna, and Nāḍī Parīkṣā model was discussed as a structured diagnostic framework, blending yogic intuition with clinical precision.
  2. Personalized Practice through Brahmana–Langhana–Samana
    He revisited the classical trio: Brahmana (nourishing), Langhana (reducing), and Samana (balancing) linking them to modern metabolic states. This framework offers yoga therapists a scientific method to design personalized sessions based on energy balance and recovery goals.
  3. Diet as an Extension of Therapy
    Emphasizing the therapeutic value of nutrition, Dr. Elangovan ji connected sattvic dietary principles with current nutritional science, noting how anti-inflammatory foods accelerate tissue repair and mental clarity.

“When your diet is light, your mind becomes bright,” he said, reminding practitioners that what you eat is as important as what you practice.

Scientific Foundation of Yoga Therapy

“Yoga is surgery without instruments.”

Dr. Elangovan ji presented data showing how yoga influences the body at molecular and neurological levels:

Improves gene regulation and immune response
Balances neurotransmitters like serotonin and dopamine
Enhances neuroplasticity and cellular longevity
Regulates hormones and circadian rhythms

He explained that consistent yogic practice “tunes” the nervous and endocrine systems — restoring stability in mood, metabolism, and immunity.

Yoga Therapy Meets Modern Medicine
“Tomorrow’s therapy rooms will look like yoga halls: peaceful, mindful, and alive.”
Dr. Elangovan ji discussed how the next wave of yoga research will move toward Yoga Therapy 2.0, integrating traditional techniques with emerging technologies like:

AI-assisted health tracking
Virtual Reality (VR) meditation
Biofeedback-based emotional regulation
Integrative models recognized by WHO and AYUSH

He predicted that in the near future, yoga therapy centers will collaborate directly with hospitals as complementary rehabilitation hubs, combining asana, breathwork, and counseling with mainstream medical care.

Key Takeaways for Practitioners

Think rehabilitation, not just treatment. Yoga therapy is a long-term journey of rebuilding vitality.
Diagnose holistically. Observe, touch, listen, and sense, not just measure.
Match practice to need. Use Brahmana, Langhana, and Samana principles intelligently.
Integrate diet and lifestyle. Food and sleep are therapy too.
Measure and document results. Bring credibility through evidence-based practice.

Conclusion

“The world already believes in yoga. Now it’s time for India to prove it scientifically.”

Dr. Elangovan ji urged young yoga professionals to become both practitioners and researchers, saying that the future of yoga therapy depends on data, documentation, and disciplined compassion. He stressed that while India gave yoga to the world, it must now lead in scientific validation and global implementation.

Prof. Dr. R. Elangovan’s insights connected ancient therapeutic logic with modern physiological understanding, giving yoga therapists a clearer, evidence-based framework for personalized healing.

His message was both practical and profound: rehabilitation is not about returning to what was lost but awakening what remains. As yoga therapy continues to evolve, his work reminds us that balance, awareness, and compassion remain its true medicine.

Related posts

Leave a Reply

Required fields are marked *