Yoga for children: simple exercises and helpful tips

Woman with child doing yoga exercises

Sun salutations and the like are a great way to relax and take a little time out. And what works so reliably for adults works just as well for the little ones! Children's yoga is now offered in many cities, but can also be practiced at home. Read this article to find out how you can switch off with yoga exercises, why yoga has nothing but benefits from a young age and what else there is to know about yoga for children.

Children's Yoga: What is it?

The goal is the same for both yoga for adults and yoga for children: the exercises should help to relax and improve body awareness. In practice, however, there are some things that are very special about yoga for children.

  • The instructions: You don't know much about spiritual terms and abstract concepts. In yoga, it is therefore all the more important that you recognize the meaning behind the exercise. You should know what you can achieve with individual poses.
  • The specific situation: You experience many moods in one day. Yoga should be flexible enough to accommodate this. If you have excess energy, quick movements are wonderful. However, if you are sad or exhausted, some gentle exercises will help you to calm down.
  • The encouragement: Adults know that sometimes individual poses just don't work that well. However, children then become easily frustrated, which is why it is all the more important to praise you. Overall, the message must always be conveyed: This is not a competition.

What the little ones can learn from yoga

Yoga also has a long-term effect on children that should not be underestimated. Introducing them to the practices at a young age has some advantages for their development.

Yoga for children is good for their development
Yoga in a group is especially great for children. It increases their social skills and teaches them that it's not about competition. © Africa Studio - stock.adobe.com
  • Stress is relieved. A child's everyday life can be stressful. Children first have to learn how to deal with it and get a good balance with yoga exercises. With playful asanas, smaller children discover what the body can actually do. Somewhat older children learn in the exercises, for example, which posture makes sitting for long periods at school more comfortable.
  • The thinking ability benefits. When yoga exercises are performed regularly, concentration increases. The child notices that he or she is getting more done and goes through everyday life more confidently. As a positive side effect, motor skills, strength and endurance as well as body balance are promoted.
  • Social competence increases. Especially when doing yoga in a group with other children, every single little yogi learns that it is not about competition. You have a shared positive experience, but you don't have to constantly measure yourself against others. In this way, mindfulness is promoted at a young age and a healthy self-image is strengthened.
  • Coping strategies are learned. Calm breathing alone, which is central to many (children's) yoga exercises, can help the child deal with anxiety and other distressing feelings.

How yoga works with children

Children's yoga is usually oriented towards classical hatha yoga. This teaching includes, for example, the sun salutation as an introduction, followed by statically held postures, the asanas, and a relaxation phase.

Since children tend to be impatient, it makes little sense to drag out the individual phases. An appropriate yoga session with children aged 5 to 10 could therefore be structured as follows:

  • Initial short relaxation and simple breathing exercises where the children can calm down and adjust to the practice
  • The sun salutation in a few repetitions to make sure the children are warmed up
  • Various child-friendly asanas in which the children learn to assess their bodies
  • A short final phase of deep relaxation, for example in the form of a fantasy journey - after all, smaller children in particular usually see little point in lying still for minutes on end.

Of course, a meditation phase can follow at the end, but sitting still is difficult for many children. Meditation therefore makes more sense if the child is actually interested in it because, for example, it has already observed its parents meditating at home.

Exercises for children's yoga

Basically, children can do everything that adults can do, because they are more flexible and enjoy finding out their limits. The priority is always whether the child feels comfortable.

  • The tree: The child stands straight with both feet on the mat. Now he puts one foot on top of the other. Both knees are very slightly bent. As soon as it is standing securely, the child raises its arms above its head and places its palms together. After a few calm breaths the side is changed.
  • The cobra: The child lies on its stomach with the palms of the hands on the mat under the shoulders. Now the child lifts the chest and stretches the arms as far as is comfortable and stays in this position for a few seconds. Particularly eager little cobras can of course hiss to their heart's content while doing this!
The tree is the perfect beginner exercise for children. © fizkes - stock.adobe.com

The range of yoga for children is just as wide as for the adult version. Children also benefit greatly psychologically when they can playfully test out their bodies and train to find balance at an early age. As long as there is no pressure and the child enjoys the yoga sessions, children's yoga is wonderful for a balanced development.


Cover photo: © Svetlana Fedoseeva - stock.adobe.com

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