Why Should Pet Owners Practice Yoga (Doga) with their dogs?
First
of all, it’s fun! There is nothing
better than sharing calm, gentle moments with your dog, it reinforces the pack
bond and encourages us to be present in the moment guided by our dogs, who live
there all the time.
A little know statistic released in 2009 by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggests that, on average, an estimated 86,629 Americans receive emergency room treatment each year for fall-related injuries associated with a pet dog or cat. Emergency room doctors said fall-related injuries can also occur outside the home, specifically while owners are walking their dogs.
Idaho-based
veterinarian Marty Becker said that he, too, has seen the ravages of
pet-related fall in his practice. While most of his patients are dogs and cats
who have sustained fractures from being tripped over or stepped upon, they are
often accompanied by owners who are nursing their own injuries from the
encounter.
So, What better
way to improve balance and awareness of our environment than a regular yoga
practice?
Doga combines massage and meditation with gentle stretching for dogs
and their human partners. Dogs are not manipulated into poses, they are
encouraged to join in with their own method of interaction and benefit from the
relaxing massage techniques. Humans do traditional yoga poses – yes,
including “downward facing dog” – while staying in contact physically with
their pets.
Doga
enthusiasts argue that the practice emphasizes yoga's focus on union between
beings, helps establish a pack mentality, strengthens the bond between owner
and pet. Doga can also provide a great
source of entertainment for class participants.
By the
end of a Doga class, canine participants may be passed out on their mats next
to their relaxed human, in a position their instructor calls the “upward facing
belly pose.
In a
recent class at Cobber’s Pet Pantry in Enunclaw, WA, Doga Instructor, Maryellen
Elcock, noted “there are not many places you can walk into
a room and see nine humans on their backs in final relaxation pose with nine
dogs at their side in the same state of mind, it is magic. Only in moments of
complete relaxation that we can heal at all levels so I consider this a healing
practice for dogs and their human companions.”