
Accessible yoga is a form of modernyoga as exercise with adaptedasanas designed to be suitable for people who are unable to follow a standard yoga class through age, illness, or disability. It includes various forms of what has been calledChair Yoga, and has also been described asadaptive yoga.
Yoga, originally ameditational spiritual practice in India, was transformed in the 20th century into an exercise practice. It was thenmarketed across the Western world with the image of a young, slim, fit female body, possibly suggesting that it was not suitable for other groups of people. Since 1979, efforts have been made by multiple yoga teachers to make yoga more accessible to people unable to participate in traditional yoga classes throughaging, injury, ordisability. There is evidence that yoga offers small to moderate benefits on a range of measures in an older adult population.

Yoga is an ancientmeditational spiritual practice from India. Its goal, the isolation of the self orkaivalya, was replaced by the modern goals of good health, reduced stress, and physical flexibility.[3] In the early 20th century, it was transformed through Western influences and a process of innovation in India to becomean exercise practice.[4] Around the 1960s, modern yoga was transformed further by three global changes: Westerners were able to travel to India, and Indians were able to migrate to the West; people in the West became disillusioned with organisedreligion, and started to look for alternatives; and yoga became an uncontroversial form of exercise suitable formass consumption.[5]
The image ofyoga marketed in the Western world is of a young, slim, fitfemale body, implying full health and physical ability.[1][6] Rosalie Murphy, writing inThe Atlantic, comments that the image wrongly suggests that yoga is suitable for wealthy, white women from the upper classes of society, and possibly less suitable for other groups of people.[2]
"Easy Does It Yoga", created by Alice Christensen of the American Yoga Association in 1979, uses exerciseswith a variety of props: in chairs, on the floor, or on beds, and in later editions also in swimming pools.[7][8] "Chair Yoga" was created by the yoga teacher Lakshmi Voelker (given her first name byMuktananda, the founder ofSiddha Yoga) in 1982, on seeing that one of her pupils, aged only in her thirties, was unable to do floor poses because ofarthritis. Accordingly, she developed an approach which could be practised sitting on a chair, or standing using a chair for support.[9][10][11]
Since 2000, articles inYoga Journal have made increasing mention of disability, but by 2019 the accompanying images did not reflect this, and the mentions were mainly of early-stage limitations of mobility.[12]The different varieties of Chair Yoga are now considered to be forms of accessible yoga.[13] These include the approaches of yoga teachers interested in making yoga more accessible, such as Howard Kent's 1985Yoga for the Disabled[14] and Susan Ward's 2002Yoga for the Young at Heart.[15] Jivana Heyman, who had started to teach yoga to people with disabilities in 1995, developed ayoga teacher training program for his students in 2007, calling it "Accessible Yoga".[13][16] Other forms or descriptions of accessible yoga include adaptive yoga,[17] intended foruse as therapy in conditions such asmultiple sclerosis.[18] Since 2010, other yoga teachers have written books about making yoga accessible to everyone.[19][20][21]
Accessible yoga poses are adaptations of ordinary yogaasanas. For example, the Cat/Cow pair, alternating betweenBidalasana and Bitilasana, is normally performed kneeling on the floor, with the back horizontal. Its accessible variant is performed sitting on the front edge of a chair, with the back vertical.[22] Standing poses such asVirabhadrasana II (Warrior II),Parshvakonasana (Side Angle) and Viparita Virabhadrasana (Reverse Warrior) can be performed straddling a chair.[23][24]

Accessible yoga with its adaptedasanas is designed to be suitable for students who are unable to participate in a traditional yoga class because ofaging, injury ordisability.[22] The claimed benefits include deepened flexibility, increased range of motion, and increased body awareness.[25] Sessions may include yoga postures,yoga breathing techniques,meditation, and relaxation methods, with suitable supports.[26] A form of accessible yoga has been developed inWales for adults with learning disabilities.[27] Accessible yoga programs have further been proposed for pregnant young women, who have often been excluded from yoga-based interventionsfor pregnant adult women.[28]
The physician and yoga teacher Baxter Bell notes that yoga includespranayama andmeditation as well as asanas, so that some form of yoga is accessible to everyone. This, Bell writes, is glossed over in recommendations for people with disabilities and limitations when yoga is equated with asana practice.[29]
A 2019systematic review by Divya Sivaramakrishnan and colleagues evaluated yoga, including three studies of Chair Yoga, as an intervention for "physical function andhealth related quality of life in an older adult population not recruited on the basis of any specific disease or condition". It found that yoga provided "small to moderate benefits in balance, lower body flexibility, lower limb strength,depression, perceived mental health, perceived physical health, sleep quality, and vitality" compared toinactive practices. Yoga was also significantly better than other active practices for lower body strength and flexibility, and for depression.[30]
"You can look at all those journals and you'll not see one woman of color," said Raja Michelle, herself a white woman, who founded the studio. "We associate yoga with being skinny, white, and even upper class."
There also exist general "adaptive" or "accessible" yoga classes, which are suitable for persons with a broad range of disabilities.See alsoEisenberg 2015.
This sequence fromMindful Chair Yoga Deck by Jennifer Cohen Harper and Mayuri Gonzales can be done from almost anywhere and is appropriate for kids and adults.