ANN/CHINA DAILY – Over the summer, a number of mass public yoga events were held across the country where people from all walks of life could be seen exercising not just their bodies but their minds too.
The scenes were an indication of China’s growing number of yoga practitioners drawn to the ancient physical, mental and spiritual practice whose roots stem back to some 5,000 years ago.
According to a report on the yoga industry in China, from 2017 to 2021 the number of yoga studios in the country tripled to 42,000, and it’s estimated that at least several million people in the country practice yoga regularly, while more people occasionally do so, with the most prominent segment being women.
China’s yoga-wear market, dominated by upscale brands such as Lululemon, increased in scale from CNY2.6 billion (USD355.8 million) in 2013 to CNY14.1 billion in 2021, according to a consumption report by Chinese e-commerce retailer JD.
The increase in the number of people who’ve started practicing yoga, in its many forms, over the past few years is closely related to the nation’s Healthy China 2030 initiative first put forward in 2016.
A central mission of the Healthy China 2030 vision is promoting healthy lifestyles and providing better access to healthcare for all.
From 2012 to 2019, the health literacy level among Chinese people increased from 8.8 per cent to 19 per cent, according to the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, and the percentage continues to climb.
For yoga, its ability to be easily practiced in the home has also worked in its favour over the past three years during the pandemic, when people were required to remain at home for extended periods to halt the spread of the virus.
Countless videos and digital classes were available online and provided and ideal healthy activity for the temporarily housebound.
For many who live in big cities and who have busy work schedules, yoga is also an ideal activity as it not only provides physical exercise but also has a focus on mindfulness, something that stressed city workers are drawn to.
In addition to the traditional styles such as Hatha Yoga, Iyengar Yoga and Ashtanga Yoga, modern yoga systems like Rocket Yoga, Yin Yoga and Universal Yoga have emerged and become popular in recent years.
A form of modern yoga called Inside Flow is one popular form, with music, movement and mindfulness among its selling points.
Yoga chain Moksa’s founder Ge Ruhua said when Moksa held its first annual national training event for Inside Flow in Xiamen, Fujian province, in 2018, only about 40 people turned up. But this year, in August alone, mass Inside Flow training events have been held across the country, as well as in other parts of Asia, attracting thousands to take part.
“The recipe of Inside Flow yoga is unique. It’s a mixture of music, yoga movement, breathing and emotions. That’s the reason why it’s addictive,” said its founder Kim Young-ho, a German of Korean descent.
Yoga instructor Christine Cheng said, “Rather than being seen as a form of exercise, it is more like an emotional release.
“Nowadays, people in cities have a fast-paced work life and face a lot of pressure. It’s difficult to relieve this pressure in a short period of exercise alone. However, with the inclusion of these elements, each of my students, despite entering the classroom in a variety of states, leaves feeling very happy. Happiness is universal.
“At practice, I’m not someone’s mother or wife, I’m just myself. I hope that more people can find this feeling of being themselves, and life will be more meaningful,” said the mother of three.
“Life can be hard for us. I sometimes put myself in my students’ shoes – when we enter a yoga studio, what are we looking for? The answer is to be relaxed.”
She said her yoga students come from all walks of life, from college students and businesspeople to stay-at-home moms and retired seniors.
“I remember a man at the age of nearly 60 achieving his first splits during my class.
“What’s really cool about yoga is that it not only relaxes us, but also allows us to explore more possibilities, to challenge and exceed ourselves,” she said.
Li Chunru, 67 and retired in Beijing, said yoga is the most important thing she does in her daily life. She goes to a yoga studio 10 minutes from her home every noon and evening for practice.
“My daughter always says that she wants me to have good health, and recommended yoga as a daily exercise when she left home for university. So I started practicing six years ago,” she said. Li’s physique belies her age and she said has had a clean bill of health on her annual body check for the past few years.
Despite its growing appeal nationwide, the epicentres of China’s yoga movement remain in the mega cities of Shanghai and Beijing, where almost a third of all yoga practitioners in the country are located, according to Dao Insights.
Those taking their places on their yoga mats are relatively well-off, too, with 41 per cent of them having monthly incomes in excess of CNY10,000.
The growth in the popularity of yoga is by no means limited to China, with increasing numbers of new practitioners popping up across the globe.
From a yoga training summit in Shenzhen in May to another summit in Suzhou in August, like many foreign practitioners, Pan Miaoling from Vietnam has followed yoga events to many cities in China.
She said that after exchanging ideas with dedicated instructors in China, she would return to Vietnam with a lot of positive energy and transmit that power in her own classes.
Inside Flow yoga founder Kim has emphasised the harmonious nature of the practice.
“There are always various disputes and competitions in the world, but when young individuals from different countries come together, they genuinely like each other.
“Just like in every international Inside Flow exchange event, people from different countries share and communicate with each other through music, movements and expressions, and we all enjoy this process.” – Yan Dongjie