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Home Opinion Ideas

Yoga For Healthy Aging

Dr Aftab Jan by Dr Aftab Jan
June 24, 2026
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Parenting, Early Rising & Schooling In Kashmir
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Aging today is no longer just a biological process. It is being accelerated by lifestyle. If you observe the present generation closely, you will see that decline has started much earlier than before. It is not always visible in wrinkles, but it is clearly evident in weak posture, low energy, a poor attention span, disturbed sleep, and emotional instability. This shift is not accidental. It is the direct result of a life that is constantly over-stimulated but internally disconnected. The body is inactive while the mind is overworked. People sit for hours looking at screens but rarely sit in silence with themselves.
This imbalance is creating a generation that is aging faster from the inside. Continuous exposure to stress, artificial light, social comparison, and digital noise keeps the nervous system in a constant state of alert. This increases cortisol levels, disrupts hormonal balance, and weakens the body’s natural repair mechanisms. Over time, this leads to early fatigue, anxiety, poor immunity, and chronic disorders that were once associated with much older age.
This is where yoga stands in sharp contrast. It acts not as a trend, but as a correction to this entire pattern of living. Yoga does not just add activity; it removes excess. It reduces the overload that modern life imposes on the mind and body. It trains a person to slow down deliberately, to breathe consciously, and to move with awareness. This alone begins to reverse many of the silent damages building inside young individuals today.
Disrupted Routines vs. Natural Rhythms: If you compare daily routines, the difference becomes even clearer. A typical young person today wakes up and immediately checks their phone, flooding the brain with information before it has even stabilized. They spend most of the day sitting, consume food without awareness—often processed and irregular—and end the day with screens. This screen time suppresses melatonin and delays sleep. This cycle repeats daily, gradually damaging circadian rhythms, digestion, and mental clarity.
Conversely, yoga introduces a completely different rhythm. It begins the day with stillness instead of stimulation, and with breath instead of noise. This simple shift has measurable effects. Morning yoga and pranayama regulate cortisol levels, improve oxygen delivery, and set a stable tone for the nervous system. When practiced consistently, it restores natural sleep cycles, improves digestion, and enhances focus. The body begins to function in alignment with its biological design rather than against it. This alignment is the foundation of healthy aging, something the current generation is losing due to the constant disruption of natural patterns.
The Mental, Emotional Gap: The mental state of today’s generation also reflects this imbalance. There is increased restlessness, comparison, and dissatisfaction. This is largely driven by social media, where people measure their worth against unrealistic standards. This creates a constant sense of inadequacy, which turns into chronic stress and emotional exhaustion. Over time, this affects brain structure and function, reducing attention span, memory strength, and emotional control. This is why even young individuals today report burnout, a phenomenon that was rare in earlier generations.
Yoga directly addresses this by training attention and awareness. When you hold a posture, focus on breath, or sit in meditation, you are strengthening neural pathways related to concentration and emotional regulation. Research shows that such practices increase gray matter in key areas of the brain, improving memory and reducing anxiety. This is not temporary relief; it is structural improvement. That is why yoga practitioners often maintain mental clarity even in older age, while many in the current generation struggle with distraction and mental fatigue in their youth.

“As the modern generation accelerates outwardly but weakens internally, yoga’s slower, root-level approach corrects the destructive patterns driving premature aging. Consequently, its relevance is rising as more people realize external progress cannot substitute for the inner balance essential to long-term health.”

Emotionally, the gap is equally deep. Modern life encourages reaction, quick responses, and constant expression, but very little reflection. This leads to accumulated emotional tension, unresolved anger, and persistent dissatisfaction. These feelings quietly impact physical health through increased inflammation and weakened immunity.
Yoga introduces a pause. It creates a space between stimulus and response, where a person observes rather than reacts. This small shift has powerful consequences. It reduces impulsive behavior, improves relationships, and builds emotional resilience. Over the years, this resilience protects against the emotional wear and tear that often defines aging. A calm mind places less stress on the body, and a stable emotional state supports long-term health.
Physical Longevity, Inner Balance: Physically, the difference becomes visible over time. Today’s generation, despite having access to gyms and fitness information, often suffers from stiffness, back pain, and poor mobility due to prolonged sitting and a lack of functional movement. Meanwhile, yoga focuses on flexibility, balance, and joint health, which are areas critical for aging well. Muscle strength alone does not prevent decline; mobility and stability do. Simple asanas practiced regularly maintain spinal health, improve circulation, and prevent degeneration. This allows a person to remain active and independent even in later years. This is a key marker of healthy aging that many modern fitness routines fail to address.
What makes this comparison more serious is that the current generation does not lack knowledge. Instead, it lacks discipline and direction. People know what is healthy, but they are trapped in patterns that are convenient but damaging. Yoga breaks this cycle by demanding consistency over intensity, awareness over speed, and inward focus over external validation. This is why it remains sustainable. It does not depend on motivation alone; it builds habit. Habit is what ultimately shapes long-term health outcomes.
Yoga, as an ancient Indian system, offers something that modern life has taken away: internal balance. This balance is not achieved through occasional effort. It is built daily through small, consistent practices that align body, mind, and emotions. When this alignment is maintained, aging changes its meaning. It is no longer a process of decline, but a process of stability and refinement. The body remains functional, the mind remains clear, and emotions remain steady.
In a time where the present generation is moving faster but weakening internally, yoga provides a path that is slower but far more effective. It works at the root, correcting the very patterns that are accelerating aging today. This is why its relevance is not decreasing; it is increasing. More people are beginning to realize that without inner balance, no amount of external progress can protect long-term health.
(The author a teacher by profession is a freelancer. The views, opinions and conclusions expressed in this article are those of the author and aren’t necessarily in accord with the views of “Kashmir Horizon”)
[email protected]

Dr Aftab Jan

Dr Aftab Jan

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The publication of “Kashmir Horizon” as an English daily was started with a modest attempt on May 19, 2008.It has been a Himalayan attempt for “The Kashmir Horizon” to survive the challenges posed to journalism in the violence fraught place like Jammu & Kashmir.

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