Got a Few Minutes
Ina Mirx is 68, looks 35, and can do things with her body
that a 16-year-old farm hand can't do, but she wasn't always
fit-as-a-fiddle.
At the age of 30, while pregnant, she was forced to jump
from the third story of a burning hotel. She landed on
concrete, fractured her spine and pelvis, broke several ribs --
and lost her child.
Over the next 10 years Marx tried nearly every kind of
regimen to rescue herself from this state. Nothing worked, and
she eventually reached such desperation that she attempted
suicide, twice. Then she discovered yoga -- her salvation.
With new confidence and a new lease on life, she began
teaching yoga and has also written two books, ''Yoga and Common
Sense'' and ''Fitness for the Unfit.''
With her special yoga program, she combines the physical
aspects of Hatha Yoga with Raja Yoga, the meditative side.
Her method is specially designed to reach out to all those
who have been left in the dust of the high-energy, high-impact
state of modern fitness programs, and those who need to relax
and unwind in a short amount of time to relieve a lot of stress
quickly.
What's more, the best thing about Marx's form of yoga is
that a few stretches a day, for a few minutes a day -- at home
or in the office -- can lead couch potatoes and grouches to a
very bright light at the end of the tunnel.
Ina Mirx is 68, looks 35, and can do things with her body
that a 16-year-old farm hand can't do, but she wasn't always
fit-as-a-fiddle.
At the age of 30, while pregnant, she was forced to jump
from the third story of a burning hotel. She landed on
concrete, fractured her spine and pelvis, broke several ribs --
and lost her child.
Over the next 10 years Marx tried nearly every kind of
regimen to rescue herself from this state. Nothing worked, and
she eventually reached such desperation that she attempted
suicide, twice. Then she discovered yoga -- her salvation.
With new confidence and a new lease on life, she began
teaching yoga and has also written two books, ''Yoga and Common
Sense'' and ''Fitness for the Unfit.''
With her special yoga program, she combines the physical
aspects of Hatha Yoga with Raja Yoga, the meditative side.
Her method is specially designed to reach out to all those
who have been left in the dust of the high-energy, high-impact
state of modern fitness programs, and those who need to relax
and unwind in a short amount of time to relieve a lot of stress
quickly.
What's more, the best thing about Marx's form of yoga is
that a few stretches a day, for a few minutes a day -- at home
or in the office -- can lead couch potatoes and grouches to a
very bright light at the end of the tunnel.
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