By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Define yoga and its Sanskrit root 'yuj' (to join, to unite)
  • 2List at least five scientifically documented health benefits of yoga
  • 3Describe Sage Patanjali's contribution — systematising yoga in the Yoga Sutras
  • 4Explain the significance of the WHO mYoga app (2021) as global recognition of yoga
  • 5Distinguish yoga from mere exercise: 'the mind has to be with the body'
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Why this chapter matters
Yoga — A Way of Life closes Unit 4 by expanding the definition of 'wellness' beyond competitive sports and outdoor play to a holistic practice that unites body, mind, and spirit. The chapter traces yoga from ancient India through Sage Patanjali's systematisation to the 2021 WHO mYoga app — showing students that a practice born in India millennia ago is now a global health movement. The chapter is unique in Poorvi for its informational/non-fiction format, preparing students for the kind of expository reading they'll encounter in higher classes.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Yoga — A Way of Life — Class 6 English (Poorvi)

"Yoga is a physical, mental, and spiritual practice that originated in ancient India. The word 'Yoga' comes from the Sanskrit root 'yuj', which means 'to join' or 'to unite'."

1. About the Chapter

This closes Unit 4: Sports and Wellness in the Poorvi textbook. It is an informative prose chapter — different from the stories and poems in the unit — that introduces students to yoga as a holistic practice. It covers yoga's origins in ancient India, Sage Patanjali's systematisation, the health benefits of asanas and meditation, and even the WHO's 2021 mYoga app.

Why This Chapter

  • Connects students with Indian cultural heritage
  • Practical health knowledge
  • Informational/non-fiction reading practice
  • Shows how ancient wisdom is being adopted globally

2. Key Content (from NCERT Poorvi Textbook)

What is Yoga?

Yoga is a physical, mental, and spiritual practice that originated in ancient India. The word 'Yoga' comes from the Sanskrit root 'yuj', which means 'to join' or 'to unite'. This symbolises the unity of mind and body; thought and action; harmony between human and nature. It is a holistic approach to health and well-being.

Sage Patanjali

Sage Patanjali presented the ancient tradition of yoga in a systematic way in 'Yoga Sutras of Patanjali'. He described yoga as the means to make the mind quiet and free from all distractions.

Health Benefits of Yoga

BenefitHow It Works
Physical FitnessYoga postures (asanas) stretch and strengthen muscles, increase flexibility, endurance and balance
Pain ReductionCan help reduce body pains such as lower back pain
Stress ReliefBreathing techniques and meditation calm the mind and reduce stress and anxiety
Better SleepRelaxes the mind and improves quality of sleep
Improved ConcentrationMeditation sharpens focus
Stronger ImmunityYoga has been shown to boost the immune system
Heart HealthImproves heart health by lowering blood pressure and improving circulation
Weight ManagementYoga can aid in weight loss by burning calories

Yoga Goes Global

The benefits of practising yoga are internationally recognised. The World Health Organisation (WHO) on 20th June 2021, launched an App called WHO mYoga. The app contains a collection of videos and audio files to teach and support yoga practice. The aim was to have an easy-to-use and free tool for people across the world to encourage them to practise yoga.

The Essence of Practice

"We must remember that when we practice yoga asanas (postures), we do not just stretch the body. The mind has to be with the body. This is the reason why it should be practised without distractions. If each stretch is coordinated with the breath and awareness, our practice will become a yogic practice."


3. Key Concepts

Asanas

Physical postures that stretch and strengthen the body. But they are not just exercises — the MIND must be present with the body.

Pranayama (Breathing)

Breathing techniques that calm the mind, reduce stress, and improve concentration.

Meditation

The practice of quieting the mind — "free from all distractions" as Patanjali described.

Unity (Yuj)

The root meaning of yoga: joining, uniting. Mind with body. Thought with action. Human with nature.


4. Timeline

PeriodDevelopment
Ancient IndiaYoga originates as a spiritual and physical practice
~200 BCE – 400 CESage Patanjali systematises yoga in the "Yoga Sutras"
20th CenturyYoga spreads globally; International Day of Yoga (21 June) established
2021WHO launches mYoga app — free yoga for the world

5. Important Vocabulary

  • HOLISTIC: treating the whole person — body, mind, and spirit — not just symptoms
  • SYSTEMATISED: organised into a clear system
  • DISTRACTIONS: things that take attention away from what you're doing
  • FLEXIBILITY: ability to bend and move easily
  • ENDURANCE: ability to keep going for a long time
  • IMMUNITY: the body's ability to resist disease
  • CIRCULATION: movement of blood through the body
  • COORDINATED: working together smoothly

6. Activities

Activity 1: Comprehension

  1. What does the Sanskrit word 'yuj' mean?
  2. Who was Sage Patanjali?
  3. List four health benefits of yoga.
  4. What is the WHO mYoga app?

Activity 2: Practice

Try one simple asana (like Tadasana — mountain pose, or Balasana — child's pose). Hold it for 30 seconds. Focus on your breath. Notice how your body and mind feel afterwards.

Activity 3: Research

21 June is International Day of Yoga. When was it first celebrated? Who proposed it at the United Nations? Write a short paragraph.

Activity 4: Discussion

The chapter says: "The mind has to be with the body." What does this mean? How is yoga different from just "exercise"?


7. Conclusion

"Yoga — A Way of Life" is a fitting close to Unit 4. After stories about sportsmanship (Change of Heart) and the joy of outdoor play (The Winner), this chapter expands the definition of "wellness" beyond games. Yoga is not a sport you win or lose. It's a practice — a way of uniting mind and body, thought and action.

The chapter also shows students that something born in ancient India is now a global movement. The WHO didn't create mYoga for India alone — it created it for the entire world. That's something to be proud of.

⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Thinking yoga is just stretching or exercise
The chapter explicitly distinguishes yoga from exercise: 'The mind has to be with the body.' Stretching without awareness is just stretching. Yoga requires coordinated breath, awareness, and presence. This is the most important conceptual distinction in the chapter.
WATCH OUT
Confusing Patanjali's dates or contribution
Sage Patanjali is credited with SYSTEMATISING yoga (writing the Yoga Sutras), not inventing it. Yoga existed for centuries before him as an oral tradition. His contribution was organising existing knowledge into a coherent system.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting the WHO mYoga app's significance
The WHO (World Health Organisation) launching a yoga app in 2021 is MAJOR global validation. The UN's health body officially endorsed an ancient Indian practice for worldwide use. This is a point of national pride and likely to appear in exam questions.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Knowledge
List five health benefits of yoga as described in the chapter.
Show solution
✦ Answer: (1) Physical fitness — asanas stretch/strengthen muscles, increase flexibility, endurance, and balance. (2) Pain reduction — can reduce body pains like lower back pain. (3) Stress relief — breathing techniques and meditation calm the mind. (4) Better sleep — relaxes the mind, improves sleep quality. (5) Improved concentration — meditation sharpens focus. (Additional: stronger immunity, heart health, weight management.)
Q2MEDIUM· Values
How is yoga different from ordinary exercise?
Show solution
Step 1 — Exercise primarily trains the BODY: muscles, heart, lungs. Yoga trains body AND mind together. Step 2 — Yoga requires AWARENESS: 'The mind has to be with the body.' In exercise, you can daydream while jogging. In yoga, you must be present. Step 3 — Yoga coordinates breath with movement: 'If each stretch is coordinated with the breath and awareness, our practice will become a yogic practice.' ✦ Answer: Yoga differs from exercise because it unites body and mind through coordinated breath and awareness. Exercise can be done mindlessly; yoga cannot — presence and focus are essential to the practice.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Definition: Yoga = physical, mental, and spiritual practice from ancient India. 'Yuj' = to join, to unite (mind-body, thought-action, human-nature).
  • Patanjali: Systematised yoga in 'Yoga Sutras.' Described yoga as making 'the mind quiet and free from all distractions.'
  • 8 BENEFITS: Physical fitness, pain reduction, stress relief, better sleep, improved concentration, stronger immunity, heart health, weight management.
  • Global recognition: WHO launched mYoga app on 20 June 2021 — free yoga resources for the entire world.
  • Essence: 'The mind has to be with the body.' Yoga is not just stretching — it requires coordinated breath and awareness.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. DISTINGUISH YOGA FROM EXERCISE: This is the most likely conceptual question. Have a clear answer: yoga requires mind-body unity through coordinated breath; exercise can be done without awareness.
  2. QUOTE THE SANSKRIT: Using 'yuj' in your answer ('yoga comes from yuj, meaning to unite') demonstrates precise knowledge.

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

The WHO recognised yoga as a cost-effective, accessible health intervention with proven benefits for both physical and mental health. Unlike many health interventions that require equipment, facilities, or medication, yoga requires almost nothing — just a small space and willingness. In a world facing rising stress, lifestyle diseases, and mental health challenges, yoga offers a low-cost, high-impact solution. The mYoga app makes it accessible to anyone with a phone, anywhere in the world. It's a remarkable validation of an ancient Indian practice by the world's highest health authority.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 June 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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