ASHEVILLE, N.C. (828newsNOW) — February is American Heart Month and a great reminder to check in on your physical heart, your stress levels and your overall well-being.

Many people think of yoga as stretching or relaxation, but the truth is that a consistent yoga practice can be one of the most supportive things you can do for your cardiovascular health, your nervous system and your emotional resilience.

1. Yoga supports your cardiovascular health

Yoga isn’t just slow movement. Many styles of yoga, especially dynamic flows and strength-based formats, safely elevate your heart rate, improve circulation and build endurance over time.

Regular movement helps:

  • strengthen the heart muscle
  • improve blood flow
  • support healthy blood pressure
  • increase overall stamina

Even slower practices contribute by improving mobility, breathing efficiency and recovery, all essential pieces of long-term heart health. A healthy heart isn’t built from intensity alone. It’s built from consistency.

(Courtesy: YogaSix Asheville)

2. Stress is one of the biggest hidden risks to heart health

One of the most powerful things yoga does isn’t visible from the outside. It teaches your body how to regulate stress. When we live in constant go-go-go mode, the nervous system stays activated in fight-or-flight. Over time, this can impact sleep, blood pressure, inflammation, digestion and heart health.

Yoga combines movement, breath and focus in a way that signals the body it’s safe to come back to balance. This shift into the parasympathetic “rest and recover” state is where real healing happens.

3. Different types of yoga support your heart in different ways

One of the biggest benefits of a well-rounded yoga practice is variety. Your heart and body respond best when you experience different types of movement and recovery.
More dynamic, strength-focused classes help build endurance and metabolic health.

Slower flow classes help regulate breath and circulation. Restorative practices help the nervous system reset and reduce chronic stress load. The magic isn’t choosing just one, it’s allowing your body to experience the full spectrum.

(Courtesy: YogaSix Asheville)

4. The emotional heart matters too

Physical health is only part of the picture. Connection, routine and community play a major role in overall wellness.

Studies consistently show that social connection and stress reduction contribute to better long-term health outcomes. Showing up for yourself, moving your body and sharing space with others doing the same creates something powerful. It’s not just about the workout. It’s about feeling supported, grounded and stronger in everyday life.

A simple reminder this February

Taking care of your heart doesn’t require extreme resolutions or perfect routines.

It starts with small, steady choices:

  • moving your body
  • breathing deeply
  • giving yourself time to reset

Your heart, physically and emotionally, benefits from every single one of those moments.