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  7. The 10-Minute Chair Yoga Routine Your Parent Can Start This Week

The 10-Minute Chair Yoga Routine Your Parent Can Start This Week

Article by: Admin

Jun 16, 2026. 13 min read

The 10-Minute Chair Yoga Routine Your Parent Can Start This WeekThe 10-Minute Chair Yoga Routine Your Parent Can Start This Week

For many adults, the hardest part of yoga isn't stretching. It is getting down to the floor and getting back up.

As India prepares to celebrate the 12th International Day of Yoga on June 21, 2026, the Ministry of Ayush has chosen a telling theme: "Yoga for Healthy Ageing". The message is clear. Yoga isn't just for the young, flexible, or physically fit. It's a tool that can help people stay independent, mobile, and confident as they grow older.

The good news? Your parents don't need a yoga mat, special clothing, or an hour-long class to begin. A simple 10-minute chair yoga routine can improve flexibility, balance, circulation, and overall well-being without ever having to sit on the floor.

If you've been looking for a safe, practical way to help your parents stay active, this routine is an easy place to start.

In this article, we'll cover

1.     Why Ministry of Ayush is focusing on Yoga for Older Adults

2.   What Yoga Samavesh Is, and Why It Was Created

3.   10-Minute Chair Yoga Routine for Seniors

Eager to find out? Let's dive in.

Why Yoga for Older Adults Is Becoming a Necessity

By the year 2050, the adult population of India over the age of 60 is expected to reach 320 million people. This is not a slow and steady increase. It is doubling.

Hence, the Ministry has decided to tackle this problem head on. In their recent awareness drives, they are making a crucial distinction between lifespan (the total number of years a person lives) and health span (the years lived in good, disease-free health). The goal is to close the gap between simply adding years to life and adding life to those years.

What Yoga Is Samavesh, and Why It Was Created

The Ministry of ayush Yoga Samavesh is the first program designed to include seniors, the disabled, and the unserved.

The rationale is rather simple. Even the so-called “gentle” yoga classes require an arbitrary level of functional mobility that many seniors lack, be it from arthritic knees, compromised balance, a fracture that didn’t heal quite right, or hip replacements that change how someone sits. Many of these habits and injuries aggregate within a single person.

Chair yoga does not use the floor. All movements take place while seated or using a sturdy chair to support them. This reduces their range of motion, but as a result the risk of falling while practicing drops considerably. Yet the benefits are real and measurable.

A review of six randomized controlled trials conducted in India, involving more than 300 adults aged 60 and above, found that yoga had a positive effect on balance and a moderate effect on mobility. Many of the programs lasted around 12 weeks, including one carried out in a Nagpur care home, showing that even gentle and adapted yoga practices can help older adults maintain movement, stability, and independence as they age.

The Fall Fear Loop That Nobody Talks About

With the passing years, a subtle decline in agility often occurs in older adults. And before they know it, a cycle starts to manifest within.

An older adult falls, or almost falls, and develops a fear of falling. With that fear, they begin to move less. The less they move, the weaker their muscles become. With weaker muscles comes poorer balance which increases the risk of falling. This ultimately intensifies the fear.

Between 35% and 55% of older adults have a fear of falling. The fear of falling often causes more limitations than the actual physical decline. Chair yoga addresses the fear directly.

The best part?

All it takes is a 10-minute successful practice to change the narrative in someone's mind. If the yoga sequence is repeated over several weeks, it begins to change the story that an individual tells themselves about the intentional restrictions they placed on their body.

The 10-Minute Chair Yoga Routine for Seniors

This chair yoga routine is designed for senior adults so that they can practice yoga safely and consistently. If your parents have suffered from osteoporosis, glaucoma, uncontrolled hypertension or have had a surgery, they must consult their doctor before trying this.

1. Seated Mountain: Posture Reset (1 minute)

Sit upright with both feet flat and hip width apart. Place your hands on your thighs. You can close your eyes or let them rest on something in front of you.

Take three deep, slow breaths. Each breath should be drawn in through the nose and exhaled through the mouth.

The body often compensates and slouches in its posture. This was a reminder to the body of what upright actually feels like.

2. Neck and Shoulder Rolls (1 minute)

Gently drop your right ear toward your right shoulder. Hold for five seconds, then come back to the center. Now drop your left ear to your left shoulder. Hold, then return.

Next, roll your shoulders forward three times and then three times backward.

No need to force any movements. Avoid sudden jerks. The neck and shoulder area holds excess tension, especially in older adults. This could be from years of leaning over phones, staring at computer screens, or carrying small children.

3. Seated Cat-Cow: Spinal Flexion and Extension (1 minute)

Place hands on knees. Inhale: arch your back, raise your chest, tilt your pelvis a bit forwards. This is the "cow" position.Exhale: round your spine, pull your stomach in, and let your head drop a bit. This is "cat".

Do 6 to 8 reps of slow movement between these two positions.

Your spine has discs, filled with fluid, between each pair of vertebrae. Because of these discs, your spine works the same as sponges. When you perform certain movements, the sponges will compress and release, thus taking in nutrients and pushing out waste products. Inactive movements will “starve” your discs. This movement will help to feed them.

4. Seated Spinal Twist (1 minute)

Sit up. Put the right hand on the outside of the left knee. Then, place the left hand on the back of the chair or the seat beside you.

To inhale is to lengthen the spine. Then exhale and gently rotate to the left while looking over the left shoulder. For five breaths, try to hold this position; once finished, return to the center and repeat on the other side.

Try to not go beyond your limits of comfort with this activity. The goal is not how far you've come but on how much rotation you have to introduce to a spine that has barely rotated anymore.

5. Seated Forward Fold (1 minute)

Make sure your feet are flat on the floor. Inhale and sit up tall. Exhale while hinging forward at the hips, not the waist, allowing your hands to slide down towards your shins or the floor.

You should be feeling a stretch at the back of your legs and lower back, if you are feeling pain from this movement then you should go as far as you feel comfortable.

Use an inhale to rise back up, if you have held this position for 5 breaths.

This pose gently works the hamstrings (muscles running down the back of the thigh). Tight hamstrings can contribute to poor posture and lower back pain in older adults.

6. Seated Leg Extensions and Ankle Circles (2 minutes)

Sit up straight. Extend the right leg straight out and hold it parallel to the floor for three seconds. Then lower it slowly. Do this ten times, then switch to the left leg.

Next, lift both feet off the floor and draw slow circles with the ankles, doing ten clockwise and ten counter clockwise.

This may be the most functionally important exercise in the entire sequence.

When standing up from a chair, the quadriceps (located at the front of the thigh) are the muscles primarily responsible for doing this and along with this the primary stabilisers of the knee joint. Weakness here correlates directly with fall risk. Chair yoga research done on older adults with osteoarthritis showed exactly this type of leg work to improve functional mobility.

Lower leg ankle circles provide the body with a warning system for unstable ground. This exercise helps improve circulation and proprioception (awareness of the position and movement of the body).

7. Seated Side Stretch (1 minute)

Sit tall. Stretch the right arm overhead and lean gently to the left, creating a stretch along the right side of the torso. Hold this position for three breaths then return to the centre and repeat on the left side.

Exercises that elicit a response from the lateral stabilizers (muscles on either side of the torso) are almost never included in routines offered to older adults. Research has demonstrated that strengthening these muscles facilitates the performance of safe and stable reaching, turning, and walking on uneven terrain.

8. Mobility of the Wrist and Hand (30 seconds)

Arms extended in front. Fist, fingers, fist, fingers. 10 reps. Rotate each wrist 10 times in each direction. This exercise may seem small, but its importance is not. Grip strength is one of the most reliable predictors of good overall health among older adults. This is especially true for any older adult who uses a walking aid. Their wrists and hands become the load-bearing joints of their mobility every day.

9. Guided Relaxation: Closing Practice (1 minute)

This is the last part - the cool down phase. Rest your hands, palms up on your thighs. Close your eyes and take 5 deep breaths. With each exhale, consciously relax a different part of your body: your jaw, shoulders, hands, thighs, and feet. Finish by remaining still for a moment, without any specific purpose or movement. Just be present.

This is not a formality. In the practice of yoga, it is referred to as savasana, the transition from stillness to movement allows the nervous system to process what has just taken place. It is the difference between a workout and a practice.

Making Home Practice Safer

The chair yoga sequence is intended for home practice. However, the home environment is not always planned for movement. Here's how you can make it safer.

1.     Use a stable chair on a non-slip surface.

2.   Place a non-slip mat under the chair to minimize the movement of the chair during leg extensions or twists

3.   Practice closer to a wall, grab bar or sturdy furniture positioned close enough to reach to ensure safety during exercises that require leaning or stretching.

Chair yoga strengthens the body’s overall balance. A safe home environment serves as an additional protective layer. You can always look at AGEasy’s portfolio of mobility aids and fall prevention products  to ensure that your surroundings are safer and encourage movement.

How to get your parents to try this

How do you get someone who has never done yoga to do 10 Minutes in a kitchen chair?

Here are few things that work -

1.     Do it with them, the first time. Not as an instructor. As a participant. Ten minutes alongside someone is very different from watching someone do something.

2.   Frame it as an experiment, not a commitment. “Let’s try this for 2 weeks” is a manageable ask. “You should do yoga every day” is not.

3.   What they did is of secondary importance. Focus on how they feel afterward. “How do your hips feel now?” “Did you notice your breathing slow down?” Doing such conversations helps build the internal motivation in senior adults to sustain the habit over time.

As long as where they are practicing is safe, they don't have to wait for the perfect chair, the perfect space or the perfect time for the practice. It is the consistency of practice that brings results later.

The goal is not perfection

Chair yoga will not reverse arthritis. It will not undo decades of sedentary habits in a matter of weeks, and will not guarantee that no future falls will occur.

However, chair yoga does help build balance, strength and confidence to make your body more resilient. Measures have shown that chair yoga provides these benefits with Indian clinical trials done specifically on this demographic.

In the Nagpur study, a control group's mobility declined, whereas the yoga group's mobility improved. This is not an inspirational talk. This is a report on clinical data.

The body is always changing in response to stimulus. Building capacity is cumulative and requires use or else it will atrophy.

Want to age well? Take a 10-minute chair yoga session every day in a quiet environment. That's all it takes. 

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