(November 5, 2023) Teen prodigy K Prisha is often addressed as “Dr Prisha” in Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu, and rightly so. The youngster has been honoured with not just one but three honorary doctorates for her spectacular achievements in yoga and social service — from the University of Jerusalem Medical College & Hospitals, Vellore (2019), Indian Empire University, Chennai (2021), and World Tamil University of USA (2021).
In 2018 and again in 2019, Prisha brought home the gold in the international yoga championships held in Mayalsia and Thailand. She’s also the youngest yoga teacher for the blind and has been certified by the NCPCR, government of India and holds 100 world records for a plethora of skills – yoga, swimming, blind-folded cycling, skating, ambidextrous writing, solving the Rubik’s Cube, Aqua Yoga, and more. Global University, Missouri, USA, recognised Prisha as the youngest person to hold the maximum number of world records. This little bundle of talent has even written a book, Yoga Indrae Seivom Inbum Peruvom, in Tamil, highlighting the benefits of the 5,000-year-old ancient Indian therapy to prevent and cure three common diseases – diabetes, asthma, and blood pressure.
Such is her command of yoga therapy that people in Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry flock to her for treatment and workshops. “Yoga improves immunity, stamina, and focus.” I have been doing it since I was one-year-old, “Prisha tells Global Indian. It has helped her “get superpowers,” she says, claiming she can “bend a spoon if I want by looking at it (telekinesis).” She’s so attuned to her senses and surroundings that she can ride a bicycle or cook blindfolded.
I can body scan for healing diseases and also make future predictions with the deep focus that I have attained from yoga and meditation – K Prisha
Teacher and healer who is sought by many
The youngster, who has an impressive collection of over 200 medals, awards, and certificates that she bagged in state-wide, national, and international competitions and events, teaches yoga every day to the visually-challenged. She has also been teaching the elderly in old age homes, and NCC cadets, apart from conducting numerous workshops for people from different walks of life. With her guidance, visually challenged students have found a drastic improvement in their eyesight. Schoolkids have also enhanced their focus, and the elderly and those who suffered from COVID-19 are able to lead healthier lives. One of her visually impaired students even went on to break a world record in yoga.
It all started at home…
Yoga flows in the family. Since Prisha’s mother, G Devi Priya, a lawyer by qualification and a yoga teacher by passion, was deeply seeped in it, the prodigy started showing interest in it when she was just one year old. She could do some asanas even before she could walk. The legacy starts with her grandmother, who is a professor of Yoga in Pondicherry. So far, Devi Priya has been her first and only guru, under whose guidance the teen has made extraordinary achievements.
Despite being a gold-medalist in law and MSc in naturopathy and yoga, Devi Priya has been completely focused on managing her multi-talented daughter’s schedules, travelling with her for workshops and competitions.
Her father, Karthik Rajendran, is a businessman and sports enthusiast who has inspired Prisha to excel in sports and martial arts like tennis and karate. At the age of seven, she participated in state and national level crossbow shooting and won gold medal in both. The multi-talented teen has a blue belt in karate and has won several competitions in it as well.
However, the love for yoga surpasses all. “I want to become a doctor of naturopathy and spread awareness of yoga throughout the world,” says the teenager, who has been invited as a judge at the National Youth Festival conducted by the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports and as chief guest to an event at Nehru Yuva Kendra, a Government of India entity. The youngster’s list of achievements never seems to end. She has been invited to several television programmes covering her extraordinary talent, and has been leaving people awestruck with her ability to instantly choreograph any dance number while possessing a great ear for music.
Yoga for a good life
The standard nine student of Meena Shankar Vidyalaya School, Tirunelveli, looks at her passion to teach yoga as a vehicle of the common good, so that even the vulnerable, like the differently-abled, can benefit and lead a wholesome life. Her dream is impressive — to adopt a village and teach yoga to everyone there.
In 2022, the golden girl of yoga had went to two international trips. She went to Malaysia for a 16-day workshop organised by the Malaysian Association for the Blind where she also conducted a four-day camp on yoga awareness. She also travelled to Dubai to receive the Global Child Prodigy award, which was conferred to 99 other youngsters from across the globe. “Until now I have transformed lives of more than 10 million people through free yoga classes,” tells Prisha who hopes to transform more lives in India and abroad in the days to come.
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