Most people come to yoga expecting something to happen quickly. The body feels different after a few sessions, a little looser, a little quieter, and there’s an assumption that this rate of change is the baseline. It isn’t. What happens in the first six...
Most people practicing yoga today are working with one limb out of eight. Just the third one, actually — asana, the physical postures. The other seven exist, are taught in classical texts, and have measurable effects on how a person thinks, responds, and lives. They...
Most yoga classes operate on a single assumption: that what works for one body works for all of them. Same sequence, same pace, same instruction — delivered to a room of people whose constitutions, energy levels, digestive patterns, and stress responses differ...
Most people encounter Ashtanga Vinyasa through its reputation before they encounter it in practice. Demanding. Rigid. Not for beginners. A system where you do the same sequence every single time until a teacher tells you you’re ready to move forward. That...
There is a particular kind of pride that walks into a yoga studio and refuses the block. The bolster stays folded in the corner. The strap goes untouched. The assumption, rarely spoken but almost always present, is that using props means you’re not quite good...
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