The best time of day to practice yoga is when you have time! Congratulations on recognising that it is a good idea to add a yoga practice into your day! Yoga is most beneficial when it is practiced regularly. In an ideal world, I would recommend a morning and an evening practice every day but we all know that most of us simply do not have time time for this. Consistency is your friend. You will be surprised at the difference in how you feel once your practice becomes consistent. As with anything we would like to become part of our routine, it has to be manageable. If we set ourselves unrealistic targets, as soon as we begin to struggle for what ever reason, we will start making excuses and feeling we have failed. Then we are less likely to achieve our aim. Try to fit your yoga into your day rather than build your day around your yoga. I recommend first deciding when you have time to practice. Then decide out how much time you will have. Then reduce that time by half (remember you can always choose stay longer on your mat). You are far more likely to regularly complete a ten minute practice every day than a twenty minute one. Some days you might achieve twenty and that will feel like a bonus. Allow completion of your ten minute practice to feel like a pleasurable win. If you find ten minutes too much of a commitment, then reduce it to five but do five minutes every day. Make this daily time slot to which you look forward. Once this time slot feels like it is embedded in your day, you are much less likely to stop. Just promise yourself that you will do that ten minutes. If you find ten minutes too much of a commitment, then reduce it to five but do five minutes every day. It is best to avoid practicing yoga too soon after a meal - allow 90 minutes after you meal before starting your practice. Traditionally, more invigorating practices would be done earlier in the day and the slower, more restorative yoga saved for later in the day but you may have different needs. Decide what you need from your yoga practice. How would you like to feel after it? That might vary day to day. It is likely to be different depending on whether you practice in the morning or evening. If practicing in the morning you might like to feel awake, invigorated and ready to take on the rest of the day but equally, you might wish to feel calm, alert, balanced and focused ready to host a meeting, presentation or something else. If practicing just before lunch, its good to “fire up” the digestion so that your body is ready to efficiently digest your food so that you benefit well from the vitamins, minerals and fuel it offers. If your available time slot for yoga is the afternoon, you might like a relaxing practice. Naturally, our bodies expect a rest in the afternoon. You might benefit from a relaxing and restoring practice leaving you restored and with energy and focus for the afternoon. You might prefer to practice just before bed, in which case, you will likely wish to feel relaxed and ready to sleep. The great thing about yoga is that we can practice according to our needs. The poses, breath work and pace we choose will be different. You may well notice that your muscles feel stiffer earlier in the day whilst your body feels more pliable and joints a little "looser" later in the day. When ever and how ever you practice, be aware of the signs your body is giving you. Yoga is not supposed to hurt! Warm up, ease in and if it all seems harder work than usual, be more gentle on that occasion. Respect your body. Your yoga practice can be as individual as you are. Yoga is for every body. Have you heard of "chair yoga"? Yup - there is that too where required and just because its called chair yoga, this doesn’t mean it's easy, it's just better suited for some bodies.
If possible, create a space in your home or work place where you can practice. Lay out your mat and have available any props you are likely to need. Step onto your mat. Take a few breaths, feeling the ground beneath your feet, remember that you are about to give your body what it needs, just as you choose to feed your body a nutritious diet. Then settle into your practice. If you would like help creating a home practice to suit your personal or varying needs, I can help you with that. We could do this via Zoom or face to face in a private 1:1 session. Just get in touch or book yourself into one of my 1:1 slots via this link bookwhen.com/freedomyogaandrelaxation If you don’t see a slot that fits with your schedule, message me and I will try to accommodate you.
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I arrive at the hall or launch my Zoom session and set up my own space. Students arrive. The familiar early birds selecting their usual spot in the physical room. Then come the majority selecting their places - again as close to their regular place as possible and then the last minute arrivals filling in the gaps between mats. There is the buzz of chatter. I love that all my groups are so friendly, welcoming of others and so supportive of one another. Start time arrives and as much as I am reluctant to halt the flow of chatter, I suggest we start the class. Class begins seated for a “settling”. This brief meditation, breath awareness leading into very gentle neck and shoulder warm ups, eases the group attention away from their outside busyness to a stiller space. From multi-tasking to uni-tasking. As this 10-15 minute section progresses, I feel the energy in the room change and soften. I see the faces in front of me soften too. The bodies, elegantly, and effortlessly seated. Peaceful. Calm. It wasn’t always like this. Sitting on yoga blocks just four inches from the floor isn’t easy or comfortable for most adults new to yoga (We can adapt, use chairs etc at first). For some time, newbies will fidget, become distracted, adjust hair, find something itching, reposition glasses, check something, peep around at peers. Gently, I coax them to draw their attention back in. In the in person classes there is a group energy to be felt. I feel it to a lesser extent in online groups too. This week, I have experienced waves of emotion as I have scanned the rooms. The serene stillness and focus. Each person right here, right now very much in the moment. This week, I held them in meditation a little longer. I sensed they were “in that still space”. Then slowly suggesting breath-led movements and mindful repositioning, these bodies create shapes, still focusing inward. Feeling, visualising, listening and experiencing their version and their interpretation of my verbal invitation and/or cue. These wise individuals uninterested in what others are doing, are completely absorbed in what is happening on their yoga mat. I don’t demonstrate unless I feel it necessary. I much prefer the posture is experienced in a way that suits each body (as long as it appears safe). The pace changes, energy levels increase as we switch from stretchy and strength building static poses to flowing movement. Still we breathe and feel and trust and experience. Then comes stillness as these bodies find the floor and arrange their bones comfortably on their mats, allowing the earth to cradle them as they follow my voice and use their breath, journeying into relaxation. Trusting. Dropping deeper, breath by breath. Breath quietens. Heart rate slows. Blood pressure reduces. The only movement visible in the room, is that created by the natural inhaling and exhaling of these bodies before me. All too soon, I need to draw these peaceful people back to alertness - via their inhale and their senses of hearing and touch. Returning to sitting on blocks we acknowledge one another before departing until the next time. These lovely people all leaving class a little lighter, a little more spacious, a little taller and a little more positive. Thank you to all you wonderful people who attend my classes online or in person. You show me proof of the power of yoga. |
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