I’m a part-time yoga teacher. So admittedly I’m biased, but…. I LOVE YOGA!
Due to Christmas, being away on holiday and injuries, I haven’t been able to practice yoga as much as I’d like. I like to practice and teach a fast-paced, dynamic flowing yoga, and because of back pain I’ve been avoiding that and going for something more slow, which I don’t enjoy as much. Nonetheless, I wanted to share with you some of the main reasons why I love yoga…
You really see results quickly
I remember when I first started practising yoga back in 2013. I remember that first class being horrendous – I had no idea what I was doing, and although I had some level of flexibility, I had absolutely no strength and had to take a time-out multiple times. I remember feeling so despondent!
And yet, leaving that class, I really felt like there was potential to gain more strength and flexibility, and despite the struggles, I really enjoyed the class. I think that was partly down to my yoga teacher who made me feel so welcome and assisted me when necessary so I didn’t feel like a complete failure.
Sure enough, I started practising 1 or 2 times a week, and within the space of a month I had gone leaps and bounds in my practice. There’s nothing like the feeling of finally being able to get deeper in to a pose that you previously couldn’t do, or being able to do a handstand or an arm balance that you watched your yoga teacher demonstrate and thought ‘yeah errr…. no, I’ll pass thanks.’ I think that yoga has the potential to give you a lot of joy and a feeling of great accomplishment, because each time you show up on the mat you are gaining more strength, more ease in a pose, and even just a fraction of a change in flexibility feels like a big leap! Of course, this just makes you want to keep going back to deepen your practice even further.
With the right yoga studio, you find a community
Yoga has the potential to really connect people. I think that a lot of people are drawn to yoga because of their hectic, busy schedules, and wanting to find time for themselves. A lot of the time, people turn to yoga to work through some kind of trauma or difficulty in their life. If a yoga studio is doing their job properly, you can find a real haven of like-minded people through showing up on the mat. Especially in a big city like London, it can be hard to make new friends, and loneliness can creep in. Finding an hour a week to connect with other people, whether that’s before the class in the changing rooms, or on the mat in the middle of the class, is so valuable. It makes you realise that we’re all the same really – we all have difficult times and times of joy, and we all are looking for something to make life just a little bit easier.
With many yoga studios, there are lots of workshops that you can attend that help you meet like-minded people – that could be a handstand or arm-balance workshop, or something more spiritual. If you aren’t feeling like you have a community of yogis to connect with, I’d encourage you to have a look at local workshops you can go to.
You can see yourself more clearly
After you have been practising yoga for a while, you’ll notice that the yoga teacher will harp on all the live long day about ‘the breath’. Turning up the breath, focussing on the breath, quietening the mind…. and once you start to do that more, you’ll realise how often your mind wanders, and where it tends to wander to. For me, I have quite a competitive streak. When I realise that I’m looking at other people in the class and thinking ‘I can’t do that pose’ or ‘She can go deeper in that pose than me’, I know I’ve stopped breathing properly.
So when you start practising a lot, you’ll notice the types of thoughts that continue to come up for you. Do you find yourself getting competitive with other students? Do you try and find ways of distracting yourself? Do you berate yourself a lot for not being able to ‘nail’ that pose? When you start to become aware of these thoughts, you start to notice them in your life away from the mat as well – these patterns that we all fall in to. And when we start to notice when those patterns emerge, we can say ‘aha, I’ve seen you before’, and choose whether or not to let those patterns take control.
Say for example, you had a bad day at work and you thought to yourself – ‘this is a ridiculous job, I’m just going to quit and find something else!’ Perhaps that’s a thought pattern you find yourself in a lot – feeling like you want to run away and quit when things get hard. Maybe, when practising yoga, you find yourself falling out of poses quickly when they feel difficult. When you start to notice this, you can say to yourself ‘okay, I know that this is a pattern I get in to when I feel like things are difficult. I’m going to wait a week and see how I feel rather than making a rash decision.’ And there you go – you just chose to not let that thought pattern take control!
The title of this blog post is ‘why yoga helps you get better at life’. Now you have 3 reasons why – you get a quick feeling of accomplishment with regular practice, you can meet like-minded people, and you can free yourself of unhealthy thought patterns. Now there’s no excuse not to roll out your mat, or get down to your local yoga studio and sign up right now!
What benefits do you find when practising yoga?
Is there anything you want to add to what I’ve said above?
What other forms of exercise help you get better at life?
C x