You might expect yoga instructors not to have a single care in the
world, considering the focus in their profession of cultivating some
serious zen.
Yes, the ancient practice typically helps us direct
our energy inward, but it's not always easy to ignore external
distractions and detractors during class. In an effort to help make your
favorite yoga studio even more of an
oasis, we asked a handful of instructors what they wish we'd all just stop doing. Here are their top requests.
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Practicing With Force
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"There has been a stigma with yoga that you have
to force and struggle in order to achieve 'the pose'. Practicing with
force puts stress into the body and mind -- and doesn't feel that great.
If people shift this concept to moving with ease, more can be
accomplished with less effort, and it feels great and free. More space
opens mentally and physically."
--
Tara Stiles, founder and owner of Strala
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Comparing Yourself To Others
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"Stop comparing yourself to others and take poses
for your body and ability. I see many students struggle to take poses
they are not ready for. Students see others take poses and they think
they too should be able to do that particular arm balance or more
advanced version of a pose. The thing is, students need to remember that
they are in a class of varied levels. Some people might have been
practicing for 10 years longer than you or might just have more
flexibility or strength. Recognize this and be okay with it. Then you
will grow your practice slow and steady just like intended."
--
Vyda Bielkus, yoga teacher and co-founder of Health Yoga Life
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Asking No Questions
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"I would love yoga students to start asking me
more questions and giving me more feedback before or after class. I love
it when people tell me, 'Wow, I loved that sequence!' or 'Can we do
inversions?' I always seem to fall back on my favorite ways of teaching,
and it really helps to have feedback. I don't want my students to be
shy!"
--
Kristin McGee, celebrity yoga and Pilates instructor
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Needing All The Answers
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"I believe that as yoga practitioners we have to
remind ourselves that we don't have to have the answers. The pose
doesn't have to 'look perfect'. It's about the feeling you have inside
that's the most important.
Yoga ignites my inner childhood spirit. In a way, it helped me to save
my life, and it helped me to overcome many demons I was battling inside.
I hope that those practicing yoga receive the same joy and life it
brings me."
--
Michelle R. Grosodonia
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Ignoring Props
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"
Please use props! Yoga is not about
showing off your flexibility or your muscles, and you certainly won't
get much out of the practice if you're forcing yourself into poses
(which almost always means you're doing them incorrectly). The hour you
spend on your mat at yoga class isn't about impressing people or being
the best -- ease yourself into poses and listen to your body. Props can
be an amazing tool to help you to get into the correct alignment of a
pose and to find your comfortable level in any posture. Using blocks or
blankets doesn't make you any less of a yogi -- but trying to one-up
your neighbor sure does!"
--
Carolyn Gregoire, features editor, The Huffington Post
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Chasing A Pose
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"Stop trying to 'get a pose'. I hear so many
students say, 'I want to do a crow pose.' 'I want to do headstand.' Most
yoga poses are not something you can just get. The poses go
together. For example, as you learn low push and downward dog this will
prepare you to take crow pose. As you build balance in standing poses
and core strength, this will actually help you find headstand. Yoga is
not a practice of stand alone poses but rather a sequence of poses that
are designed to work together."
--Bielkus
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