How to Start Yoga
When I went to my first yoga class in 1999, it took place in a cramped sub-basement of a nearby fitness facility. You could literally hear the water moving in the pipes overhead.

I wore a hoodie (why not? I was to discover “why not”). I saw some mats in the corner and grabbed one. I was informed by another woman in the class that those were Pilates mats. I was off to a stellar start.
I remember not grooving on the cross-legged position most others in the class were adopting (I still don’t — my practice changed years later when I found heroes pose), my hoodie got in my way and occluded my vision when I was in downward dog — and about that downward dog: it felt like the air changed in my lungs and that I might suffocate, so strange was that orientation for my body.
And yet, by the end of that class, I felt something. Parts of me had been stretched and expanded in a way that they never had been before. I found myself in poses where I had nowhere to escape and no other option but to just sit with the positions — most of them alien to me — and see what my body was going to do. It promoted a certain amount of honesty from myself.
I’d never had such a sensation of body awareness. Or such a feeling of calm. It took a couple more classes to firmly arrive at the realization: I’d found my exercise.
I could see committing to this practice and doing it for the rest of my life: a concept I could not visualize with running, or even the gym workout I grudgingly did. With yoga, there was no forcing or convincing myself; I was looking for excuses to go to yoga , not looking for excuses not to attend.
So how do you start yoga? If you’re reading this and have a curiosity about yoga, perhaps the following points might convince you that yoga might also be for you:
Yoga is For Everybody.
Many are daunted by the idea of attending yoga because of the general “image” of yoga, as seen through the lens of social media and various cultural influences. The presumption is that you need to be a certain weight; you need wear a specific line of clothing, and that you need to be in an optimal age range in order to practice. Nothing could be farther from the truth. There are students of all sizes, ages, economic statuses, and dressed in a variety of ways. There are no requirements to be a yoga student other than to be open to learning and happy to be there.
Don’t Come to Class Looking for Perfection.
Another misconception which holds potential students back is the idea that they can’t take up yoga because they won’t “do it perfectly”. After over twenty years of practicing, I still don’t “do it perfectly”, because that’s not the point. It’s a practice. I’ve often heard from people — when I’ve suggested they try yoga — “Oh, I’m not flexible enough for yoga.” In my mind, that would be like saying: “My kid can’t start school — they don’t know how to read.” You go there to *learn* how. The progress you see in your own development — poses that you now have an understanding of that you didn’t have any understanding of then — is the magic. Remember the awkward-feeling downward dog I mentioned? I could probably fall asleep in downward-dog now. It’s those little moments which are actually monumental.
It’s a Practice and a Process, Not a Performance.
It’s easy enough to see what other students are doing in class and being intimidated by that. “Are you kidding me?” I’ve sometimes thought when I see a classmate in a side crow or flying pigeon. I usually draw inspiration from them, rather than letting a display of accomplishment daunt or discourage me — and I strongly urge anyone new to yoga to do the same. See others nearby you as “demo-ing” the pose for you, and inspiring you to at least try something new. If you get there: great. If you don’t ever get there: also great.
My advice: just start. The journey of yoga is an exploration, and every class you take is new and different. There is no greater opportunity to get to know yourself, and no better activity through which to vent stress, clear your mind, and to nurture your body.
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