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Take Your Personal Practice Home

Updated: May 20

Fighting crowded streets and traffic, depending on where you live, to make it to a yoga class on time, remembering to have all your yoga gear, carving out an area on your mat amid the after-work studio crowds: Yoga can once in a while feel much less than Zen-like. It's time to domesticate yourself and take your practice home. I'm Angela, your at-home Yogi instructor


Starting a home yoga practice can ultimately save time, energy, and money. Currently, it's the year 2022, and gasoline prices are out of this world expensive. Twenty minutes of yoga at home is often more beneficial than dealing with any stress caused by driving, paying a fortune to fill up your gas tank, parking, and paying to practice for an hour at a studio. (I'm not telling you to abandon your studio as I feel they're also beneficial.)


While most yoga teachers will advise you to learn the fundamentals of asana (yoga poses) in a live class before getting on the mat at home, I'm here to say, "Nothing can replace your at-home Yoga practice,". A big part of Yoga is simply, Listening; it's so important to go into your own body and ask it to be your teacher. It is a time when you can find your own rhythm, your own tune..., your own heartbeat. It is where genuine knowledge arises.

Going to classes has many benefits, of course, I am acknowledging, but I have observed time and time again that it is when people start to practice at home that the real insights occur.

Beyond the reasons to start a home yoga practice, today there are new ways to start one — ways that blur the lines between showing up in a live yoga class and rolling out a mat in your living room to do yoga at home. You will find more peace from your practice within the safe space of your home.


My virtual Yoga classes are quite sophisticated. Besides the many yoga DVDs and books on the market, my online weekly yoga classes and digital downloads are bringing home more of the benefits of a live class. While I occassionally offer online live sessions that are scheduled, my main goal is to have premade sessions that can be practiced on your time. While I'm not physically there to observe your alignment and adjust your pose hands-on, multimedia is the next best thing...and for some, it may be even better.


When I teach classes, I can tell just by watching who is practicing at home and who is not. People who are not practicing at home simply try to fit their bodies into my instructions as if they were following orders. They are concerned mainly with whether they are doing it 'right.' But people who are practicing at home are inquisitive about instructions and test them out in their own bodies, asking themselves, 'How does this feel?' They're about the freedom of yoga.


What Poses Should I Do?

Some styles of yoga follow a set sequence of specific poses, but many instructors, including Me, recommend a more open-ended approach, especially when you're doing yoga at home.


At home, you learn to listen to what your body needs that day, move at your own pace, and develop intuition about what sequences or kinds of yoga poses you want and need to do most on any given day.


If you are fatigued, you may want to do a more restorative yoga sequence. If you're feeling energetic, a more flowing, fast-paced, or rigorous set of yoga poses may feel more satisfying or help you channel that energy. Many like to do energizing yoga practice in the morning and a calming restorative practice in the evening.

But listening to what you need is more than a physical thing.


As you practice your first poses on your own, try to cultivate an attitude of playfulness and acceptance. Being present during your practice means allowing yourself to be aware of whatever physical sensations, emotions, and thoughts are currently arising. Be creative and spontaneous. If you approach your practice with a sense of curiosity, rather than self-judgment or competitiveness, you will find it easier to motivate yourself to practice — and you'll be more present when you do practice.


Sun salutations are a time-efficient way of practicing yoga because they thread together poses that involve different parts of the body. Sun salutes are also commonly practiced as a warm-up, followed by standing poses such as Warrior I, II, and II — and ending with forward bends, twists, and restorative poses.

As you advance, you may want to move into more challenging intermediate and advanced yoga poses such as arm balances, inversions, and backbends.


Staying Motivated

Setting up a home yoga practice is only half the battle — now you have to roll out your mat and do it. Please review my blog posts on how to achieve max motivation by setting your sleep intentions, what's the most healthy sleep practice, and also your wake-up process.


The best advice I can give you is to make your yoga part of your morning ritual. Make yoga part of your sleep ritual. This means getting to bed 15 minutes earlier and stripping off your clothes completely so your skin can breathe. Also, so your yoga practice does not cut into your sleep time. The second piece of advice is to sit down with your weekly calendar and begin to cross out any activity that is not serving you anymore (this takes being brutally honest). Unless it's educational, Netflix is not serving you, it's detaining you.

The real key to staying motivated to keep doing yoga at home gets back to, listening to yourself and exploring what you need with a sense of curiosity and creativity. Doing yoga at home will ward off any insecurities you may feel about your body. You'll feel comfortable in your own flesh.

Another significant way to support your home practice is to practice with a member of your family or a friend. Being held accountable by others can get you to the mat on the dreariest of days. Once you get to the mat, the magic often takes over after a couple of minutes, and you find yourself vibrating with the music of yoga.


Here's What You'll Need for At-Home

The best reason to start a home yoga practice is that you don't need much to begin. Here are some helpful tips on how to do yoga at home:

  • Choose or create a quiet, uncluttered space in your home for your practice, and stock it with the essential basic yoga props — mat, strap, blocks, blanket, bolster, etc. The space doesn’t have to be large, but it should be quiet, clean, open, and sacred.

  • Get realistic goals, starting out with small pockets of time (10-15 minutes).

  • Begin with basic beginner's yoga sequences and expand your practice as your skills improve.

That said, it’s your yoga practice — so build it to best meet your individual needs.



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