After a hiatus of more than six years, I have returned to yoga.
I have been wanting to supplement my twice weekly swimming with some core strength and flexibility work for a while now. I did a lot of Bikram yoga before I left Australia and for a year or so after I arrived in London and have dabbled in yoga of the cooler (by that I mean non-hot) variety and pilates as well. I have always loved the intensity and mindfulness of these types of activities as well as the centered feeling that comes afterwards.
A bit of googling a few weeks ago yielded a great yoga/pilates studio walking distance from Gidday HQ so for the last three weeks, I have relinquished my unscripted and lackadaisical Saturday mornings in exchange for this:
- The alarm goes off at 8am – I know…on a weekend. I lie there for 15 minutes wondering why I am doing this to myself.
- Stumble bleary-eyed to the bathroom and, avoiding eye-contact with the mirror, splash my face with cold water.
- Brush/flatten ‘bed hair’. My bed hair is a remarkable feat of vertical engineering that occurs every single night.
- Put one load of laundry in the washing machine on the express cycle. I’m up, may as well be productive (so I can be lazy later).
- Have vegetable juice and a yoghurt. Sounds noble but it’s really all I can manage first thing/pre-exercise. Don’t worry, I make up for this later.
- Get dressed.
- Transfer essentials from my handbag into my backpack.
- Hang the wet washing on the airer.
- Walk to the yoga studio (25 minutes).
- Groan and sweat for one hour at the same time as working out how to actually ‘switch on’ [insert name of muscle I have never heard of]. It’s multi-tasking at its best peeps.
- Walk home (25 minutes – again).
- Shower. It’s a surprisingly sweaty business this yoga (and no I’m not doing Bikram or hot yoga.)
- Eat!
And that peeps, is my new Saturday morning.
I’ve followed this new routine for three weeks and on balance, the news is good:
- Morning backache has disappeared and I’m feeling longer, stronger and looser-limbed than I have felt for years.
- I’m breathing – deeply – again. And given my easily distracted disposition, I hope that I’m also reaping the benefits of a few meditative moments at the start and end of every
classpractice (and re-learning the lingo).
You may have noticed that I said ‘on balance’ and that is my struggle. Tree pose was never my forte and my balance, unlike a fine wine, has not improved with age. But I do my best to spread my toes and draw up and yet I wiggle and lurch about, falling on my a**e at least once a class practice. It is somewhat chastening but yoga is supposed to be about letting go of ego and let’s face it, a little less ego never did anyone any harm.
Coming down to earth – literally – also reminds me to pay attention to what I am doing, feeling and ‘switching on’.

I actually fell out of Warrior pose yesterday trying to work out what to ‘switch on’.
But I am hooked and have booked next week’s class practice already – there is something about actually booking a place that makes me go rather than succumb to more than 15 minutes of wake-up wondering after the alarm goes off – and I’m hoping to bring a little balance and mindful breathing into the week ahead.
Wishing you all a peaceful and mindful week.
Good post, and I love that Worrier Pose cartoon too! So did you stick to it??
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No I didn’t – I confess I have become a bit of a sporadic ‘worrier’ 😉
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I’m onto my second cycle of aerial yoga and loving it. Its been a few years since I’ve been and it’s amazing how much better I feel after only 10 weeks.
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I have to confess that I don’t know aerial yoga cataluna6 but it is amazing how yoga just ‘sorts things out’ body-wise isn’t it?
Thanks for your comment and welcome to Gidday from the UK 🙂
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It was pretty strange the first couple of times, I still haven’t gone completely upside down! But I always feel fantastic after a class, it’s a bit like swimming that way.
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