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Bringing Your Practice Home

Many yogis don't practice at home because they simply don't know where to start. Here's how to create sequences that will keep you engaged, curious, and dedicated.

By Judith Hanson Lasater

Bringing Your Practice HomeWhat's your hardest yoga pose? If you and your yoga friends were to compare notes, you'd likely come up with a wide variety of answers. But virtually all practitioners will tell you that a greater challenge lies in developing and maintaining a home practice. Beginners face the task of remembering poses to practice; more experienced students face the dilemma of deciding what emphasis to choose during any particular session. Even teachers and students with decades on the mat can be daunted by the difficulties of maintaining and renewing a home practice. Illness, family obligations, boredom, travel, and that universal bugaboo, a perceived lack of time: All these obstacles, and more, will inevitably appear.

Even if you've established a strong desire and commitment to practice regularly, knowing which poses to do right now, for today's session, is one of the most concrete challenges of a home practice. This challenge can be met by choosing a specific sequence of poses that will meet your needs, in this moment, for health and wholeness. Some systems of asana practice, like the Ashtanga Vinyasa of Pattabhi Jois, use set groupings or series of poses, so sequencing is not an issue. But many systems do not designate the order of poses; within limits, choosing the sequence is left to the student. And even students who prac-tice set sequences like the Ashtanga series can benefit by working especially diligently on different poses on different days.

Even with years of regular class attendance under your belt, if you don't have the technical knowledge to create a well-rounded and well-organized home practice, that practice may very well remain spotty. It probably won't sustain itself-and you-over the long haul.

Planning Your Practice Sessions

To create a satisfying practice that you approach with enthusiasm, at least on most days, requires two basic kinds of knowledge. The first kind is gained by answering this next question for yourself: What do you really need from your practice today? If you are very tired from a long airplane trip, for example, you might choose a restorative practice to replenish your energy. At the least, you might start with resting poses and then see where the practice leads you; if you find your energy is increasing, you can always move into more dynamic asanas. On the other hand, if you feel energetic at the beginning of your practice, you might use a more vigorous session to channel that energy. For example, you could choose to emphasize standing poses or arm balances, making challenge and strength your focus.

Regardless of what you actually do, if your practice is an expression of what is alive in you now, that practice will help you stay present during your time on the mat. That experience can serve as a model for practicing presence all day long. It will also satisfy you and thus help give you the impetus to practice again tomorrow. If you force yourself to practice because you think you should, because you didn't yesterday, or for any other more external reason, even the most technically polished poses will not answer your inner need for ease and wholeness.

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Reader Comments

Clarissa

Home practice truly requires self-discipline and creativity. This article is very encouraging.

Rob

I have had a home practice for about 3 years now. I started with taping the Yoga Zone 30 min tv show that was on at the time. So I had about 25 shows on my TIVO and I would pick from the varied shows based on my needs of the day. This was a lazy man's way of keeping a home practice going. Now I can do it on my own. But when I am not in the mood to think I pull up one of the shows. In most cases it gets me going and after the show is over I continue with my own poses. I now maintain a 6 day a week home practice along with 2 weekly yoga class sessions. Good luck

stellabloo

Excellent and informative article!
As someone who has practiced yoga both in health and in recovery, I was glad to see Plank Pose included as an arm balance. IMHO each group should include an universally-accessible option that embodies the benefits of those poses in a gentle form (e.g. for a post-op practice) .
So I was surprised to see that Downward Dog is specifically not included as an inversion - my suggestion for another very gentle inversion would be "standing splits" - honouring the physical limits of the practioner, of course.

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