In all seriousness, I know a lot of people don't consider yoga to be an aerobic activity. And while a lot of people say it's good at building strength and increasing flexibility, which it is, it is also a great workout. For the second week in a row I was sweating and breathing heavy, but I felt really rejuvenated at the end of the workout. Is it because the teacher is telling us to "be true to our bodies" and "listen to our breath"? I actually think so.
I'm not a religious person - I haven't been to church in 20 years. But I do consider myself a spiritual person, and it's something that I consider a very important and personal part of my life. So maybe that's why I connect with yoga. When the teacher started our ending meditation in double pigeon pose (a new pose I learned where you sit, cross your right leg over your left, lean over, and stretch, then repeat with left leg over right) it hurt, but at the same time was completely calming. Like all the stress I had earlier that day - not being able to find my keys, 3 hours worth of meetings, etc - didn't matter. More than that, like it didn't even happen.
And no, I'm not just drinking the kool-aid. And I'm not going to go out and devote my life to yoga and leave civilization behind. But it is a nice feeling when you can put your body through a tough workout, and your mind feels just as strong after. Call me crazy, but I feel more complete after yoga.
But the question remains, will I feel this complete after (SPOILER ALERT!) ballroom dance tomorrow?? Dun Dun DUN! Til tomorrow!
~Catie
Minutes spent working out this week: 75
catie, i agree with the 'spiritual but not religious' thing. and i wish i could get to yoga every day, but it's just not possible with my schedule. i feel more toned every time i go, and it's all about that, and flexible and having a 'still mind'. i think it's a mental work out too. and once you start going a lot, you'll totally be able to do all the crazy hard poses. it just takes a while. (believe me! haha)
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