172 Allen Street, 2nd floor (btwn Stanton & Rivington)
(212) 353-8859 tricia@bikramyogales.com

What to Expect as you Begin Bikram Yoga

by Tricia, Director of Bikram Yoga Lower East Side

My first day of yoga was in the Spring of 2000. I was living in Atlanta where I ran a few restaurants. I was stressed out, had my hand in the chocolate pretzel bowl, and I felt out of shape. I was sick of the gyms, I had no extra time, and I was feeling less than T-rrific. After a hard week at work, I staggered to my friend Wayne’s place to get my hair done. Wayne took one look at me and immediately announced he was taking me to yoga class. Yoga class? No way. Yoga just wasn’t my speed. I was an All American soccer player in college: I liked my hamstrings tight and my workout fierce. Needless to say, I was skeptical.

But Wayne promised me this yoga would be different. He promised it would be an intense work out and that I would gain flexibility with the heat. He went on telling me about how great I’d feel, how much weight he’d lost doing the yoga, how much healthier he was, blah blah blah. Through all his shpeil, he forgot to tell me what I really needed to know, like:

There’s no one who visits this web page that can’t do this yoga. The instructors will give you everything you need to get through a class, from instructions as basic as how to breathe (in and out through your nose), to tricks on trouble-shooting your poses, getting through the heat, knowing when to sit-down, focus, and just watch. You can drink water between any of the poses after the warm-up ( the first 4 postures), and if you need a break in class, you can sit down on your mat, connect with your breath, and rest until you’re ready for more.

How quickly you progress in your Bikram practice will depend entirely on you – upon your natural ability to a small extent, but mostly upon the honest time and effort you give to yoga. It will have little to do with how “perfectly” you can do the poses. Instead, it will have to do with how well you understand what you are trying to accomplish in each pose, how honestly you try to accomplish your goal, and how supple your muscles and joints have become in comparison to the point at which you began. In Yoga there is no standard of comparison except yourself. Perfect is the best you can do that day. Even on your first day. Which is today, right?