22/06/2026
When you’ve been teaching yoga for a couple of years, you get the hang of directing your students through movement.
You know yoga is more than Asana and you're experimenting with ways of bringing depth and meaning into class.
Maybe you theme around some of the other limbs, the chakras or do a series on the yamas and niyamas as this was the philosophy you learnt during your YTT.
Or maybe you centre classes around the moon, astrology, the seasons, holidays?
I did all of this.
I took workshops and trainings on how to find my voice as a yoga teacher. How to theme classes and tie it all in to the movement so that it sounded meaningful.
But something always felt off. Because I knew that if a student questioned me - h0w is this related to the teachings of yoga. I'd struggle to answer.
That's when I took the deep dive.
Into the Yoga Sutras and the Bhagavad Gita and the funny thing was, a lot of what I had been teaching was YOGA as per those texts.
The difference being that once I had the grounded experience of studying these texts, I better understood the roots and context.
I could make it relatable for the people I teach without feeling like a fraud.
If you're where I was and want your classes to be more than life-coaching through movement, I've got you.