
It is only now, after nearly 8 years of on and off the mat yoga practice, growing, regressing, obsessing, trying, giving up, and returning again and again to yoga, that I am making a small breakthrough, one for which I dearly wish a permanent stay. The irony of the breakthrough itself is humbling. It is imperceptible in my outer form and vibrating with excitement in my inner core.
It used to be all about achieving the poses, being strong enough to make it through class and pushing myself to the edge, the blurry line between heightened sensation and agonizing pain. Perhaps I owe much of it to my unfailing self-discipline, and I admit, I have learned a great deal and reaped tremendous benefits from that type of approach and practice of yoga. I have healed injuries, found quiet of the mind even if for short bursts, enjoyed exposure to many different styles of yoga, learned to seek yoga studios wherever my travels take me, and even drifted in and out of home practice a dozen times.
It has been a wonderful part of my life, this yoga. But I had reached a plateau of some type for a while, and I just couldn’t shake it.
Usually this happens after the initial burst of learning has taken place. Then the learning and growing returns again with a new twist and a new challenge. For me, I was presenting myself with plenty of challenge and opportunity, the satisfaction and bliss often followed the practice and by no means was I either unsatisfied or unchallenged in my regular power yoga classes.
Still, something else was still lacking. And I think I may have just stumbled on it. What a lucky occasion to be alive for and to live through!
Through a series of private lessons with my fabulous instructor, biweekly power yoga at the studio, and a devotion to daily 1-hour home practice, I have been watching and feeling a transformation. In simple words, I would call it a deeper, softer, gentler but a far more precise understanding what it means to be in a pose and how find the easiest way to get there and stay there for your body.
It seems for the first time, I am really discovering my hips, the emotion-packed hips I have begged to know for years, and their rotation. I can finally feel and tuck in my tailbone (and not because I have injured it like that time I went right into the wall when falling out of a tripod). I am learning to find and extend my stubborn toes. I am learning to move less of my body and isolating only the belly muscles during the deep inhalations and slow exhalations. I am finding that it really is about activating my core and that it makes the difference between right or wrong, between pain or ease, between falling down or staying put. I am finally seeing how I need to do all of this, every time, every minute and second of the practice, with the breath.
The poses feel brand new, refreshing and rejuvenating. The discovery of the “heightened awareness”, as my teacher calls it, in every part of the body, makes for a whole new experience. Poses that make up the foundation of yoga now feel alive.

For the first time, every single pose seems both more profound and quite simple. The poses I have done a thousand times seem new yet familiar every time. The layers of learning and room for discovery in a single yoga pose alone require hours and weeks of study. Perfection is a myth but growth is inevitable and sweet.
My understanding of these concepts has been difficult and my progress painfully slow. Yet this intangible breakthrough fills me with motivation, hope and excitement. It gives me the conviction to know that yoga is here to serve us a great many purposes but it will serve none of us if we are not patient and observant and open to it.
From the short week of intense yoga practice, at home and in class, and with much more to still formulate and come, here are the 8 Reasons which influenced the breakthrough and to help us build a conscious yoga practice:
1 – Practicing consciously and every day, at home or studio: Most of my progress in the past has happened during more intense sessions of practice (not necessarily an intense flow but frequent ones). So commit if you can at least for a little while (1 week, 10 days, a month) to a daily practice and repeat the sequence every day. It is an entirely different feeling than if you were to practice once or twice a week.
2- Letting Go of Old ways of Getting into a pose: This has been the hardest one for me to grasp and the most important one to accompany the frequent practice for the best results. Try to let go of the ways you are used to getting into a pose (which you know by heart) and build it up anew every time, focusing on a newer, more precise alignment, a more syncopated breathing, and ease rather than tension in staying there.
3- Always Incorporating the Main Poses: Progress is born of repetition and we always return to the foundations. The foundational poses are the Sun Salutations A and B, with a variety of standard hip openers (Pigeon, Frog), shoulder openers (Eagle), backbends (Camel pose, Full Wheel), and standing series (Tree, Hand to Leg). Do these every day, every practice. Do the Sun Salutation at least 3-4 times and the other poses at least once.
4- Observing yourself like a Hawk: This is a literal observation with a mirror or your eyes depending on the pose. Or better yet, with a video camera. It is imperative that you have a reasonably good idea of what you look like and what is the expected form and alignment of the pose. This is more of an outer observation but just as important one to then help guide you into what needs to be adjusted.
5- Knowing your particular Body’s Challenges: Every body is different, and a good teacher can help you identify the tight spots which not only varies from person to person but also in a given body, from side to side. When you know these challenges, you can focus on those areas, the release of which will give you the most progress.
6- Learning more about Alignment Technique: This may be one where a private session with your favorite instructor, or a small group class with a lot of adjustment and explanation, can help. Reading and watching videos is excellent but for me, the real learning and what I believe pushed me over that edge is the understanding and feeling of the alignment techniques with the hands and voice of an expert.
7- Breathing with Intention and Focus: Breathing is not overrated in yoga. If your breathing is not helping you, you are doing it wrong. I was and have been for a long time. I still sometimes regress to tense breathing or simply breath out of sync with my poses. Practice focused, consistent, deep breathing which should only be observed from your belly (not shoulders or upper body). Always remind yourself of the breath especially as you get into the poses in a new way.
8- Anticipating the Breakthrough for Yourself: The yoga journey has much in reserve for you and breakthroughs are not reserved for a special few. I think if you practice with focus and intention, and follow these tips or others you may have come across, at some point in your journey, the same pose will fall into place as perfect as the unfolding of a perfect rose.

You may also like:
Why I Trust Scribe with my SEO:
Scribe is the smartest and best solution for finally getting SEO right. You will sleep easy at night while traffic finds its way to your site. That sounds like an advertisement but it's so true!











{ 18 brilliant comments, Care to add another? }
Excellent article Farnoosh. I might have to print this out for those subtle reminders during my yoga practice. Sounds as if you have had some of the same ups and downs, stops and starts as my practice has. I wish I could afford to go to the studio (it has been a few years), but I will continue practicing at home with dvd’s and the dvr. Just not the same though having that instruction on hand. Great, great article. Have a great remainder of the week if I don’t hear from you soon.
Blessings,
Rick R.
Rick, look up yoga podcasts in iTunes, esp. yogadownload.com and Dave Farmar for power yoga. They are mostly free and excellent. And only audio which is sometimes better than watching. Thanks for the kind words! Glad you enjoyed the post!!! Keep that motivation strong even when you don’t feel like it, just do it. Inspiration comes from the practice (not before practice, unfortunately
)!
I can so much relate to the points you are making, especially about trying to break a plateau to new enlightenment, and the unexpected developments.
I am currently in a grove (no muscle ache, just a bit of sweat, no immediate challenge in sight), appreciating the routine, but not seeing progress the way I use to see progress a year or two ago. However, somehow it’s there, building up, and it will unveil itself and make me feel like I did something without knowing, just through the routine.
I like very much how you write, simply yet to the point
Daniel, so happy you identify with the challenges in the yoga journey. I am certain your breakthrough is on its way, especially if you practice often and observe yourself. Keep at it! And *thank you* for the kind words on my writing style!
The photographs are beautiful, and the advice is inspiring for Some Day yet also inspiring for Now, even for a beginner. Thank you!
Rebekah, enjoy your yoga journey. I think of myself as a beginner still!
so thoughtful, Farnoosh. I like the idea of anticipating the breakthrough. Like, incorporating an unopened door into your practice, just waiting patiently for when you will walk through it, instead of agreeing to the plateau as a final destination. Very smart.
Thank you Ali….yes we should anticipate and make way for it to happen. No plateau shall be agreed to by either of us!
your 8 points sound a lot like Zen practice. I like that. I’ve been doing yoga at home for years and it’s one of the best activities i’ve ever taken up. But, I’ve always seen it as more of a body than a mind thing. I’ve practiced the Tea Ceremony for years as well. The way you put it, it’s not much different at all.
Keith, good for you. Zen practice it is but it’s still not easy to maintain that rigorous regular practice. I am so glad you resonated to the pointed mentioned here. Enjoy your journey!
Hi, Farnoosh. You are right that alignment is more important that pushing yourself. We have a great free yoga video on safe alignment skills. It was made by Leeann Carey, my boss & an inspiring yoga teacher. I thought your readers would benefit from taking a look at this.
Anjeanette, alignment is very important. Thank you for the recommendation!
Last Fabulous Post by Farnoosh was Winners of the Movie Contest and Your 30 Best Films
Hi Farnoosh. This is such a coincidence because in many ways, this is very close to where I am in my own Yoga practise. I was very regular the first year and a half. That was 8 years ago. After an initial burst of peace and vitality, I was very irregular. Only now, in the last few weeks, after finding a personal Yoga trainer has something changed, at the core, like you say. Indeed being regular is the first most important thing. Now , I watch myself more, am learning to breathe better, and am at peace. Fantastic time, for the mind and body.
Dear Uzma, how nice to see you going through the archives – gosh I need to re-read my own advice….Oh how exciting to hear about your internal change. We must be regular with our practice, that I think is the greatest challenge of yoga. Yoga is brutal when we skip out on practice. And so rewarding when we keep at it. It’s wonderful to share the love of yoga – and all its glory and peace – whit you, my dear friend, thank you!
very nice post. I enjoy reading it. I been practicing yoga for 7 years now, Astanga yoga, but still have find useful information on your blog. Practicing yoga is the jurnej that never ends.
Last Fabulous Post by Kizie was Kauai- a magic garden in the Pacific
Hi dear Kizie, thanks for your comment….I LOVE Ashtanga, it is my all-time favorite type of yoga. So glad that you enjoyed this. Practice never ever ends. It only expands and through it we grow. It is a magnificent transformation!
Thanks for the great tips, Farnoosh. Have just gotten back to my yoga practice after taking a long (unintended) break…It’s harder than I thought to get back into regular practice…but like you say, it’s a lot to do with self-discipline and practicing consciously…
Love reading your posts, keep up the good work!
Matt, yoga punishes severely when we take time out for too long and I know exactly what you mean because I go through ebbs and flows – mainly when I travel. I hope you ease into it and find the juicy flow of happiness come your way after opening those hips and shoulders. Thanks for the kind words here. Welcome and come back anytime. Namaste!
{ 7 brilliant comments, Care to add another? }