Photo: morguefile.com |
The second question that potential new students ask me is
usually, ‘What sort of yoga do you teach?’ I generally answer that I am BWY
trained in the hatha tradition, but that I have absorbed elements from various
teachers and experiences over the years. (The first question is, ‘How much is
it?’ Rarely does anyone ask me where – or even if – I qualified.)
There seem to be so many different styles of
yoga around. Let’s start with hatha, ashtanga, Iyengar, kundalini, Dru: the
list goes on and is growing. Add in Scaravelli, Bikram, viniyoga and yin, and
those that are purely descriptive, such as dynamic, power, restorative, for
pregnancy, and trendy ones like barre, aerial and acro – not to mention hybrids
like Yogalates and Body Balance. I’m confused, never mind my students!
So, what style of yoga do I teach? It depends. I always have
a lesson plan, but adapt it according to who turns up and how we’re all
feeling. Sometimes we work really slowly, sometimes more dynamically. Sometimes
we have a very precise class, but sometimes we’re more mellow and we just go
with the flow, literally and metaphorically. Sometimes, the age of my students
on the night means it’s accidentally an over-50s session. Other times the boiler is playing
up and we inadvertently have a session of hot yoga.
I don’t want or need a label on my classes. What
you get is ‘Julia’s yoga’, whatever that is.
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