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Practice Makes…Well, Practice.

In the yoga sutras, we’re given a few key points as to how yoga works (we’re given more than that, but let’s use the KISS system for now).

Patanjali tells us pretty much right away that yoga is self-evident when the mind is quiet. He then reveals that in order to quiet the mind, one can engage in consistent practice while relinquishing any hold over how that practice turns out (sutra 1.12).

The key is a steady consistent practice.

Most of us begin yoga as casual observers, heading to our favorite class maybe once a week. But, then yoga does something strange. It gets its hooks in us and we become obsessed. Suddenly we’re buying unlimited memberships at yoga studios and investing in $100 yoga pants. We read yoga, speak yoga and breathe yoga. No matter what the outer trappings of the practice, it still creates internal transformation. Why?

Because yoga always does it’s job.

The practice can be of any discipline and the teacher can be of any lineage. As long as the student is dedicated and engaged in the practice, yoga will do its job. The practice has a way of clearing the wheat from the chaff and allowing for the inner condition of yoga to arise.

What?

Right. Yoga is our birthright. It is who we are. It is a natural, inborn, ingrained state, and we’ve simply forgotten it through our social conditioning and programming. The practices of yoga (thankfully) slowly undo that programming to reveal more happiness and freedom. We become more at ease with ourselves, more confident. We become generally more fun to be around. People enjoy our company. So much so, in fact, that our friends and loved ones will start telling us to go to yoga if we slip into a funk. They’ve witnessed the power of our practice and how it affects our attitude in such a way that those we interact with notice.

Those are some of the benefits and they’re revealed no matter what we hope for in the practice. Remember the sutra? It says that one of the things that slows our mind is a relinquishing of any desire for the fruits of the practice. Because that desire locks us in to expectations… which, if we don’t get what we want, bums us out.

So what if our yoga practice results in less stress and less tension instead of rock hard abs? Isn’t anything we derive from a focused practice awesomely okay? In the words of the inimitable Rolling Stones, “You can’t always get what you want. But if you try sometimes, you just might find, you get what you need.”

And, indeed, if we try on a regular basis, yoga lays the groundwork for our internal condition to shift. The yoga sutra also stresses regularity. In the sutras that follow, Patanjali defines practice (abhyasa) as something that’s engaged in consistently over a long period of time. Consistency is key. The Beatles did it. They performed together as a band for 8 hours a day for 4 straight years in a crappy pub. Sounds like a lot of work…but look at what that work yielded. In his book, Outliers, Malcolm Gladwell talks about the 10,000 hour rule of excellence. Basically we need to dedicate 10,000 hours to anything to earn mastery. Yoga included.

So start now.

Like, right now. Every day is an opportunity for your practice. And every practice counts. When we choose to show up on our mat, whether it’s for ten minutes or three hours, all of that counts. The consistency over a long duration is what gives yoga time to create the internal change that supports the sustained feeling of connectedness and happiness that is yoga. It’s good stuff, but it doesn’t happen magically. Only with dedication and surrender do we attain liberation.

This isn’t a frou frou concept.

You can have it, too. The state of yoga isn’t the providence of those who sit on Himalayan mountaintops in dhotis (traditional mens garment in India) meditating for 108 years. Anyone can realize it. You’ve just got to keep getting on your mat. Let it do its job. Give it time and witness the results. Because they’re awesome, and there’s a new perspective waiting for you inside your own human condition.

Go, yogi, go.

For help on building and maintaining a regular home practice, no matter where, no matter what, please check out Alanna’s “Liberate Your Practice” course on Udemy.com. The first 25 folks to register with the special Yoganonymous code: abhyasa108, get 25% off.

Check out the video preview here:

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About

Alanna Kaivalya is an artistic and inspiring teacher of yoga, and the creator of The Kaivalya Yoga Method. Born with a hearing impairment, Alanna learned through the power of vibration at a young age, and was then naturally drawn to the harmonic practice of yoga. Listed as Yoga Journal’s top 21 Yoga Teachers Under 40 (March, 2008), and now with more than a decade of teaching experience, she has developed a teaching style that is a unique combination of her spirit, her knowledge, and of course the teachers who have influenced her along the path. She recently launched The Kaivalya Yoga Method Teacher Trainings, advanced level intensives held in New York City, Bali and abroad, and teaches workshops, at trainings and retreats across the globe.

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