Forget the perfect 90-minute sunrise ritual. Here is how to build a practice that still happens on your worst Tuesday.
The most common confession I hear from students is not about difficult poses. It is: “I can't keep a home practice going.” Usually followed by a description of an ambitious routine that lasted eleven days.
The problem is rarely discipline. It is design. A practice that requires an empty house, a full hour, and high motivation is a practice designed to fail — because most mornings offer none of those.
Design for the worst morning, not the best. The floor next to your bed. Ten slow breaths, three cat-cows, one forward fold, thirty seconds of standing still. Two minutes, no mat required. That is the whole minimum practice.
Here is the quiet magic: a two-minute practice kept daily rewires more than a grand practice kept rarely. Most days you will do more, because starting is the only hard part. But on the worst Tuesday — sick child, missed alarm, grey rain — the practice still happens. And a practice that survives your life is the only kind worth building.
Aga
Yoga teacher & founder of Inflow