Are you good at yoga?


Yoga Teaching & Learning Newsletter
April 2024


Hello Reader

Are you 'good at yoga'? Scroll down for some thoughts on what this question means and how it relates to our yoga teaching. See what you think.

Go to the bottom of this newsletter to find the dates for the next 3 Q&A Zoom sessions for your diary. Do come along and join us if you've not been before!

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Are you good at yoga?


“You’re a yoga teacher - you must be very good at yoga!”


Has anyone ever said this to you? I have heard it many times! It’s an interesting comment that always makes me smile.

The word ‘good’ is a subjective one, and rather vague. Though it does have its uses of course. We might for example say ‘good’ to a student who has just done something that we asked for. In that situation the meaning is clear and we’re indicating that the student has done what was intended and done it well and appropriately.

Words like ‘good’ are so non-specific and subjective that you can only really use them usefully with someone who is clear about what you mean. If you tell a yoga student that their pose is 'good' - meaning they are now breathing more freely in the pose - they may mistakenly interpret it as meaning their body is more closely aligned to the shape of a yoga pose they’ve seen online.

Another aspect of using the word ‘good’ is that it suggests that there is also a ‘bad’! Because bad is considered as wrong, the idea of the possibility of getting it wrong can bring feelings of shame or inadequacy. So an unspecific use of the word ‘good’ in yoga classes can sometimes illicit fears of ‘not being good enough’ or the embarrassment of ‘getting it wrong’.

It’s all about being very clear and communicating well in our teaching. And also being aware of what we are communicating unknowingly when we’re teaching. The word ‘good’ may be reinforcing misconceptions that students have about what a ‘good’ yoga pose entails.

What is considered to be an advanced asana in some quarters is often about extreme ranges of joint movement or how far people can stretch. ‘Advanced' postures are sometimes considered to be the most extreme contortions. Often these are poses that can only be carried out by hypermobile bodies, and beginners assume that these yogis are 'good at yoga' and have achieved these physically strong poses from years of practice which is not always the case.

I once had a student who had been practising yoga for many years, who decided that she wanted to get her foot behind their head. She had a pretty mobile body to start with, so wasn’t too far away from it. After months of daily practice, she finally achieved her aim, and showed me. I asked her what that felt like, and she shrugged, looking slightly underwhelmed. Though I praised her achievement, interestingly she didn’t keep up that practice afterwards.

Part of the learning of yoga is the realisation that the shape of the asana is not the most important thing, and that striving for an end-point can be counter-productive. But maybe to begin with, the idea of attaining the ‘perfect pose’ gives some people the motivation to practice. Perhaps some need to go through that striving process towards that 'achievement' in order to learn that yoga practice is a process, that ideas of shape are not fixed, and that most goals have a temporary use.

Some students realise right away that we are all different with different types of bodies. They realise that yoga is about the experience of the practice and that it's the knock-on effects that matter most. Others have to go on a long convoluted journey, sometimes with a few injuries along the way, to get to that realisation. (The book The Alchemist by Paolo Coelho comes to mind here – a short book, well worth a read if you haven’t read it before.)

I would add though that there is such a thing that I would call a ‘good shape’ in a yoga pose that is worth working to achieve. This would be a shape where everything is aligned, joints are not distorted, the structure and function of the individual body is honoured, there is a balance of sthira and sukha within the shape, there is effort but not strain, the body is grounded and supported, there is a sense of focus and ease, and the breath is flowing.


Whenever I see this in action, usually after a student has been practising for some time, I find it one of the great joys of teaching yoga. And it’s just as likely to be an elderly person with limited ability in a gentle pose, as a younger person in a strong pose. To see someone achieve that shape is, to me, very good indeed!

To have a strong and clear useful intention, such as to be aware, to be well orientated with gravity and space, to let the breath flow, to work within the limits of your body – a ‘good shape’ can be found. So in the end, we come back to communication and what we mean by the words we are using.


Teaching mixed ability groups, and giving shared achievable aims, allows everyone to work together and at the same time do a ‘good’ yoga practice. This allows us to be mindful of our common humanity as we explore our bodies as individuals within a group. I would say that all those who strive to do that are 'good at yoga'. Would you agree?


Yoga teacher Q&A
get-togethers on Zoom

Dates for your diary

The next three Q&A meetings are on:

Wednesday 24th April 1-2pm

Saturday 18th May 10-11am

Friday 21st June 2.30-3.30pm

To receive email invitations to the Q&A sessions, sign up here


Enjoy the rainbows in the April showers,

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Here you will find articles, newsletters and web links for yoga teachers. The YogaUK.com website was founded in 1999 by Andrea Newman to support and connect heart-centred yoga teachers who work hard to serve their local communities. All yoga teachers are welcome, from anywhere in the world.

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