About the studio
Still Ave began in 2017 with a borrowed room, a stack of second-hand blankets, and a small handful of students who wanted to practise without the noise. Years later the room is our own, the mats are better, and the intention is unchanged: yin and restorative yoga, taught slowly and without spectacle.
I am Priya Sundaram. I came to yoga the long way — through a stiff back, a stressful decade, and a first class I very nearly walked out of. I stayed because, for ninety minutes, the endless commentary in my head finally went quiet. Teaching is my attempt to hand that quiet to someone else.
I trained in the classical foundations and kept adding — breathwork, restorative methods, functional mobility — but the heart of it is simple. Meet the body where it is. Move with the breath. Stop before the ego takes over. Rest as if it mattered, because it does.
What I believe
Yoga as a slow craft
I do not believe in miracle poses, guru worship, or the idea that a harder practice is a better one. I believe in slow, careful, repeatable work — breath that has been paid attention to, range of motion offered without forcing, and a quiet room where someone can set down the small armour of a hard week.
Most of what happens in class is unremarkable from the outside. A long exhale. A held shape. A pause. Another. The good practices don't look dramatic; they feel like having been listened to — by your own breath, for once.
Balance is not holding still. It is a thousand small corrections, forgiven.— practice notes
If you are reading this
A small note
You have arrived at a small studio journal. There is nothing to buy on this page, no course to sign up for, no challenge to complete. The studio runs by word of mouth and keeps a short wait list that opens a few times a year.
If something here has been useful — a class to consider, a shape to try, a way of thinking about the breath that happens to fit — that is the whole intention. The journal is the practice, written down.