Foundations
Your First Yoga Class — What to Actually Expect
No flexibility required, no chanting you have to fake. Here is what an honest first class looks like.
A first class is mostly listening. You will arrive, roll out a mat, and spend the first few minutes simply lying down while the teacher talks you into your own breath. Nothing is tested. Nothing is graded.
How to practise it
- Arrive ten minutes early and tell the teacher it is your first class — every good one wants to know.
- Wear something you can bend in; skip socks, bare feet grip the mat.
- Take child’s pose any time the room moves faster than you want to. It is always available, never a failure.
- Breathe through the nose when you can. When you cannot, you are working too hard — back off.
- Stay for the final rest. It is the point, not the epilogue.
Common mistakes
- Pushing to match the most flexible person in the room. Their practice is not your practice.
- Holding the breath during effort. The breath is the whole instrument; do not put it down.
- Leaving before savasana because it feels like doing nothing. Doing nothing, well, is the skill.
You do not need to be flexible to start yoga any more than you need to be clean to take a shower.
In the studio, and at home
A good beginner room is small, warm, and unhurried. You should leave a little calmer than you came, and slightly surprised that ninety minutes went by.
You do not need to be flexible to start yoga any more than you need to be clean to take a shower. You start where the body is today, and the practice meets you there.
Questions we hear
No. Flexibility is a result of practice, not a requirement for it. Beginners are welcome exactly as stiff as they are.
Water, comfortable clothes, and bare feet. Studios lend mats and props; you bring only yourself.
Every pose has an easier version. A good teacher offers three options for each shape; you choose the one your body can hold with a steady breath.