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oak tree yoga

174 Victoria Road
Wargrave
07977934346
yoga classes and yoga teacher training

oak tree yoga

  • Welcome
  • Classes
    • One to One
    • Online
    • Special Needs
    • Sound Baths
  • Retreats
    • Retreat with Us
    • June 2025 Hampshire
    • July 2025 Sweden
    • October 2025 Hampshire
    • November 2025 Hampshire
    • March 2026 Goddess Rising Day Retreat
    • Yoga Retreats Booking Now
  • Thai Massage
  • Yogi's Library
    • PRACTICE WITH US
    • THIS WEEK'S CLASS
    • 20 MINUTE CLASSES
    • VINYASA
    • SLOW FLOW
    • HATHA YOGA
    • YIN-YANG YOGA
    • RESTORATIVE YOGA
    • 7 CHAKRA SERIES
    • MEDITATION
    • TUTORIALS
    • Guided Meditations
  • Journal
  • Sign In My Account

Dormant Shoots

June 17, 2023 Sarah Raspin

Thr gifts of yoga are many and various, but for me one of thoe most important is that no matter how long we have been practsising, and not matter how old we are, whether we are healthy and full of beans, or fatigued or even unwell, there is a way to continue practising, developing and learning.

I met a lovely man recently on retreat in Samos who told me how much he regretted not sticking with yoga when he first came to it when he was younger. Now 50, he has committed to his practice with a trusted teacher. I have another student who picked up a copy of the Bhagavad Gita when she was 16 years old and was deeply moved by it, now in her fifties and dealing with an intractable autoimmune disease, she wonders why she didn’t find her way t0 yoga back then, but waited almost 40 years to begin.

It seems to me that our yoga practice begins when we first come to it, whether we committed to daily practice or not. Yoga is a seed that once planted can lie dormant for years, until the right combination of warmth, environment and attention cause it to germinate and grow.

Similarly, I meet students who used to have a dedicated yoga practice, but who fell off the yoga wagon somehow and have only just returned to it. There’s a kind of frustration in these students, they often express how they wish they had carried on, or wonder why they stopped when they know how much good yoga brings to life and limb.

It’s the same thing exactly, the yoga might be dormant within you, but it lives there still. All you have to do is shine some light on it, tend to it a little, water it regularly and it will begin to bloom within you once more.

If you have been away from regular practice and are regretting that fact, the worst thing you can do is to beat yourself up about it. Try to accept it as being your unique path in yoga, try rolling out your mat for ten minutes, moving gently, breathing more consciously. Make some room for yourself to water that seed, which grows in the sunlight of kind care, not the shadow of self-reproach.

← Holding Hope in a Troubled WorldGot to Let Go →
Rainy day yoga ✌🏼🕊️

Sunday morning autumn practice looks like this - slow movement, nourishing pranayama & gentle poses held for a long time. Meditation rises naturally.

Doesn't look like much from the outside, but everything on the inside ha
When fear arises, lift your heart✌🏼🕊️

The victories & challenges we encounter in our yoga practice become the manual for how to live more skillfully.

Fear has a posture. When we are scared, our breath becomes shallow, our chest caves in &
Stay hopeful✌🏼🕊️

Be friendly with happy people,
Have compassion for the unhappy &
Cultivate equanimity towards the wicked
Yoga Sutra 1:33

Patanjali taught this to his students about 2,000 years ago. 

It's easy to be friends with happy people
If you want to continue to do your best & most dedicated work, you ought to know how best to replenish your energies afterwards ✌🏼🕊️

The week after retreat is necessarily a very slow one here. We're back to our usual weekly schedule, but quiet
You are stronger than you think you are ✌🏼🕊️

Good people need to be strong, because the bad ones shout so very loudly. 

#bestrong #pinchamayurasana #inversionworkshop
Disconnect to reconnect ✌🏼🕊️

Retreats offer an immersive experience to deepen one's meditation practice, fostering self-understanding, emotional regulation, and a renewed sense of vitality 🤍

#yogatribe #yogaretreat #meditationretreat #yogaweeken

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