Wherever You Go, Yoga Can Come Too

Summer has a way of turning our routines inside out. The sun lingers, plans change on a whim, and suddenly we find ourselves practicing yoga in borrowed beds, airport lounges, or lakeside cottages. In those moments of transition, it’s easy to drift away from our yoga practice.

Not out of laziness, but logistics. Props are packed away. Schedules become spontaneous. Space is limited. I get it — I’ve been there.

In moments like these, I turn to Patanjali’s teachings of sthira and sukham. Iyengar Yoga shows us how to stand firm—finding strength and steadiness (sthira)—while also embracing comfort, adaptability, and ease (sukham). So, as summer spontaneity begins to entice, how can we soften rigidity while remaining committed to our practice?

Here’s what’s worked for me:

Keep it simple.

If you can bring a couple of props, great: a belt takes up very little space, and one or two blocks can go a long way. But you don’t need a mountain of gear. It’s summer—go with the flow and improvise!

Short doesn't mean ineffective.

You can shift your physical, mental, and emotional state in just 20 minutes. Sometimes, a shorter session is even more powerful than pushing through a full hour. Try this one and see how deeply you can reset with a short, focused practice.

Let go of perfect conditions.

Practice in your pyjamas. Practice while the kids nap. Practice outside with birds chirping—or inside while traffic hums. Practice without a mat (a deck or lawn works just fine). Let yoga adapt to your life, not the other way around.

Why Stay With It This Summer?

Iyengar Yoga is a touchstone. Every time we come to our mat, we honour strength and stillness. Whether we know it or not, we’re nurturing self-understanding, self-compassion, and self-respect. Yoga offers our nervous system exactly what it craves: balance, resilience, and efficiency.

So don't start over in September. Let this be the summer you stay with it—gently and steadily—with sthira and sukham.

Why This Matters

Yoga is more than movement. It’s a relationship with yourself—a practice of self-inquiry, or svadhyaya.

Summer is often a time of joyful chaos: travel, social gatherings, a shifting rhythm. It's easy to become untethered from the steady beat that comforts and nourishes you. The one that comes not from the calendar, but from being in sync with yourself.

Yoga teaches us that discipline isn’t about force. It’s about commitment—a loving, steady commitment to your own well-being. Like any healthy long-term relationship, sometimes it’s inconvenient, sometimes it’s hard, but it’s always worthwhile.

When we pause to ground our feet, lengthen our spine, and steady our breath, we create a more stable container for our thoughts, emotions, and energy. In that steadiness, we can respond more wisely. We can listen more deeply. We can meet the present moment with contentment—santosha.

"Still the breath, still the mind."
— B.K.S. Iyengar

Bringing Yoga With You: My On-Demand Membership

I’m so grateful for Iyengar Yoga—it’s taught me the power of breath, the potential of the mind, the possibility of the body, and the santosha that comes from integrating all three.

That’s why I created my On-Demand Membership: to offer Iyengar Yoga that meets you wherever you are—on a dock, in a hotel room, or your childhood bedroom.

With the Membership, you’ll receive:

  • 🧘‍♀️ A well-organized library of exceptional Iyengar Yoga classes

  • ☀️ A summer playlist featuring minimal-prop practices, suitable for yoga on the go

  • 💌 Personal support and weekly class recommendations from me—plus, I’m only an email away if you have questions about your practice, setup, or space


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Why Beginners Love Iyengar Yoga