I’ve officially made it through 15 days IN A ROW of hot yoga. Yes, I am proud of myself for making it this far. Yes, I plan to complete the 30 days. Yes, I’m seeing changes in my body and mind. But it definitely has not been easy. In fact, it’s one of the harder things I’ve ever done.
Here are a few things I’ve been surprised by so far:
1.) I haven’t lost any weight. Considering how much I sweat, it seems impossible that I wouldn’t be burning enough calories to drop at least a pound or two after fifteen 90-minute workouts in a row. The scale disagrees with me. What I’m finding is that this form of yoga is much more of a toning exercise than one for weight loss. The heat makes you feel as though you’re burning more calories than you are. I’m cool with that… I guess.
2.) While it’s been relatively easy for me to slim down in the past, I’ve always had a hard time putting on muscle. After 15 days of Bikram yoga, I can actually feel, though not really see, some muscle toning going on – primarily in my legs.
3.) There’s more to this yoga thing than just the physical changes. It effects how you structure your day, what you prioritize, how you deal with stress and how you manage your time. If nothing else, this challenge has driven me to make healthier choices. Struggling through a 90 minutes class in a 108 degree room where the odds are good that you’ll be posted-up next to a smelly person is the best motivation I’ve found so far to make sure I don’t do anything to myself to make those 90 minutes any more difficult than they already are.
4.) Now that I’ve painted that lovely picture, let me be clear that despite the heat, the smell, the sweat, the pain and the lack of weight loss, the class is far from unpleasant. It’s the most cleansing thing I’ve ever done. I walk in feeling stressed and worried and walk out feeling refreshed and energetic. It puts you in touch with your body, your breathing. You become more aware of the parts of your body that hurt – pains that you could probably go most of your life ignoring because your body and mind get used to the day-to-day discomfort that comes with sitting in front of a computer 40+ hours/week. Stretches that once hurt come to feel amazing. Stretches that once felt amazing come to hurt. You have the self-satisfaction of knowing that you are taking your current and future health into your own hands. Like most things worth doing in life, it’s challenging but wonderful.
5.) The class is 90 minutes, but the time commitment is more like 2.5 – 3 hours/day once you factor in getting to the studio, changing, warming up, cooling down, driving home and taking a shower. The time commitment has been the most difficult part of the challenge for me.
6.) Yoga is expensive. Doing yoga requires that you buy yoga stuff. Yoga stuff is expensive too. But if you’re going to do it, good yoga clothes, a nifty water bottle and a nice yoga towel are worth the expense. When I started this challenge I decided that I’d just use stuff that I already had rather than fork out over $100 on a tank top and yoga towel. I’ve been wearing the same 3 yoga outfits on rotation for 15 days in a row and, in addition to the fact that I’ve had to do laundry every other day, I’m totally sick of all my outfits. Needless to say, I will be investing in at least one more yoga top to get me through the next 15 days. I’m also buying a yoga towel so I can stop using our bathroom towels for my disgusting sweat sessions (sorry babe, should’ve thought of that sooner). Beyond getting bored with wearing the same outfits day-after-day, you need to do what you can to feel confident if you’re going to be looking at yourself in the mirror for 60 minutes per day, and a nice yoga outfit, cool gulp of water and absorbent towel can work wonders to improve how you feel during class.
7.) I’m more sore on day 16 than I was in the first week. With most workouts, you feel most sore on day two or three but if you continue to do the same thing day after day, your body adjusts and you begin to feel less taxed by the same workout. That is not the case with Bikram, a practice in which you do the same postures in the same order each class. However, though you’re going through the same movements, as you begin to understand poses more you move deeper into the postures, pulling more benefit from them but also putting your muscles, bones and ligaments through new challenges on a daily basis.
8.) It’s hard, it’s hot and it takes up a ton of time, but I can actually do this!
9.) People of all sizes and ages can do this yoga, and really kick ass at it.
10.) Maybe most surprising of all: I’m not sick of it yet.
We’ll see how I feel after another 15 days…