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Kristina Symons, 46, recalls her yoga teacher training – from manic phase to calm
phase – and how it has quite literally blown her mind
My Story...
“I
t will blow your mind!” My
yoga teacher’s words filled
me with dread. What was I
letting myself in for? I am a
very impulsive person. I make
decisions on a whim and worry about the
consequences afterwards. Truth be told,
I wasn’t even very good at yoga when I
foolishly enrolled on my teacher trainer
course. What was I thinking?
A few months prior to my signing up,
my osteopath had given me three choices
regarding my ongoing back injury: take
medication, live with back pain, or practice
yoga. The answer was simple. Yoga it was.
Back then, the thought of a yoga class
terrified me. I had spent a lifetime swimming,
sprinting and sweating myself into a frenzy.
Now, I was planning to spend a precious
hour doing what? Breathing? Should I buy
some of those funny flowy pantaloon things?
Should I have an Om tattoo covering my
right shoulder? What about a toe ring? At
least a thumb ring?
Yet my back pain was worsening, so I
forced myself to book a vinyasa flow class
at my local leisure centre. At the front of
the studio were young professionals, sweaty
from the gym, sporting designer crop tops
and at the back were the earthy, hippy
types, weirdly carrying their own mats. I was
bemused by this. What was wrong with the
mats in the corner of the room? When a man
in red lycra underpants and matching vest
came in carrying a wheel, I almost died. Had
he lost his way to the circus?
Luckily, the instructor was normal. Lovely,
smiley, welcoming and normal Amanda
came in and I felt okay. The class was fine.
Absolutely fine. And I noticed that after
just a few classes, my back pain began
to subside. This yoga thing was okay, not
overwhelming, quite relaxing and a good
opportunity to stretch my back. On nothing
more than an impulse, I had an idea. I would
do a teacher training course and refine my
yoga practice. I signed up to a 200-hour,
12-month course.
That is yoga
Then those words filled me with dread. “It
will blow your mind”. What did that mean?
What if the other trainees were gymnasts and
ballerinas? What if they could do the splits and
handless headstands? Surely at the age of 46,
I would be the only oldie carrying an injury. My
heart was sinking. I would look a fool.