For yoga classes, invading rhythms are hard to ignore (Boston Globe)
COHASSET -- People who practice yoga like it quiet. It helps them to meditate and relax.
COHASSET -- People who practice yoga like it quiet. It helps them to meditate and relax.
COHASSET -- People who practice yoga like it quiet. It helps them to meditate and relax.
BELLEVUE, Wash. -- By the end of their doggie yoga class, most of the wandering and sniffing participants are passed out on their mats, in a position their instructor calls the "upward facing belly pose."
BELLEVUE, Wash. -- By the end of their doggie yoga class, most of the wandering and sniffing participants are passed out on their mats, in a position their instructor calls the "upward facing belly pose."
The yoga craze isn't just for adults these days. More and more children are hitting the mats to relax and stay fit
By Tim Swift, The Baltimore Sun Mar. 3--There are bodies inches to the left and the right, the temperature is climbing, and the sweat is starting to pour down. Nearby, candles flicker, and a rhythmic beat pulses throughout the small studio.