06/04/2026
Recovery Yoga Zoom Meeting. Inpatient treatment.
Both new students from last week were there.
Student “M” [before class]: “So, are we going to do the same poses we did last week, or different ones?”
Me: “We’ll be doing the same poses every week. And here's why: I only have you for three or four weeks while you’re here [inpatient treatment] and I want to teach you a recovery-based yoga practice that you can leave here with - kind of like 'give a man a fish, and he’ll eat for a day; teach a man to fish, and he’ll eat forever.' I want to teach you how to do yoga; not just give you one hour of yoga class.”
[After class]
Student M: “Class seemed like it went faster this week. [Pause.] It’s probably because I’m more familiar with the poses. Plus practice was a little bit easier tonight because I’m getting better at it!”
Student “A": "Yeah, I agree. Except crow [pose] wasn’t any easier.”
Me: "Yet. It wasn't easier yet."
A: [Smiling] "Thank you for doing this. See you next week, right?"
Student M: "Yes, thank you."
Yoga is a proven support activity for substance use disorder that builds resilience to stress and reduces rates of relapse. Give your clients the tools they need to thrive in recovery.