Afternoon Yoga Club


Turning 60 shouldn’t require a new personality. It does require a new relationship with your body. Less conquest. More cooperation.
The first two reasons to start yoga later in life are obvious: balance and strength. Falling gets expensive fast. Weakness is a sneaky little gateway drug to injury. So yes, we practice Tree. We wobble in Warrior 3. We build the kind of strength that helps you get off the floor without negotiating with it.
But the standouts aren’t the sexy biomechanics. They’re community and confidence. That’s the real “welcome” in the Afternoon Yoga Club—being in a room where a 70-year-old and a 23-year-old are both working on the same unglamorous thing: showing up.
Confidence is not about nailing a pose. It’s about repeating a hard, simple promise: I will come back. Over time your body learns it can adapt. Your mind learns it can stop catastrophizing every sensation.
And then stress relief, quietly doing its job. Not as an escape hatch. As a return. Breath by breath, you get more attuned, less spun out, and slightly harder to knock off center. Which is a decent life skill at any age.
