Ashtanga Yoga Tech Support #2: Solace, Sex, and Strength
Welcome back to Tech Support Tuesday. Each week, I pull questions from the yoga corners of Reddit and answer them on video. This week’s session covers three questions — grief on the mat, yoga’s quieter effects on intimacy, and whether this practice can actually change your body.
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🕊️ Navigating Grief in Yoga Practice
One listener returned to yoga to find solace after their father passed away. During Shavasana, the tears flowed. That’s not a problem with your practice — that is your practice. Shavasana holds power in its stillness. When you’re moving through postures, your body and mind are occupied. Lying down removes those distractions and lays bare whatever you’re carrying.
Crying on the mat is bearing witness. Your body has been waiting for you to stop, to allow for rest. Shavasana may have been the first time you gave it that chance.
☯️ Permission to Grieve and Move Forward
If Shavasana feels too overwhelming, it’s okay to skip it occasionally. The first rule is do no harm. The yoga mat is one of the few places where you don’t need to explain yourself — nor should you judge yourself. Communicate with your teacher if necessary. Your journey on the mat is deeply personal, and sometimes laying still and letting emotions flow is the whole point.
Going back to practice after a week? That says something about you. A lot of people wouldn’t. Don’t rush. You’ve got time.
🌟 Transforming Physical and Emotional Landscapes
Another question explores yoga’s impact on intimacy. The physical stuff is obvious — stamina improves, you’re stronger, more flexible in every sense. Ujjayi breathing coordinates your nervous system. You learn to down-regulate on demand, and that means you’re actually present with your partner instead of stuck in your head.
But the bigger shift is subtler. Ashtanga trains you to stay present with intense sensation without reacting to it. To breathe through discomfort. To notice what’s happening in your body without narrating it. These are transferable skills. When you stop bracing against your own body, everything changes — including intimacy.
⚖️ Beyond Aesthetic Goals
Can yoga tone your body? Sure. Ashtanga will absolutely change your body composition — you’re holding your own weight in ways that build lean, functional muscle. Sun salutations are progressions of a push-up. Your arms, core, and legs will all get worked.
But here’s the thing. Once you start practicing, you’ll probably notice something shift. You stop caring as much about what your body looks like and start caring about what it can do. Santosha — contentment — changes how you show up in every physical relationship. Self-love looks good on everyone.
✨ The Side Effects Are the Point
Start with what hurts — anxiety, back pain, whatever brought you here. The toning, the calm, the adamantine body the Yoga Sutra talks about? Those are side effects. Remarkable ones. But side effects nonetheless.
That’s Tech Support Tuesday #2. Three questions. Grief, connection, and what your body is actually for. Bring yours next week.
00:00 The Question
00:21 Why Shavasana Is Hard
00:49 Your Practice Is Working
01:10 The Grief Will Change
01:51 Permission to Grieve
02:41 Moving Forward
03:16 The Question
03:37 Physical Benefits
04:00 Presence & Breathwork
04:45 Body Acceptance
05:10 Connection & Self-Love
05:38 The Question
05:58 Posture & Spine Health
06:41 Anxiety & Flow State
07:28 Pain Relief
07:42 Body Composition & Strength
08:19 Beyond Aesthetics
09:08 The Takeaway
