Here’s how to break bad habits with yoga 

Everyone has a bad habit or two, whether it’s late-night snacking, doom scrolling or binge-watching Netflix when you should be sleeping. Hitting the snooze button six times every morning seemed impossible to give up, until I started a consistent yoga routine. You might be surprised to learn that you can break bad habits with yoga. While yoga isn’t a quick fix, it can help you eliminate bad habits while enhancing your quality of life. Here’s how.

Helps You Build Awareness

Our bad habits happen without us giving them much thought beforehand, such as reaching for that bag of chips after work instead of an apple. However, yoga interrupts these patterns by building awareness of the present moment. As you concentrate on your breath while moving through each pose, you learn to tune into your body. This practice makes it easier to recognize your bad habits and make healthier choices.

Retrains Your Nervous System 

Bad habits tend to form due to boredom, stress or overwhelming emotions. Practicing yoga retrains your nervous system to take a pause instead of automatically diving into fight or flight mode. The breathwork and mindful movements associated with yoga also serve as a sort of “emotional regulation bootcamp.” Over time, you may find yourself taking a few deep breaths to manage your emotions instead of impulsively buying clothes or rage-texting your boyfriend when you get upset or overwhelmed.

Strengthens Your Willpower

Discipline is a core component of yoga. Struggling through new poses helps you practice completing difficult tasks while building self-compassion. As you build up your strength and confidence on the mat, your intentionality will inevitably spill over into your daily decisions and activities. After all, you stuck it out during that lengthy chair pose, maybe you can resist that second helping of dessert tonight, too.

You Begin To Crave Things That Nourish You

Yoga helps you build a better relationship with your body. Over time, you may naturally gravitate away from bad habits and crave food and activities that nourish your body, mind and soul. This realignment positively affects every aspect of your life, from avoiding toxic people, choosing wholesome foods and drinking less on the weekends. You’ll find that the clarity and grounded energy you receive from yoga feels better than a short-lived dopamine hit from a sugary pastry or cocktail.

Are You Ready to Break Bad Habits With Yoga? Join Us 

Sometimes the easiest way to break bad habits is to replace them with healthier ones. When you focus less on stopping these habits and more on building a consistent yoga routine, you may ultimately slip into a healthier mindset. For example, you may replace mindless doomscrolling in the morning with a gentle stretch routine or use grounding techniques before reacting to bad news.

Remember, change rarely happens overnight. You can start your journey towards better health by showing up with your mat to a yoga class. The rest will take care of itself. If you’re ready to discover how to break bad habits with yoga and build positive habits, visit Ignite Yoga and book a class today.             

About the Author

Picture of Justina Sanford

Justina Sanford

Justina is the owner of Ignite Yoga in Dayton, Ohio and 500 E-RYT yoga instructor. She's been teaching yoga for 15 years utilizing various yoga methodologies and has a passion for nudging people to discover what they're capable of, both on and off the mat. Justina loves to facilitate powerful experiences that often include dharma talks (life talks), breathing practices, visionwork, journaling, music, meditation, and sometimes even some unconventional methods. Justina is a former Music Therapist that has discovered a passion for entrepreneurship and helping people succeed. When she's not teaching classes, she's coaching and mentoring her staff or working to improve Ignite Yoga for students and teachers alike. Outside of small business ownership, Justina loves nature, fitness, cooking, culture, singing, and learning. Alongside her husband Chris, they take care of their three rescue dogs and travel often for outdoor adventures.

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