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Does anyone else find themselves absolutely

exhausted after doing a full practice six days in a row?

I've recently upped my mat time from three days a week

to six (minus moon days) and I feel like I'm being

visited by a vampire every night. No energy at all by the

end of the week but my stretches are also so much

deeper by the end, due to the steady practice. Do I need

more vitamins? More protein? Find a job that lets me

nap in the afternoons? Or is this just what 36 feels

like?

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you might try expanding your practice

gradually-<br>3 days til 4 days etc. Also I might suggest looking

at your diet. I am a vegetarian & have been for many

years. When I started this practice I found that I

needed more protein in my diet than before. Bear in mind

that each person is an idividual & it pays to observe

what foods give you energy & detract from it. I found

in the first couple of years of practicing that my

energy level wasn't as high as it is now - but I was

also undoing alot of damage caused by other factors.

Have heart it does get better & better &

better.<br>p.s. I'm 47 & it feels pretty good!!!

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Hi edenlotus<br><br>Even when I was working out

like crazy, I never did it six days a

week.....<br><br>But this is yoga right? I think that with yoga there

are things that you consciously have to do to make it

different.<br><br>I'm 38 and there are many times when I have felt like

how you've described. Certainly building physical

stamina will eventually help, but I'm finding that really

focusing on the breathing and aiming for lightness, versus

always working so damn hard, has helped me balance six

days a week of practice and it's really something that

has just come to me recently. <br><br>On particulary

low energy days I've been just saying to myself-

Today, just focus on breath and bandhas, there is

nothing else to do. And its amazing how much work there

is to do just there! I think about finding softness,

and how can I make the poses flow with ease. I think

about drishti. I think about how good this feels, how

I'm creating space and becoming calm and learning

focus. I find that if I take away the pressure to be

physical, mentally, when I start that first suryanamaskara,

its a lot easier to swallow. I've been trying to

apply this to days when I feel full of energy as well -

instead of - "ya baby I'm gonna NAIL this or that pose

today!" its more like bringing myself back down a notch,

keeping my ego, my ambition in check.It has taken me a

lot of time to get to this stage, but I feel a real

shift has occurred in my thinking and I'm so curious to

see where it's all gonna go next.<br><br>Changing the

time you practice, if work permits might be a thought.

Not sure if you're practicing at home or in a class

but mixing that up a bit might help if possible.

Classes- although I love them and miss them so much - seem

to take it out of me more then self practice. Re

food, being moderate in this department has never let

me down. I'm also a one cup of coffee a day girl -

maybe one day I'll evolve- but I have to say, it helps!

If java's not your thing, perhaps a great juice or

smoothie can be a pick me up during a low point in the

day. Taking a hot bath or putting a few drops of some

kind of pleasant oil (garlic for the vampires? just

kidding...) on your pillow before you sleep might make

nighttime more pleasant.<br><br><br>And you know,

sometimes, I just take a day off and do 5 days a week- I

don't beat myself up over it - i actually feel better

that I honoured what my body was feeling and use the

day to practice yoga OFF THE MAT - Because if yoga is

only about working out six days a week- forget it- I'm

not interested.<br><br>A lady I met the other day

told me about some woman from Maui in her 50's who is

on 2nd or 3rd series and is like a butterfly - as

light as air in her practice. This inspires me, much

like fellow poster nadi ca saying that 47 feels good

and many of the members of this club - devoted

experienced yogis who have made this a practice through their

lifetime. <br><br>Correct me if I'm wrong here but I feel

that the secret to being there 10,20,30 years from now

must be a combination of many years of practice AND

learning how to manage the body, not through sweat, toil

and drudgery, but through breath, bandhas and

learning how to be light.<br><br>yours in yoga<br><br>sue

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My name is reinaldo I have been aware of the

practise for about five-six years. And I have been doing

with diferent frequencies. I will confes that if I

would have been doing a six day in a row during my

first two years I would probably be exausted but I did

practise for several days in a row and it no longer take

energy away from me. It is certain that the prectise my

be good one daing and not so good on the next but I

no longer exhausted. I believe that once you get the

full flow and connect each breath and movement it will

just flow thru.<br><br>Reinaldo

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napping, really does help. Even 5-10 minutes

squeezed in somewhere at work. I don't think 36 has that

much to do with it. I'm 42 (well almost). I think your

body eventually gets used to it. Mine did. At first I

was sick and tired a lot. Now I'm good.

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