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Yoga: 5 mistakes beginners should avoid

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Sep 7, 2025, 11:30 IST
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Five common mistakes beginners should steer clear of

Starting yoga can feel exciting and a little intimidating at the same time. You see pictures of people bending like pretzels, balancing on their arms, or sitting peacefully in meditation, and you think, How on earth am I supposed to do that? The truth is, no one begins yoga perfectly. Everyone wobbles, struggles with breathing, and probably feels silly the first few times. And that’s okay.

What really matters in the beginning is avoiding a few mistakes that can either slow you down or make the practice feel frustrating. If you know what to look out for, yoga becomes something you enjoy rather than a chore you force yourself into. Let’s talk about five common mistakes beginners should steer clear of.

2/7

Treating yoga like just a workout


A lot of people start yoga because they want to “get fit” or “lose weight.” That’s fine yoga can definitely help with both. But if you treat yoga like another gym class where the goal is only to sweat or burn calories, you’ll miss the bigger picture.

Yoga isn’t just about stretching your body; it’s about slowing down, tuning in, and connecting breath with movement. If you rush through poses, you won’t really feel what they’re doing for you. And honestly, trying to force yoga into being a quick workout often leads to frustration because the changes are subtle at first.

Instead, approach yoga as practice, not performance. It’s not about how many calories you burn in 30 minutes, it’s about how you feel during and after those 30 minutes.

3/7

Forgetting to breathe


This sounds silly, right? Breathing is automatic. But beginners constantly hold their breath without realizing it especially when a pose feels hard. You might be in downward dog, arms shaking, and suddenly you notice you’re clenching your teeth and not breathing at all.

The breath is the anchor of yoga. Without it, the practice is just stretching. With it, you calm your nervous system, move deeper into poses, and actually feel grounded.

A simple trick: every time you change positions, pair it with an inhale or exhale. Inhale as you lift arms up, exhale as you fold down. That rhythm keeps you present.

4/7

Comparing yourself to everyone else

This one’s huge. You walk into a class and see someone folding in half or balancing in crow pose, and immediately you feel behind. It’s natural, but it’s also dangerous. Yoga isn’t a competition, and comparing yourself steals the joy of your own progress.

Every body is different. Some people are naturally flexible, while others need more time. Some can hold plank forever, others shake after ten seconds. None of it matters. What matters is showing up and doing your best for your body.

Next time you catch yourself looking around, try closing your eyes in a pose. It pulls the focus back to how you feel instead of how anyone else looks.

5/7

Ignoring alignment and rushing through poses


Here’s a mistake that can actually hurt you: trying to force your body into a pose without caring about alignment. For example, in warrior pose, beginners often let the front knee drift too far forward, which strains the joint. Or in downward dog, many people round their backs instead of lengthening the spine, which misses the point of the pose.

Going deeper into a stretch doesn’t mean you’re doing it right. Proper alignment does. Even if that means using props or bending your knees, that’s perfectly fine.

Props aren’t a weakness they’re a smart choice. A yoga block, a strap, or even the wall can help you find the right alignment without pushing your body too far.

6/7

Expecting instant results


We live in a world where we want quick fixes. Download an app, do a “30-day yoga challenge,” and expect to look different by the end. But yoga doesn’t work like that. The changes creep up slowly.

In the beginning, you might feel like nothing’s happening. But after a few weeks, you’ll notice little things, you sleep better, you handle stress differently, your balance improves, your hips feel looser. The physical changes, like strength and tone, follow with time.

Be patient. Think of yoga as something you’ll carry with you for life, not a short-term project. Ten or fifteen minutes a day for months will change you more than an occasional two-hour class.

7/7

Skipping savasana


Let’s talk about the final resting pose, savasana. A lot of beginners think it’s just “lying down doing nothing,” so they pack up and leave early. Big mistake.

Savasana is where everything you’ve done settles in. It’s where your nervous system calms, your mind quiets, and your body integrates the practice. Skipping it is like baking bread and never letting it cool, you miss the best part.

Even if you only have five minutes, give yourself that rest at the end. You’ll feel completely different walking out of class.

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