Most of us don’t have an information problem.
We know movement is good for us.
We know we’ll probably feel better after a yoga class than we did before it.
We know getting enough sleep matters. We know spending less time on our phones would probably help. We know slowing down every now and then is good for our nervous system.
Most of us know these things.
So why don’t we always do them?
Because knowing and living are two different things.
It’s easy to mistake learning for changing.
We read the book.
Listen to the podcast.
Save the Instagram post.
Think, “That’s a really good idea.”
Then life gets busy and we carry on as we always have.
Real change doesn’t usually happen because we learnt one more thing.
It happens because we begin practising something consistently enough that it becomes part of who we are.
That’s why yoga is called a practice.
You don’t become calmer because someone explains the benefits of breathing.
You become calmer because you’ve spent enough time noticing your breath that your body begins to recognise it as somewhere to return to.
The same goes for confidence.
You don’t become confident because you read about confidence.
You become confident by repeatedly doing things that stretch you.
The same goes for self-trust.
It grows every time you listen to your own intuition instead of dismissing it.
This is what embodiment really means.
Taking something you know in your head and allowing it to become part of how you live.
Maybe that’s why we keep coming back to the mat.
Not because we’ve forgotten what yoga teaches us.
But because every practice is another opportunity to live it a little more fully.
Knowing is a great place to start.
Practice is what changes us.
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