Am I too stiff for yoga?
Dennis Newhook, Iyengar Yoga Teacher
One of the most common things people say to me when they hear I am a yoga teacher is "oh, I'm too stiff for yoga!"
As an Iyengar yoga teacher, such a statement sounds like a response based upon a misleading image of yoga often presented by Hollywood and the fitness industry (e.g. product advertisements featuring contortionists; celebrities seeking eternal youth and longer legs through yoga; scantily-clothed individuals sweating it out in mirror-lined rooms while instructors shout directions through a loudspeaker; instructional yoga DVDs promising everything from fewer wrinkles to buns of steel, many of which are made by last year's aerobics instructors turned yogis overnight still pushing their fitness mantra of "no pain, no gain”). It's an intimidating image indeed!
While yoga can certainly be integrated into a fitness program and applied within a variety of settings, Iyengar yoga classrooms will look nothing like the images of yoga presented in mainstream media.
Iyengar yoga teaches students in a systematic order, honouring bodily limitations or injuries. Postures are often modified to meet the needs of students. Props, such as chairs, blocks, or straps, enable students to work safely.
To address the question in the title of this article: NO, you aren't too stiff for yoga. On the contrary, the stiffer you are, the more you stand to benefit from a practice that teaches you to restore motion to stiff joints and length to shortened muscles.
While students definitely notice their stiffness during class, they also notice that yoga helps with increased co-ordination, awareness, balance, strength, and confidence. Flexibility will surely improve, but it really is a by-product of practice, not the goal, and in no way a barrier.