Ground Floor: Making yoga accessible to all ages

Posted: June 4, 2014 at 5:47 am


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By Deborah Neyens, correspondent

Andrea Parks yoga practice first helped her cope with the aches and discomfort of pregnancy. It later gave her some me time away from her three small children at home.

Six years ago, the high school German teacher started teaching others about the benefits of a yoga practice.

Yoga just made such a big difference in my life, she said of her decision to become a yoga instructor. I have a love of teaching anyway, and Im teaching something thats important to me.

In 2013, with her youngest daughter off to school, Parks began looking at potential spaces for her own yoga studio. She opened Toula Yoga in April.

While Toula Yoga offers traditional yoga classes for beginners to advanced yogis, Parks has a particular interest in working with children and people who have mobility issues. My mission is to open yoga to everybody. she said.

Parks, who is a certified yoga instructor through the Anusara School of Hatha Yoga, recently completed training in adaptive yoga. In an adaptive yoga class, the teacher adapts basic yoga poses to meet a students individual needs, often with the use of props like chairs, blocks and blankets.

Its useful for anyone who cant get down and up off the floor, she explained. I even have kids with cerebral palsy, and one spends most of the day in a wheelchair. She feels so much better and can breathe better when we get her body stretched out and in alignment.

Toula Yoga offers prenatal classes for expectant mothers, infant and toddler classes for caregiver and child, and kids-only classes by age group starting at age three.

I really wanted this to be a family place, Parks said, noting the benefits of yoga for children include increased focus, coordination and strength.

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Ground Floor: Making yoga accessible to all ages

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