{january} slow beginnings, as nature intended

January often arrives with pressure. We’re encouraged to set resolutions, overhaul routines, “be more productive,” and reinvent ourselves before we’ve even put away the holiday decorations. The cultural message is clear: hurry up and become a better version of yourself.

But the body, mind, and nervous system thrive on a very different pace.

Inside ĀN Yoga, our January theme is Slow Beginnings — an approach to the new year that emphasizes wintry restorative yoga and slow movements.

This blog post will guide you through:

  • why slow beginnings are an antidote to burnout

  • how the natural world models slow change

  • and how to practice slowness through live classes and on-demand practices inside ĀN Yoga

Be sure to read until the end for a special offering!


The New Year Is Exciting — and Also Overwhelming

The new year often brings excitement, hope, and motivation for what the next 365 days might hold. Yet for many of us, it also marks a return to faster-paced rhythms — at work, at school, and in daily life. Schedules fill up. Expectations resurface. The world picks up speed once again.

But perhaps there’s a small (or not-so-small) part of you that longs to remain a little dormant, a little home-bodied, lingering in your favorite sweatpants just a while longer.

And I want to remind you that even though we are stepping into January, the natural world tells us we’re still deep in winter.

There is no rush right now to have the year figured out. No urgency to set goals in motion. In fact, the faster we force ourselves forward, the more likely we are to hit burnout by February 1.

Yoga teaches us that so much of life exists beyond our control. We can’t always dictate how quickly the world moves or how our days unfold. What we can influence is how we meet these moments — with compassion instead of self-criticism, with choices rooted in clarity rather than pressure.

When urgency presses against you, you can lean into your biology and reclaim rest through a few simple, intentional routines:

Three Ways to Lean into Slowness (Even When Life Moves Fast)

1. Ritualize your routines.
This saying is a favorite from one of my teachers. It is a very yogic and Zen perspective to see even the most mundane routines and chores as something sacred. It's more about the inner attitude you bring to the routines rather than the actions of them.

Examples:

  • make your bed with a spritz of essential oils

  • savor your tea or coffee slowly, allowing its aroma and nuanced flavors fill your senses

  • adorn yourself with care and beautification

  • notice beauty on your commute

2. Prioritize your “big rocks.”
Your “big rocks” are the self-care activities that nourish you — the anchors that keep you steady when life moves quickly.

Examples:

  • five-minute morning meditation to set the tone for the day

  • deliberately slow and intentional meals without distraction

  • walks in nature that is lush in greenery

  • gentle and screen-free routine to unwind in the evenings. 

3. Create breathing room between tasks.
Instead of multitasking, practice completing one task at a time. When you finish, pause. Breathe. Quietly say, “I’ve completed this,” before moving on. This signals to the brain that one loop has closed before another begins — reducing the feeling of carrying a thousand unfinished threads with you at the end of the day.


For Women Who Are Tired of Hustling Through Their Lives

Inside ĀN Yoga, our mission is to help women reclaim rest. Slowing down doesn’t mean stopping your life — it means choosing a pace that honors your biology.

If you are craving:

✨ nervous-system-friendly yoga
✨ community support
✨ restorative practices
✨ a slower way to start the year

…you are warmly invited to join us inside ĀN Yoga.

New members can enjoy 50% off their first month with promo code HALFOFF at checkout.

If you feel like you’re falling behind already, remember that nature is still hibernating. This guided meditation practice in the Library can be helpful in reminding you that, right now, what you have going on, is already enough as it is.

And if you’re still feeling the drag of winter is a bit too heavy and wanting a little lightness, explore the Ignite Slowly in the New Year gentle flow practice.

Slow January - a restorative yoga practice inside the Library, allowing the body steep in winter’s slow hush while gently sensing the subtle stirrings of the new year.

Inside the Membership You’ll Receive:

Live weekly classes (slow flow, restorative, yoga nidra)
On-demand library with shorter practices, at your pace
Seasonal themes + monthly contemplations
A community where tired women rest together, without guilt

May you lean into softness and slowness for the rest of this month, wherever you can. And know that sometimes the quiet resistance you feel in your body isn’t something to push through — it’s wisdom reaching out to you.

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{february} beyond pink hearts: what self-love really asks of us

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{december} a winter pause