I knew Evan was a yoga regular when we first started dating four years ago. He wasn’t a runner, a swimmer or a gym goer like me, but that was fine. I wouldn’t drag him to the gym and he wouldn’t con me into going to the yoga studio. We both talked of liking hiking. Let that be enough. It’s good to have separate interests and activities, I told myself. We were a couple of fifty-something guys, not high schoolers who had to like the same movies, have the same favourite Depeche Mode song and eat off each other’s plates at Denny’s.
For almost three years, I managed to avoid yoga. Evan would go five or six times a week at some insanely early hour while I would try (unsuccessfully) to fall back asleep, knowing my workout would wait until midafternoon. Time apart was good, plus we’d each have separate stories, him telling me about a guy who was too gassy doing his downward-facing dogs and me sharing about the woman with headphones on the elliptical machine who always sang bits hysterically off-key without knowing her attempt at lip synching could be heard by everyone in the gym. (The hysterics are gone; it’s now plain annoying.)
And then it happened. For the umpteenth time, he tried to get me to go with him to yoga. “Come on. Just try it. Once.” For some still inexplicable reason, I said, “Okay.”
Let’s just get this over with, once and for all. All along, I had told Evan I didn’t have a body for yoga. I lack balance. My body is unstretchable. I would be a distraction to others. I would cause the instructor to lose the beat, to mistakenly do a star pose when he called for a mountain pose. Surely, that would be enough. One class. Half a class, actually. The instructor would boot me. Namaste.
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My kind of place...
I should mention that Evan always goes to hot yoga. This is even worse. I do not like heat. This is why my last vacation was to above the Arctic Circle in Norway. In January. Sweaty me is definitively unsexy. I’m an uber-pale white dude whose face gets blotchy red after a few minutes of heat. The blotchiness remains even after a cold shower when I’ve been removed from the heat zone.
I don’t do saunas. I don’t do Death Valley any time of year. I don’t even like standing in front of an open oven.

Happy baby pose...
not gonna happen.
So, yeah, getting kicked out halfway through my first and last hot yoga class would be more of a relief than an embarrassment. I could say to Evan, “I tried,” and he’d never mention me going to yoga again. No more happy baby poses, otherwise known to me as, “Simon says, ‘Touch your knees.’” Very, very sad baby.
Gilbert was the pour soul who served as the yoga instructor. As Evan introduced me at the check-in counter and Gilbert handed me a two-dollar rental towel and a four-dollar rental mat, I apologized for what we were all about to experience. “I will put my mat in a corner,” I said. “Don’t look my way. It will throw you completely off.”
As expected, I sucked. My chair pose was more of a standing lean, my Warrior II unfit for battle…even my cow pose (basically a head-up crawl position) stank like manure. Yes, I humiliated myself. No, I did not get kicked out.
Dammit, Gilbert was too much of a professional. I was giving him the all-out worst and he had the nerve to say after class while standing behind the counter, “You were really getting it.” Had I known then. there was a fire hydrant pose, I’d have attempted it because this liar, liar’s yoga pants were definitely on fire.
The next f#%king week, Evan wanted me to go to hot yoga again.
Oh, no. This was not the deal.
I only got my wisdom teeth pulled once. One time for having to take a girl to prom. I don’t even have to have another colonoscopy in the next ten years.
Yes, I just compared yoga to a colonoscopy.

Thank god for cow pose!
But the following week I was back at the yoga studio with Evan, this time apologizing pre-class to Jenny whom I could tell was a formidable force just from the way she said, “You’ll do fine.” It was more of an order than an expression of encouragement. Jenny’s class felt like hot yoga boot camp, the pace and the moves exponentially upping both the sweat factor and level of personal cluelessness. I’d sort of figured out cow pose and its corresponding cat pose, but what the hell was a chaturanga? Could we please stick to animals? Flamingo pose, elephant trunk sway, wet dog shake. I could visualize these things but not a chaturanga which sounded, if anything like a drink at a bar you down in one swallow. Maybe a shot was exactly what I needed before class even if it was 6:15 in the morning. Something with Kahlua, please.
Jenny should have been the end of it. She scared me. She overwhelmed me. Still, as I tried to sneak out to the parking lot after class, she stopped me and said, “You were great.” Another liar. Must be part of yoga training. She at least had the sense not to add an exclamation mark.
I’ve probably done hot yoga fifteen times now, including a week of free classes over New Year’s. Every time has been with Evan. (Why else would I go?) I know what more of the poses are supposed to look like. I just can’t do them. I’ve reached a level of proficiency in ugly-sweating and that hasn’t scared Evan away yet but apparently even a pose as elementary as downward-facing dog remains aspirational.
It doesn’t help that I have a hard time hearing what the instructor is saying because the music is too loud for me. It probably also doesn’t help that Gilbert is the only instructor that has had to endure me a second time. Fourteen instructors’ different styles and routines for fifteen classes. I’ve stopped apologizing, maybe even stopped feeling humiliated. Still, my body’s lack of flexibility is as glaring as ever. I’m telling myself this morning’s class was the last. But, well I’ve said that fifteen times now.
Evan has a way of making me think I’m almost capable or at least looking past my flaws—in the studio and beyond. If he can accept me looking my absolute worst, I suppose I can keep showing up. Something tells me there will be a sixteen occasion. Fortunately though, hiking season is right around the corner.














